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Health & Wellness

Bill Moyers: Money-Driven Medicine - The Real Reason Health Care Costs So Much

By Bill Moyers and Maggie Mahar, Bill Moyers Journal. Posted September 1, 2009.


Bill Moyers teams up with financial journalist Maggie Mahar and Academy Award-winning filmmaker Alex Gibney to bring you the truth about America's health-care system.
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Editor's Note: Maggie Mahar's book, Money-Driven Medicine: The Real Reason Health Care Costs So Much (HarperCollins, 2009), forms the basis for a new documentary by Alex Gibney, an Academy Award-winning filmmaker (Taxi to the Dark Side, Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room.) The film, Money-Driven Medicine aired on Bill Moyers Journal on Friday.

Warning: it will make you really, really mad.

Mahar, who covered finance for Barron's, began her research by randomly calling doctors to get their side of the health-care story. To her surprise, nearly all of them (most of whom did not know her) called her back -- so eager were they to ring the alarm on a system they see as having strayed far from its mission.

The filmmakers are making this presentation available to community groups, high schools and public libraries for a reduced price, and are providing resources for using the film to jump-start discussions and debates about health care reform. For more about the film, go to the Money-Driven Medicine Web site.

Below you'll find Bill Moyers' introduction to the segment he aired on his show and a clip from Money-Driven Medicine's site, along with the transcript from the video:

***

Bill Moyers: Welcome to the Journal.

The world of medicine has changed radically since I was a kid in East Texas. Back then, Dr. Sam Tenney made house calls for a couple of bucks a visit. Dr. Granbury raced to a patient's side with such speed you could hear his tires screeching around the courthouse square blocks away. And if you needed a prescription, Dr. Wyatt would offer to drop it off at your door on his way to the hospital -- a non-profit community hospital, by the way, run by civic-minded citizens who counted every penny.

If any of them were around today, they would surely marvel at our high-tech medicine. But as prudent folks, they would also marvel - in a horrified way, I think -- at the cost of it all. How did we get here?

Maggie Mahar wanted to find out. She's one of our best financial journalists -- now, after years of research, she has written:

Money-Driven Medicine: The Real Reason Health Care Costs So Much.

During their summer recess, if every member of the House and Senate would read it before returning to Washington, the outcome of the health care debate might be very different.

In this broadcast we will share with you a film based on Maggie Mahar's work. The book and the film couldn't be more timely as our country wrestles with what to do about money-driven medicine.



Transcript from the segment:

Dr. Norfleet: All right, I'm Dr. Norfleet. And Joel has been talking to you about the build-up pain you're having right now.

Mr. Willsmall: Yes ma'am.

Dr. Norfleet: Is it the same kind of pain you've had before Mr. Willsmall?

Mr. Willsmall: Uh, no. It started about a month ago.

Dr. Norfleet: The pain you are having now?

Mr. Willsmall: Yeah.

Dr. Norfleet: And who is your primary doctor?

Mr. Willsmall:I don't have one right now.

Dr. Norfleet: Okay. You've been admitted to the hospital before though? You've been here before?

Mr. Willsmall: I've been… I was admitted to the Centennial Hospital.

Dr. Norfleet: Okay.

Mr. Willsmall: I had chest pains and that's when they found the hepatitis.

Dr. Norfleet: Oh boy. Hepatitis B or C or both?

Mr. Willsmall: Both.

Dr. Norfleet: Wow! You have a history of ulcers or anything like that?

Mr. Willsmall: No ma'am.

Dr. Norfleet: And you haven't seen anybody else about this, huh?

Mr. Willsmall: No ma'am.

Dr. Norfleet: Okay.

Mr. Willsmall: I went to the downtown clinic cause when this happened I wasn't able to work. I lost my job. I lost my apartment.

Dr. Norfleet: Okay.

Mr. Willsmall: And so, I'm just trying to get help.

Dr. Norfleet: Yes, Sir. We are going help you, okay?

He's complaining of vomiting blood. It's been going on for a month so it's not really considered an emergency anymore. It's considered a chronic problem, but we get a lot of patients like that, that the emergency department is the only place they know they can go to, to maybe address their problem.

He didn't have the luxury of having a primary care provider, which is a luxury in this country, which is kind of sad. We're like the richest country, you know, and a lot of our people don't have doctors so they use the emergency department in order to see a physician.

Nurse: Say, "Ah." You've got a lot of congestion in the back of your throat. Do you feel like its kind of sitting there?

Dentist: Well, that second to last tooth is infected and the very back tooth looks broken off.

Patient: All right.

Maggie Mahar: Over the last 12 years a number of people visiting America's emergency rooms has soared. Yet here's what's surprising: The number of low-income people going to ERs has not increased. The increase has come almost entirely among middle-class people and many of them have insurance.

Nurse: Whose insurance do you have?

Patient: Blue Cross.

Nurse: Do you have your card with you?

Patient: Yeah.

Maggie Mahar: So why do they go to the ER? Why aren't they seeing their own doctor? Many people think that they know what's wrong with the health care system in this country. Millions of people are uninsured. And sure, that's part of the problem. But that's not the whole problem. The whole problem is bigger than that.

Dr. John Nixon: I am on top here. Any problem up there? Any problem in the back?

Dr. Nixon: There're just not enough resources out there for, not only your uninsured patients, but also your insured patients. Insured patients have a problem also because their doctors, when they call their office and says, "I need to see…" … "We can't see you for three weeks." "Well, what am I going to do for three weeks?"

Doctor: Open your mouth.

Health care costs keep going up, up and up and up. But the access seems to be going down down down down.

All right. Do you need anything for pain right now? You do? Okay, we'll get you something all right? We've got to run some tests and we'll be back.

Patient: Okay, thank you.

I'm just glad, you know, that there's a place to come to, you know. I mean, dying is not no big deal to me, but you know, people have to go through a lot before they get there.

Maggie Mahar: When I was a financial journalist at Barron's, I wrote many stories about health care. And what I learned was that much of what we think we know about health care isn't true. And much of what is true is counterintuitive. So eventually I decided to write a book about health care. And when I did I knew I wanted to talk to a lot of doctors. So I began putting out phone calls. I didn't know most of the doctors I was calling. I was hoping that maybe 20 percent of them would return my call. To my utter surprise 5 out of 6 of them called me back. And they talked. They talked for 30 minutes. They talked for longer than that. They said, "Please, we want someone to know. Please tell people." To a man and to a woman what they were most passion about was the declining quality of care in this country. Not about how much they were paid or how much they weren't paid. They were concerned about the quality of care, about what was happening to their profession and how little power they had to do anything about it.

Dr. Donald Berwick: It is, I guess, politically correct, widely believed, that to say that American health care is the best in the world. It's not. There's a much more complicated story there. For some kinds of care my colleague Brent James calls it rescue care. Yes, we're the best in the world. If you need very complex cardiac surgery or very advanced chemotherapy for your cancer or some audacious intervention with organ transplantation, you're pretty lucky to be in America.

You'll get it faster and you'll probably get it better than in at least most other countries. Rescue care we're great. But most health care isn't that. Most health care is getting people with diabetes through their illness over years or controlling the pain of someone with arthritis or just answering a question for someone who is worried or preventing them from getting into trouble in the first place. And on those scores: Chronic disease care, community-based care, primary care, preventive care. No no, we're no where near the best. And it's reflected in our outcomes.

We're something like the… We're not the best health care system in the world in infant mortality rates. We're like number 23. There is an index that is used in rating health care systems, which is the rate of mortality that could have been prevented by health care. There are at least a dozen countries with lower rates of preventable mortalities than the United States and not one of those countries spends 60 percent of what we do on health care.

Maggie Mahar: Dr. Donald Berwick is a pediatrician and a revolutionary, really. He wants to overthrow a health care system he sees shot through with waste, inefficiency, self- interest and disrespect for patients. Berwick believes that the people working in our health care system are by and large dedicated and caring people, but they're stuck in a stupid system. And he calls that a national tragedy.

Dr. Donald Berwick: If you look at the way we pay for care in the country and say, "Well, what is the underlying theme here?" We pay for doing things. A piece of surgery, performing a test, doing a procedure. Even a visit is a thing. So specialties or medical practices that do a lot of things, a lot of tests, a lot of surgeries, a lot of procedures; They'll tend to be the higher income earning specialties.

Medical students leave medical school today with enormous debts. Primary care specialties are the lowest paying. If you have a choice between taking 15 years to pay off your debt or seven, you might decide on seven, and that means you can't be a primary care doctor.

Dr. Dan Larson: I wonder what your blood pressure is first thing in the morning.

Maggie Mahar: What's interesting about the fee schedule is that it's all about what it costs the doctor to produce the service in terms of time and education. Never does anyone ask, "How much benefit is there for the patient?" This might be a service that, on average, lengthens the patient's life by 5 months, as opposed to having your diabetes controlled for 30 years, which means that you live a lot longer and you never have an amputation. And yet we would pay much more for that technically very skilled procedure that gave you another couple of months, because we look at it entirely in terms of the work on the part of the doctor rather than the benefit to the patient.

