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Health & Wellness

Medicare: A Bush Disaster That My Life Depends on

By James Ridgeway, Mother Jones. Posted September 9, 2008.


Remember Bush's signature health care initiative? I need it to survive -- and that's not very reassuring.
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I began needing drugs to stay alive one day in the early 1990s, though I did not realize it at the time. I was still a decade away from officially becoming an old person by US government standards, although I'd already started getting my mailings from AARP. I had spent the afternoon in the Plaza Hotel bar in New York City, meeting with an actor who'd said he wanted to make a film from a book I'd written. (To no one's surprise, it never happened.) I'd had a few bourbons without eating anything, and afterward I stopped off at a falafel place. Then I began to vomit blood.

I went to the doctor. He gave me the first of what was to become a series of yearly tests, snaking a fiber-optic device down my throat to look at my upper digestive tract. He announced that I had Barrett's syndrome, a dangerous precancerous condition in the cells of the lower esophagus, caused by years of acid reflux. But fortunately for me, the doctor said, there was a pill, still relatively new at the time, that could save me from a terrible fate -- a little purple pill. With that, I became one of the millions of people who take Prilosec and a crop of other prescription drugs for acid reflux, stomach ulcers, and heartburn.


This was when I learned what it means to get old. You're no longer like the average young person, who needs a course of antibiotics to cure a sinus infection, or painkillers for a sprained ankle. You have more in common with people who have life-threatening diseases like aids or cancer: Your access to the drugs you need may determine whether you will live another day, or another 10 years. Or it may determine whether you can see, or whether you can walk across a room. You will take pills until you die.

With that in mind, the question of what the government does to ensure America's elders get their drugs takes on a significance of Darwinian proportions. And so, it was with more than professional interest that I followed President Bush's push for a Medicare prescription drug plan in 2003 -- his signature health care initiative, and to date his only successful one. Congress passed the plan in a dramatic, clock-stopping session that November amid much media fanfare; two years later, I got a chance to try it out when I joined the 25 million people receiving benefits under what's now known as Medicare Part D.

Part D offers a disturbing window on the future of health care. For conservatives, it represents the sharp end of the stake they hope to drive into Medicare at large, destroying the largest and best single-payer health care program this nation has ever known. For progressives, it demonstrates the vast shortcomings of any health program -- no matter how "universal" -- that fails to defy Big Pharma and the insurance companies. For myself, perhaps the key lesson from dealing with Part D has been that the new plan doesn't have that much to do with ensuring drug access for seniors, but a great deal with securing the vested interests of the stakeholders -- from the Bush administration and the pharma industry, all the way to groups like aarp.

prilosec was just the beginning of my life in pills. A few years after my esophageal cancer scare, a doctor encouraged me to consider antidepressants, and I grudgingly went to see the psychiatrist he recommended. A genial, heavyset man, he greeted me from a leather armchair that was tilted back into a reclining position so he could comfortably view his patient. Then he launched into a series of rapid-fire questions: Do you have trouble sleeping? Wake up feeling blue? Think bad thoughts during the day? Ever think of committing suicide? At the end of the interrogation he smiled broadly and said, "You've got 7 out of 10." Turning on the electric motor in his chair, he winched himself upright and opened the door to a cupboard, revealing shelf after shelf of pill samples. He pulled out a package and said, "Here, see how this works."

Like many people, I went through a string of antidepressants before settling on one with side effects I could endure -- in my case, Wellbutrin. And like many people, I kept on taking it. The cdc reports that in 2005, antidepressants were the most prescribed class of drugs in the country, with nearly 118 million prescriptions written that year alone. US sales of antidepressants in 2006 topped $13 billion.

The elderly, unsurprisingly, make up an important segment of the antidepressant market. For some people, I suppose, getting old may be the glorious adventure that's depicted in commercials for retirement investments. But for most of us, it's actually pretty dispiriting: You feel lousy, your friends are sick or dead, and you worry about dying too -- or running out of money before you do. In the United States, an estimated 5 million or more seniors -- about 1 in 7 -- suffer from depression, and the elderly have a higher suicide rate than the general population as well. When it comes to treatment, of course, antidepressants tend to win out over costly psychotherapy sessions where we might find some relief talking about how rotten it is to get old. Between 1995 and 2004, according to a Department of Health and Human Services study, the number of antidepressant scrips written annually for patients over 65 more than doubled.

By the time I officially became a senior citizen, I was already taking two of the most prescribed classes of drugs in the United States. Then, while visiting France a few years ago, I suddenly felt a numbing in my left arm. I told the concierge at my hotel in Dijon, who swiftly called a doctor to my room. (She apologized profusely that because I was a foreigner, a house call would cost all of $50 -- on a Sunday.) The doctor said I was all right, but insisted that I go to the hospital nonetheless. I was quickly picked up by a miniambulance, admitted through the emergency room, checked out by doctors and specialists, and run through a CT scan and mri before being released six hours later with a bill for a little more than $200.

