Posts with the tag Health
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Dear Igor Volsky:

I would hope that you recognize that the real problem in all of this is that our government has too many healthcare programs. All Americans should already be enrolled in Medicare. Period. It is very easy for a regressive politician like King George to take benefits away from poor people, because no one cares about the poor. The democratic wing of the corporate party gave up on poor folks when Jimmy Carter became it's standard bearer. Just think how hard it would have been for King George to cut benefits for EVERYONE instead of just the poor and unemployed. Sadly, that kind of thinking is just a little too unitarian for our wanna-be unitarian (photo-op) politicians. Blaming the regressive republicans is getting very old. There is a solution to the problem, but too many just want small improvements. That is the same old kind of politics.

Sincerely,
pee-wee

This election is not helping my chronic anxiety. I'm sure I'm not the only one on pins and needles awaiting the results on November 4th. Although I decisively chose my candidate months ago, I spend far too much time glued to the online media:

Huffington Post
MSNBC
Air America
Rachel Maddow
Brave New World TV
The Daily Kos
Real Clear Politics

For comic relief, I enjoy:

Saturday Night Live
Dave Letterman
Jon Stewart

...but that of course does not divert my focus away from the election.

Greg Palast has me petrified about the GOP stealing the election, and Naomi Wolf has me frightened of impending fascism. Even Rolling Stone is sounding the alert about voter purging. Yikes! That "Help America Vote Act" needs to be repealed ASAP!I recently joined Common Cause to promote a fair and just electoral process. Thank Goddess for my anxiety-relieving remedies (see posted list).

Our individual health depends on our environment being conducive to health. That means we need a healthy economy, an adequate health care system, and leaders who care about all of our well-being, including the poor, the middle class, women, and minorities.

Health also depends on stress reduction, since 85% of all illness is caused by stress. Societal stress is sky-high in the U.S. right now, and many people I know are battling stress-related illnesses.

Let's all vote in a new government that will improve our quality of life, so we can all get well.

Barack Obama
Support Democratic Candidates

Somehow we’ll all make it through the next two weeks, and with Grace, hard work, and vigilance, we will have a positive electoral outcome. Together we can transform the health of the United States of America.

Please vote, volunteer, donate, whatever you can.
Peace!
The media worldwide (and here in Europe) naturally relish presenting Obama as "young" or "youthful". No harm - it helps the image of 'hope' and 'change' he offers.

But McCain now talks of Obama's 'youth' deliberately to discredit Obama's experience in contrast to his.

Obama is 47, McCain 72. McCain can't get away from being 'old' (60 +). But Obama is NOT young - although he looks refreshingly youthful. He is middle-aged (40 - 60) and in the prime of life for a political leader who must undertake the heaviest of responsibilities towards the US and the world. Let's remember J. F. Kennedy was 44, 3 years younger than Obama, when he became US president.

True, old people tend to see the middle-aged as young. But in McCain's case his references to his opponent as 'young' are, it now appears, barbs deliberately to belittle Obama's experience compared with his own.

I suggest it is important to counter this. The age gap is between the indisputably old - more than the biblical span of 'three score years and ten', and a man in the prime of life.

Some people retain their intellectual acuity into their eighties or more - like the present pope or Gladstone, the 19th century prime minister. But for most there is
slow deterioration of memory and other faculties. and of course of the physical capacity to bear long working hours.

In previous US presidential elections health has been a major media interest. It is to be hoped that both Senator McCain and Senator Obama will divulge the necessary medical information (psychological as well as physical)for specialists to guide the public on the health question.

After Hillary conceded, I moved over to Barack's campaign.  I don't have an attitude like some "Hillary Loyalists".  I did join a group over at democrats.org Party Builders site called Hillary for V.P. because I would like Hillary to have the choice to serve in the capacity of Vice-President.  This blogpost has a link to Hillary' HuffPo article about prochoice activism.  Hillary never dropped out of politics.  I could never work with Republicans like she always thought she had to do to make the political gains necessary to protect choice.  She has helped me to merge feminism and politics in my life.  I think she is the best qualified candidate for Vice-President.  I don't know whether she wants the job or not.  I am poor and the only money that I could spare in the last few years went to the DNC and Hillary's PAC.  I suppose that I don't want it to end.