Dr. Dan Larson: He has a very soft, like maybe one or maybe two out of six systolic near the apex. Take a listen; let me see if we've ever evaluated that...

Maggie Mahar: So we don't value primary care doctors, generalists, family doctors highly at all. The compensation is relatively low and that's why we have fewer and fewer of them.

Dr. Dan Larson: Albany Med's Internal Medicine residency this year, I believe, none of them are going to primary care. They're all going to sub specialize in cardiology, gastroenterology, endocrinology, etc. I believe it's none are going into primary care.

Student: I think I can hear it. It's very soft.

Dr. Dan Larson: Yeah. It's very soft. It's a little mid-systolic thing. It's probably nothing.

Krystal Irizarry: Finances does play into the decision. People say that going into primary care can be a burden compensation-wise and the worry about their future. What does the future hold in terms of health care? It's really hard to make a decision. I wish there was an easy way.

Dr. Dan Larson: If the dollars to dollars ratio were even vaguely similar to specialty and primary care, I'd choose it again every time. I like the variety. I like doing different things. I wouldn't like doing the same thing all day long. And I'm willing to take an income hit to be primary care, but it's affected the quality of primary… the ability to deliver quality primary care in this country, because not enough people are going into it and, makes it harder to put together an integrated system. And everyone pretty much acknowledges that if someone doesn't have a primary care doctor they go to multiple specialists, there is more duplication of services at higher total health care cost.

Krystal Irizarry: Do you have any pain when I press in your stomach?

Larry Churchill: There are very few relationships in which we're asked to take off our clothes and be examined by people with the idea that it's going to be safe to do that and tell them about intimate parts of our history that we probably don't tell anyone else about. That makes it special. That's making oneself vulnerable and sometimes a fairly profound way. Or going under anesthesia for an operation. If someone says, "I'm going to put you to sleep and we're going to cut you open and do certain things to you and it is all going to be fine and good for you," that's a pretty big leap of faith.

Maggie Mahar: Larry Churchill is a bio-ethicist and one of the heroes of his profession. A discipline that struggles with the hardest moral questions regarding medicine. He doesn't just ask his students to wrestle with end of life care or stem cell research. He takes a clear-eyed look at the most difficult ethical questions regarding how you deliver care in a profit driven system.

Larry Churchill: We're now treating medicine as if it were an industrial product. Through put. How many units of care can you deliver? The idea that you are going to see a patient on average for between 12 and 15 minutes, no matter what their condition or how many kinds of problems they have or how complicated their diagnoses or how much reassurance they might need is an idea that you can treat medicine like a production line product and you can turn out patients in the same way like we produce widgets. That's a Commercialization and an industrialization of the relationship. So this is a system which is fundamentally broken in terms of the kind of conflicts it raises in the minds of physicians and, also, in the minds of the patients.

Dr. Espinoza: Hi. Dr. Espinoza, nice to meet you. How are you? Karen, daughter? Wonderful, pleasure. Okay. Dr. Lynn was kind enough to send you in my direction is that correct?

Patient: Yes it is.

Dr. Espinoza: Do you have an understanding of why you're here to see me?

You can't just fix things in medicine. Medicine is a process. It's a duration of treatments that occurs over the course of somebody's lifetime. Yeah, there are things that we do that are very systematic and very matter of fact, so to speak, where you fix and "boom" they're are on their way, but it's just not a good way to develop a relationship. You need a rapport, you need trust, you need that patient, you know, having the ability to say, you know, "Yeah, Dr. Espinoza, that's my doctor."

Dr. Espinoza: How've you been?

Patient: Fine.

Dr. Espinoza: The thing I miss most is being able to sit in a room and talk to a patient for an hour. But, you know, we're so compressed with our time and the amount of patients we have to see, you know, 15 minutes is a long time these days. That's a long time. Basically, you know, you get on the assembly line.

Dr. Espinoza: Have we met before?

Patient: I think so.

Dr. Espinoza: Just get hooked up and the chain keeps moving.

Hello.

It doesn't allow you to have an intimate relationship with somebody without someone else trying to always pry, you know, that relationship apart.

Patient: Because you had told me to go to White House, I think, and I couldn't get there because they told me my insurance wouldn't cover it.

Dr. Espinoza: Ah, okay.

The insurance companies, you know, are clearly in the room with us. You know, employers are in the room with us. You know, you get into these issues of out of network, in network; we're only going to pay 20 percent of your hospital visit versus 50 percent if you go to this hospital. These are all brokered deals and negotiated contracts and things like that, that in larger insurance companies have with specific hospitals, which specific testing centers. You know, so you're dealing with a lot of things that, you know, this is not stuff that's taught at medical school, this is not stuff that, you know, your partners are familiar with other than being exposed to it. You know, and we've kind of turned the blind eye or done the ostrich thing with, you know, burying our heads in the sand saying, "You know what, we're just doctors we want to just deal with what we do." But all of those other entities now live in our bed, in our bedroom with us. You know, you can't just pay attention to your wife and go to sleep at night. You're sleeping with six or seven other people that are trying to break your marriage up. That's a big problem. That's a big problem.

Dr. Donald Berwick: When you go see the doctor and the doctor listens to you and then sends you a bill, there's profit in that bill. That's the doctor's income after he or she has paid the receptionist and the lights and heat and the rent and the equipment. He keeps the rest. That's profit. Just as long as it's a human enterprise, yeah, at some level, someone's got to make some money or why would… they won't do it. So we're going to have profit even if you call it a non-profit system. What are the incentives? Right now the incentives in America are if you want profit, do more. You make money by doing stuff and there's no limit. So we do and do and do and we get this oversupply, this excess activity because that's how people, hospitals, doctors make money.

Dr. Espinoza: Carl, you gave him already a little cocktail from the bar. All righty. If you need anything more, just let us know. Right now you are going to get a little bit of a local anesthetic down here in your leg. Let's start with the right heart.

You know, if you're a hammer, everything looks like a nail. You know, I'm an interventional cardiologist and that's what I do for a living is I fix blockages.

Six front checks B35, please.

Does the hospital like you doing lots of procedures? Sure, you know, these procedures are reimbursed, fairly substantially. You know, even within your own group there is a component of productivity. You know, you wish things would just be about taking care of patients and doing the right things but, you know, are there external pressures? Absolutely. Absolutely.

Patient: Do you have to push the cath in or does it find its way just naturally?

Doctor: Um, all roads lead to Rome.

Patient: Terrific.

Dr. Espinoza: But, at the end of the day, if you just remember the fundamental principle that you have to have done something for that patient in order to make them feel better, live longer, you know, engage in a lifestyle that they weren't able to engage in before, and if you stick to those principles, it allows you not to, kind of, drift from what you know is right and fall in to this arena where, you know, you're just slamming a stint in every blockage that you see. Because if you did that, then clearly it becomes… I would hate to use the term immoral, but it becomes an issue where you are doing things just to do them, not because it's the right thing to do.

DR. Larry Churchill: There's an awful lot of technology involved even in ordinary outpatient kind of encounters now. We have been so good at finding new and innovative ways to treat illness, and we love this. The idea that technologies can be turned into cures is really a fundamental thing in our society.

Dr. Jim Weinstein: I'd like to suggest that if we looked at the population of people with a problem: Back pain. And said how many MRI's do you think we need to do as a nation? We could probably cut the number in half and not have hurt anybody. Yet we keep opening more and more MRI machines and do more and more pictures. They're beautiful, they're incredible -- incredible technology. But then that causes somebody to have to make a decision about a back surgery that maybe they didn't need.

Dr. Donald Berwick: I think the main driver, the difference between our costs and other countries costs that have health care systems as good or better than ours, is supply-driven care. It's this work that Elliot Fisher and Jack Wennberg have explored at Dartmouth. It's that we overbuild and, therefore, we use, and there's no limits, there's no cap, there's no control. And so we just spin the wheel.

Maggie Mahar: What's truly staggering is how much waste there is in our health care system. Up to one out of every three of the more than two trillion dollars that we spend is wasted on ineffective, often unproven procedures, overpriced drugs and devices that are no better than the drugs and devices that they're replacing. Unnecessary hospitalizations, unnecessary tests. Now this may seem like an overstatement. I mean, how can it be that 1/3 of the money is wasted? We actually have close to three decades of research done by doctors at Dartmouth University proving how much waste there is in the system. What the Dartmouth research ended up doing was looking at health care all across the country and what they discovered is that in some high treatment states, like New Jersey, Medicare was spending 20 percent more per patient than the average. And in other low treatment states, like Iowa, Medicare was spending 25 percent less than average. They tended to focus in on what happened to patients during their final two years of life.

So in that way you're comparing apples to apples, pretty sick patients, and they began looking at sick patients who had the same disease, etcetera -- finding these enormous differences in what Medicare spent. Some people said, "Well maybe patients in New Jersey are simply more demanding than the stoic citizens of Iowa." But, in fact, very few people demand a chance to spend more days in the hospital during their final two years of life. Very few people cry out for a chance to die in an ICU or to have that fourth procedure or to be poked and prodded by eleven or twelve specialists during your final six months of life. In the states where Medicare spends more, these are the things that happen to people.

