Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Kill the Bill or Support Passage? A Debate on Healthcare Legislation Between Insurance Industry Critics


DemocracyNow!
December 29, 2009

The progressive community is split over the $871 billion healthcare reform bill that passed the Senate last week. Some have lambasted the Senate for removing language that would have created a government-run health insurance program to compete with private insurers. Others believe the Senate bill is the biggest expansion of federal healthcare guarantees since the enactment of Medicare and Medicaid over four decades ago and should be supported as a first step toward reform. We host a debate...

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Sunday, November 29, 2009


By Joshua Frank
Online Journal Contributing Writer
November 27, 2009

...At every stage in its life cycle, coal can negatively impact human health, from mining operations, cleaning, transportation to burning and disposing of the combustion waste. PSR reports that many Americans are being affected daily by coal and the exposure is contributing to horrible health problems; heart attacks, lung cancer, strokes, asthma among others...

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Monday, November 23, 2009

Rejecting the Narrative for Health Reform in America, Believing in a Better Way


By Kevin Gosztola
OpEd News
November 23, 2009

To the extent that politicians in Washington, D.C. have not attempted reform of this magnitude with a concerted effort for a decade (perhaps, decades depending on how you regard Hillary Clinton's past efforts), the recent votes on health reform in the House two weeks ago and in the Senate this weekend are historic. But, they are no more than contrived milestones in history if you truly assess what the Democrats and their supporters hope this bill will achieve...

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By 60-39 Vote, Senate Agrees to Open Debate on Healthcare Bill


DemocracyNow
November 23, 2009

Health care reform cleared its first hurdle in the Senate this weekend. In a party line vote of 60-39, the Senate voted Saturday evening to open debate on the bill put forward by Senate Majority leader Harry Reid. All 58 Democrats and both Independents voted in favor of the motion while 39 out of 40 Republicans voted against it. At a news conference immediately following the vote, Reid said “The road ahead is a long stretch but we can see the finish line.” We speak to Ryan Grim of the Huffington Post about the vote and the House Finance Committee’s vote to audit the Federal Reserve...

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Sunday, October 25, 2009

Medicine's new best practice


Marco Visscher | September/October 2009 issue
Ode Magazine

Anita Palepu was an associate editor at the Canadian Medical Association Journal in 2006 when the publisher fired two editors in a conflict over editorial independence. Angry at what she felt was a move to allow advertisers to dictate what appeared in the journal, Palepu and some other colleagues resigned. But she says cheerfully, "Instead of being outraged, I'm doing something about it." Within a year, Palepu became co-founder and co-editor of Open Medicine, a free, independent online quarterly that offers peer-reviewed science and analysis. In the first issue, the editors stated that "medical knowledge should be public and free from undeclared influence."...

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Friday, October 2, 2009

Mother Speaks Out on Insurance Giant CIGNA’s Denial of Healthcare to Cancer-Stricken Twin Daughters


DemocracyNow!
October 1, 2009

Stacie Ritter’s twin daughters were diagnosed with cancer at the age of four. Their insurance provider, CIGNA, denied them coverage even though they had been covered by the family’s former insurer. The incident marked just the latest chapter in the family’s ongoing troubles with the health insurance industry. A few years ago, the Ritters filed for bankruptcy due to their high medical expenses—even though they had health insurance at the time. Stacie Ritter joins us to tell her story...

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Friday, September 18, 2009

As Baucus Unveils Health Plan Absent of Public Option, New Study Finds 45,000 Uninsured Die Every Year


DemocracyNow!
September 18, 2009

Nearly 45,000 Americans die every year–that’s 122 deaths a day–due to lack of health insurance. That’s the startling finding of a new study that appears in the current issue of the American Journal of Public Health...

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Friday, September 11, 2009

Chemicals and Our Health


OpEd Columnist
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
July 15, 2009
The New York Times

...If terrorists were putting phthalates in our drinking water, we would be galvanized to defend ourselves and to spend billions of dollars to ensure our safety. But the risks are just as serious if we’re poisoning ourselves, and it’s time for the Obama administration and Congress to show leadership in this area.

