Do Democrats Face “Unmitigated Disaster” at the Polls if They Pass Reform?

Republicans continue to warn Democrats that if they pass health care reform, they will lose their seats in November.

For what it’s worth, I believe that a fair number of incumbents (Republicans as well as Democrats) will lose their jobs in November because unemployment will remain high. In good times, Americans vote for the person they like: charisma carries the day. In bad times, they vote their pocketbooks. Health care reform will not be the issue that decides elections in November.

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T.R. Reid Hosts a Presentation of Money-Driven Medicine on Link TV

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

 

Special: Money-Driven Medicine—Throughout March,
Beginning March 13

 

In
this Link TV special presentation of Alex
Gibney's
Money-Driven Medicine, get to the heart of what's really
going on with health care in America, no matter which side of the debate you
land on.

Money-Driven Medicine is the first and only documentary taking a
systemic look at the forces underlying — and often undermining — American
health care. Produced by Academy Award-winner Alex Gibney and inspired by
Century Foundation Health Care Fellow Maggie
Mahar's
acclaimed book by the same name, the film offers a
behind-the-scenes look at the $2.6 trillion U.S. health care system, how it
went so terribly wrong and what it will take to fix it. Money-Driven
Medicine
lays out the policy challenges for the next decade if we are to
provide all Americans effective, high quality, patient-centered care while
containing costs and avoiding unnecessary, even risky procedures.

 Joining this special presentation of Money-Driven Medicine is guest T.R. Reid, author of "The Healing of
America: A Global Quest for Better, Cheaper and Fairer Health Care," with
commentary on the film.

For DVDs, videos clips and more
information
on Money-Driven Medicine,
now available in four versions of different lengths (all on one DVD), please
visit www.moneydrivenmedicine.org

For
airdates, and information on where you can find Link TV, via satellite or on Cable in your area, see
below.

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Pelosi Makes another Wise Decision

Late Thursday the Associated Press reported that “House Democratic leaders have abandoned a long struggle to appease the most ardent abortion opponents in their ranks, gambling that they can secure the support for President Barack Obama's sweeping health care legislation with showdown votes looming next week.

“In doing so, they are all but counting out a small but potentially decisive group whose views on abortion coverage have become the principal hang-up for Democrats fighting to achieve the biggest change in American health care in generations.”

Meanwhile Thursday evening Igor Volsky reported: “Stupak’s Abortion Gang Falling Apart as Pro-Life Members Admit Senate Bill Won’t Fund Abortions.”  

This is, I think, a final turning point in the fight for health care reform. And Pelosi is doing what I thought she would do. I couldn’t imagine that the first woman to become House Speaker would let a relatively small group of people who oppose “a woman’s right to choose” bury health care reform.

Granted, many Americans have misgivings about abortion. When faced with the choice, many women wouldn’t choose abortion for themselves. But the majority of Americans believe that women should have a choice, and they don’t feel that the government–or Bart Stupak– should make that decision for them

 

Libel Laws Stifle Scientific Debate

The editor of the British Medical Journal, Fiona Godlee, writes that “organized sceptism,” or the  “requirement that scientific claims be exposed to critical scrutiny before they are accepted” is one of the basic tenets of good science.Yet in the UK, where a firestorm is raging over libel lawsuits being used to silence scientific debate, that  “critical scrutiny” could land a skeptic in court.

Right now, the legal case garnering the most attention involves British journalist Simon Singh, author of a Guardian article that strongly questioned the benefits of chiropractic treatments for some pediatric problems. Singh, who is also co-author of the book “Trick or Treatment? Alternative Medicine on Trial” wrote;

“The British Chiropractic Association claims that their members can help treat children with colic, sleeping and feeding problems, frequent ear infections, asthma and prolonged crying, even though there is not a jot of evidence. This organisation is the respectable face of the chiropractic profession and yet it happily promotes bogus treatments.”