There was an interesting article in the Chrsitan Today news site about universal healthcare in England. It is working and continues to be a model that deserves real consideration in America. http://www.christiantoday.com/article/nhs.marks.60th.birthday/20150.htm

Depending on which major studies you read, at least 44,000 people, and perhaps as many as 200,000 people, die as inpatients in hospitals each year as a result of medical errors that could have been prevented. In addition to the cost in terms of human lives, medical errors have been estimated to result in total costs between $17 billion and $29 billion per year in hospitals nationwide. It was also estimated in a JAMA article that there were 199,000 deaths from medical errors in outpatient care alone, and there could be upwards of 424,000 annual deaths per year in the American medical system, which would make the existing system itself one of the leading causes of death in the United States.

Thankfully, the Democratic party is not ignoring the problem and is moving towards a national solution. It is the right thing to do, it is the moral thing to do. This is not an issue to be left solely to the marketplace. It's not about maximizing profits for healthcare industry companies. It's about caring for our people and putting them first.
Last April, Emily Kronenberg posted a blog that reported on hearings held by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform about the effectiveness of abstinence-only education.  Yesterday, MSNBC reported that the number of states refusing abstinence-only grants is increasing because abstinence-only education is so ineffective  in preventing teen pregnancy. 
Pre-Rally warm-up:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hl3JDUwN8Wg&feature=related

Rally at Moscone Center: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxFd3GVCbMk

I'm loving this one, Louisville, Kentucky:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzsmp7XJNH4&feature=related

Pennsylvania: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fiv-pcChWD4

Please check them out and forward them on!
The Colorado Senate has blocked citizen testimony this week on a health bill.   Read More »
The Senate hearing referred to below is over, but you can still send a letter. Please read the letter below:

***********************************************

Thursday, May 1, 2008 - 1:30 PM - Help Needed !
Single-Payer Health Care Financing To Be Considered by Colorado Senate Health and Human Services Committee
Please tell others and bring as many people as possible

Colorado Senate Resolution - SR08-006 - Affordable Access to High Quality Healthcare

Approximately 25 or more souls showed up ready to testify today in the Senate Health & Human Services Committee in favor of our Resolution SR08-006 - Affordable Access to High Quality Healthcare. Unfortunately, our Resolution was laid over until tomorrow, Thursday, May 1st at 1:30 PM still in room SCR 356 at the Colorado State Capitol Building.

I know this is trying but it is our only shot this Session and I think this Resolution has a good chance to pass out of Committee and into the Senate.

We now have a golden opportunity on two fronts:
GATHER MORE PEOPLE and overflow the room on Thursday. Call friends, other HCAC members and members of other organizations who you know. Not everyone has to testify to make a point. When a Legislative Committee sees a room full of people all on the same side of an issue they cannot ignore it. If you can’t be there send a proxy.


CREATE MORE TESTIMONY, live, written and by phone.
Live testimony is always terrific. Remember you get 3 minutes and they will cut you off. So don’t make the mistake of spending too long in getting to your point. Always be courteous and friendly. You are reporting to these people, they didn’t cause the problem, they are trying to solve it. . . mostly.


Written testimony allows some more flexibility on time but still should be succinct and solution oriented. Never threaten voter retaliation just tell them how they can help you.