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Thursday, September 10, 2009

Obama Urges Lawmakers to Pass Healthcare Bill, But What Will Reform Really Look like?


DemocracyNow!
September 10, 2009

President Obama intensified his push for healthcare reform Wednesday with a nationally televised address before a joint session of Congress. Obama urged lawmakers to overcome partisan differences and pass long-awaited changes to the nation’s healthcare system. But what would reform actually look like? We speak with Dr. Quentin Young, a longtime friend of Obama and the national coordinator for Physicians for a National Health Program, as well as the Reverend Jesse Jackson, founder of the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition...

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“A Robust Public Option Is Essential”–Progressive Caucus Co-Chair Rep. Grijalva Draws a Line in the Sand on Healthcare Reform


DemocracyNow!
September 10, 2009

In a nationally televised address, President Obama called on Congress last night to take quick action and pass an overhaul of the nation’s healthcare system. Obama defended proposals for a government-run public health insurance plan as part of healthcare reform but suggested that he would accept a bill that did not include a public option. We speak with Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-AZ), co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. “We’re going to fight for it down to the very last day,” Rep. Grijalva says of the public option. “It has got to be part of [the bill]. If it’s not, we are just showering money upon money on the same system and the same industry that got us into the mess that we’re in right now.”

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Wednesday, September 9, 2009

“California’s Real Death Panels”–Data Reveals California’s Private Insurers Deny 21% of Claims


Democracy Now!
September 9, 2009

President Obama begins his final drive for healthcare reform tonight with a nationally televised prime-time address to a joint session of Congress. His speech comes after an explosive August recess consumed by raucous town halls and talk of government-run “death panels.” We take a look at California’s “real death panels.” That’s what the nation’s largest nurses group is calling private insurers, as new data reveals they denied one of every five claims over the past seven years. We speak with Charles Idelson of the California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee...

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Widespread Alcohol Abuse Clouds Mongolia's Future


by Louisa Lim
National Public Radio
September 9, 2009

At midnight in Mongolia's capital, Ulan Bator, 14 people are in the "sobering-up" cells at a district police station on a recent evening.

This and police stations like it are on the frontline of Mongolia's battle against alcohol abuse. People are brought to the cells to prevent them from freezing to death in the winter, and from doing harm to others.


A report by the U.N.'s World Health Organization notes that alcohol abuse could be Mongolia's biggest stumbling block to economic and social progress. A 2006 survey carried out by Mongolia's Ministry of Health and WHO found that 22 percent of Mongolian men and 5 percent of women are dependent on alcohol, rates three times higher than in Europe...

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Friday, September 4, 2009

Distorting the Voice of the People


Sep 3, 2009
By E.J. Dionne
Truthdig

Health care reform is said to be in trouble partly because of those raucous August town hall meetings in which Democratic members of Congress were besieged by shouters opposed to change.

But what if our media-created impression of the meetings is wrong? What if the highly publicized screamers represented only a fraction of public opinion? What if most of the town halls were populated by citizens who respectfully but firmly expressed a mixture of support, concern and doubt?

There is an overwhelming case that the electronic media went out of their way to cover the noise and ignored the calmer (and from television’s point of view “boring”) encounters between elected representatives and their constituents...

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Friday, August 28, 2009

Conservative media's culture of "death" poisons health care debate


Media Matters
August 28, 2009

Radio host Laura Ingraham, guest-hosting Fox News' The O'Reilly Factor, and conservative columnist Andrea Tantaros asserted that the Democrats are "playing the death card," using Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's death to promote health care reform in his name. Ingraham and Tantaros' comments are the latest in a long line of attempts by conservatives to attack Democrats and progressives by attaching the word "death" to progressive initiatives, most recently in the debate over health care reform...

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Thursday, August 20, 2009

What We Leave Behind


By Frida Berrigan
In These Times

From Kosovo to Lebanon, cluster bomb casualties continue to mount...

