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The New Values Voters: People Of Faith For Health Care Reform
Faith communities have also spoken out for reforming our health care system, urging that it reflect the values of human dignity, shared responsibility, compassion, stewardship of resources, and concern for those who are vulnerable. Advocates for reform include the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, the United Methodist Church, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the Episcopal Church, the Union for Reform Judaism, the Central Conference of American Rabbis, and others.
Such support is also reflected in the values of people in the pews. A 2009 survey by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life showed 6 in 10 Americans—including 48 percent of white evangelicals, 55 percent of Catholics, 56 percent of white mainline Protestants, and 72 percent of the religiously unaffiliated—favoring a government guarantee of health insurance for all citizens, even if it would mean raising taxes.
See on thinkprogress.org
Obama, Ryan address AARP group in dueling speeches
NEW ORLEANS, La. — President Obama, speaking Friday by satellite feed just minutes before a speech by GOP vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan, took a pre-emptive shot at the AARP’s “Life@50+” convention, telling the group not to believe the criticisms that would follow.
“Contrary to what you’ve heard and what you may hear from subsequent speakers, Obamacare actually strengthened Medicare,” Obama said.
The Romney-Ryan camp claims the president’s health care law raids Medicare of billions of dollars, and it has made that assertion a central theme of its campaign.
Speaking to the group, which counts among its membership more than 37 million people over the age of 50, the president tried to discredit that argument.
“When you hear this notion … that we somehow took $716 billion, robbed it from Medicare beneficiaries and seniors, I want you to know that is simply not true,” he said. “What we did was we went after waste and fraud, and over-charging by insurance companies, for example. Those savings do come out to $716 billion.”
Moments later, Ryan tried going on the offensive — warning the crowd of what he claims will be catastrophic consequences to Medicare if voters stick with Obama.
His message was not well received.
“The first step to a stronger Medicare is to repeal Obamacare, because it represents the worst of both worlds. It weakens Medicare for today’s seniors and puts it at risk for the next generation,” Ryan said to a chorus of boos.
See on politics.blogs.foxnews.com
For an aggregation of other articles on Hot Topics in Healthcare Law, go to my magazine on Scoop.it – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law and Regulation and my newspaper on Paper.li – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law.
For an aggregation of other articles on improving healthcare, go to my internet magazine Scoop.it! Changing Health for the Better.
D.C. Week: Lawmakers Talk Health Before Heading Out — Focus is on Medicare Advantage Plan Cuts under the ACA
WASHINGTON — Members of Congress tackled several health-related issues this week before leaving the nation’s capital and hitting the campaign trail for a final election push.
Democrats and Republicans traded jabs this week on health reform’s impact on Medicare Advantage plans, with one side praising the law’s effects and the other predicting it will hurt the program.
The Obama administration reported that the Affordable Care Act (ACA) has strengthened Medicare Advantage. Since the ACA was passed in 2010, Medicare Advantage premiums have fallen by 10% and enrollment has risen by 28%, according to a statement from the Department of Health & Human Services (HHS).
HHS also projected enrollment to increase 11% in the next year with premiums remaining steady.
But Republicans in the House of Representatives held a hearing Friday on Medicare Advantage plans and took the opportunity to bash cuts in the plan under the ACA saying it will negatively impact enrollment and benefits for seniors.
See on www.medpagetoday.com
For an aggregation of other articles on Hot Topics in Healthcare Law, go to my magazine on Scoop.it – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law and Regulation and my newspaper on Paper.li – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law.
For an aggregation of other articles on improving healthcare, go to my internet magazine Scoop.it! Changing Health for the Better.
JAMA Forum: A Tale of 2 Health Plans
Consider 2 plans for health coverage.
In plan No. 1 (the ACA), the approach is to help everyone under the age of 65 years who doesn’t have insurance coverage. Everyone who is really poor is offered Medicaid. Everyone else will be put into a regulated market.
In plan No. 2 (the Romney plan for Medicare), the approach is to change the way everyone over the age of 65 years gets health insurance. Everyone who is really poor is offered Medicaid. They—along with everyone else—will also be put into a regulated market.
The differences between the end points of the ACA and the Romney plan for Medicare are shockingly similar. With enough tweaks and some serious efforts at compromise, one could be accepted in exchange for the other. The powers of both competitive bidding and regulatory reform could be used.
We could stop demonizing the other side for trying to “end America” by seeking results that aren’t much different from our own.
I’m not optimistic. It’s an election year. And despite protestations that good policy is the goal, it seems far too often that politicians care more about winning elections than about Americans winning a better health care system.
See on newsatjama.jama.com
For an aggregation of other articles on Hot Topics in Healthcare Law, go to my magazine on Scoop.it – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law and Regulation and my newspaper on Paper.li – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law.
For an aggregation of other articles on improving healthcare, go to my internet magazine Scoop.it! Changing Health for the Better.