They're getting more aggressive, intensive, and expensive care. And here's the stunner: The outcomes are no better. Often they are worse on average in states like New Jersey or New York or California than they are in low treating states like Iowa or North Dakota.

Rashi Fein: You have a situation where the doctor provides a service, is paid for providing this service, and controls, to a significant extent, the demand for that service. It's not I saying, "I'm going to get a high definition television." This is a doctor saying, "You ought to have a high definition television." More correctly, "You ought to have an MRI or a cat scan. It's called for in this situation." Who in the world? I don't have the ability to say "Is this MRI necessary?"

Maggie Mahar: The fact of the matter is that insurance companies tried saying no in the 90s, in that era of manage care, when the great many HMOs would say, "No, we're not going to pay for that." The problem is that HMOs made their decisions on what they are going to pay for based, too often, simply on cost. If something was too pricy, they would say no. But they weren't looking at the quality of the procedure. They weren't asking, "Well, would it really benefit the patient?" They were simply saying, "Well, where does it fit on our schedule of costs?" So, sometimes, they denied ineffective, unnecessary, expensive care and sometimes they denied very good, effective, expensive care.

There was a backlash, needless to say, in the media, on the part of patients, on the part of doctors, so by the late 90s HMOs began to say, "Okay, okay, we won't try to manage care. By and large, we will pay for whatever Medicare pays for. Medicare tends to pay for whatever the FDA approves. We'll just pass the cost along to you in the form of higher premiums." And that's why, since 1998-99, premiums have just skyrocketed.

Reporter: In fact the average total premium for a family of four last year topped ten grand.

Reporter 2: Doctors here in Boston say they're seeing an increasing number of patients who cannot afford the most basic preventative health measures, like a blood test.

Reporter 3: 72 million Americans had trouble paying for medical care last year.

Reporter 4: Hospital bills are now a leading cause of personal bankruptcy.

Dr. James Weinstein: I think it's interesting that a country that has a 12-trillion dollar budget spends a sixth of it on health care. And our work would suggest that we're not spending it wisely.

The Dartmouth slogan is "Vox clamantis in deserto," which is that voice crying out in the wilderness, and I thought it was a good analogy for me because I came here because I heard another voice, Jack Lindberg, talking about the disparities in the delivery of our health care system and the irrationality of its utilization. And, now, having been here for 12 or so years, I realize it's an uphill battle. You can't fight city hall, but we're going to try.

Maggie Mahar: In the early 1990s Dr. Jim Weinstein made a courageous decision. He decided to walk away from tenure and an endowed chair in the University of Iowa to go to Dartmouth, where he would participate in devising ways to help patients become involved in making decisions about their own care. As a surgeon, Weinstein had long felt that patients just weren't getting a fair shake, as he put it. They weren't getting the information they needed about the risks of treatments. Too often, informed consent was informed persuasion. Ultimately, illness in his own family would drive that lesson home.

Dr. James Weinstein: My daughter's name is Brieanna. She had beautiful blue eyes, curly brown hair; your first child, the light of your life. 13 months later I get a call from our pediatrician saying, "Could you come over to the hospital?" And I walk into the pediatrics hospital and I ask my wife what's wrong and she says, "They won't tell me. They won't tell me." The doctor walks in with about, it seems like, 10 other people other people. Very intrusive. And said, "I think your daughter has leukemia and we need to treat her, immediately."

The protocol for a treatment was very intense chemotherapy. She would lose her hair quickly. She would be sick. She would develop sores in her mouth. She wouldn't be able to eat because of sores from the chemotherapy in her esophagus. She would have all kinds of rashes. Her blood counts would be almost zero so her risk of infection would be very high. We couldn't take her any place. She had to be protected. And it sounds, "Well, that's not so bad, we can do that for a week." But the protocol was for 3 years. She did pretty well for about, I think, 2 years and then the leukemia came back. And they said, "We need to re-induce her with the bad medicines again and we have to consider brain and spinal radiation.

So spinal taps every day for three weeks." I said, "I don't get it. I mean, you just told us if we followed this protocol, these are the results. We did everything you said and it is still not working. And now you want us to do something worse." "Well, you have no choice and if you don't do that we will sue you." I said, "What?" "If you don't do what we tell you, we'll sue you."

Maggie Mahar: Why would doctors threaten to sue a parent whose child is dying? In all probability, the physicians were concerned that if they didn't followed the protocol and go on with the further treatment that they had planned to give her, they might be sued for malpractice. Even though the doctors couldn't explain the protocol or give them any assurance that they knew that the next treatments would do Brieanna any good.

In a way, I think it's a response to the uncertainty that they say, "We are the doctors. We know what we're doing and this is the way we do it and this is what we do next." And if anyone, whether it is a resident, a patient or a relative, says, "Well, why?" They say, "Because it's the way we do it. Period."

Dr. James Weinstein: You know, doctors are trained, I hope, in every case to think about what's best for the person that they are taking care of. They're trained to give medications, to do operations, to measure different tests with blood sugars or blood pressures. They're not really trained well in this decision process of giving information to patients to empower them to make decisions. That is a big short fall in the American health care system.

Dr. Donald Berwick: We have really good data that show when you take patients and you really inform them about their choices, patients make more frugal choices. They pick more efficient choices than the health care system does. Wonderful work of a researcher named Annette O'Connor studied patient shared decision-making with respect to surgery. What she found across a range of studies was when patients actually got to participate in the decision, surgery rates fell by almost 25 percent. And satisfaction in outcomes improved. So an activated patient really engaged. I'm not talking about payment here. I'm not talking about shifting burden of cost. Just engaged with knowledge and shared decision- making. Better outcomes, lower cost, higher satisfaction. You know, what more could you want?

Commercial: Intensive care requires a finely orchestrated team led by physicians and nurses passionate about patient care.

Commercial 2: Some of the world's finest…

Maggie Mahar: It's interesting how hospitals advertise. Who would make a decision about where to have their baby or where to be treated for cancer based on an ad they saw on TV?

Commercial 3: Number one for heart surgery in New York State.

Commercial 4: A magnet hospital for nursing excellence.

Maggie Mahar: Hospitals are not advertising to the patient. Hospitals are advertising to doctors. Hospitals don't have patients, doctors have patients. And hospitals want doctors to bring their well-healed, well-insured patients to that hospital.

Commercial 5: Our award winning full service cardiology department has been nationally recognized as the best in the region. And in the…

Maggie Mahar: Hospitals have engaged in, what many call, a "medical arms race".

Commercial 6: Using advanced micro technology physicians determine…

Maggie Mahar: Typically, 4 or 5 hospitals within a 5 mile, 10 mile, 15 mile radius will all buy the same technology because they're competing with each other.

Commercial 7: When you need us, rest assured, we will deliver an exceptional performance.

Maggie Mahar: One time Dr. Donald Berwick called a hospital in Texas and said, "We've heard you have a very good procedure for treating a particular disease. We'd like to learn more about your protocol so other hospitals can use it." And the hospital said, "We can't tell you that. It's a competitive advantage in our market that we're better at treating this disease and it is very lucrative. So this is proprietary information."

Dr. Donald Berwick: We believe in markets, right? Isn't that the American way? Well, markets mean competition. Isn't that the American way? Competition makes things come out right. Well, what does that mean in health care? More hospitals so they compete with each other. More doctors compete with each other. More pharmaceutical companies. We set up war. Wait a minute, let's talk about the patient. The patient doesn't need a war.

Maggie Mahar: The patient isn't the center of a collaboration. The patient is the victim of a competition. There's a saying in Swahili, "When…" I can't remember this one… "When the elephants fight the grass is trampled." The patient is essentially the grass.

Dr. Clifton Meador: Somebody says, "Nobody in Nashville makes anything. We just do stuff and people send us money." I've been told they never had a recession in the history of the place. This is music row. Every one of these houses is now a recording studio. There's Love Monkey Music, Flashville, Sharp Objects Music, Seasac, whatever that is. This is the heart of "music city" USA.

Here's what a nurse told me. "Tell patients to remove the foil from a suppository before insertion."

Maggie Mahar: Clifton Meador has had many careers. He's been an author, a family doctor, an epidemiologist, a health care administrator and the youngest ever Dean of the University of Alabama Medical School. Over the years, he's watched the business of health care turn into a driving force in the US economy. Much of it headquartered in Nashville.

Dr. Clifton Meador: This is Marilyn Way. Marilyn Way is a center road of Marilyn Farms. Marilyn Farms is a huge complex. The predominant business in here is health care corporations of one sort or another. This goes on and on for over a mile here and this is not called for-profit hospital row, or anything like that, but this, this is the equivalent of the music row that we went down for the recording industry.

Dr. Clifton Meador: This is titled "The Nashville Health Care Industry, The Family Tree 2006." Every little square here is a health care business industry or spin-off. We have 3 mother corporations here: HCA, which is the Hospital Corporation of America, spun off all of these. Hospital Affiliates, which is a spin-off of HCA, spun off all of these. And Health Trust, which is a spin of Hospital Affiliates and HCA, spun off all of these. So this is a massive, industrial health complex that's headquartered here in Nashville.