The British Chiropractic Association demanded that The Guardian print a retraction of Singh’s article. The newspaper refused to retract the piece but offered the group the opportunity to publish a rebuttal. Instead, they chose to sue Singh for libel. The BCA claims that the wording of the article would lead the public to believe that the chiropractic group was being consciously dishonest.

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Sarah Palin Admits Going to Canada for Health Care– Why?

How rich is this?

Over at “Think Progress,” Igor Volksy reports that, while speaking to a crowd in Calgary, Canada last weekend Sarah Palin revealed a tidbit about her life growing up not far from Whitehorse:

“We used to hustle over the border for health care we received in Canada,” she said. “And I think now, isn't that ironic?”  

Isn’t it?  (I can imagine Palin, tilting her head  slightly to one side, gazing into thin air, and referring to something that she will never understand: irony. )

As Volsky points out, this admission doesn't exactly square with Palin's stand on health care. She has warned us all that U.S. health-care reform will lead to “socialism” and that Canada needs to reform its health care system to “let the private sector take over.”

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Peggy Noonan vs. the New England Journal of Medicine

Let’s put to rest, once and for all, the idea–or rather, the  notion
(it’s not even an idea,  just a vague impression, based on
hearsay)–that the health reform legislation now under discussion
includes no plans for containing health care spending.  

The
reform proposal now being debated in Washington would put a brake on
health care inflation. As an eye-opening essay in the most recent
(March 4) issue of the New England Journal of Medicine explains, Medicare
would, at last, have the power it needs to lead the way,  not by cutting
benefits
, but by restructuring how it does business.

Meanwhile,
pundits such as Peggy Noonan feel free to pronounce health care
reform “a disaster” and “a colossal waste of time
”without giving any
indication that she has ever read the legislation. Presumably Noonan
bases  the opinions that she expresses in her recent Wall Street
Journal
Op-ed on  what other pundits have said.

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Hospital Breaks New Ground In Luxury

Below, an excerpt from yesterday’s Philadelphia Inquirer (March 3, 2010)

I’m not writing a post about this story because the piece speaks for itself. It reveals much about this nation’s healthcare priorities. Also, beware of for-profit“Wellness” programs. Good health is, of course, an admirable goal. But staying well doesn’t have to be this expensive.

But I am bold-facing a few of the high-points or the story and in two or three places, you’ll find my comment in red.

Thanks to HealthBeat reader Dr. Brad F. for calling my attention to this story.  (He dared me to read it. Brad likes to visualize me literally hitting the ceiling. )

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Will Reform Pass? Don’t Believe Everything That You Read

I remain all but certain that comprehensive healthcare reform legislation will pass this spring. The New York Times isn’t sure, but Nancy Pelosi is. My money is on Pelosi. “Every legislative vote is a heavy lift around here,” she told reporters earlier today. “You assume nothing."  But she added, "We will pass a bill."  I agree. The process will be ugly, but they will get it done.

Unless the president and Pelosi have signed a secret political suicide pact, they wouldn’t be doing this unless they were quite sure they could pull it off.

Most of the press is more skeptical than I am. But I’ve been a journalist long enough to know that you don't sell many newspapers with a headline that reads: “Game Over.”  Uncertainty is far more interesting; the media will do its best to keep the suspense alive to the very end.  

That's fine. Americans should be paying attention to this process. And those who want reform should contact their representatives.  But don't let the coverage rattle you.

President Obama’s Speech—A Different Tone

This afternoon, President Obama spoke with the confidence and determination of a leader who knows that he is right—and that he has won.

He is no longer pleading for bi-partisan co-operation. His final proposal includes all Republican suggestions that reformers find useful. The president realizes that some will not agree with his plan. As he said at the end of the Summit, “That’s why we have elections.” Those who disagree can make their beliefs known at the polls.

In the meantime, President Obama is saying: “this is my proposal.”  He would not speak with such authority unless he was quite certain that the Democrats have the votes to pass this legislation.

You will find my comments, in red, interspersed throughout the speech.

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