Posts Tagged ‘Health Care Reform’

Event in Santa Monica This Sunday: The State of Healthcare 2012 and Beyond

March 23rd, 2012

Reminder: Andrew McGuire Speaking

This Sunday Afternoon in Santa Monica:

THE STATE OF HEALTHCARE

2012 AND BEYOND

With

California’s Insurance Commissioner DAVE JONES
California OneCare’s ANDREW MCGUIRE
Consumer Watchdog’s CARMEN BALBER

SUNDAY, MARCH 25, 2 – 4:30pm

William Turner Gallery, Bergamot Station

2525 Michigan Ave., Santa Monica

FREE ADMISSION, FREE PARKING & REFRESHMENTS

Dear OneCare Supporters,

California OneCare supporters are cordially invited to this special PPDC* event, an informative discussion on the state of healthcare reform today, including the latest on the Affordable Care Act of 2010, California’s Single Payer movement, and information on a critical ballot initiative for controlling health insurance rate increases.

Our own Andrew McGuire will discuss next steps for single payer legislation in Sacramento and cover key strategies developed by California’s coaltion for single payer, Campaign for A Healthy California. There will be a Q & A session following the three presentations.

We thank Susan Haskell, and the Pacific Palisades Democratic Club for their unwavering support of California’s health care reform movement.

Sincerely,

George Savage, Secretary, Board of Directors, California OneCare

Could Repeal of the Affordable Care Act Propel America Toward Single Payer?

March 20th, 2012

On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court will begin hearing oral arguments over the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act. Many believe the outcome will be a watershed moment for health reform, and could even affect the November presidential race. Attorneys general from 26 states with Republican-controlled legislatures are suing the federal government to repeal the ACA. At issue is the individual mandate, the requirement that all Americans purchase private health insurance if they aren’t covered through an employer or eligible for Medicare or Medicaid. The opposing states argue that the mandate is an unconstitutional expansion of Congress’ power to regulate the economy. The Obama administration counters that the mandate is necessary to bring everyone into the system so as to prevent taxpayers from being burdened with the hospital costs of those who don’t have insurance. The mandate doesn’t go into effect until 2014, when the state health insurance exchanges are scheduled to start.

However, some single payer advocates, are siding with the ACA’s Republican opponents, arguing that the public shouldn’t be forced to buy private health insurance. Unlike GOP critics who want the ACA replaced with either vouchers or health savings accounts, single payer advocates instead want Medicare immediately expanded to all Americans. Fifty doctors and two non-profit groups – Single Payer Action and It’s Our Economy – have filed a friend-of-the-court brief in favor of striking down the individual mandate.

“It is not necessary to force Americans to buy private health insurance to achieve universal coverage,” said Russell Mokhiber of Single Payer Action. “There is a proven alternative that Congress didn’t seriously consider, and that alternative is a single payer national health insurance system.”

The national arm of the Green Party has also called for the justices to strike down the individual mandate.

“America needs real universal health care, not a direct public subsidy in the form of a health insurance mandate to sustain the private insurance industry,” said Barry Hermanson, Green candidate for Congress in California’s 12th District (San Francisco) (http://www.barryhermanson.org). “President Obama and Democrats in Congress could have introduced a Medicare For All bill, which would cover every American and drastically reduce medical costs by removing insurance companies from control over our health care. Instead they acted in the interests of insurance and other corporate lobbies. Even with the mandate, the ACA leaves 23 million Americans without coverage and many millions more with inadequate health care.”

If the Supreme Court overturns the individual mandate, thus crippling a key provision of the ACA, or strikes down the law entirely, could we see a renewed demand from the public to expand Medicare? Would the United States be forced to adopt single payer sooner rather than later? Single payer advocates who oppose the ACA certainly hope so. It’s possible that the public will give national health insurance another look, especially since Republican alternatives like vouchers and health savings accounts don’t lead to universal coverage and don’t control costs. The cost of health care will continue to spiral out of control. Thousands of people will continue to die prematurely. Thousands more will continue to go bankrupt. This much is clear: expanding Medicare to all doesn’t involve a mandate and threat of a fine. Membership is automatic. Should the ACA be repealed, the case for national health insurance will be stronger than ever and lawmakers will have to listen.