Maggie Mahar: After World War II, while other countries let their government begin to intervene in health care to make sure everyone got care, to regulate it to make sure it was good care, in this country doctors very, very strongly opposed any government involvement or anyone being involved in telling a doctor what to do. After Medicare was passed in 1965, elderly patients were getting far more care than they had been before then.

Then that's when our industrial medical complex, I would say, took off. By the early 70s, there were so much money involved that suddenly people began to say, "You know what? Medicine is too important to be managed by doctors. We all know doctors are bad managers. What we need are businessmen managing health care." And that's when health care went from being physician centered and controlled, to a large degree, by doctors to being controlled by the corporation and the CEOs of those corporations.

And, over time, more and more the CEO of the Hospital would not even be somebody with a MD. He would be somebody with a MBA. And CEOs bent on growth, bent on higher quarterly earnings, quarter after quarter, and year after year, are always pushing for more sales, more revenues, more and more and more. It produces more. But more may not be better for our health.

Dr. Donald Berwick: I've heard it said that the official bird of health care is a crane. Look around at any hospital in your community there's a crane on top adding rooms. You know, we just, we overbuilt it. And then, having overbuilt it, we use it and then we think using it is necessary. It's a spiral.

Rashi Fein: The worst thing that could happen to a director of a hospital is that everybody, all of the sudden, would be healthy. I'm not saying that he's overjoyed when there's an epidemic. Clearly, he isn't. I'm not saying that he's overjoyed when people are sick. Clearly, they're decent folks. But they're running something where what they are selling is hospital beds.

Maggie Mahar: If you can believe it, Rashi Fein has survived 5 decades of the battle for health care reform. In 1953 he served on President Truman's commission on the health needs of America at a time when Truman was pushing for universal coverage. Then he worked with JFK when he fought unsuccessfully for Medicare, a battle that LBJ would later win. As a professor of medical economics at Harvard, Fein has never given up. He firmly believes that medicine should not be all about money. As he puts it, "We live in a society not just in an economy."

Rashi Fein: Well, we spend more than any other country and we spend a higher percentage of our gross domestic product and our gross domestic product is larger than most other countries'. So we are spending per capita one heck of a lot more than anybody else, which ought to be disturbing, if only because there are lots of other things we could be doing with money. We could have more money for education or more money for infrastructure or more money for bridges and transportation or we could put money into high- speed trains or we could have tax cuts.

On the other hand somebody could say, "Well, we have chosen to spend money on health care and that's also a good thing." True. But interestingly, disturbingly, frighteningly, pick your own word, we spend more money and we are not healthier. We don't live longer. We don't seem to be getting as much value for money.

Larry Churchill: It shouldn't be any surprise that there is a huge disconnect between the amount of dollars that actually poured into health care and the health indicators of a population because this system was not designed to serve this end. That's a fundamental realization that we need to come to. And until we do I think, you know, we'll still be trying to tinker with the market in some kind of funny way. Just a little tweak or adjustment to make it work better, but it was never designed, actually, to meet health care needs.

Dr. James Weinstein: We got through and had a few weeks over the years of no treatment and everyday without a smile. Ever. She was a great big sister. They had a lot of fun together as sisters. I was in Germany giving a lecture and I could tell in my wife's voice something was wrong when I called home. Gone one day. And she wouldn't tell me that she'd had another relapse. I got home from Germany, and she said, you know, "Brieanna relapsed again." So I picked my daughter up and I hugged her.

You know, said, "This isn't possible. We've done everything." So back to the doctor. Another protocol. Radiation she has to be put to sleep for, she has to be taped down onto a table. Imagine the effects of radiation on your child's brain, on the spinal chord when it's developing. Will there be brain damage, doctor? "Oh, your daughter's so smart, there'll be no problem." Will she get a secondary tumor from the radiation? "Oh, it's possible, but it's twenty years away." "Oh, okay. I guess I'm supposed to just accept that." We take her for radiation.

She'd have to go for five days in a row. They'd put her to sleep. She'd come home and she, we couldn't comfort her. We had to put padding all around the room so she wouldn't hurt herself. It upset her so much and bothered her brain so much. Am I helping her? Am I hurting her? Is this barbaric? Is this treatment? Eventually, she had her final relapse when she was twelve. Her sister, Shelsey, is probably about eight at this time. And I said, "Shelsey, I think your sister's going to go to heaven soon."

And she grabbed my hand, and she said, "Daddy, that's okay." She said, "I always thought heaven is where life is and that life is just a dream." I said, "Shelsey, I hope you're right. I hope this is just a dream and that we're going to go some place where life really is." And I've always… that's such a profound statement, for anybody. It made such incredible sense to me. When Shelsey and I went for a walk, her sister died.

Dr. Keith Junior: Good morning, Ms. Elma. How you doing?

Elma: Hurting, right now.

Dr. Keith Junior: You're hurting?

Elma: I hurt real bad. My pain is from here all the way up.

Dr. Keith Junior: I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. It hurts that bad?

Elma: Yes.

Dr. Keith Junior: When did this first start?

Elma: Yesterday.

Dr. Keith Junior: What time yesterday? That hurts just touching you? That hurts.

Elma: Up here when you touch me.

Dr. Keith Junior: This doesn't hurt?

Elma: No. It's just uncomfortable, but it doesn't hurt.

Dr. Keith Junior: Medicine is everything I thought it would be and a whole bunch of things I didn't put into the equation. But I just love doing what I do so much that it just doesn't bother me to do those extra things. I'm willing to go the extra mile, because, hey, this is somebody's mother, this is somebody's father, this is somebody's brother. And if I don't do right by them, just understand, people die in my profession. Unlike other professions where, oh, I get a recall, I'll tell you what, I'll give you a free sandwich… No. I can't get you a free momma. You can't have mine. Mine is good. And you just have to keep the one you've got and I'm going to help you do things to keep her around.

Does it hurt to lift your arm?

Patient: No.

Dr. Keith Junior: You don't have any problem combing your hair?

Patient: No.

Dr. Keith Junior: Has anyone ever told you that you have high blood pressure?

Patient: It just happened today?

Dr. Keith Junior: No, no, no. I don't believe that.

Patient: I was upset, because I got here. I was supposed to see Dr. Knox or somebody, so she was not here.

Dr. Keith Junior: Well, she's not here anymore.

Patient: Well, I don't know. You can take it again because I never had high blood pressure.

Dr. Keith Junior: What I try to do is to make sure that I inform my patients and get them to understand what's going on with them. Inform them of what's going on.

Yeah. She may not have got it right. It's even higher. You should have taken the one she gave you.

You know, let the patient know. You've got a stake in it. It's not something magical I'm going to do, you know, wave my wand and you're going to be better. I don't. I mean, you've got high blood pressure; you will have high blood pressure when you leave here. But I'm going to give you a way in which you can manage the problem. And, so, manage the problem. Just don't stand there. Do something.

Anything change about your family history?

Patient: No.

Dr. Keith Junior: No chest pain or shortness of breath?

Patient: No.

Dr. Keith Junior: Prevention is the key and we in this trench need to make sure we prevent certain things, rather than wait for certain things to happen.

Patient: No, I get headaches. I've been having them for years.

Dr. Keith Junior: You'll always have a bill, but the thing is, you can't always have good health. That's a window, something you work on, and if you've got it, maybe you can keep it. And even that's not a promise. But, the thing is, if you ignore it and neglect it, we can expect to have more recs of people who want to end up in the emergency room and when they go to the emergency room, they find that they have metastatic cancer. That's just not the way it's supposed to work. You know, access to care, and someone who does care about what's going on, not the dollar that comes into your pocket, but actually cares about that person, what they represent, is what we need more of.

Maggie Mahar: A physician takes an oath to put his patient's interests ahead of his own. A corporation is legally bound to put its shareholders' interests first. And this is part of the inherent conflict between health care as a business, part of our economy, and health care as a public good and part of our society. Health care has become a growth industry. That means higher health care bills. That means more and more middle class people cannot afford health care in this country.

Larry Churchill: For Americans right now I think the primary question is, "How vulnerable am I in terms of the current system? Am I just a pink slip away from being uninsured and potentially uninsurable?" And I think there's a very profound question about whether we are creating a health care system that is sustainable over time. Some people have suggested, and I agree with them, that, actually, the end product of all of this mess and confusion in technological innovation, is going to be a system that cannot be sustained, because it will be so expensive that only the extremely well to do, the elite, will have access to it.

Dr. Espinoza: When you have a system that's built around generation of revenue, when that revenue is going somewhere, and that money is not being put back into the system to help people, you've really kind of lost, you know, we've lost our way.

Dr. Donald Berwick: I think that health care improvement at the systemic level has some of the properties of major social movements in this country: civil rights, environment. So many oxes to be gored, and a lot of people with oxen that won't get gored but think they will. And this, you know, the coalition of the people who would be better off and the people who are needlessly afraid of change, that is, they don't need to be afraid of change but they are, that's an immense coalition. That's eighty percent of America.

Dr. James Weinstein: In my life my daughter caused me to change my life. And I said, "I don't want other people to have to do what she had to do." We have the compassion. We have some knowledge. We have technology, but we let so many things get in the way of the real ideals, the hippocratic principles, that we get lost in that system that Brieanna shouldn't have had to face and so many millions of other people shouldn't have to face.

