• In November 2009, then-OMB Director Peter Orszag described aspects of the Obama administration's strategy during an interview: "In order to help contain [ Medicare and Medicaid ] cost growth over the long term, we need a new health care system that has digitized information. (wikipedia.org)
  • If you want American evidence that government-run health care doesn't work, look no further than Medicaid and Medicare, the health care program for the poor and elderly, respectively. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • By the way, the trust fund for Medicare Part A, which covers hospital care for the elderly, is on track to deplete its reserves in 2026, which is within the next presidential term. (deseret.com)
  • one that will slash a trillion dollars from Medicare funds and institute rationing of care as the number of older Americans increase. (blogspot.com)
  • Sadly, typical politicians in both parties are playing politics with Medicare. (sunshinestatesarah.com)
  • Floridians must lead the way on saving Medicare, and that will require courageous leaders willing to fight for real reforms and stand up to the status-quo politicians … in both parties. (sunshinestatesarah.com)
  • The Affordable Care Act, by contrast, takes management of Medicare away from Congress, giving it to an unelected board of technocrats that will ration care. (newrepublic.com)
  • Just yesterday, according to Politico , Ryan defended the budget in a contentious town hall by saying the Affordable Care Act "puts a board in charge of cutting costs in Medicare" and that the board would "automatically put price controls in Medicare" and "diminish the quality of care for seniors. (newrepublic.com)
  • The CBO should put pencil to paper on House Bill 676 - Medicare for All, code for single payer healthcare, which has been shown to reduce access to care. (texaspolicy.com)
  • Can you imagine a politician getting elected who admits Medicare-for-All will double your tax bill? (texaspolicy.com)
  • Social Security and Medicare are on the brink of collapse, and politicians seem unwilling to make necessary changes. (nextnewsnetwork.com)
  • In the United States, politicians, like Donald Trump, promise not to touch Medicare or Social Security, while others, such as Bernie Sanders, deny the obvious: Reserve funds for both programs are projected to run out (by 2034 for Social Security and even sooner for Medicare). (nextnewsnetwork.com)
  • Unless urgent action is taken on Social Security and Medicare, future senior citizens face the likelihood of benefit cuts, health care rationing, or inadequate access to medical providers. (nextnewsnetwork.com)
  • Essentially, my dad said that what upset him when politicians described Medicare was the use of the term "entitlement," which implied that people like my parents who paid Medicare taxes for several decades don't deserve to reap the full benefits of that investment. (blogspot.com)
  • I pointed out that the reason Medicare is running out of money is that the dollar value of health benefits that seniors use today far exceeds the amount they paid in to the system thirty, twenty, or even ten years ago, since Medicare only began to pay for prescription drugs in 2006 and annual increases in the cost of health care have far exceeded inflation. (blogspot.com)
  • In the late 1990s I asked Dr. Annis what was in the King-Anderson Bill that enabled him to predict in 1962 the insolvency of Medicare and the coming government takeover of healthcare. (medpagetoday.com)
  • Once health care is nationalized, or mostly nationalized, rationing care is inevitable, and those who have lived the longest will find their care the most restricted. (iwf.org)
  • Marketing long term care insurance in the years to come will involve more and more agents positioning coverage as a way to avoid an inevitable rationing of long term care options. (thinkadvisor.com)
  • I find convincing his argument for explicit rather than implicit rationing [rationing in some form, he argues, is inevitable]. (one-eternal-day.com)
  • The first of these reform proposals to be passed by the United States Congress is the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which originated in the Senate and was later passed by the House of Representatives in amended form on March 21, 2010 (with a vote of 219-212). (wikipedia.org)
  • A variety of specific types of reform have been suggested to improve the United States health care system. (wikipedia.org)
  • These range from increased use of health care technology through changing the anti-trust rules governing health insurance companies and tort-reform to rationing of care. (wikipedia.org)
  • He argued that the U.S. has an opportunity to redesign its healthcare system and that there is a wide consensus that reform is necessary. (wikipedia.org)
  • It seems that everyone has an opinion regarding what should be done to reform our health care system. (pacificresearch.org)
  • This was clearly an anxious moment for Health Reform to remove the idea of a committee of physicians and ethicists making life and death decisions for patients and their families. (healthworkscollective.com)
  • These mandated benefits were hailed as a "consensus" approach to health care reform. (freedomworks.org)
  • An opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal this Friday explains that senior Americans are increasingly voicing opposition to reform proposals that give the government more control over health care as they come to recognize that political rationing will affect them the most. (iwf.org)
  • With the August recess for Congress underway, President Obama has failed in getting health care reform completed before members of Congress left Capital Hill for the respective districts. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney has experience in health care reform. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • In a bid to reduce the costs of healthcare, politicians and bureaucrats have championed the need for reform. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • As argued previously in this column (ANJ 2010, April & August issues) what is also required is a cultural revolution in thinking about: the values of health and healthcare, ageing and death, the kind of reform that is required to ensure a healthcare system that is responsive and well-coordinated to meet the needs of current and future generations, and whether the solutions being proposed by authorities will be effective and just. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • From the very beginning of the debate over the budget and, really, from the very beginning of the debate over health care reform, GOP leaders have held up their ideas as a consumer-oriented alternative to the supposedly bloodless and mindless central-planning that ended up in the Affordable Care Act. (newrepublic.com)
