Business Leaders Try to Undermine Reform

In an 11th hour attack on health care reform, a coalition of employer groups, including the Chamber of Commerce, wrote to House Speaker Pelosi and Republican Leader Boehner at the end of October opposing the Democrats' health reform bill. (The group includes The Business Roundtable, the American Benefits Council, the Corporate Health Care Coalition, the National Association of Manufacturers, the National Association of Wholesaler-Distributors, the National Coalition on Benefits, the National Retail Federation and the Retail Industry Leaders Association.)

Over at THCB, two commentators have suggested that these business leaders may “Send reform back to the drawing board.”

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If Conservatives Ran Heath Care . . . and We Had a Single-Payer System

[Below an Op-ed that I wrote for the Washington Post’s “Outlook” section. It appeared yesterday Sunday, November 15, 2009.  Many readers have commented on the Washington Post website, but I’d also be interested in hearing from HealthBeat readers here.]
                                          ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

If you're a progressive like me, and you're upset by the Stupak amendment, which bars federally subsidized insurance from covering abortions, consider this: What if we had a single-payer health-care system and someone like Jeb Bush were running the country?

Many liberals remain angry and disappointed that single-payer legislation never stood a chance in Washington. From the beginning the Obama administration made it clear: we cannot wipe the slate clean and start over from scratch; we must build on what we have. Yet, to single-payer advocates, a government-run health-care system seemed such an obvious way to put patients ahead of profits. I understand their frustration.

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Reform: Looking at the Glass Half-Full Part 2

The Truth about the Public Option

For reasons I don’t understand, progressive pundits have been swallowing Congressional Budget Office Director Douglas Elmendorf’s dispiriting speculation about the public plan, hook, line and sinker.

Elmendorf claims that in 2019 (six years after reform begins), less than 10 percent of the population will be shopping in the Insurance Exchange where there can choose between private insurance and the public plan.  Few will choose the public plan, Elmendorf asserts, and many of those who do will be in poor health. The government plan will be puny—giving it little market power when negotiating with providers. Thus, he declares, the public plan will be more expensive than private insurance. (This may be why Senator Joe Lieberman has claimed that the public option will somehow add to the deficit)

What is remarkable is that if you read Elmendorf’s  commentary you will find that he has no hard evidence to back up  his claims. His assessment is based on “probably’s.”

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Screenings of Money-Driven Medicine in Boston and Seattle Nov. 18 & Nov. 22

Boston: HealthBeat reader, nurse and healthcare advocate Ann Malone has passed along this invitation: Please join us for the screening of Money Driven Medicine: What’s Wrong with America’s Healthcare and How to Fix It” on Wednesday, November 18th and 6:00 PM at Northeastern University,.

UPDATE "Based on an overwhelming response, " the location has been changed to Room 101 in Churchill Hall, Northeastern University.

The film will be followed by a panel discussion featuring healthcare leaders and policymakers in Massachusetts.

Seattle: Northwest Film Forum on the 22nd at 8:00pm.
click here for information
http://www.nwfilmforum.org/live/page/calendar/1132

Patient Safety Forum and Screening of Money-Driven Medicine in Washington D.C. Tuesday, Nov 17

Consumers Union's “Safe Patient Project” is hosting a Patient Safety Forum at the Kaiser Family Foundation in Washington, D.C. (1330 G Street, NW) Tuesday, November 17, 10 a.m. – 3:30.

  

The forum marks the 10-year anniversary of the Institute of Medicine (IOM) study on medical errors, “To Err Is Human.”  Consumers Union  explains: “Unlike most anniversaries, we’re not gathering advocates, journalists and policymakers to celebrate–we’re gathering to call attention to the fact that we find ourselves asking the same question the IOM asked 10 years ago: ‘Must we wait another decade to be safe in our health system?’” 

 

I’ll be speaking at the forum.  The conferencewill be webcast live for online viewing. For more information on the forum and the webcast, go to  http://www.safepatientproject.org/2009/11/delaying_is_deadlyjoin_our_pat.html 

 

 

Following the forum there will be a reception from 3:30 to 5.