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Monday, August 17, 2009

“You Do Not Cut Deals with the System that Has to Be Replaced”: Ralph Nader on Secret White House Agreements with the Drug Industry


DemocracyNow!
August 15, 2009

The Obama administration admitted last week it promised to oppose proposals to let the government negotiate drug prices and extract additional savings from drug companies. In return, drug companies reportedly pledged to reduce costs by up to $80 billion. The White House has tried to back off the reported agreements, but the drug industry says it expects the White House to uphold its pledge. We speak to former presidential candidate and longtime consumer advocate Ralph Nader.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

The brutal truth about America’s healthcare


The Independent
August 15, 2009

An extraordinary report from Guy Adams in Los Angeles at the music arena that has been turned into a makeshift medical centre...

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Saturday, August 15, 2009

Design Meets Disability


by Graham Pullin
July-August 2009
Utne Reader

How art can help science augment the body, from hearing aids to prosthetic limbs

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Friday, August 7, 2009

Medicinal mirth: The health benefits of laughter


by Mary Desmond Pinkowish
August 2009 issue
Ode Magazine

Why a laugh a day keeps the doctor—and the cardiologist and the psychiatrist—away.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

A Real Win for Single-Payer Advocates


by John Nichols
The Nation
July 17, 2009

Canada did not establish its national health care program with a bold, immediate political move by the federal government.

The initial progress came at the provincial level, led by the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation's Tommy Douglas when he served from 1941 to 1960 premier of Saskatchewan. The universal, publicly-funded "single-payer" health care system that Douglas and his socialist allies developed in Saskatchewan proved to be so successful and so popular that it was eventually adopted by other provinces and, ultimately, by Canada's federal government.

For his efforts, Douglas would be hailed in a national survey as "The Greatest Canadian" of all time. But Douglas' regional initiative also offers a lesson for Americans...

Friday, July 17, 2009

Howard Dean on His Prescription for Real Healthcare Reform


DemocracyNow!
July 17, 2009

The House Ways and Means Committee approved legislation early this morning to overhaul the nation’s healthcare system and expand insurance coverage. By a 23-to-18 vote, the committee backed key elements of President Obama’s blueprint for healthcare, including the creation of a new government health plan and requirements for employers to offer health insurance to workers or contribute to its cost. To help fund the changes to the healthcare system, the House committee also agreed to impose a surtax on families with incomes of more than $350,000 a year. Meanwhile, the conservative American Medical Association has just come out in support of the House bill, saying “the status quo is unacceptable.” Today we spend the hour with Howard Dean, physician, six-term Vermont governor, Democratic presidential candidate in 2004, and former chairman of the Democratic National Committee. Dean’s solution embraces President Obama’s healthcare plan but argues that the reform bill is “not worth passing unless the American people have the choice of signing up for a public option—a real public option.”...

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Thursday, July 16, 2009

House Health Care Bill: Its Path and Transparency


By Paul Blumenthal
Sunlight Foundation
July 15, 2009

Yesterday, the House of Representatives released a 1,018 page bill (H.R. 3200) to reform the nation’s health care system. This is the first step in the House in the long slog to pass health reform. The bill will go through many different steps, committees, markups, hearings and floor procedures before it comes out the other end. In this post, I will try and explain all of these steps while also detailing the areas where transparency problems may arise. At Sunlight, we’re trying to make sure that transparency in the entire legislative development of this bill is taken as a paramount concern by Congress...

“They Dump the Sick to Satisfy Investors”: Insurance Exec Turned Whistleblower Wendell Potter Speaks Out Against Healthcare Industry


DemocracyNow!
July 16, 2009

As the debate over healthcare reform intensifies on Capitol Hill, we spend the hour with a former top insurance executive who’s now exposing the industry’s dirty secrets. Wendell Potter once served as the head of corporate communications at CIGNA, one of the nation’s largest health insurance companies. We speak to Potter about his own transformation from industry mouthpiece to whistleblower, the healthcare industry’s extensive PR and lobbying machine, the campaign to discredit Michael Moore’s film Sicko, and the insurance industry’s most pressing task: the fight against a public option, let alone a single-payer system...