Dr. Donald Berwick:I think health care is more about love than about most other things. If there isn't at the core of this two human beings who have agreed to be in a relationship where one is trying to help relieve the suffering of another, which is love, you can't get to the right answer here. It begins so much for me in that relationship that everything that's built around that had better make damn sure that it's supporting them and not hurting it. And a lot of the structures that I am talking about-fragmented structures, transaction-oriented structures, competitive structures, forget that -- forget that this is about two people meeting and that's all it's about.

Bill Moyers: Money-Driven Medicine, a film produced by Alex Gibney, Peter Bull and Chris Matonti; directed by Andy Fredericks; and based on Maggie Mahar's book of the same name.

Log on to pbs.org and click on Bill Moyers Journal - Maggie Mahar will be there to answer your questions online. We'll link you to the Money-Driven Medicine website where there's more info about the book and the film. We'll also link you to some analysis of what advocates of reform are up against in taking on the health insurance industry, the drug lobby, and the Wall Street equity firms.

Take a look at this recent cover of Business Week. Reporters Chad Terhune and Keith Epstein write that the CEO's of the giant insurance companies should be smiling -- their lobbyists have already won. Quote: "no matter what specifics emerge in the voluminous bill Congress may send to President Obama this fall, the insurance industry will emerge more profitable."

And remember that television ad Barack Obama made as a candidate for president?

Barack Obama: The pharmaceutical industry wrote into the prescription drug plan that Medicare could not negotiate with drug companies. And you know what, the chairman of the committee who pushed the law through went to work for the pharmaceutical industry making $2 million a year. Imagine that. That's an example of the same old game-playing in Washington. I don't want to learn how to play the game better. I want to put an end to the game-playing.

Bill Moyers Now look at this recent story in the Los Angeles Times. Lo and behold, since the election, the pharmaceutical industry's $2 million dollars a year superstar lobbyist Billy Tauzin has morphed into President Obama's pal. Tauzin says the President has promised not to pressure the drug companies to negotiate with the government for lower drug prices and has agreed not to allow cheaper drugs to be imported from Canada or Europe - contrary to the position taken by candidate Obama…

Each of these stories illuminates the scarlet thread that runs through Maggie Mahar's book - the story of how today's market-driven medical system gives Wall Street investors life and death control over our health care, turning medicine into a profit machine instead of a social service to meet human need. That's the conflict at the heart of next month's showdown in Washington.

I'm Bill Moyers. See you next time.

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See more stories tagged with: healthcare, health care, bill moyers, money-driven medicine, maggie mahar

Bill Moyers is president of the Schumann Center for Media and Democracy.

Maggie Mahar is a fellow at the Century Foundation and the author of Money-Driven Medicine: The Real Reason Health Care Costs So Much (Harper/Collins 2006).

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What They Say Is All True ... It's What They Don't Say ... Single Payer Health Care
Posted by: mmckinl on Sep 1, 2009 12:17 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yep health care is being driven up by Wall Street, duplicate services, yada,yada,yada ...

What they don't say ... never mention in fact is that single payer health care is the only solution to all these problems ...

Only by putting all care under one umbrella can reform truly take place, can mandates be undertaken for more efficiency.

Maggie Mahar did a great job of confusing the issue with a myriad of facts, figures and family stories but nowhere did she offer a solution. Maybe it is because she worked for a foundation funded by the founder of J&J Corp, a staunch conservative ...before her current gig ...

The answer is Single Payer Health Care Maggie, can't you just say it, even once over almost an entire hour of a health care documentary?

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» Won't Work in the U.S. Posted by: FoonTheElder
» I guess it depends..... Posted by: mjabele
» RE: To be fair, Posted by: oregoncharles
» RE: To be fair, Posted by: mmckinl
At least LBJ pushed hard for Medicare and Civil Rights Act of 1965.
Posted by: jwverez on Sep 1, 2009 12:29 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In sharp contrast, we have a president who lied to us about hope and change only to find out that he's fighting for the other side against us. I feel sorry for our younger generation that will be lucky to have Medicare once they get to make it to 65.

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A 9/11 Every Two Months
Posted by: ender on Sep 1, 2009 12:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Over 18,000 Americans die every year because our health care industry is broken. Six times the number of people that died that day die just because we don't have universal health care.

To put it another way: health insurance companies are domestic terrorists who are six times more effective at killing Americans than al Qaeda, only al Qaeda doesn't take money out of your paycheck every week to pay its top guys multi-million dollar salaries or to run ads on TV or to buy legislation in Washington DC. The real "death panels" are the boardrooms of Aetna, Cigna and Humana.

I suggest attention for health care reform could be amplified by protests that occur on the 11th day of every other month, starting this September 11th. It'd be an effective counterpoint to the crazy "death panel birthers" and it just might remind us how our country was once united by a common threat and a common enemy, only this time the common threat is illness and the common enemy is the for-profit health care industry.

Suggestions? Volunteers?

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» In the New York Times... Posted by: wmholt
» 18,000 a year isn't the half of it Posted by: pelican beak
» RE: 18,000 a year isn't the half of it Posted by: JenniferBedingfield
» RE: 18,000 a year isn't the half of it Posted by: JenniferBedingfield
Natural Pain Management System_FOR HUMAN,ANIMALS & PLANTS
Posted by: purpleenergy on Sep 1, 2009 2:22 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One such proven NATURAL SLEEP MANAGEMENT SYSTEM is PRAN YANTRA or Tesla Purple Positive Energy Plates & Disc. These plates are energised with UNIVERSAL FREE ENERGY WHAT WE CALL PRAN IN India. They works on the scientific principle of Lights, Colours, Sounds & Vibrations.The Aluminium Plates are Coloured in layers of red, blue, green & so on & by the time you put the last colour coat, the surface assumes the colour PURPLE. These plates undergo a series of man made procedures at a specific location in the Himalayan Region of India & are DESIGNED FOR LIFE LONG USE ON HUMAN,ANIMALS& PLANTS.
It’s a perfect Pain Reliever & u wouldn’t have to rush to HOSPITAL for a sudden Spondalities, Fibromyalgia,Migraine,Headache,Stomach ache,back pain,toothache,sprains ,stress,fatigue,trauma,depression.
PLACE THE PLATE ON THE AFFECTED PART FOR 15 MINUTES.THE PAIN DISAPPEARS :For INSOMNIA, place the plate beneath your pillow.
PLACE THE PLATE BENEATH YOUR PILLOW FOR A BLISSFUL SLEEP EVERY DAY
It’s a perfect Pain Reliever & u wouldn’t have to rush to HOSPITAL for a sudden Spondalities, Fibromyalgia,Migraine,Headache,Stomach ache,back pain,toothache,sprains ,stress,fatigue,trauma,depression.

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Thrilled to Help Promote This Movie
Posted by: drricklippin on Sep 1, 2009 4:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I attended the NYC premiere of this excellent film based on Maggie Mahar's book.

To put Bill Moyers moral voice behind it is an excellent and pwerful lever.

My one minor disagreement with Moyers was his boat metaphor of "we are all in this boat together?" Rather to me the predominant metaphor is "BASIC HUMAN HEALTH IS NOT FOR SALE"

(But that may be a trivial point)

Thanks so much AlteNet for covering Moyers endorsing this outstanding and timely documentary.

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa

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» RE: Two different boats... Posted by: Changling
The Need for Health Care Reform
Posted by: CTC123 on Sep 1, 2009 5:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Consider the Connection to:
The NEGATIVE Economic Pyramid
At the top of the Pyramid,
Health Care Industry X________
(Health Care Profiteers, Lobbyists, and Invested Interest), collect money from
the consumer (U & I), and dispense Trick'le-down Health Care, their primary care is the
bottom line.$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Search for the facts:
Money-Driven Medicine
CTC123GREEN

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Stories are good.
Posted by: PJAW on Sep 1, 2009 5:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Part of the evolution of our health care crisis is rooted in the fact that for years everyone felt that their story was somehow unique. They were deceived into believing that there was something wrong with them personally or their doctor that caused their insurance plan to reject their claim. After all, everything that they read in their insurance company's literature spoke of serving subscribers, of providing the best doctors at the least cost to them personally, and it was alwys accompanied by photos of smiling healthy people and alleged endorsements of the wonderful performance by the insurance company.

The stories we're hearing now have been around for years for anyone who would take the time to listen. Few did because it required a little research and they assumed (due to corporate propaganda and a complicit corporate media) that it could never happen to them. Times were better anyway, and many people had enough money to just forget about it and move on unless the financial impact was totally devastating.

Now, the public is finally getting it. The financial standing of millions more people is so fragile that they simply cannot "forget about it and move on". The corporate media can no longer ignore the problem because the public latched firmly onto it during the 08 campaign and has refused to let go. However, they still serve the interests of their masters by attacking the solution and anyone who promotes it.

More than a decade ago, I personally decided to counter attack the inusrance industry with a program I referred to as "managed profits". Everyone I spoke to said, ""Great idea, go for it!" The plan was to enroll a large number of people via the internet and do a little collective bargaining with the insurance industry, subscribing en masse to some company's product under strict, profit limiting rules.