  • As I write this, the final outcome of health care reform is unknown, and the inclusion of a universal long term care insurance option, while likely, is still uncertain. (thinkadvisor.com)
  • Which brings me to one of my pet peeves about health reform in general, and the Affordable Care Act in particular: the selling of reforms as good because they provide people who already have health insurance with more "free stuff. (blogspot.com)
  • And our country will never have an honest debate about health reform as a social good and a shared sacrifice if we let politicians of both parties, only concerned about the next election, portray it as a false choice between rationing and free stuff. (blogspot.com)
  • That was how Brian Lee Crowley of Canada led off his remarks at our major conference, 'Lessons from abroad for health reform in the U.S.' on Monday, co-sponsored by the Galen Institute and the International Policy Network in London. (galen.org)
  • Over on Common Dreams.org he now writes about how the health insurance industry has worked to sabotage health care reform for years. (majorityrules.org)
  • Potter is very explicit in warning Americans that the previous efforts to kill health care reform and today's opposition are not spontaneous but are coming from the health care industry efforts to continue making profits off our current dysfunctional system that is profit based not care based. (majorityrules.org)
  • So the next time you hear someone warning against a "government takeover" of our health care system, or that the creation of a public health insurance option would send us down the "slippery slope toward socialism," know that someone like I used to be wrote those terms, knowing it might turn many of the very people who would benefit most from meaningful reform into unwitting spokespeople for the industry. (majorityrules.org)
  • The very people who would benefit from health care reform are arguing against it. (majorityrules.org)
  • Unfortunately, as a physician myself, and seeing how the system works, I honestly think a minimum of 50% healthcare spending would be eliminated with good tort reform. (luminous-landscape.com)
  • He wrote in the Lancet in 1999, 'The notion that the NHS has ever `rationed' health care is a gross misuse of the English language. (chf2serve.org)
  • The BMJ published 45 papers between 1990 and 1999 with rationing in the title, and 'healthcare rationing' is a medical subject heading in Medline (MESH term). (chf2serve.org)
  • But although there is little explicit priority setting by governments, implicit rationing by default takes place all the time by health care personnel at the level of service delivery. (who.int)
  • The message is a powerful one: Life and death decisions should be made by patients and doctors, not politicians and bureaucrats. (iwf.org)
  • What I'm trying to do as I write and speak out against the insurance industry I was a part of for nearly two decades is to inform Americans that when they hear isolated stories of long waiting times to see doctors in Canada and allegations that care in other systems is rationed by "government bureaucrats," someone associated with the insurance industry wrote the original script. (majorityrules.org)
  • Americans were the most likely to skip needed care because of costs, with 33 percent having done so over the past year. (vox.com)
  • Also, in an ABC News poll, 89% of Americans are happy with their health care coverage. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • In fact, this legislation would increase health care costs for Americans. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • The government will move in and look into all the health care plans Americans have. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • While politicians engage in political trench warfare over voter rights, abortion, the Afghanistan withdrawal and an endless list of other issues, aging Americans are left to wonder whether their golden years will be filled with reduced Social Security checks, rationed health care or runaway inflation. (deseret.com)
  • Future retirees - Americans like me who are 55 or younger - will be offered essentially the same kind of health plan as members of Congress receive, a payment-support system where they pick from approved plans. (sunshinestatesarah.com)
  • The net effect of single payer in the U.S. will be many fewer care providers - even as 323 million Americans are clamoring for their promised "right to health care. (texaspolicy.com)
  • I supported most provisions of the Affordable Care Act because its implementation will eventually allow millions more Americans to more reliably access health care, especially primary care, when they need it. (blogspot.com)
  • The plan was to force all Americans into health maintenance organizations (HMOs), create regional alliances to price-fix by region, and criminalize charging more than the set rates. (medpagetoday.com)
  • The State and Federal Health Exchanges ("so called Obamacare competitive model") has resulted in both the health exchange and the private insurance industry increasing the cost of healthcare to unaffordable levels, decreasing access to care, rationing of care and destroying the healthcare system. (typepad.com)
  • As Medicaid has grown as a result of Obamacare, Medi-Cal patients cannot find a physician to care for them. (typepad.com)
  • Wait times for care went up with Obamacare. (texaspolicy.com)
  • CONCLUSION: In order to offer women who request CS equal and just care, there is a pressing need to either implement current national guideline document at all maternity clinics or rewrite the guideline documents to enable clinics to adopt a structured approach. (bvsalud.org)
  • He mentioned electronic record-keeping, preventing expensive conditions, reducing obesity, refocusing doctor incentives from quantity of care to quality, bundling payments for treatment of conditions rather than specific services, better identifying and communicating the most cost-effective treatments, and reducing defensive medicine. (wikipedia.org)
  • The paradox of the American health system, then, is that it poses as a system with no limits - there is no centralized authority rationing care or negotiating treatments - even as it turns tens of millions of people away from services they need. (vox.com)
