Posts Tagged ‘California Nurses Association’

SB 810 Passes Senate Health Committee

May 5th, 2011

Facing possible extinction for the first time in four years, the single payer bill SB 810 pulled through, passing the Senate Health Committee on Wednesday on a 5-3 vote, state Sen. Mark Leno’s office reported. Up until a couple of days ago, committee chair Sen. Ed Hernandez had been undecided, putting the bill in jeopardy. But intense pressure from single payer advocates across the state and a massive phone campaign finally secured a “yes” vote from Hernandez. In addition, hundreds of single payer supporters descended upon the Capitol in Sacramento to attend the hearing.

Leno’s office released the following statement after the vote:

“California is being overrun by out-of-control health care costs, which has a significant impact on the state budget, businesses and families,” said Senator Leno, D-San Francisco. “Our single payer plan not only guarantees universal coverage for all Californians, but also contains health care costs, which is essential to solving our state budget crisis in the long term.”

SB 810 creates a private-public partnership to provide every California resident medical, dental, vision, hospitalization and prescription drug benefits and allows patients to choose their own doctors and hospitals. This single payer, “Medicare for All” type of program works by pooling together the money that government, employers and individuals already spend on health care and putting it to better use by cutting out the for-profit middle man.

“We must continue to fight for healthcare for every Californian,” said DeAnn McEwen, President of the California Nurses Association and a nurse at Long Beach Memorial Medical Center. “Federal reform does not insure that all Californians will receive the care they need. President Obama noted that if states come up with a better plan, they could move forward. Californians deserve the best. Senate Bill 810 will provide every Californian with an excellent standard of care, improve health outcomes, and finally get healthcare costs under control.”

California currently spends $200 billion annually on a fragmented, inefficient health care system that wastes 30% of every dollar on administration. Under Senate Bill 810, that wasteful spending is eliminated. The bill creates no new spending, and in fact, studies show that the state would save $8 billion in the first year under this single-payer health care plan.

“Most doctors support a public-private partnership like Medicare, but with everybody covered, better benefits, and lower costs,” said Dr. Henry L. Abrons, president of Physicians for a National Health Program, California Chapter. “We need to spend our precious resources wisely. Federal reform won’t accomplish these things, but SB 810 will.”

“Health Care for All realizes that the only way to provide better health care for absolutely everyone, for less money than we’re now spending, and control rising costs, is to pass a bill like SB 810 and then make the necessary changes to finance it,” said Greg Brockbank, chair of Health Care for All, California. “We stand ready to do our part in making that happen, and then to help successfully implement it.”

SB 810 will now move forward to the Senate Appropriations Committee. It’s imperative that we keep calling and writing our legislators so we can get the bill through the entire Senate a fourth time, then on to the Assembly, and finally to Gov. Jerry Brown’s desk. Along with Vermont – which is poised to pass its own single payer bill – we have the chance to show the rest of the country that single payer works, and is the best and most fiscally responsible way to solve our healthcare crisis. Full care for all, for less!

To find your state Senator, click on this link. To find your Assemblymember, click this link.

Sylvia@californiaonecare.org

Single Payer Activist Debates Libertarian Over Health Care

February 15th, 2011

This video from the independent broadcaster, The Real News Network, aired on Jan. 18, and features Donna Smith of the California Nurses Association debating Shikha Dalmia, a senior analyst for the libertarian think tank, Reason Foundation. This segment took place before Republican efforts in Congress to repeal the federal health reform law failed. Both Smith and Dalmia criticize the reform law, but prefer very different alternatives to it. Smith is a single payer advocate who was featured in Michael Moore’s movie, Sicko. Dalmia favors so-called free-market solutions to the healthcare crisis. One should be aware, however, that the Reason Foundation has received funding from Charles and David Koch, the billionaire businessmen who have helped bankroll the anti-tax Tea Party movement and who are behind efforts to undermine health reform.

Dalmia’s arguments here are so riddled with errors and half-truths, it makes one’s head spin. Smith holds her own in the debate, but neither she, nor the moderator completely knocks down Dalmia’s claims. First of all, Dalmia rejects the fact that the United States spends about 17% of GDP on health care. Instead, she makes a dodge, preferring to focus on the rate in health care spending increases, which has indeed slowed recently.

She also says that France and Germany are single payer systems that spend the most in GDP on health care. Wrong again. France and Germany do not have single payer systems. Both countries have Bismarck-style systems similar to the U.S., in which private health providers and private insurance companies deliver care. Where France and Germany differ from the U.S. is that the insurance companies in those countries are prohibited from making a profit on basic health care, and they are heavily regulated. In fact, Switzerland, which also relies on private health providers and regulated private insurance companies, spends the most after the U.S. — nearly 12% of GDP.