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Monday, July 6, 2009

The placebo effect is not all in your mind


David Servan-Schreiber | May 2009 issue
Ode Magazine

What the placebo effect tells us about the healing power of the brain...

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Doctatorship: Military thinking in medicine


Dana Ullman | May 2009 issue
Ode Magazine

Military thinking has invaded medical thinking. It’s time to replace shock and awe with health and peace...

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Monday, June 22, 2009

Health Care Showdown


by Paul Krugman
New York Times
June 22, 2009

America’s political scene has changed immensely since the last time a Democratic president tried to reform health care. So has the health care picture: with costs soaring and insurance dwindling, nobody can now say with a straight face that the U.S. health care system is O.K. And if surveys like the New York Times/CBS News poll released last weekend are any indication, voters are ready for major change...

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Ray McGovern on Illness and Health


Consortium News
June 18, 2009

Editor’s Note: Former CIA analyst Ray McGovern – one of our favorite writers – underwent a successful medical procedure to open a clogged artery near his heart. Though Ray had health insurance, the scary moment gave him an insight into the life-and-death dilemma that Americans who lack insurance face:

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Saturday, June 13, 2009

AMA Opposition to Obama Public Health Plan Echoes Group’s Decades-Long Resistance to Healthcare Reform


Democracy Now!
June 12, 2009

On Monday, President Obama is scheduled to address the American Medical Association, the nation’s largest doctors’ group with 250,000 members. They have expressed strong opposition to a government-run plan. We take a look at how the AMA has fought almost every major effort at healthcare reform over the past seventy years...

Monday, June 8, 2009

Senator Bernie Sanders: Health Care Is A Right, Not A Privilege


BuzzFlash
June 9, 2009

Let's be clear. Our health care system is disintegrating. Today, 46 million people have no health insurance and even more are underinsured with high deductibles and co-payments. At a time when 60 million people, including many with insurance, do not have access to a medical home, more than 18,000 Americans die every year from preventable illnesses because they do not get to the doctor when they should. This is six times the number who died at the tragedy of 9/11 - but this occurs every year.

In the midst of this horrendous lack of coverage, the U.S. spends far more per capita on health care than any other nation - and health care costs continue to soar. At $2.4 trillion dollars, and 18 percent of our GDP, the skyrocketing cost of health care in this country is unsustainable both from a personal and macro-economic perspective...

Sunday, June 7, 2009

'Single-Payer' Supporters Challenge Democrats


By Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, June 6, 2009

..."Obama is really the one who is puzzling to us," said Rose Ann DeMoro, executive director of the California Nurses Association, a union that has been leading many of the single-payer protests. "We were all supporters of him. . . . It's hard to understand how he can expect to rally support around a plan that will leave the big insurance companies in charge and keep hurting patients." ..

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Report: Discipline Methods Endanger Disabled Kids


National Public Radio

Morning Edition, May 19, 2009 · A large number of schools use potentially dangerous methods to discipline children, particularly those with disabilities in special education classes, a report from Congress' investigative arm finds.

In some cases, the Government Accountability Office report notes, children have died or been injured when they have been tied, taped, handcuffed or pinned down by adults or locked in secluded rooms, often to be left for hours at a time...

Sunday, May 17, 2009

That Didn’t Take Long: Insurance Industry Breaks Promise to President Obama


by Jason Rosenbaum
The Seminal (via Alternet)
May 16, 2009

Just four days after standing next to President Obama and declaring their commitment to control health care costs to the tune of $2 trillion over 10 years, the insurance industry, drug and medical device makers, and hospital groups are backing off their promise:

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Stop the Single Payer Shut-out!