That's when I discovered that private citizens are specifically prohibited from organizing for the purpose of buying insurance (by law - check for yourself). That was also when I discovered that insurance companies are exempt from anti-trust laws.

So, unless those laws are changed, the "co-ops" being promoted as an alternative to a "public option" cannot be formed (other than by insurance companies) and if they are allowed, nothing will prevent insurance companies from colluding to fix prices anyway.

The game is rigged. The insurance industry has spent decades and millions of dollars creating this unbelievably favorable legal climate for themselves and they are exploiting it to the max and will continue to do so as long as they possibly can.

Single payer is the answer, though the "public option" may be the only road to it right now. I've lectured on this subject, there are lots of issues that need to be addressed but the first order of business should be to wrest control of the marketplace from the insurance industry. They are ruthless criminals who have violated the public trust in the most vile and pernicious manner.

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» RE: Stories are good. Posted by: 3rdI
The houseboy has no intention of healthcare reform
Posted by: solrev on Sep 1, 2009 5:20 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama is a snake in the grass. He has only one goal, maintain the status quo at all costs.
We need to bite the bullet and go directly to single payer. Go to the doctor in your area, get treatment and you will never see a bill. Until we do that we do not have a clue as to what healthcare actually costs. Find out the true costs then worry about how to pay for it. Employers are not responsible for your healthcare, except in the work place and that is called OSHA. If progressives support Obama because they to not like the right, they are the sheeple. If your choice is the lesser of two evils, then do not choose. If you can not vote in a good government, stop legitimizing a bad government. You may not be able to beat the fork tongue politicians, but you do not have to join them. Like the great philosopher said, “stupid is as stupid does”.

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One problem I had with the film
Posted by: Tim Chadron on Sep 1, 2009 6:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
was that scene where the doc sort of throws up his hands and says, "You can't fight city hall!" Meaning it's an uphill battle for the docs to fight to get things right. Well, since when does the AMA NOT have bargaining power with our government? The problem is that the docs and the AMA are part of the problem in that they, most of them anyway, seem to like the system just as it is. If they didn't, they could certainly wield one of the most powerful lobbies in this nation as a club to get virtually any change they wish. But that is not the case.

This doc portrays himself and the other docs as innocent victims of "the system." The problem is that they are, to a large extent, responsible for the system that is now in place. So quit playing the victim and climb out of your Mercedes, skip the country club today, and help those who need it. Use your political power to help all the citizens of this country experience the same level of health care that France, Canada, Great Britain, Japan, Taiwan, and every other developed nation on this planet already enjoy.

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Spread the Word
Posted by: Gravitas on Sep 1, 2009 6:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I wish we would start connecting the dots as to how they get away with all this, they so scapegoat "faulty lifestyle" that the average sheeple is too busy feeling guilty or pointing the finger towards this neighbor they never stop to figure out how things really work!

I am going to order this film and show it to my students.

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» s/b "you're" n/t Posted by: brunowe
» so-called risky behavior Posted by: cplot
Reduced Price????
Posted by: Gravitas on Sep 1, 2009 6:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I just checked the price. Yes, it is reasonable for community organizers. However, I want to show it at a school. As an adjunct I like to buy my own videos rather than have the school order them. But that means I have to pay the institutional price. Do you have any idea how little adjuncts make?? I wish that would be taken into consideration! I can put in a request at my school but there are no guarantees. And that means I can't take it with me to show elsewhere!

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» RE: educed Price???? Posted by: SFGlam
Good but like the previous commenter said...
Posted by: james108 on Sep 1, 2009 6:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... it leaves out much of the problem. The AMA supposedly represents a lot of physicians, and I don't think they're doing anything to promote single payer. Also, I know physicians can complain about the fee schedule being too low, but at the same time overcharge the uninsured for huge loss write-offs or to negotiate down whatever the person can pay, refuse to give medicare and tricare patients equal appointment consideration, forcing them to high cost ER and many of them are part of the problem.

I know many don't have any control over the big corporate pharma, medical equipment supplier's charges, or the big hospital and HMO control of things, but the AMA kind of did control the supply of health care providers, because they thought we'd have too many offering services, possssssibly to keep fees high.

The Physicians for a National Health Program, claiming to represent over 17,000 members proves not all of them are in it just to get rich off extortion of suffering people though. It's good to make money, but controlling people's access to health care to make more money off of less is criminal. The health program the PNHP promotes isn't the half-baked, high cost system envisioned by the democrats though. Promoting things like that at the expense of sidestepping discussion of better options is as much of the problem as anything else mentioned.

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What has driven up the cost of healthcare
Posted by: gcdcpakmbs on Sep 1, 2009 6:54 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. The first big bump was when providers started accepting assignment on insurance benefits. Why? It caused an increase in demand. Go back to Intro to Economics. Most basic of basics. THAT is the PATIENT's fault. No fundamental understanding of what the procedures/care cost.

2. In 1972, how much did we as a nation spend on CAT scans? MRI's? PET Scans? Heart Transplants? Lung Transplants? I could type in another 250 procedures easily.

The amount? $0 for the diagnostic procedures, and for the transplants you could count them because they were all headline news.

The major increase in cost is procedures that never before existed.

SINGLE PAYOR SYSTEM: The problem is not Insurance. That is tantamount to blaming finance companies for the huge increases since the 70's for the cost of automobiles.

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» true Posted by: james108
Duh
Posted by: slinkypomo on Sep 1, 2009 6:55 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Of course the US Health system is money driven! Its ALL about profit. Overpaid, under worked Doctors dont help any!

RT
Ultimate Anonymity

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The big picture . . .
Posted by: newsound on Sep 1, 2009 6:58 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not just about seeing your doctor when you have a problem. There's a big picture here that people seem to be missing. The term healthcare is self-explainatory . . . from preventative maintenance, diet, exercise and probably the most important - EDUCATION. People take better care of their cars than themselves. The dumbing-down of America has played a major roll in why things have gotten so out of control. Americans pick a side or issue and start fighting and sadly, that will be the status quo.

Argue you're point at a "town meeting."
Scream loud on that talk radio show.
Be "educated" by that news story that uses the corporate-assigned "talking points."
Write a book with a million facts and figures . . . or better yet, make a movie.

And while all of this is going on, LOBBYISTS ARE MAKING POLICY.

BTW . . . 2 years ago, Michael Moore's movie made many people mad too. Did that change anything?

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» RE: The big picture . . . Posted by: Basenjis
SINGLE PAYER NOW!!!
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Sep 1, 2009 7:05 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What's really horrifying are those people many of whom are on Medicare standing up against allowing everyone else to be in the same type of system that they are in! The very poor may qualify for Medicaid, but those that are really in the middle are being squeezed from all sides! With so many people in this nation hurting because of Corporate Welfare - it is past time that we all stand together and start demanding some action for US! Call/fax/email (hell start picketing) "your representatives" and demand that they support Single Payer, it's the only way to at least keep the bast--ds sorta honest!

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» RE: SINGLE PAYER NOW!!! Posted by: tmgibs
» RE: HUH? Posted by: marid
» RE: SINGLE PAYER NOW!!! Posted by: Basenjis
» RE: Well put Base Posted by: marid
PATIENTS AND THEIR DOCTORS
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Sep 1, 2009 7:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That used to be the arrangement. There was mutual trust and a physician's first responsiblity was to the patient. Now both Patient and doctor wait for a 'verdict' to come down from an insurance company. The insurance company's first responsibility is to the company executives and the shareholders. There can be no negative impact on profits. Decisions are not made in the best interest of the patient which is the goal of every physician out there. That's what has changed over the years. Doctors and patients discussed the problem and arrived at what would be done about it. The insurance company was informed by way of an itemized bill for services rendered. A further explanation could be requested. But they were not involved in deciding medical treatment before hand. That's what has to change. And their expectations of double digit profits, crazy bonuses and retirement packages has to be more realistic. They agree to insure people for medical purposes and they are a necessity. Almost like a utility. They are definitely not Tiffany's.

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the cost of medicine
Posted by: the director on Sep 1, 2009 7:43 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please forgive me but the high cost of medicine is "we the people" eat badly. We eat processed foods laden with preservatives. Oh but we are too busy, then die and make the eugenics folks happy.
When Bill Moyers was a kid in Texas they used manure to grow our food not ammonium nitrates and sulfates. We rotated our crops and corn was only grown for swine.
We have surrendered our health to the conveniences of our busy lifestyle, slow down.
Medicine is a business and high tech is expensive while eating good nutritious food
is very inexpensive, we are what eat.
When we eat badly we can expect the worst from the business of medicine, especially the bill.

Patrick McGean
Director
Cellular Matrix Study
Body Human Project

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» RE: Valid points Posted by: marid
» RE: Valid points Posted by: etio
» RE: The poison of marketed "food" Posted by: the director
Healthcare in this country is like everything else -----
Posted by: symcokid on Sep 1, 2009 7:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in this USofA, money driven, same as it has always been - nothing has changed and it never will. It doesn't seem as though this government cares if we can afford insurance coverage or we are covered even - show me the money up front or the Doctor's won't even attempt to treat you!