Contrary to what Dalmia claims, healthcare spending in the U.S. is out of control because of deregulation in the healthcare industry. Japan, which also has privatized health providers and insurance companies, is famously aggressive at controlling costs. For more information on healthcare systems around the world, read T.R. Reid’s excellent book, The Healing of America: A Global Quest for Better, Cheaper, and Fairer Health Care. In his chapter on Japan, Reid provides the perfect counter-example to Dalmia’s assertion that innovation only arises from “competitive” (libertarian-speak for “unregulated”) markets. Reid writes about how the Japanese government’s tight cost controls prompted MRI manufacturers in the country to invent smaller and less expensive scanners.

Next, Dalmia says that you can’t “cram 35 million people in the system and not go bankrupt.” Ridiculous. We’re going bankrupt now because the millions of uninsured aren’t contributing to the risk pool, and when they end up seeking care in emergency rooms, that drives up costs for everyone else. Then Dalmia says Medicare does a bad job at controlling costs. A big reason for this is our fragmented, profit-driven system. Also, the program was partially privatized after then-President George W. Bush enacted his big Medicare drug giveaway to Big Pharma in 2003. In addition, the government is prohibited from negotiating drug prices for Medicare recipients, contributing to spiraling costs. Even so, the growth in healthcare costs for Medicare has been slower than for private insurance.

What’s most laughable is how Dalmia complains that any sort of government involvement in health care is a civil liberties violation – that the government will end up making healthcare decisions for people. But, the private insurance companies do that already. The insurance companies dictate what kind of treatment people can have and whether they get any treatment at all — sometimes resulting in deadly consequences. Under a publicly funded, privately delivered, single payer system, patients and their doctors – not government bureaucrats or insurance company bean counters – make the healthcare decisions.

I agree with Dalmia that the U.S. needs to end the connection between employment and health insurance. But her solution is to essentially throw every American into the individual private insurance marketplace, where people would be at the mercy of insurance companies. This would make an already bad situation infinitely worse. With nearly half the U.S. population having preexisting conditions, the 50 million uninsured would quickly grow to over 100 million uninsured. That situation would drive up costs to unimaginable heights. And the deregulated environment would rapidly result in more insurance company monopolies. But Dalmia’s last idea is a real head scratcher. She suggests that to help people who can’t afford insurance in this newly deregulated environment, they should receive government-subsidized tax credits! First of all, any tax credit the government might provide would probably be paltry, and not enough to cover any major medical treatment. Second, I thought Dalmia was a libertarian. Aren’t tax-hating libertarians supposed to be against government-subsidized anything?

Sylvia@californiaonecare.org

365 Ad # 349 Deborah Burger

February 12th, 2011

365 Ad # 349

Deborah Burger, President of the 85,000-member California Nurses Association, says that their research has shown that a single payer healthcare system would stimulate the economy and create jobs. And it would mean that patient care would be nurses’ first priority. That’s why they support California OneCare.

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California Insurers Agree to Delay Rate Hikes

February 2nd, 2011

Aetna, Anthem Blue Cross, PacifiCare and the last holdout, Blue Shield, have agreed to Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones’ request to delay proposed rate hikes for 60 days. The first three companies relented last week. It took public pressure, notably from the California Nurses Association, to finally get Blue Shield to announce a hold off on increases yesterday. From The Sacramento Bee:

Blue Shield bowed to public pressure Tuesday and agreed to delay plans to raise premiums by as much as 59 percent for customers who buy insurance on their own.

The move gives nearly 200,000 Californians at least a 60-day reprieve from hikes that were scheduled to take effect March 1.

Instead, the increases will take effect no sooner than May, if state regulators and a company-hired actuary find nothing that could prevent or further delay the new rates from going into effect.

Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones had called on the insurer, as well as three others, to postpone rate increases until his department could review the rates for compliance with state and federal rules.

Aetna, Anthem Blue Cross and PacifiCare complied with the request, but Blue Shield repeatedly refused.

On Tuesday, the company announced its change of heart.

“Blue Shield of California will comply with Commissioner Jones’ request to delay for 60 days our rate increases that were scheduled for March 1,” Blue Shield of California Chairman and CEO Bruce Bodaken said in a statement.

To read more: http://www.sacbee.com/2011/02/02/3370169/blue-shield-agrees-to-delay-increase.html#ixzz1CpswWfo8

Commissioner Jones can only do so much. This 60-day delay is merely a Band-Aid on the gushing wound that is the for-profit health insurance industry. The people of California can no longer afford the status quo. If we truly want to stop these rake hikes, the private, for-profit insurance model of health care has to be eliminated and replaced with the more affordable publicly run, privately delivered health care model that SB 810 can provide.

Sylvia@californiaonecare.org