Friday, May 8. 2009
Nader.org

...Among the giant taboos afflicting Congress these days is the proposal to create a single payer health insurance system (often called full Medicare for everyone).

How can this be? Don’t the elected politicians represent the people? Don’t they always have their finger to the wind?


Well, single payer is only supported by a majority of the American people, physicians and nurses. They like the idea of public funding and private delivery. They like the free choice of doctors and hospitals that many are now denied by the HMOs.

There are also great administrative efficiencies when single payer displaces the health insurance industry and its claims-denying, benefit-restricting, bureaucratically-heavy profiteering. According to leading researchers in this area, Dr. David Himmelstein and Dr. Stephanie Woolhandler, single payer will save $350 billion annually....

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Baucus’s Raucous Caucus: Doctors, Nurses and Activists Arrested Again for Protesting Exclusion of Single-Payer Advocates at Senate Hearing on Healthca


DemocracyNow!
May 13, 2009

Advocates of single-payer universal healthcare—the system favored by most Americans—continue to protest their exclusion from discussions on healthcare reform. On Tuesday, five doctors, nurses and single-payer advocates were arrested at a Senate Finance Committee hearing, bringing the total number of arrests in less than a week to thirteen. We speak with two of those arrested: Single Payer Action founder Russell Mokhiber and Dr. Margaret Flowers of Physicians for a National Health Program.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Doctors Arrested at Senate "Roundtable" on Healthcare


Institute for Public Accuracy
May 5, 2009

Doctors and other advocates of a national single-payer health system -- also known as improved Medicare for All -- directly confronted senators at a Senate Finance Committee "roundtable" on health reform today. Videos are available here and C-SPAN coverage is here.

One by one, single-payer advocates in the audience stood up and asked why single-payer experts were being excluded from the proceedings. They each spoke out in turn until they were removed from the committee hearing room by Capitol police, at which point another person would speak up. Eight were arrested.

Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.), chair of the Senate Finance Committee, has stated on multiple occasions that single payer is "off the table" of health reform. As advocates spoke up today, he joked that he needed more police.

Today's roundtable, the second of three, consisted of 15 witnesses with no single-payer advocates among them. By contrast, several witnesses have direct ties to the for-profit, private health insurance industry...

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Injured War Zone Contractors Fight to Get Care from AIG and Other Insurers


Democracy Now!
April 28, 2009

The bailed-out insurance giant AIG has come under intense criticism for handing out hundreds of millions in bonuses to top executives and billions in payments to other financial firms, all while receiving taxpayer aid. But new disclosures on its handling of insurance claims add a fresh angle to the ongoing scrutiny of AIG. According to the investigative website ProPublica, AIG and other top insurance companies have routinely denied medical benefits to civilian contractors wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan. Many workers have returned home to face long, grinding battles for basic medical care, artificial limbs and psychological counseling.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

The Health Care Industry and their Capitol Hill Protectors Are Sabotaging Our Chance for True Reform


By Marie Cocco
Washington Post Writers Group
April 24, 2009

So far we have "reformed" the health insurance system by reinforcing precisely what's wrong with it.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Campaign in Montana Seeks to Establish Healthcare as a Human Right


DemocracyNow!

We broadcast from Montana, where a vibrant movement is seeking to recognize healthcare as a universal human right. Last December, the Health Board of Lewis and Clark County, which includes the state capital Helena, adopted a resolution that recognizes the human right to health and healthcare. In February of this year, the Montana State Senate held a hearing on establishing the right to healthcare in the state. We speak with State Senator Christine Kaufmann, director of the Montana Human Rights Network.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Ask Johnson and Johnson to Live Up to Its “Pure” and “Gentle” Claims


We think parents have a right to know if the products they buy for their babies contain hazardous chemicals linked to cancer and skin rashes. Other companies are making safe and gentle baby products without hazardous chemicals. Instead of playing defense, J&J should live up to its promises of purity and be the safest, most responsible company it can be.