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JT Barrie
Posted by: rimchamp77 on Sep 1, 2009 8:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I wrote a book in response to the scam known as the Dangerous Drugs Mythology taught in public schools and most private schools. The Dangerous Drugs Mythology teaches children not to take any personal responsibility for their health decisions. If a doctor or someone in authority tells them to use drugs long-term or in a chronic fashion it must be OK. Children are actively discouraged from learning information about drugs and to "trust the experts".
We should never waste our time learning the compendium of facts and problems involved with every disease and every drug and every treatment - but we must learn about the principles of health care and the real health risks. This is especially true of "quick fixes" like the drugs peddled to our doctors by drug dealers in three piece suits. Drugs are short term fixes and should be avoided if other non drug therapies can be utilized. Over reliance on drugs is a serious problem in the USA. Is it any wonder we lead the world in per capita consumption of both legal and illegal drugs and our economy pays premium drug prices compared to the rest of the world.

The same principles should hold true for expensive surgeries and procedures. Willingness to endure short term discomfort for health reasons is a lost quality in our culture. We are constantly pressured to fill our time with "stuff". That stuff can be drug use [beer, wine commercials + Viagra + any drug that provides short term relief from any minor discomfort], recreation, or expensive high end possessions like sleek cars. We are actively encouraged to sacrifice our health in pursuit of the golden calf [see Exodus for details].

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Erm. Volunteer-model on the table, then?
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Sep 1, 2009 8:59 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nothing against volunteerism, I think its a great and rewarding thing to be involved in, should you choose to make a difference amongst others, especially those where you live and work and raise your family. A rising tide lifts all ships, is the way that I look at it.

But are you really, really, really that pissed that folks who deliver you medical care, perform medical research, and provide auxiliary services need to feed their families? Once again, volunteerism is wonderful, in my opinion, but when was the last time a loudmouth like the author put in a sixty-five or seventy hour week pro bono?

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What if...
Posted by: wtfo on Sep 1, 2009 9:22 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The other day I was thinking about our current (and probable future) healthcare system in this country and it suddenly struck me that - per Naomi Klein's "Shock Doctrine" - what if we actually DO experience a pandemic in this nation? I mean - a real, serious pandemic that affects virtually ALL of America's citizens...

While nobody (certainly not me) even wants to contemplate the ramifications of this event on our society, almost everybody would agree that our current healthcare system would immediately implode. Any attempt to continue to ration access to medical resources the way we are currently doing it would simply not work and would probably result in citizen reaction that would make terrorism seem mild in comparison.

In all probability the government (that hated of all institutions) would have to nationalize all the medical resources in the nation to even begin to manage the situation and attempt to halt the spread of the pandemic. Our current for-profit health institutions (and insurance agencies) would simply not exist during the national emergency because, as we all know, their methods of healthcare management are not in any way conducive to working for the good of "the people" or, in reality, for the good of the society in general.

Then, assuming that the government was even somewhat successful in handling this national emergency, what do you think would happen afterwards? Do you think that the average American citizen who was left alive would want to go back to the way it was before the pandemic? Do you think they would finally start to believe that healthcare is not something that can be rationed simply by market mechanisms but is instead something to be managed "by the people" for the good of "the people" to protect "all the people"?

In a sad way, I am left to believe that if I am ever to see rational healthcare policy in this nation, we may have to actually survive something like this and - again via Naomi Klein's "Shock Doctrine" - decide as a people to make an intelligent, adult decision once the shock has worn off.

Unfortunately for me I have pretty much lost the feeling that the knowledgeable, thoughtful, civically minded people of this country - even armed with powerful audio-visual tools like this documentary - are no match for the politically and corporate brain-washed majority of our citizens. It may take a major health shock to restart the proper thinking processes of "we the people"...

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» RE: What if... Posted by: MT512
The blind following of market forces
Posted by: alturn on Sep 1, 2009 9:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
will lead to death. Not only of the individual, but of society.

The healthcare mess is symbolic of our greater woes.

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» There is no society to be killed. Posted by: ABetterFuture
America
Posted by: Hachino on Sep 1, 2009 11:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Richest country in the world with "the best health care" is a tragic joke to someone like me who has never had health insurance because I can't afford it and none of my jobs have ever provided any benefits, even the 60+ hour workweek ones. I am in my early 40's and haven't been able to see a doctor or get any form of medical or dental treatment in over 25 years. I am one of the 50 million uninsured people you hear about. (That's over 1000 filled sports stadiums) Does it seem acceptable that I have never received medical care or even a cursory examination since my childhood just because I am not wealthy? Other societies view this system as barbaric, predatory and shameful. Please, America remember that I too am a human being and that my joys and pains are also your own. Single payer now.

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» RE: Be careful what you wish for... Posted by: Prinzowhales
» More thoughts... Posted by: mjabele
Everyone thinks "THIS" is "the" problem.
Posted by: PJAW on Sep 1, 2009 11:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In reality, there is no problem, there are many problems and nearly everyone is contributing somehow. Much of the public does not take care of its health (wrong foods, smoking, alcohol etc...), some doctors provide lousy care and game the system to boot, the pharmaceutical industry vastly overcharges for their products (many of which do no good or actually harm), and insruance companies are skimming outrageous sums off the top of every premium dollar.

The two most manageable problems are insurance and pharmaceutic prices. All financial control has to be removed from the insurance companies immediately. Drug prices need to be controlled at the same time. Next, provider fraud can and must be reduced if not eliminated. Public education takes time but will gradually inspire lifestyle modification which will which will bring better health and a reduced need for professional intervention.

The simplest method for funding health care (two thirds of which is already deliverd under one government program or another) is a national sales tax, which would amount to about 13% on all non-essential retail sales. It would quickly become accepted routine. Before you freak out, do the math. If your current insurance premium is $500 per month (fairly cheap in today's market) you would need to make $3,846 in non-essential purchase each month to hit that threshold.

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Broken ObamaCare is a symptom - not a cause of American Sickness
Posted by: Man_vs_Kleptocracy on Sep 1, 2009 1:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The cause is American style Fascism that the corporate media clearly won't acknowledge anymore than the Washington snake oil hucksters that are virtually hired to perform for their keep.

Until the Fascist beast is addressed nothing real or meaningful will change.

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Money driven medicine. Like everything else, quantity before quality and thus the mess.
Posted by: JenniferBedingfield on Sep 1, 2009 1:46 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I know I've discussed this before but here goes. It's all about putting profits first by the old trick of whole-sale volume sale. Having read the article and the comments, I thought about what I had learned in finance and accounting and the follies in the medical world. Instead of taking quality production and care seriously, it's all about pumping up the sales by going cheap on production and pushing out more quantity just to desperately generate those profits. In this unfettered capitalist system, there is no regard for people health, the environment, or other long term costs. This also explains why alternative practitioners are under the knife while the rich doctors aren't. I know it looks impossible out there to defeat those big money giants but don't be afraid to try all venues from finding alternative practitioners to not giving up the fight to get those Big Insurance middlemen out of the way. Challenges galore.

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Too bad that the human factor is left out of their cold equations
Posted by: Changling on Sep 1, 2009 9:39 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Without heart you have a relentless machine that calculates and churns out profit regardless of human needs and lives. The bottom line becomes the margin of profit per quarter over quality care and how many are saved. That is considered in the loss margin and therefor must be reduced at all costs. Yours and mine lives are the cost that are red of death but to them red of loss of profit. Blood money on the sacrifice of us on their alters of money made. The true margin of death. Like Carthage all over again only it is everyone who gets put into the Furnaces of Moloch, not just babies.

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AMA's origins may have a something to do with this
Posted by: sandy55 on Sep 1, 2009 10:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have no idea if these words stated as fact are actually true but if they are this article explains how things got the way they are. I found it just yesterday if it is true thing do seem to add up.