 

At 5:00 Consumers Union is hosting a free screening of Money-Driven Medicine, the film based on my book, produced by Alex Gibney,  the Academy-Award winning documentarian best known for “Taxi to the Dark Side” and “Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room. ”  I’ll be answering questions following the film.  

 

(Kaiser Family Foundation: 1330 G St. NW, Washington DC)  If you want to attend the screening, please RSVP here http://cu.convio.net/site/PageNavigator/spp_MDM_DC   Seating is limited.

The Slaughter at Fort Hood Is Not About One Individual

We Have Been Driving Our Soldiers to a Breaking Point

The
Ft. Hood massacre is not about one soldier suddenly “snapping.”And
whether Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan was a devout Muslim or not is of little
importance.

This tragedy calls attention to the fact that as we
send young men and women into what many now realize are unwinnable wars
where they will see unimaginable horrors, we are risking, not only
their young bodies, but their minds.

Below, a post I wrote last
year about how the U.S. Army has ignored the serious mental health
problems of our soldiers.  Instead of helping them, it has attacked
them, accusing them of “faking” mental health problems. In the post, I
quote a February 2008 VFA report: “the leader of the mental health
treatment clinic at Fort Drum asked soldiers not to discuss their
mental health problems with people outside the base. Attempts to keep
matters ‘in house’ foster an atmosphere of secrecy and shame,” the
report observed “that is not conducive to proper treatment for
combat-related mental health injuries.”

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If You, a Friend, or a Relative Live in New Jersey

Money-Driven Medicine, a film produced by Alex Gibney (best known for Enron: the Smartest Guys in the Room), will be screened Tuesday night (Nov. 10) 5:00 – 6:30 p.m. at the New Jersey State Museum Auditorium, 205 West State Street, Trenton, New Jersey.

Following the film, I’ll be answering questions about health care reform.

Admission is free.

Money-Driven Medicine
is one of the strongest documentaries I have seen in years and could
not be more timely.  The more people who see and talk about it, the
more likely we are to get serious and true health care reform.”

 Bill Moyers

If You Haven’t Seen Money-Driven Medicine, the Film . . .

Based on my book (Money-Driven Medicine: The Real Reason Health Care
Costs So Much) , produced by Academy-Award winning documentary
film-maker  Alex Gibney (best known for “Enron: The Smartest Guys In
the Room”), a free streaming video of the 90-minute documentary is available throughout the month of November.

 Go to www.moneydrivenmedicine.org,
see “Watch-In for America’s health in the upper-right hand corner,
scroll down a few inches to “To learn more and participate in the
Watch-In click here.”  If you would like to buy the DVD, It’s now available for home use at an affordable price. Go to www.moneydrivenmedicine.org
and on the left hand side of the page, see “Buy, rent, screen” or call
877-811-7495.  Special prices for high schools and libraries as well as
hospitals and universities.

(Neither I nor The Century Foundation makes any profit on these sales. The film’s distributor, California Newsreel is also a non-profit. )

Intermountain Healthcare — Proof That U.S. Hospitals Can Improve

(We Should Not Scoff at the Medicare Pilot Programs in Reform Legislation)

I urge everyone to read this story by David Leonhardt in this Sunday’s (November 8) New York Times.  (Thanks to HealthBeat reader Lisa Lindel for spotting it. )
Leonhardt
profiles Intermountain Healthcare, a network of hospitals and clinics
in Utah and Idaho that President Obama and others have described as a
model for health reform.

Leonhardt concludes:

“If
you simply looked at Intermountain’s overall results — the good
outcomes and low costs — you might be tempted to dismiss them as a
product of the environment
. Utah has the youngest population of
any state, as well one of the lowest rates of alcohol and tobacco use.
More than half of the state’s residents are Mormons. This homogeneity
creates a noticeable sense of community, even a sense of mission, among
many Intermountain doctors and nurses.

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