Whether you bathe your little ones using Johnson's Baby Shampoo, you grew up with "No More Tears" in the tub, you're a medical professional or you're just outraged that there are carcinogens in shampoo, take a minute to tell J&J that safe products are important to you.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Health Care By and For the People


Yes! Magazine
Spring 2009

...As a native of Venezuela, Bracho was familiar with participatory health care models widely used in Latin America to teach preventative health. She took these models as her inspiration and founded Latino Health Access, which recruits and trains community members to act as health educators, known as promotores. These educators lead programs on asthma prevention, diabetes, and healthy eating...

Monday, April 13, 2009

Higher Rates of Autism Found Near Toxic Waste Sites


Monday, April 13, 2009
The Daily Green

Search for Superfund sites near your home.Click on Title above...

Friday, April 10, 2009

Keep Antibiotics Working!


Resistance to antibiotics is a growing public health crisis, afflicting hospital patients and seemingly healthy individuals alike. Doctors caution that these vital drugs should only be used when absolutely necessary, because resistance emerges when bacteria are constantly exposed to antibiotics. Yet roughly 70 percent of antibiotics used in the United States are added to the feed of livestock and poultry that are not sick. This reckless practice encourages the development of antibiotic-resistant diseases—such as food poisoning and post-operative blood infections—that affect humans.

Please write to your members of Congress today and tell them to support the Preservation of Antibiotics for Medical Treatment Act, and put an end to the dangerous overuse of important human antibiotics in the feed and water of animals that are not sick.

click on the title above to take action!

Monday, April 6, 2009

Why "chocolate or vanilla"? Put Single Payer on the table!


Monday April 6, Los Angeles will host the last of five White-House sponsored healthcare forums, whose alleged goal is to find out "what Americans want" in terms of healthcare reform. Moderators in this "grassroots-from-above" movement will go out of their way, as they have so far, to rule single payer out of the "menu" of "permitted options". It is up to the people to demand that it be brought back.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Safe Patient Project


When deadly medical errors are kept secret, the underlying problems that cause them don't get fixed. These errors,including hospital infections, kill an estimated 200,000 Americans each year, and cost us $51 billion. Yet they aren't required to be tracked or made public. By bringing medical errors to light, effective action can be taken to prevent them.

Consider the case of actor Dennis Quaid. His newborn twins almost died when they were injected with a massive dose of blood thinner because the adult version of the drug looked similar to the infant version and was put in the wrong bin. Quaid went public, and the hospital installed a computerized medication system to confirm the right drug and dose before it's given.

A decade ago the Institute of Medicine set national goals to cut medical errors in half by 2004, to reduce the 1.5 million medication errors that occur each year, and to ensure that doctors and nurses are competent in patient safety. Ten years later, we don't know if we're any better off. Errors aren't regularly made public, and there are few national standards to prevent them.

It's time we got serious about stopping preventable medical errors. Help us get 50,000 signatures on our petition to make error rates public so we know what to do to prevent them in the first place.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Sen. Bernie Sanders introduces single payer bill


PNHP
Press release
March 26, 2009


Challenging head-on the powerful private insurance and pharmaceutical industries, Vermont’s Sen. Bernie Sanders introduced a single-payer health reform bill, the American Health Security Act of 2009, in the U.S. Senate Wednesday.

The single-payer approach embodied in Sanders’ new bill stands in sharp contrast to the reform models being offered by the White House and by key lawmakers like Senators Max Baucus (D-Mont.) and Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.). Their plans would preserve a central role for the private insurance industry, sacrificing both universal coverage and cost containment during the worst economic crisis since the Depression.

In contrast, Sanders’ new legislation would cover all of the 46 million Americans who currently lack coverage and improve benefits for all Americans by eliminating co-pays and deductibles and restoring free choice of physician. The most fiscally conservative option for reform, single payer slashes private insurance overhead and bureaucracy in medical settings, saving over $400 billion annually that can be redirected into clinical care.