Telephone calls to the legislator’s offices are effective. Make reference to the Resolution by name or #SR08-006. Briefly tell them why we want and value their support. If you happen to live in their District make sure to mention that. Thank them for listening.
SUBJECTS:

Personal stories are valued if they can be presented quickly and kept on point. Legislators are real people too; your stories do touch them. Always circle back to how a public health care system (single payer) would have helped in your situation where for profit insurance failed. Try to stay positive and factual. Wild claims about insurance abuses or imagined collusion or corruption undermine credibility, stay factual and be able to back up what you say. Here-say is less valuable than your real personal experience. Personal observations on other country’s health care systems that you have experienced are good.

Technical information testimony is helpful and shows our knowledge. You should be able to back up a claim with a reference, which could be a newspaper, magazine, technical paper or report, website, etc. where you learned it. Information developed by the 208 Commission resonates with some. Read the Resolution and work out material in support of a particular paragraph. These are smart people but don’t resist writing in simple terms. We know much more about our topic than they do. This is about informing them. If you have a question feel free to call me.

SENATE HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES COMMITTEE
All Postal Mailing Addresses:
200 E. Colfax
Denver, CO 80203

Bob Hagedorn, Chair
senbob@msn.com
303-866-4879

Betty Boyd, V. Chair
betty.boyd.senate@state.co.us
303-866-4857

Shawn Mitchell
shawn.mitchell.senate@state.co.us
303-866-4876

Paula Sandoval
paula.sandoval.senate@state.co.us
303-866-4862

Dave Schultheis
senatorschultheis@gmail.com
303-866-4835

Bill Cadman
bill.cadman.senate@state.co.us
303-866-2737

Lois Tochtrop
lotochtrop@aol.com
303-866-4863

Respectfully,

Barry Keene, Vice President,
Health Care For All Colorado
303-665-0180
Barry@HealthCareForAllColorado.org

Health Care For All Colorado
P.O. Box 280767
Lakewood, 80228-0767

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Thank you,

Patty
Senate testimony for single-payer healthcare had good turn-out, so they post-poned it until tomorrow.
Dear Single Payer advocates and supporters in Colorado:

http://healthcareforallcolorado.org/pdfs/R08-1187_01.pdf

Help needed Wednesday, April 30, 2008 - please tell others !

We have worked all this Legislative Session to get a conversation opened up about Single Payer Health Care Financing and have finally broken through. Resolution 08-1187 was read into the Senate record this morning and was immediately calendared for the Senate Health & Human Service Committee tomorrow. I am sure it is no simple oversite that they give us no notice to form a substantive appearance and / or bring in national experts.

However, this is our 1 clear shot this year to have a conversation with the Legislature about the merits of a Single Payer health care financing system. WE MUST SHOW UP IN FORCE!

Senate Committee Room 356, Wed 4/30. The time should be approx late morning, it is listed as "upon adjournment", which means when the Senate finishes its business in Senate Chambers for the day. If I get any more exact timing I will certainly let you know but I would plan to show up by about 10:30 AM prepared to testify.

gak? what the heh-heh-hell? ladies, it's time to take charge of our health!

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/04/22/health/main4033768.shtml

Iraq, the economy AND healthcare are key issues in the campaign for the Presidency. Here's why healthcare needs to be addressed.

Depending on which major studies you read, at least 44,000 people, and perhaps as many as 200,000 people, die as inpatients in hospitals each year as a result of medical errors that could have been prevented. In addition to the cost in terms of human lives, medical errors have been estimated to result in total costs between $17 billion and $29 billion per year in hospitals nationwide.

It was also estimated in a Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) article that there were 199,000 deaths from medical errors in outpatient care alone. There could be upwards of 424,000 annual deaths per year in the American medical system, which would make the system itself the one of the leading causes of death in the United States.

The National Council for Patient Information and Education reported that an additional 125,000 deaths occur annually due to adverse reactions to drugs that the physician never should have prescribed.

To put this into perspective, this is the equivalent of a World Trade Center disaster every week for over a year and a half, or the crash of two fully loaded 747 aircrafts every day of the year.

We spent a trillion dollars reacting to the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and started a never ending war in Iraq. Let's put things in perspective and also recognize the importance of resolving some of our healthcare issues.