  • Each new mandate will bring America another step toward a government-controlled, rationed system, where political concerns and bureaucratic judgements determine who deserves what treatments. (freedomworks.org)
  • Another May 11 article, appearing on the front page of the Times , is entitled, "In Greek Debt Crisis, Some See Parallels to U.S." Its author, David Leonhardt, led the newspaper's campaign to promote Obama's health care overhaul, explicitly supporting limits on medical treatments ordinary people could receive. (real-agenda.com)
  • What has been overlooked in this situation, however, is that a key driver of the spiraling costs of healthcare is not the over-utilisation of services by people in need, but rather 'the use of wasteful tests and treatments' prescribed by doctors (Tilburt & Cassel, 2013) together with the rising costs of drugs (driven by the business behaviours of the pharmaceutical industry) and medical technology, particularly in hospitals. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • In other words, they ration care by restricting allocations to facilities (resulting in too few operating rooms or burn units), reducing payment schedules (resulting in fewer physicians available to treat patients), and delaying or denying treatments that are very expensive. (texaspolicy.com)
  • There were a number of different health care reforms proposed during the Obama administration. (wikipedia.org)
  • If politicians want to bring down health care costs and expand access to health insurance, they should consider reforms that give consumers greater control over their health care spending. (freedomworks.org)
  • Although avoiding the language of rationing, the kinds of 'reforms' being championed (eg. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • The rhetoric of healthcare reforms has also had a political ideological objective shifting the provision of and accountability for public healthcare services to private sector providers. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • Failure to distinguish what each of these terms refers to unnecessarily muddles debate about what healthcare reforms are needed as well as where and how these should occur. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • First in the line of fire were public hospitals, which reduced bed numbers by 6% between 1998 and 2000 via forced mergers, closure of acute care units, centralization of more complex technology and rationing of nursing care. (galen.org)
  • Founded in 1948, the NHS goes beyond single-payer health care into truly socialized medicine: The government doesn't just pay for services, it also runs hospitals and employs doctors. (vox.com)
  • He puts the price tag of single-payer healthcare at $32.6 trillion over ten years. (texaspolicy.com)
  • In the U.S., we already have a single-payer health care system, called the Veterans Administration Hospital system. (texaspolicy.com)
  • Single-payer health care, as proposed in HB 676, would be much more like a universalized Medicaid, with all the accompanying problems and inefficiencies. (texaspolicy.com)
  • If you want the type of healthcare that Canada has, then say it, but that's not insurance, that's 'free' healthcare, single payer. (fullcontactpoker.com)
  • These are the typical political calculations we have come to expect from politicians more concerned with winning elections than solving our nation's challenges. (sunshinestatesarah.com)
  • Back then, rationing took place for the nation's greater good. (thinkadvisor.com)
  • Pity the poor American professor whose every junket to a European academic conference was marred by his continental colleagues' sneering over cocktails about his nation's shame du jour-Vietnam, Watergate, Iraq-or about American racism, capital punishment, or health care. (city-journal.org)
  • Although more complicated than an HMO or point-of-service plan, high-deductible health plans combined with health reimbursement arrangements and/or health savings accounts can mean significant savings. (pacificresearch.org)
  • Over the years because of the cost overages, Medi-Cal has been forced to decrease reimbursement to physicians and ration both care and access to care. (typepad.com)
  • greater government regulation of universal health coverage, reducing reimbursement for medical costs, cutting funding to public hospitals) seem however, to be more concerned with restricting universal healthcare coverage, rather than reforming it. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • He also argued for bundling payments and accountable care organizations, which reward doctors for teamwork and patient outcomes. (wikipedia.org)
  • Nor do health outcomes seem to be suffering. (vox.com)
  • So here, then, is the comparison: The UK spends barely half what we do, covers everyone, rarely lets cost prove a barrier for people seeking care, and boasts health outcomes better than ours. (vox.com)
  • In some cases outcomes are 'better' at a higher level of care for elective surgery And in other cases, such as infectious disease or critical illness, less common acute or chronic diseases they will be worse. (healthworkscollective.com)
  • This objective has been pursued despite experts warning that such a shift will ultimately lead (and in some cases has already led) to inequities and unjust disparities in access to healthcare and related health outcomes, especially in vulnerable populations who cannot afford private health insurance. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • In light of this, the ICN urges all nurses and policy makers to 'focus on the nursing role as a key priority and determinant for achieving equity, delivering universal health coverage and ultimately improving health outcomes globally. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • Achieving equity, delivering universal health coverage and ultimately improving health outcomes is going to require a collective effort on the part of a range of stakeholders, not just nurses. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • There is some strong evidence that ageism may contribute to negative health outcomes as a result. (amac.us)
  • The aim of the study was to evaluate the functioning of citizen dialogues in the Swedish health system in terms of representation, process, content, and outcomes. (bvsalud.org)
  • When President Obama told Barry Frank and John Kerry " We don't need a Public Option in the Affordable Care Act legislation " he was right. (typepad.com)
