Archive for 2008

Why Not Connecticut?

Monday, April 21st, 2008

UHCEF Article of Interest
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The American Prospect May 2008 (Click here for original article.)

A model grassroots organizing campaign mobilizes public opinion for universal coverage in a state long dominated by private insurers.

Marc Caplan | April 21, 2008

Connecticut — still known as the insurance capital of the United States even with takeovers and significant layoffs in the industry — might be the last state conventional wisdom would expect to break new ground in the fight for universal health care. But it could well happen. Strong advocates and legislative proponents, significant business support for real change, and an innovative health-care foundation implementing a well-funded broad-based organizing campaign are positioning Connecticut to provide national leadership on the issue. (more…)

What Really Ails Medicare

Monday, April 21st, 2008

UHCEF Article of Interest

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The American Prospect May 2008 (Click here for original article.)

The cost crisis of Medicare gets a lot of attention. The program can be fixed only by universalizing the larger health system in which Medicare resides.

Jonathan Cohn | April 21, 2008

When Lyndon Johnson signed the law creating Medicare in 1965, he promised that it would transform the lives of America’s senior citizens. “No longer will older Americans be denied the healing miracle of modern medicine,” Johnson proclaimed. “No longer will illness crush and destroy the savings that they have so carefully put away over a lifetime so that they might enjoy dignity in their later years.” As ambitious as those goals were, some of Medicare’s architects had even loftier hopes. Many were veterans of Harry Truman’s crusade to provide insurance to every single American; it was only after that effort failed that they decided to concentrate on covering the elderly, whom they knew to be a politically sympathetic group. But in focusing on senior citizens, they didn’t give up on bringing insurance to the rest of the country. Medicare, they fervently hoped, would be a stepping stone to universal coverage — and perhaps a model for how to achieve it. (more…)

The Primacy of Prevention

Monday, April 21st, 2008

UHCEF Article of Interest

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The American Prospect May 2008 (Click here for original article.)

Addressing the whole range of behaviors that affect health is the key to a healthier society. This requires a universal health care system.

Neal Halfon | April 21, 2008

The case for universal health-insurance coverage is becoming universally acknowledged. To make a real difference in health outcomes, cost, and system performance, we need to cover the whole person, with a full continuum of appropriate care, and ensure continuity over a person’s entire life. Anything less will perpetuate inefficiencies and poorly coordinated coverage, which engender fragmented and poor-quality care. But universal coverage alone is not sufficient to reduce the remarkable 35-year difference in life expectancy across different classes of Americans. Universal coverage alone is also not likely to greatly improve the United States’ ranking of 46th in life expectancy and 42nd in infant mortality among 192 nations. A high-performing national health-care system must also focus on the prevention of disease and promotion of optimal health for all its citizens. (more…)

Health Reform You Shouldn’t Believe In

Monday, April 21st, 2008

UHCEF Article of Interest

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The American Prospect May 2008 (Click here for original article.)

What the Massachusetts experiment teaches us about incremental efforts to increase coverage by expanding private insurance.

Marcia Angell | April 21, 2008

For all their promise of change, Democrats are remarkably timid about changing the health-care system. The system now costs twice as much per person as those of other advanced countries and delivers worse average outcomes. It prices tens of millions of people out of health coverage altogether and limits care for countless others. Yet leading Democrats are clinging to this system, proposing to cover more people but not changing the system itself except at the margins. The timidity extends to choice of words. No one is supposed to say “single-payer” or “national health insurance” anymore, because that is “politically unrealistic”; the most we are allowed is to talk of reforming the system incrementally so that someday it will morph into “Medicare for all.” (more…)

Borrowing Ill Health

Monday, April 21st, 2008

The American Prospect May 2008 (Click here for original article)

Hospitals are getting more aggressive about sending debt collectors after under-insured consumers.

Tamara Draut | April 21, 2008

As health-care costs continue to climb, the trend to more “cost sharing” continues, and the ranks of the uninsured keep swelling, more and more Americans are finding that paying for medical care means going into debt. The latest study by the Commonwealth Fund found that one out of five Americans have medical debt — a population that includes many individuals with health insurance. In fact, nearly two-thirds of people who reported being in debt or having problems with medical bills had health insurance at the time the bill was incurred. Medical debt doesn’t discriminate by race or class either, though like other economic forces, it disproportionately impacts lower-income individuals and individuals of color. (more…)

Study: Most doctors back national health insurance

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

UHCEF Article of Interest

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South Florida Sun-Sentinel (click here for link to original article)

April 3, 2008

Reflecting a shift in thinking over the past five years among U.S. physicians, a new study shows a solid majority of doctors — 59 percent — now supports national health insurance. (more…)

Jamie Eldridge and John Bonifaz to Speak at 10th Annual Ben Gill Fundraiser

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

Join Mass-Care and the Universal Health Care Education Fund on MARCH 29 for:

  • Jamie Eldridge and John Bonifaz speaking on the future of health care reform
  • Honoring single payer advocates Senator Pat Jehlen,Dr. Bernard Lown, and Tim Macchio
  • Participatory workshops on health care activism

Click here to learn more about the Ben Gill annual fundraiser.