By Bill Richardson | Tuesday, August 07, 2007 |

Americans are fed up with the high cost and inefficiency of our health-care system.  Since 2000, health insurance premiums have risen by more than 80 percent.  The number of uninsured Americans has increased every year since President Bush took office - and is more than three times the number of jobs created during the same period. Tragically, nearly 18,000 Americans die every year for lack of health insurance.

When people go without health coverage, we all end up paying the price.  Families who can't afford health care try to do without as long as they can, which often leads to expensive emergency room visits.  The lost productivity due to trying to live without necessary medical care is estimated at $65 billion to $130 billion per year.

The costs are bad enough, but the inefficiencies of the system waste precious dollars.  Up to 31 percent of all health-care expenditures are for administration. Families are fed up, and want a reliable system that gives every American access to affordable, high-quality health care.

In New Mexico, I've made access to affordable care a priority and I'm proud of what we've done to expand access and improve quality.  We've helped more working New Mexicans obtain coverage, lowered premiums in the state's Health Insurance Alliance for small businesses, and increased the number of children covered by employer-sponsored insurance.  My state and others are doing everything we can, but it's time for the federal government to get to work.

As the presidential election approaches, we'll hear plans creating huge government bureaucracies or forcing a "one size fits all" approach upon families. 

Our well-being is too important to leave to massive, untested programs.  My plan is a common-sense approach that builds upon existing systems, offers well-established coverage options, and provides Americans with choices of affordable care:

1. Working families and small businesses will be able to purchase the same coverage available to the president and members of Congress.

2. We will allow Americans 55 to 64 to buy in to Medicare.

3. We will strengthen the Veterans Administration and create a Heroes Health Card to provide veterans with high-quality care, without bureaucratic hassles.  

4. We will enable dependent young adults to remain on their parents' plans until the age of 25, reducing their costs and increasing coverage.

5. Families who want to keep their current health insurance will have the freedom to do so. 

6. Insurance companies will no longer be able to deny coverage for pre-existing conditions.

My plan also keeps coverage affordable:

-- A sliding scale tax credit will help families obtain coverage.

-- My plan will cap interest charges on personal credit card medical debt.

-- As with auto insurance, all Americans will be required to have health coverage and employers will pay their fair share of employee health-care costs.

-- We will control costs by streamlining administration, implementing electronic medical records and simplifying hospital regulation.  

-- We will also emphasize preventive care and healthier lifestyle choices.  In my state we improved the rate of fully immunized children, took junk food out of schools and put physical education back in.  Investments in preventive care will create a healthier America and save billions of dollars.

My plan is a common sense approach providing everyone a choice of quality, affordable health coverage.  No new government bureaucracies will be created, and we will not need to raise taxes.  We already spend

$2.2 trillion per year on health care in this country.  By streamlining the system, increasing efficiency, and asking everyone to pay their fair share, we can make accessible, affordable health care a reality for everyone.

===================================================

The main talking point's:

Even though people will be required to have health coverage, Bill Richardson will make it affordable by giving advance tax credits to lower income family so they can afford to buy coverage.

You have the freedom to stay on you current health plan and see any doctor you wish, and not be assigned a doctor.

Veterans will be issued a "Heroes Health Card". This card, which will be issued to every single veteran upon leaving the military, will provide our returning servicemen and servicewomen with the healthcare they need, when and where they need it. If elected President, Bill Richardson will call on every provider in America to accept this card and coordinate care with the veteran's local VA hospital.

Currently, veterans have to beg Congress for their healthcare funding each year, rather than receiving it as an entitlement. Bill Richardson will end this travesty. And will ensure that we fix President Bush's mess, at Walter Reed as well as those at other VA hospitals and clinics throughout the country. Our veterans and military personnel deserve high quality healthcare, and it is a travesty to provide them with anything less.

www.RichardsonforPresident.com

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