  • Now defending the Ryan Republican budget: Elizabeth McCaughey and her latest misrepresentations about the Affordable Care Act. (newrepublic.com)
  • Her argument is that the Republican budget won't keep seniors from getting the health care they need--and that the Affordable Care Act will. (newrepublic.com)
  • But the Affordable Care Act already does that anyway. (newrepublic.com)
  • First, they would have you believe the difference between their favored plan and the Affordable Care Act is entirely about the form of cost-cutting. (newrepublic.com)
  • The Republican budget would take much more money away from seniors than the Affordable Care Act would. (newrepublic.com)
  • When reformers threaten the status quo, the health industry blankets airwaves with ads warning that under the new system, there will be someone who says no to you: the government. (vox.com)
  • The Institute of Medicine reported in September 2012 that approximately $750B per year in U.S. health care costs are avoidable or wasted. (wikipedia.org)
  • The costs must come down, but not by rationing, government price controls or higher taxes. (pacificresearch.org)
  • Health insurance in New Jersey costs so much in part due to state mandates that require everything under the sun to be covered by the policies you can buy in New Jersey. (pacificresearch.org)
  • New Jersey tort laws are a travesty that adds significantly to health care costs through high malpractice insurance premiums and all those unnecessary tests we hear about due to physicians practicing defensive medicine. (pacificresearch.org)
  • Insurers' refusal to pay the high costs of this last-chance treatment did much to torpedo public trust in managed care during the 1990s. (healthworkscollective.com)
  • Once health care is a "free good" that government pays for, demand will soar and government costs will soar too. (iwf.org)
  • In President Obama's vision, he would have the government insure the uninsured, control costs, allow those who have health care to stay in the coverage, and improve the quality of the health care system. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • Just as the computer industry has made breathtaking leaps at ever-lower costs to consumers, so too could the health care industry were it similarly unfettered. (capitalismmagazine.com)
  • Governments with universal healthcare systems are increasingly bemoaning the costs of their systems and the need to contain these costs if affordable healthcare services are to be sustained into the future. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • In addition, yet another amnesty bill has been introduced in Congress at a time when it is obvious that a growth in the genera population will only exacerbate and increase the costs of educating the children of the newly enfranchised, formerly illegal immigrants, along with the cost providing medical care to those who cannot afford it, and incarcerating those who break the law. (blogspot.com)
  • With medical staffing shortages expected to increase with time, and health care costs rising, debates over proposed rationing of medical services to older folks are growing, especially in countries with government run healthcare that view cost as a major decision-making factor. (amac.us)
  • This approach has been denounced by Republicans and Democrats because it will lead to rationing, higher health-care costs, and diminished choices for patients. (sunshinestatesarah.com)
  • Put simply, this means physicians would be paid a salary they simply will not and frankly cannot afford to accept, not with medical student loans averaging more than $183,000 at graduation and 60-70 percent overhead costs for a primary care doctor's office. (texaspolicy.com)
  • Speaker after speaker said, in different ways, that when government controls health care, medical decisions inevitably are made based upon costs, because politicians over-promise on benefits and are unwilling to raise taxes to the levels necessary to finance their commitments. (galen.org)
  • Instead the democrats backdoored the republicans and basically destroyed the healthcare insurance industry, driving up costs, while forcing companies out of the healthcare insurance business. (fullcontactpoker.com)
  • If they have anything to be mad about it should be the lies and lack of coverage and shady tactics and outrageous costs that create so many problems for the very citizens the current private health care system is saying they can do a better job of helping than a public option would. (majorityrules.org)
  • Dentists are not involved significantly in the health care costs of this country. (luminous-landscape.com)
  • Who should participate in health care priority setting and how should priorities be set? (sagepub.com)
  • For example, it has been brought to public attention by Psychiatric Times and others that in the United States, CDC guidelines failed to identify residents in long-term care as high priority for COVID testing. (amac.us)
  • The gap between what is needed and what can be afforded means that priority setting is a necessary feature of all health systems, rich and poor. (who.int)
  • In the industrialized world, a number of countries, particularly those with well-developed social security and health care systems, have undertaken explicit priority-setting exercises as the scope of their publicly financed health services came under review. (who.int)
  • So it is disturbing that he is so intransigent in accepting the reality of rationing: are there other arguments over which he is similarly immovable? (chf2serve.org)
  • Similarly rationing by price. (chf2serve.org)
  • explaining reactions to explicit healthcare rationing. (sagepub.com)
  • Establish mechanisms for improving the healthcare service delivery system over the long-term, which is the primary means through which value would be improved. (wikipedia.org)
  • Most people believe that changes to our current system need to be made, but not quickly and not by politicians. (pacificresearch.org)
  • New Jersey's tort liability system is ranked second to worst in the nation, according to the 2008 study released by the nonpartisan Pacific Research Institute, which specializes in health care policy. (pacificresearch.org)
  • Britain spends a lot less than we do, yet in terms of broad culture, they have a similar value system to our own," says Hank Aaron, a Brookings Institution health economist and co-author of two books about the British health care system. (vox.com)
  • But the American health care system is uniquely fractured, opaque, and cruel in its approach to saying no. (vox.com)