Highlights of the bill include the following:

Patients go to any doctor or hospital of their choice.
The program is paid for by combining current sources of government health spending into a single fund with modest new taxes amounting to less than what people now pay for insurance premiums and out-of-pocket expenses.
Comprehensive benefits, including coverage for dental, mental health, and prescription drugs.
While federally funded, the program is to be administered by the states.
By eliminating the high overhead and profits of the private, investor-owned insurance industry, along with the burdensome paperwork imposed on physicians, hospitals and other providers, the plan saves at least $400 billion annually - enough money to provide comprehensive, quality care to all.
Community health centers are fully funded, giving the 60 million Americans now living in rural and underserved areas access to care.
To address the critical shortage of primary care physicians and dentists, the bill provides resources for the National Health Service Corps to train an additional 24,000 health professionals.
Sanders, who serves on the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, is a longtime advocate of fundamental health care reform. His new bill draws heavily upon the single-payer legislation introduced by the late Sen. Paul Wellstone (D-Minn.) in 1993, S. 491, and closely parallels similar legislation pending before the House, H.R. 1200, introduced by Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.).

Monday, March 30, 2009

Insurers shun those taking certain meds


Miami Herald
BY JOHN DORSCHNER
March 30, 2009

How health insurers secretly blacklist those with certain ailments.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

22 members of Hawaii House of Representatives Sign Resolution asking FDA to Rescind Approval for Neurotoxic Aspartame


Hawaii takes seriously the ominous neurodegenerative effects of this commonly found artificial sweetener, found in Diet Cokes, Sugarless Gum, Equal, and hundreds of medications, despite its being metabolized as methanol and formaldehyde; you personally could write in support of this long overdue and obvious imperative to Margaret Hamburg, M.D., FDA Commissioner, 5400 Fisher's Lane, Rockville Md., or to commissioner@fda.gov.

http://www.opednews.com/articles/22-members-of-Hawaii-House-by-Stephen-Fox-090319-10.html

Thursday, March 12, 2009

What Obama Can Learn from European Healthcare


by Steven Hill
Huffington Post
March 9, 2009


Whether one looks at infant mortality, life expectancy, the number of physicians, hospital beds, medical errors or high out-of-pocket expenses, America underperforms to a shocking degree. Unlike single-payer Britain or Sweden, nations like France, Germany, Switzerland & Belgium have figured out a third way: the insurance companies are non-profits...

Dr. Quentin Young, Longtime Obama Confidante and Physician to MLK, Criticizes Admin’s Rejection of Single-Payer Healthcare



Democracy Now!
March 11, 2009

While the Obama administration claims “all options are on the table” for healthcare reform, it’s already rejected the solution favored by most Americans, including doctors: single-payer universal healthcare. We speak with Dr. Quentin Young, perhaps the most well-known single-payer advocate in America. He was the Rev. Martin Luther King’s doctor when he lived in Chicago and a longtime friend and ally of Barack Obama. But he was noticeably not invited to Obama’s White House healthcare summit last week...

Friday, March 6, 2009

What Makes Things Hazardous?


by Jourdan Rassás
Earth911.org

Household Hazardous Waste is any product that is discarded from a home or a similar source that contains volatile chemicals that are:

Ignitable: capable of burning or causing a fire
Corrosive: capable of eating away materials and destroying living tissue when contact occurs
Explosive and/or Reactive: capable of causing an explosion or releasing poisonous fumes when exposed to air, water or other chemicals
Toxic: poisonous, either immediately or over a long period of time
Radioactive: capable of damaging and destroying cells and chromosomal material
Some examples of HHW are used motor oil, oil-based paint, auto batteries, gasoline and pesticides. The term HHW refers specifically to those products used in and around the common household, not used for any industrial purpose. These products can be harmful to the environment if they are not disposed of properly, which means they should not be dumped down the drain, and empty or partially empty hazardous waste containers should not be thrown in the garbage. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Americans generate 1.6 million tons of HHW per year. The average home alone can accumulate as much as 100 pounds of HHW in basements, garages and storage closets.