Posts Tagged ‘health care ‘reform’’

The Massachusetts health care mess – coming soon to the rest of America?

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

In this month’s newsletter cover story, health care analyst Sally Pipes points out many problems with Massachusetts’s mandatory health insurance program that could now affect us all as we move closer to a national health care system totally controlled by the federal government. She shows that we could end up with a burdensome trifecta: higher taxes and higher medical costs, yet lower quality care. This is to say nothing of ethical dilemmas. It is not encouraging reading, but it provides a much needed assessment of our situation that does not receive much coverage in the mainstream media.

Here’s the link.

Can you and your doctor thrive without Medicare and insurance plans?

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

By Dr. George Watson, president of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons

Patients and doctors need to ask: what should a medical practice be like?

For doctors: Would you like more time with your patients; fewer or no insurance company hassles and prior authorizations, and less paperwork? Would you like to determine a fair price for your service, together with your patient? Would you like your daily receipts to equal your daily charges? Would you like to be called “Doctor” rather than “Provider”?

Read the rest here.

Report on cost of health care reform

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Following is John Goodman’s summary of the GOP summaries (here and here) of the report of Medicare’s Office of the Actuary on the financial impact of health care reform as enacted by President Obama. (Page references in brackets apply to the report.)

  • Health care costs will go up, not down. National health expenditures will increase from 17 percent of GDP now to 21 percent under the new law and will be higher than without the legislation. [Page 4] Net federal spending on health care will also increase.
  • Health care shortages are “plausible and even probable.” Because of the increased demand for health care, “supply constraints might initially interfere with providing the services desired by the additional 34 million insured persons.” [Page 20]
  • 14 million employees will lose their employer coverage. Employees of small firms are especially at risk (despite small employer tax credit subsidies). [Page 7]
  • 2 million employees who lose coverage will have to enroll in Medicaid. [Page 3]
  • A Medicaid insurance card is not a guarantee of care. An estimated 18 million people will be added to Medicaid. [Page 3] However, because there is no corresponding increase in the supply of caregivers, “it is reasonable to expect that a significant portion of the increased demand for Medicaid would be difficult to meet, particularly over the first few years.” [Page 20]
  • One in ten insured workers will see their health benefits taxed. By 2019, more than 10% of insured workers will “be in employer plans with benefit values in excess of the thresholds (before changes to reduce benefits) and this percentage would increase rapidly thereafter.” [Page 13]
  • Higher taxes will lead to higher premiums. The new taxes on medical devices, prescription drugs, and insurance plans “would generally be passed on through to health consumers in the form of higher drug and device prices and higher insurance premiums.” [Page 17]
  • There are more than one-half trillion in Medicare cuts. The new health law cuts “$575 billion” from Medicare. [Page 4]
  • Medicare cuts would threaten almost one in every seven hospitals. About “15 percent of Part A providers would become unprofitable within the 10-year projection period.” [Page 10]
  • Overall access to care for seniors would go down. Because of the law’s payment reductions, “providers for whom Medicare constitutes a substantive portion of their business could find it difficult to remain profitable and, absent legislative intervention, might end their participation in the program. [Page 10]
  • 7.4 million people will lose access to Medicare Advantage plans. Enrollment in MA plans will be cut in half (from its projected level of 14.8 million under the current law to 7.4 million under the new law). [Page 11]
  • False advertising: The new “Medicare Tax” doesn’t go to Medicare. “Despite the title of this tax, this provision is unrelated to Medicare; in particular, the revenues generated by the tax on unearned income are not allocated to the Medicare trust funds.” [Page 9]
  • False advertising: Budgetary double-counting does not improve Medicare’s solvency. Medicare cuts “cannot be simultaneously used to finance other federal outlays (such as the coverage expansions) and to extend the [life of the Medicare] trust fund, despite the appearance of this result from the respective accounting conventions.” [Page 9]
  • The new long-term care insurance plan (CLASS Act) is unsound. The program faces “a significant risk of failure” because the high costs will attract sicker people and lead to low participation. [Page 15]
  • The promise to those with pre-existing conditions is unfunded. “By 2011 and 2012 the initial $5 billion in Federal funding for [high risk pools] would be exhausted, resulting in substantial premium increases to sustain the program.” [Page 16]
  • The law does almost nothing to limit actual fraud and abuse. The fraud provisions in the law will save only about two percent of $47 billion in suspect claims.

More interviews for James Lansberry

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

SMI VP James Lansberry has a full morning of interviews on health care scheduled for Tuesday, 3/23/10:

  • Lou in the Morning on Legends 105.1 FM in Pensacola, FL, at 8:40 AM CT
  • With the Rev. Dr. Jim Brettell, KDVW 1530 AM, Little Rock, AR, at 9:05 AM CT. Listen live at http://www.drjimtalk.com/drjimtalk.htm
  • “Outside the Box” with Mitch Henck, WIBA AM-1310, Madison, WI, 10 AM CT. Listen live at http://www.wiba.com/main.html
  • On KUBB 96.3 FM, Merced, CA, 9 AM PT.
  • The Meeting House on WLBF, WDYF and WSTF in Alabama, 11:30 AM CT. Listen live here.