  • The US health care system has been designed as if, with enormous intelligence and intent, it was to be as resistant to cost control as possible," Aaron says. (vox.com)
  • At the center of the UK system sits the National Health Service. (vox.com)
  • At the state and federal levels, mandated health benefits have been offered as a moderate, piecemeal approach to correcting problems in our health care system. (freedomworks.org)
  • There are serious problems in our health care system. (freedomworks.org)
  • This leads him to some form of individualised accounts on the strength of which individuals could make claims on the health care system. (colinjames.co.nz)
  • The electorate wants to believe the system can still deal with the issues and politicians are going to go on trying to meet that expectation. (colinjames.co.nz)
  • With the President's approval rating dropping rapidly, support for his massive overhaul on the best health care system in the world has also decreased. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • If you listen to Congressional Democrats and President Obama, you would think our health care system is broken and ineffective. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • Recently, the World Health Organization, an agency of the United Nations, ranked our health care system number 1 out of 191 counties for being responsive to patients' needs. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • While President Obama says he will improve the health care system with a government takeover, evidence from other government-run health care systems show otherwise. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • Politicians who support a universal health care system point to Europe and Canada, where government run systems are the norm. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • In fact, Great Britain, know for its government-run, universal health care system, has even worse survival rates than the European averages. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • Republicans have been opposed to a single party payer system and government control of the healthcare system. (typepad.com)
  • President Obama has created a healthcare system infrastructure that played on states' greed. (typepad.com)
  • The harm to the current healthcare system is incalculable. (blogspot.com)
  • The NHS in Scotland ruffled some feathers recently when internal documents that were presumably leaked suggested the NHS in Scotland is considering offering a two-tiered system where the wealthy have to pay for care and the non-wealthy get it free . (goodmanhealthblog.org)
  • The U.S. healthcare system has its own set of problems but the NHS struggles with problems of a different nature. (goodmanhealthblog.org)
  • From a strictly health point of view, the best medical system would provide universal access with a strong emphasis on illness prevention and social health. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • Canada rations medical care by under-funding the public system, bringing inequality through the back door. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • In England, "excessive deaths" were recorded in care homes, in what some describe as a "complete breakdown" of the system as it relates to seniors. (amac.us)
  • Will we demand a health care system that really tries to keep everyone healthy? (historynewsnetwork.org)
  • Or go back to rationing health care by income, by race, and by geography, kept in place by a political system that rations power and votes the same way? (historynewsnetwork.org)
  • The administrators of the Canadian health care system enjoy monopolist immunity from dissatisfied customers. (galen.org)
  • He said that the level of political involvement in the Canadian health care system appears to know no bounds, with even the quality of the toast served in Manitoba hospitals becoming a hot political issue. (galen.org)
  • It's obvious that the current health care system is class oriented in that it serves those with money best and does not believe in equality of care. (majorityrules.org)
  • At what level of the health system should they be made? (who.int)
  • In this article, we focus on citizen dialogues (CDs) in a health system that is politically governed and decentralised. (bvsalud.org)
  • Life expectancy in Britain is higher than in the US, and on measures of "mortality amenable to health care" - which specifically track deaths that could have been prevented by medical intervention - the US performs worse than the UK. (vox.com)
  • Proponents of mandated benefits argue that unless insurance companies and managed care providers are required to expand coverage for certain medical expenses, patients will suffer. (freedomworks.org)
  • Also overlooked is the problem of language and the tendency to treat the terms 'healthcare', 'hospital care', and 'medical care' as being synonymous, when they are not. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • That's not enough for everybody in a state with 30 million people, and state officials have said health care workers will be first in line for the shots, followed by nursing home staffers, emergency medical service drivers, and paramedics and home health aides. (reformaustin.org)
  • 1) In a capitalist world, all nations limit access to medical care, and Canada is no exception. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • Why Ration Medical Care? (susanrosenthal.com)
  • Who decides how much is reasonable to allocate to medical care? (susanrosenthal.com)
  • Most people consider medical care to be a human right and want everyone to have access. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • Because capitalism rules the world, its needs dominate and, therefore, medical care is rationed.Most people get only what they can pay for, or what employers, insurance companies and governments decide to provide. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • Ultimately, how much is spent on medical care is determined by the relative strength of the two classes. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • The only way to provide medical care as a human right is to provide universal access to it, so that everyone gets the care they need. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • The public is not permitted to question whether medical care should be rationed by class, because we are not allowed to question capitalism. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • Opposition to universal medical care is both political and financial. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • All existing medical systems are based on this model of rationed care, with different nations displaying variations. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • In the US, medical rationing is based on ability to pay. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • In 2004, the US government spent two trillion dollars on medical care, an average of $6,820 per person, more than any other government in the world, including those that offer universal medical care. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • The Pulitzer Prize winning activist's legacy included becoming the founding Director of the National Institute on Aging (NIA) of the National Institutes of Health, founder of the Department of geriatrics and adult development at Mount Sinai Medical Center, CEO of the International Longevity Center-USA, and namesake of the Columbia Aging Center. (amac.us)