Sylvia@californiaonecare.org

Why They Don’t Listen – How We Can Change That

February 10th, 2012

Dear Supporters,

The California Senate was only two votes short of passing SB 810 last week. But six Democrats refused to support the bill when it was put to a vote in the California Senate. You may have been one of the thousands of Californians who called these senators urging them to change their minds and vote for the people of California. You showed them what real democracy looks like. They didn’t listen.

It turns out their allegiance was not to us, their constituents.
It was to those who are profiting from our current broken health care system.

Follow the Money

*Insurance Industry may include auto, life and other insurance

Together, you and I and others like us can turn this around.

Go to the ACT! page on the California OneCare website to see how you can get involved in building a movement for single payer that cannot be ignored. There you will find activities, materials and projects to help educate people in your community about single payer, raise money for the campaign, plan actions with friends, and get endorsements from your community leaders.

Let’s reach every Californian with the message that a single payer health care system will give all of us access to the health care we need at a cost we can all afford.

Become a monthly donor and help us to help you spread the word!

Over the next months we will continue to improve our website. We need your help to become a fully interactive site that will allow supporters like you to communicate and plan activities with others in your community. Your monthly contribution in whatever amount you choose will help make this happen.

Thank you for your continuing support for single payer and our work.

Sincerely,

Jeanne Ertle
Vice Chair, California OneCare

Don McCanne, MD: A word about the Susan G. Komen Foundation

February 7th, 2012

Editor’s note: The Komen Foundation has since reversed its decision regarding funding to Planned Parenthood. However, Dr. McCanne’s post – especially his last point – is worth highlighting.

A Painful Betrayal

Editorial

The New York Times, February 2, 2012

With its roster of corporate sponsors and the pink ribbons that lend a halo to almost any kind of product you can think of, the Susan G. Komen for the Cure foundation has a longstanding reputation as a staunch protector of women’s health. That reputation suffered a grievous, perhaps mortal, wound this week from the news that Komen, the world’s largest breast cancer organization, decided to betray that mission. It threw itself into the middle of one of America’s nastiest political battles, on the side of hard-right forces working to demonize Planned Parenthood and undermine women’s health and freedom.

The Associated Press reported on Tuesday that the foundation is cutting off its financing of breast cancer screening and education programs run by Planned Parenthood affiliates. That means nearly $700,000 less for Planned Parenthood, which performed 750,000 such screenings last year, many thousands of them with money from the Komen foundation.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/03/opinion/a-painful-betrayal.html

And…

Consolidated Statements of Functional Expenses

The Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, Inc.

Year Ended March 31, 2011

Public support and revenue – $471,750,158

Program services

Research – $75,301,537
Public health education – $181,092,283
Health Screening Services – $54,089,036
Treatment services – $23,251,563
Total program services – $333,734,419

http://ww5.komen.org/uploadedFiles/Content/AboutUs/Financial/2011%20Komen%20Financial%20Statements%20FINAL(3).pdf

Comment:

By Don McCanne, MD

Nothing further needs to be said about how unwise it was for the Susan G. Komen Foundation to cut off funds for breast cancer services at Planned Parenthood facilities. Having made an error so grievous that some suggest could result in the demise of this public service organization dedicated to fighting breast cancer, we should ask if we can afford to lose their contributions to this effort.

We need to take a look at their program services.

The $75 million that they spend on research could easily be incorporated into the budget of the National Institutes of Health, the world’s largest medical research institute.

The $181 million spent on public education has reached all of us through their pink ribbon campaign. Although it certainly is important for the public to know about screening mammography, isn’t it likely that this will still be common knowledge, even without the pink ribbons?

The $54 million for screening and the $23 million for treatment actually are already being paid for by taxpayers. If you consider that the marginal tax rate for Komen donors likely averages about 30 percent, then tax subsidies for the $471 million in public support amount to about $141 million, far more than the $77 million being spent on screening and treatment. In fact, the balance of our tax subsidies would pay for most of the research that they fund.

A more fundamental question is why aren’t all women guaranteed appropriate screening and necessary treatment for breast cancer? They would be if we had a single payer national health program – an improved Medicare for all. If so, the loss of the Komen Foundation would not be all that tragic, though it is still painful to say that.

Re-posted with permission from pnhp.org.