After that, we might let him eat lunch.

Samaritan members exempt from individual mandate

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

This is the text of a press release issued today (Monday, 3/22/10) by Samaritan Ministries in response to passage of the health care bill:

PEORIA, IL–Members of Samaritan Ministries International will be able to continue sharing medical needs as they have done for the past 15 years, thanks to an exemption to the individual mandate in the health care bill approved by the U.S. House on Sunday, James Lansberry said Monday.

Lansberry, vice president of Samaritan Ministries International, said the exemption for members of health care sharing ministries is intact in the bill now on the president’s desk.

“Members do not need to change anything they’re doing,” said Lansberry, who is also president of the Alliance of Health Care Sharing Ministries.

He said that the reconciliation bill passed by the House and now before the Senate “also has nothing in it that we can find that affects anything related to individual mandate exemptions.”

Most importantly, Lansberry said, “Nothing has changed with respect to God’s sovereignty.”

Neither, he added, has anything changed “with our ability to continue to operate.”

Samaritan Ministries is concerned, however, about the eventual impact of the health care bill on the United States over the long term.

“This is certainly a very dangerous thing for the health care industry and for Americans in general,” Lansberry said.

On the up side, though, “There are some things economically in there that may actually increase favorability toward cash patients. I think that’s going to be a positive effect for our members.”

Lansberry also stressed that once government subsidies for health insurance plans kick in and start funding abortion, Christian health care sharing ministries “will be the only pro-life option left for Christians.”

The Samaritan VP also encouraged members to pray in the coming days and months for God’s will to be done in the health care sector.

Samaritan Ministries is a health care needs-sharing organization founded in 1994. It includes more than 14,400 member households in all 50 states and around the world. For more information about SMI or to contact James Lansberry, call 1-888-726-4276, send e-mail to jlansberry@smchcn.net or info@healthcaresharing.org, or view www.samaritanministries.org.

###

For interviews, contact Jeff Whittemore at 1-888-726-4276 or jwhittemore@smchcn.net or Mike Miller at 1-877-764-2426, Ext. 142, or mikemiller@smchcn.net.

Samaritan Ministries responds

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

James Lansberry, vice president of Samaritan Ministries and president of the Alliance of Health Care Sharing Ministries, will be interviewed on several programs today:

That’s just what he has scheduled so far.

Samaritan will post a press release later today responding to yesterday’s congressional action.

Follow-up to NPR story

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Columnist Britt Combs of the McDowell News in North Carolina writes a follow-up to the NPR story that aired last week.

Some highlights:

Here’s the really nifty thing: The money does not pass through the groups’ administrative hands. It goes directly from member to member.

(snip)

No force, no threats, no violence or coercion. And they save an enormous amount of money in the process. As it turns out (Surprise!), it’s cheaper and easier to do it yourself.

(snip)

Meanwhile Samaritans members are solving their own problems. James Lansberry, a spokesman for the group, said he is very concerned about Washington attempts to force everyone to buy into the government’s insurance scheme. He said his members are paying their own medical bills without asking for insurance or government help and should not be punished for it.

Bill to block individual mandate heads to Va. gov’s desk

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

The Virginia Assembly gave final approval Wednesday to a bill that would make it illegal in that state for the government to require residents to purchase health insurance. Gov. Robert F. McDonnell said he will sign the bill, setting the stage for a conflict between the state and the federal government if such a mandate is included in final health care legislation. Both House and Senate bills include such a mandate.

Praise God for the courage of the Assembly and pray for passage of similar legislation in 34 other states.

Samaritan VP James Lansberry offered these thoughts on this type of legislation here.

Pray for representatives to hold firm on ‘no’ vote

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

The Wall Street Journal’s health care blog has named nine members of the U.S. House of Representatives who have indicated they might change their vote on a health care bill. Thirty-nine Democrats voted against the health care bill approved by the House last year. Some House members who voted yes the first time are saying they would vote no this time on the Senate bill that may be presented to them, so every vote is vital for those trying to push a radical left version of health care reform. 

Here are the names of those House members who have told The Associated Press that they would consider voting yes under certain circumstances:

Reps. Brian Baird of Washington, Bart Gordon and John Tanner of Tennessee, Suzanne Kosmas of Florida, Frank Kratovil of Maryland, Scott Murphy of New York, Glenn Nye of Virgnia, Michael McMahon of New York, and Rick Boucher of Virginia.

Please pray that these representatives would be able to resist arm-twisting and would again vote no on a federal takeover of the U.S. health care system.

The health care reform road?

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Tevi Troy has mapped out on National Review Online the path which health care legislation could take in March. It’s here. Everybody please be in prayer for health care sharing ministries as we arrive at this crucial juncture.