  • The difference between the two plans is that the Republicans convert the program into a voucher, unleashing a competitive market that will reduce the cost of medical care, keeping it within reach of seniors. (newrepublic.com)
  • And, when it comes to long term care (or medical care, for that matter), having the "gold" means either having the money to self-fund care, or having an insurance policy ready to cover cost. (thinkadvisor.com)
  • However, President Lyndon Johnson threatened and bullied to get it passed in July 1965 with the intention of providing health insurance to people age 65 and older, regardless of income or medical history. (medpagetoday.com)
  • Primary health care (PHC), as envi- the health indicators of its population Medical University. (who.int)
  • Or pay for a hip or knee replacement for seniors, when palliative care might cost less? (iwf.org)
  • Thus, it is vital that their voices be heard by supporting organizations like AMAC, voting for politicians who support seniors, taking active roles in government and/or service organizations, and getting involved in and making informed decisions about healthcare. (amac.us)
  • Competition among plans, she implies, will reduce the cost of health care enough to keep it within the reach of seniors. (newrepublic.com)
  • This is why the Congressional Budget Office said unequivocally that the Republican budget would leave seniors with much greater exposure to health care expenses. (newrepublic.com)
  • It spends those dollars, immediately, often on programs that have nothing to do with health care for seniors. (blogspot.com)
  • Our government already pays hospitals each year to care for the uninsured. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • A few years ago roughly 25% of the care provided at many hospitals was paid privately as a way to boost hospital revenue. (goodmanhealthblog.org)
  • It has been suggested, and in cases documented, that younger people were often prioritized for care and resources at hospitals. (amac.us)
  • Seven weeks later, as the state once again closes businesses with virus cases skyrocketing and hospitals running out of intensive-care beds, Texas indeed appears to be a model: for how to squander a hopeful position through premature reopening, ignoring inconvenient data and fighting party-political turf wars. (skyscraperpage.com)
  • In contrast to the federal government, state governments have a wealth of experience in seeking out and implementing new health benefit mandates. (freedomworks.org)
  • That will beget shortages, which governments typically "cure" with rationing. (capitalismmagazine.com)
  • The woman who told us that the Clinton health care plan would prohibit doctors from accepting private cash payments ( it wouldn't have ) and that the Obama health care plan would "pressure the elderly to end their lives prematurely" ( it won't ) has a new op-ed. (newrepublic.com)
  • In a recent report, the Institute for Public Policy Research warned that the public trust in the NHS will collapse unless the government admits that health care must be rationed. (chf2serve.org)
  • Setting priorities in primary health care - on whose conditions? (sagepub.com)
  • That also means politicians emphasize primary care rather than expensive hospital care. (goodmanhealthblog.org)
  • He said it is essential that we refocus our health care delivery and financing on primary care and prevention and modernize our delivery infrastructure to address the chronic illnesses that are consuming an ever greater share of health care resources, especially obesity-related illnesses such as diabetes and hypertension. (galen.org)
  • These priorities may be expressed in terms of particular geographical areas, particular diseases, particular levels of health care (e.g. primary care and public health, rather than hospital services), particular types of interventions (e.g. immunization or contraceptive supplies), particular management systems (e.g. drug supply), or particular parts of the population (e.g. pregnant women, children under five). (who.int)
  • ABSTRACT This study looked at the comprehensiveness of the primary health care approach being applied in Pakistan's National Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (MNCH) Programme launched in 2005. (who.int)
  • The MNCH Programme is applying a selective primary care model. (who.int)
  • Pakistan's primary health care programme needs to be reviewed and revised according current thinking on community participation and inter-sectoral collaboration to accelerate progress towards achievement of Millennium Development Goals 4 and 5. (who.int)
  • The National Health Service is experiencing severe doctor shortages and doctors going out on strike, as it faces increasing demand from an aging population. (texaspolicy.com)
  • However, there currently is a health care bill that could pass the House after narrowly getting approval from the House Energy and Commerce Committee, with 5 Democrats joining 23 Republicans in opposition. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • Files/epa/Corbis Before he was assassinated, Dutch politician Pim Fortuyn rose to prominence with his outspoken opposition to Islamic extremism. (city-journal.org)
  • Who decides is the essential question of the healthcare debate. (iwf.org)
  • The ethics of healthcare rationing has been the subject of debate for decades. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • This debate has primarily rested on the issue of whether it is ever acceptable to ration healthcare and, if so, on what grounds. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • What is missing from the debate is the benefit we really want: care. (texaspolicy.com)