When the FDA, whose officials have to be acceptable to Rockefeller Center before they are appointed, has to put an independent operator out of business, it goes all out to execute those orders. But the orders do not come directly from Standard Oil or a drug house director. As Morris Bealle pointed out, the American Medical Association (AMA) is the front for the Drug Trust, and furnishes the quack doctors to testify that even when they know nothing of the product involved, it is their considered opinion that it has no therapeutic value.
Wrote Bealle:
'Financed by the taxpayers, these Drug Trust persecutions leave no stone unturned to destroy the victim. If he is a small operator, the resulting attorney's fees and court costs put him out of business. In one case, a Dr. Adolphus Hohensee of Scranton, Pa., who had stated that vitamins (he used natural ones) were vital to good health, was taken to court for 'misbranding' his product. The American Medical Association furnished ten medicos who reversed all known medical theories by testifying that 'vitamins are not necessary to the human body'. Confronted with government bulletins to the contrary, the medicos wiggled out of that one by declaring that these standard publications were outdated!'
In addition to the FDA, Bealle listed the following agencies having to do with 'health' - i.e., with the health of the Drug Trust to the detriment of the citizens - as being dependent on Rockefeller: U.S. Public Health Service, U.S. Veterans Administration, Federal Trade Commission, Surgeon General of the Air Force, Army Surgeon General' s Office, Navy Bureau of Medicine & Surgery, National Health Research Institute, National Research Council, National Academy of Sciences.
The National Academy of Sciences in Washington is considered the all wise body which investigates everything under the sun, especially in the field of health, and gives to a palpitating public the last word in that science. To the important post at the head of this agency, the Drug Trust had one of their own appointed. He was none other than Alfred N. Richards, one of the directors and largest stockholders of Merck & Company, which was making huge profits from its drug traffic.
When Bealle revealed this fact, Richards resigned forthwith, and the Rockefellers appointed in his place the President of their own Rockefeller Institution, Detlev W. Bronk.
The medico drug cartel was summed up by J.W Hodge, M.D., of Niagara Falls, N.Y., in these words: 'The medical monopoly or medical trust, euphemistically called the American Medical Association, is not merely the meanest monopoly ever organized, but the most arrogant, dangerous and despotic organization which ever managed a free people in this or any other age. Any and all methods of healing the sick by means of safe, simple and natural remedies are sure to be assailed and denounced by the arrogant leaders of the AMA doctors' trust as fakes, frauds and humbugs Every practitioner of the healing art who does not ally himself with the medical trust is denounced as a 'dangerous quack' and impostor by the predatory trust doctors. Every sanitarium who attempts to restore the sick to a state of health by natural means without resort to the knife or poisonous drugs, disease imparting serums, deadly toxins or vaccines, is at once pounced upon by these medical tyrants and fanatics, bitterly denounced, vilified and persecuted to the fullest extent.'


Here is the link to it if you choose to read it in its entirety:
http://educate-yourself.org/fc/drugstory.shtml

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There is a bill floating in Congress that would work!! H.R. 676
Posted by: MindyB on Sep 1, 2009 10:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The bill that is currently being lauded as the one that will get passed H.R 3200 is severely flawed because it keeps the greedy private insurance companies as the major players and the ones who will greatly benefit from this "reform" by receiving subsidies to cover the currenly uninsured. It does nothing to address the issue of runaway costs, the ever increasing insurance premiu,s, co-pays, co-insurance, deductibles, and immense control the insurance industry has on our health care and our doctors. The only bill on the table H.R. 676, which unfortunately has been shoved to the corner, that trully will provide Universal Health Care by using non-profit insurance agencies rather than the currently market driven private insurance industry, and will drive down the cost of health care while guaranteeing quality health care for all must be supported. Please call/write your Congresspeople and push them to support H.R. 676.

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What should be done
Posted by: tchii on Sep 2, 2009 4:39 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Medicine should be completely socialized. Profits for no one, but everyone should get a living wage.
The government should simply act as the money pool. No medical decisions. The DOCTORs then make all the medical decisions, whatever it is, the government just pays. An overview panel reviews all the doctors and their costs and makes assessments (of the doctor if necessary, nothing about actual care) based on that. If one doctor has higher bills, he's reviewed. Anyone caught cheating is dealt with. Simple, easy. The program would be paid for by adding a tax at the same rate that everyone pays for their current insurance, averaged, of course, so that no one ends up paying more than they already do. This money would be ear-marked especially into a private fund controlled by something like the fdic (ie private/public company) which would invest the funds into something like mutual funds so that the money could earn interest. No one pays for health care, but everyone pays for healthcare. The doctor decides, single payer, and the money itself makes money.
Finally, all those insurance people and companies can be re-trained, like all the millions of americans who lost their jobs because they were out-sourced or sent overseas.

Namaste,
tchii

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The FDA allows to many chemicals in the food supply
Posted by: topview on Sep 5, 2009 8:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our basic health is from what we eat. If you eat chemicals every day and since most of them are neurotoxins that change your bodies ability to digest and process the food you intake.
Doctors are trained to treat you with chemicals, and our basic body functions can not tolerate chemicals.
In order to live a healthy life and not have health problems, you have to resort to what makes your system work as it is required for all organs and systems to function normaly, you have to feed it what it was born to function on.
Once I went back to only natural food and stopped eating packaged and processed foods, I never got sick anymore and didn't need a doctor.
Your body will function perfect if you feed it what it requires. That is the problem with the health in America.
People are eating poison to the human body when they eat in fast food joints and buy food off the shelf without reading labels.

If the FDA would just ban all un natural food additives, the populations health would change in just a few months.
Of course they would have to ban almost all food in supermarkets and fast food in and outs.

Most people have no idea the food they are eating is poison to our system. One can of soda will weaken your immune system for over eight hours, from the sugar in it, and if it has High fructose corn syrup in it, the signal sent to your brain from the HFCS makes your body feel it needs more food and drinks to satisfy your appetite.Aspartame, MSG are excito-toxins and kill brain cells and create more fat to store the toxins in.

Corporations know this and they have it down to a science, that makes you buy more and ruin your health, all so they can profit more.

My advice is to go back to basics, as our ancestors existed on what nature provided and lived pretty healthy.
I am 75 now and I had colon cancer 13 years ago, and after I changed back to basics, I haven't needed to go back to a doctor and am doing just fine.
My blog has good info on the things to avoid to stay healthy.
My Healthy Info 4u

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WE ARE ALL BEING SO SCREWED
Posted by: cori on Sep 7, 2009 11:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When corporattions have the same rights as individuals and nations and have all the money and our reps who we vote for are willing to be brided, we the people are all going to be screwed. This is not a democracy. We vote for our reps and they turn around and pass legistaltion for special interests. So unless we march and protest very loudly and don't reeelected Blue Dog Democrats and others who don't work for us there will not be much forth coming in health care or drug cost reforms. Our government is corrupt to the bone. While the very rich are really making out 99.9 percent of us are being totally screwed. Our government has become our worst enemy. no health care, dangerous costly drugs, toxic chemicals in our foods, low wages, no jobs, exploding poverty, food prices through the roof, and a tax structure that favors the rich, 2 wars, 800 bases + the biggiest prison system on the planet that we pay for! Courtesy of our Government. So what will it take for us to get our elected reps out and make a change?

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HOW TO HAVE A PUBLIC OPTION
Posted by: cori on Sep 7, 2009 12:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From Robert Reich: The importance of having the Pubic option and how to get it.



FROM DR. REICH



CC Obama



To get anything meaningful through Congress the president will have to give Democrats far more leadership & more cover. Yet it's not too late. Obama need to twist arms, cajole, force members to join him, & threaten retribution if they don't come along.



He'll need to be specific about what he wants -- especially about three things and makes clear to individual members that he means business.



1. I will not stand for a bill that leaves millions of Americans without health care. It's vital to cover all Americans, not only for their & their children's sakes & not only because it's a moral imperative, but because doing so will be good for all of us. One out of three Americans will experience job loss & potential loss of health insurance for themselves and their families at some point. One out in four of us who have insurance is under-insured - & those who don't get preventive care can get walloped with many major illnesses that wipe us out financially, & force us into emergency rooms that all of us end up paying for.



2. The way to cover all Americans & not have deficits is to require the wealthiest Americans pay extra. The top 1 percent of earners take home 23 % of total national income. Their tax burden is not excessive, it is less then before WW2.. Many managers of hedge funds, private-equity partners, & investment bankers -- including those who have been bailed out by taxpayers -- are paying 15 % of their taxes because their earnings are treated as capital gains! We should eliminate this loophole and use it to guarantee the health of all.



3. I want a true public insurance option -- not a "cooperative," & not something that's triggered if certain goals aren't met. A public option is CRITICAL for lowering health-care costs. Private insurers don't face enough competition to guarantee low prices & high service. In 36 states, three or fewer insurers account for 65 percent of the insurance market. A public insurance option would have the authority needed to negotiate low drug prices & low prices from medical providers. Commercial insurers pay 30 % higher rates to providers than the government pays through Medicare, because Medicare has the scale to get those lower rates. A nationwide public option could get similar savings. And those savings would mean lower premiums, deductibles and co-payments for Americans who can barely afford health insurance right now.

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The Medical Industrial Complex, like all other "industrial complexes" are fueled by greed!
Posted by: Javan on Sep 7, 2009 12:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Make lifestyle changes that create health and leave the expensive ineffective sickness care alone. Alternative sickness prevention is much more cost effective and promotes good health in an environment of integrity.

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Moyers Healthcare series
Posted by: Maggiekruger on Sep 7, 2009 1:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article; the entire series is so dead on

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We should never waste our time learning
Posted by: teon6 on Sep 20, 2009 4:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We should never waste our time learning the compendium of facts and problems involved with every disease and every drug and every treatment - but we must learn about the principles of health care and the real health risks. This is especially true of "quick fixes" like the drugs peddled to our doctors by drug dealers in three piece suits. Drugs are short term fixes and should be avoided if other non drug therapies can be utilized. Over reliance on drugs is a serious problem in the USA. Is it any supernatural supernatural subtitles gossip girl s03e02 subs gossip girl s03e02 subtitles the big bang theory subtitles the big bang theory subs seropol5 wonder we lead the world in per capita consumption of both legal and illegal drugs and our economy pays premium drug prices compared to the rest of the world.

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