  • He notes how the health insurance industry has been working behind the scenes to drive the debate and most people don't see it. (majorityrules.org)
  • More recently, politicians have thrown around the term "health care rationing" as a way to scare consumers, but the fact is that health care rationing takes place every day. (thinkadvisor.com)
  • A report published by the Commonwealth Fund in December 2007 examined 15 federal policy options and concluded that, taken together, they had the potential to reduce future increases in health care spending by $1.5 trillion over the next 10 years. (wikipedia.org)
  • This would double what we spend annually on healthcare, more than $3.3 trillion in 2017. (texaspolicy.com)
  • Meanwhile, those working at the intersection of health policy and ethics have attempted to persuade pundits that the issue should not be about rationing and compromise, but about justification and appropriateness (Asch & Ubel 1997). (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • Rounds says he frets about what many in his party call "death panels" and he refers to as rationing panels - or government committees that could withhold authorization for certain procedures in certain situations, possibly with life-and-death results. (madvilletimes.com)
  • The ethics and reality of rationing in medicine. (sagepub.com)
  • Your clients will want to purchase long term care insurance not simply because there's a risk they may need it, but because there's an even greater risk that today's government programs will be forced to severely ration what's available. (thinkadvisor.com)
  • In essence, the wealthier were subsidizing the physician's care of the needy, "balance billing," in today's jargon. (medpagetoday.com)
  • The politicians, in a state like California, by following the federal money, ignored the will of the people. (typepad.com)
  • California politicians were bragging about the great deal the government had given them. (typepad.com)
  • No amount of money would make my insurance company sell healthcare insurance in the state of California. (fullcontactpoker.com)
  • Republicans felt government control would increase the cost of healthcare, increase inefficiency in the administration of healthcare care, ration healthcare and decrease access to healthcare. (typepad.com)
  • Improved access means providing more people with some, but not all, of the care they need. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • Universal access means no rationing and no class discrimination, so that the millionaire, the factory worker and the homeless addict all receive the best that society can provide. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • Politicians who talk about universal access really mean improved access. (susanrosenthal.com)
  • Dr. Valentin Petkantchin, of the Institut économique Molinari in France, said that France tops many world health care rankings but misplaced efforts at cost containment are leading to an erosion of quality, choice, and access. (galen.org)
  • In 1996, Congress and President Clinton enacted legislation that requires health insurance companies to provide - and requires consumers to buy - certain health benefits. (freedomworks.org)
  • When Congress hears from members of their respective districts, and their problems and questions about this legislation, Congressional backing for this type of health care change will decrease to match their voters' support. (thecollegepolitico.com)
  • When I listen to politicians arguing the merits of some piece of legislation, I am usually 99% sure they have no idea how demography--population--will affect the outcome of their grand schemes. (blogspot.com)
  • Should there be a cross-party coalition on health policy? (gponline.com)
  • The Scottish government's policy could not be clearer, our National Health Service must be maintained to the founding principles of Bevan - publicly owned, publicly operated, and free at the point of need. (goodmanhealthblog.org)
  • For many years, our health care blog was the only free enterprise health policy blog on the internet. (goodmanhealthblog.org)
  • Noted health policy expert Dr. Ken Thorpe of Emory University led the conference with a keynote speech highlighting the challenges and policy proposals under serious consideration in Washington. (galen.org)
  • Although some commentators believe rationing is not necessary, rationing by one means or another occurs in all healthcare systems. (chf2serve.org)
  • The 13 premiers agreed on energy conservation efforts, which usually means imposing communist-like rationing and moralizing on consumers, whom they believe to be clueless about saving their own money. (canadianliberty.com)
  • In the U.S. such patients are discharged to a nursing home or sent home with home care. (goodmanhealthblog.org)
  • The only options for unhappy patients are individual complaints to politicians, letters to the editor, and calls to open-line shows. (galen.org)
  • Their bottom line is not health care or the patients but profits. (majorityrules.org)
  • The UK has one of the most equitable health care systems in the world. (vox.com)
  • These findings has taken the lead in referring to collaborations should be useful to members of the international between Southerners as "South-to-South (S-to-S)," population, health, and nutrition communities by and the United Nations Centers of Excellence have suggesting possible future directions for incorporat recently been renamed the South-South Centers. (cdc.gov)
  • These plans cause employees to be more engaged and to begin to understand what health care services really cost. (pacificresearch.org)
  • And will the rising generation of voters - those who have grown up used to customised private sector goods and services - tolerate politicians making the decisions on their behalf? (colinjames.co.nz)
  • an ageing demographic, the 'undeserving poor') for their allegedly disproportionate over-utilisation of public healthcare services and the need to curb this costly 'wanton' demand. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • Many older people contribute to society and rely on health care services for their wellbeing. (amac.us)
  • This kind of ad is misleading because none of the preventive health services defined by the bill suddenly became free. (blogspot.com)
  • Partners under Contract No. 200-98-0415 for the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (cdc.gov)
  • Finally, we are grateful for the helpful insights and suggestions from numerous CDC, USAID, and external reviewers and for editorial and production assistance from Linda Elsner, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Technical Information and Editorial Services Branch, CDC. (cdc.gov)
  • Amazingly, the politicians create the problem and then blame it on the greedy insurance companies and specialist physicians. (pacificresearch.org)
  • Recently, the cost of health insurance in New Jersey has been rising more rapidly. (pacificresearch.org)
  • Get the latest updates about Insurance policies and Laws in the Healthcare industry for different geographical locations. (healthworkscollective.com)
  • Mandated benefits require health insurance companies to provide, and force consumers to buy, particular types of coverage. (freedomworks.org)
  • At first glance, health benefit mandates are very attractive, because they require insurance companies to expand health coverage. (freedomworks.org)
  • Federal health insurance mandates will only make these problems worse. (freedomworks.org)
  • Mandates often come about as the result of intense political lobbying by groups who want insurance companies to expand coverage for a particular type of health care. (freedomworks.org)
  • While additional health insurance may be desirable, the decision to buy it should be made by consumers, either on an individual basis or by their representatives through collective bargaining. (freedomworks.org)
  • In the years ahead, successful insurance professionals will find themselves using the concept of rationing to establish the value of purchasing long term care insurance. (thinkadvisor.com)
  • Practicing physician Dr. Alphonse Crespo said that Switzerland's imposition of an individual mandate for insurance in 1994 has caused a domino effect toward centralized power over the health sector. (galen.org)
  • This entry was posted in Congress and tagged CIGNA , CommonDreams.org , health care , health insurance industry , public option . (majorityrules.org)
  • and comparative analysis of the cost of treatment across various healthcare providers to identify best practices. (wikipedia.org)
  • In 2016, the Commonwealth Fund, our partners on this project , surveyed 11 high-income countries about cost-related barriers to care. (vox.com)
  • A union that goes on strike for more benefits would see some or all of the negotiated benefit increase soaked up by the cost of a mandated health benefit. (freedomworks.org)
  • In 2015, the theme Nurses: A force for change - care effective, cost effective has been adopted for International Nurses Day. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • More consumers will be forced to ration virtually every decision that involves cost. (thinkadvisor.com)
  • However, there is little evidence that these methods have significantly influenced health spending. (who.int)
  • BACKGROUND: Globally, studies illustrate different approaches among health care professionals to decision making about caesarean section (CS) and that attitudes regarding the extent to which a CS on maternal request (CSMR) can be granted vary significantly, both between professionals and countries. (bvsalud.org)
  • By sticking to his belief that rationing has the strict meaning of a defined ration of care per person, Sir Michael risks accusations of using words for political ends. (chf2serve.org)
  • Despite health expenditure in Australia reportedly reaching a record low for the period 2012-2013, there has been a political campaign of spreading false and misleading information about Medicare's sustainability (Keast 2015).This misinformation has included 'blaming' vulnerable populations (eg. (homeworkhelp-experts.com)
  • The New York Times and others developed a pretty cool tool that calculates a person's place in line based on geography, health and demographic information. (reformaustin.org)
  • It puts politicians in a pickle, though, because there's not enough for everyone right now. (reformaustin.org)
  • Politicians, however, refuse to take serious action or engage in honest conversation about the issue for fear of alienating their voter base. (nextnewsnetwork.com)
  • In the larger Oxford English Dictionary on CD-ROM the participle 'rationing' is defined separately as 'raising the price of a commodity so as to restrict the number of people who can afford to buy it. (chf2serve.org)
  • The above discussion notwithstanding, Medicine and Social Justice blogger Josh Freeman made the very good point that health should generally not be considered a commodity , but a social good. (blogspot.com)
  • State politicians say a way of getting more federal money into the states and perhaps attracting people back to the state will be by expanding Medicaid. (typepad.com)
  • From the point of view of politicians with a limited budget, is it worth spending a lot on, say, a patient with late-stage cancer where the odds of remission are long? (iwf.org)
  • Twelve years is a long time when you're a politician - two terms in the Senate, three in the White House and six in the House of Representatives. (deseret.com)
  • The rationing won't last long, hopefully, if vaccine manufacturing is speedy enough. (reformaustin.org)
  • And, when it comes to the need for long term care, we're not talking about just an irritating rash - we're talking about facilities that won't be staffed to provide adequate care. (thinkadvisor.com)
  • Health workers already have the best spot in line - an easily defended decision to protect the people whose exposure is greatest. (reformaustin.org)
  • and millions more people at high risk because of their work conditions - think of outbreaks at meat-processing plants and prisons - or their health conditions. (reformaustin.org)
  • Will politicians still be able to harvest votes by repeating ad nauseum that America is the greatest country on earth, pointing to their flag pins, while we mourn all those people who died because America wasn't even close to the best at dealing with a global crisis? (historynewsnetwork.org)
  • Cutting benefits, raising the age of benefits (considering that people live longer now), or privatizing retirement plans similar to what Australia and Chile have done - none of which American politicians are eager to do. (nextnewsnetwork.com)
  • And so it has to be rationed, by politicians denying funding and by clinicians making arbitrary decisions. (colinjames.co.nz)
  • Healthcare professions and the public alike want Sir Michael and his institute to be rational, logical, and impartial in their decisions. (chf2serve.org)