Back in the United States, my doctor agreed with the French hospital's assessment that I'd probably had something called a transient ischemic attack -- a tiny, passing stroke that leaves no permanent damage, but is a powerful warning sign of worse things to come. I must keep my blood pressure and bad cholesterol way down, he said, so I started taking Diovan for the former and Pravastatin for the latter. Among seniors, drugs for high blood pressure and heart disease are among the most widely prescribed, according to the cdc, as are cholesterol-lowering drugs, which have been another recent boon to drug companies, with $21.6 billion in US sales in 2006.

This, then, was my lineup when I signed on to Medicare at the beginning of 2006. Every day, I take four of the most common types of drugs used by people over 65. In addition, I take two kinds of expensive eye-drops for glaucoma, Cosopt and Xalatan. Without this cocktail, I would be blind and at an increased risk of having a stroke, developing esophageal cancer, and slitting my wrists. Now, my supply of these tiny kernels of survival would depend on Part D.

I had looked forward to going off private insurance and on Medicare: no more searching for in-network doctors, or getting precertified for routine procedures. Medicare is a far cry from Europe's national health care systems -- besides being primarily for old people, it has significant monthly premiums (for most, $96.40 in 2008), deductibles (including $1,024 for hospital stays), and copays. Yet it's like those systems in that it's basically a single-payer setup, in which the government pays providers to take care of patients.

But there's a big difference between the original Medicare program and the new prescription drug plan, a difference that reflects the times in which each came to be. Original Medicare grew out of Harry Truman's post-World War II calls for national health care. The program was debated for 20 years, and finally created (along with Medicaid for the poor) under Lyndon Johnson in 1965, against the wishes of the American Medical Association and much to the chagrin of conservatives, who ever since then have been looking for ways to dismantle what they see as a dangerous step toward socialized medicine.

Medicare, which in 1972 was expanded to cover disabled people under 65, did not include a prescription drug benefit -- but in the '60s and '70s, drugs were cheaper and less crucial to treatment, even for seniors with chronic conditions. Since then, drug spending has risen steadily: Most years in the 1980s and 1990s saw double-digit increases, far outstripping inflation rates or even the rise in overall health care costs. Yet efforts to add any version of single-payer drug coverage to Medicare -- most recently, as part of Hillary Clinton's doomed 1993 Health Security Act -- have consistently failed.

In fact, some have argued that Medicare not only can't handle added benefits, but must essentially be destroyed in order to save it: Only some form of privatization, conservatives say, will prevent this foolhardy entitlement program from going bankrupt. In 1995, the Heritage Foundation launched a $30 million media campaign about Medicare reform. The foundation proposed a market-based system, modeled on the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program, in which the government would subsidize private insurance and managed-care companies in providing benefits.

While this public-private model has not yet succeeded in replacing Medicare, it did find expression in the new drug benefit. Part D is not in fact an entitlement program; it really isn't even a benefit provided by the government. It's a program subsidized (and nominally run) by the government in which people buy prescription drug insurance policies provided by private companies.

That public-private model didn't mute the right's opposition to Part D: After all, conservatives had proposed this notion in order to reduce existing benefits, not to add new ones. Some have never forgiven Bush for supporting Part D, and still aim to dismantle it. (In an especially cynical move, in 2005, the Republican Study Committee, a group of congressional budget slashers, proposed postponing implementation of the Medicare drug program in order to pay for Katrina relief.)

The pharmaceutical companies also flatly opposed Part D in the early stages of its development, which occurred during Bill Clinton's final years in office. But the pharma giants later had a sort of epiphany, realizing that the industry's real enemy wasn't a Medicare drug plan per se; in fact, as long as it was executed on their terms, such a plan actually stood to increase drug sales. By the time Bush's Part D proposal rolled around, explains Paul Precht, deputy policy director of the nonpartisan Medicare Rights Center, "the pharmaceutical industry said, 'We won't oppose it, but there has to be privatized delivery.'"

As Congress debated what was to become the Medicare Modernization Act of 2003, drug companies, insurance companies, hmos, industry trade associations, and advocacy groups spent more than $140 million on lobbying and deployed at least 952 lobbyists, according to a 2004 Public Citizen report. Their biggest priority: to prevent a system in which the government had the power to negotiate drug prices, as it does in purchases for the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Department of Defense, and the Public Health Service.

It worked. "Drug company lobbyists were unbelievably successful in getting a sentence put in the legislation saying the government cannot negotiate or set prices," notes Dr. Sidney Wolfe, director of Public Citizen's Health Research Group. "And once you had that, it became pure privatization, a free-enterprise system."

Yet in this marketplace system, the government submits to terms that no private business would accept. Like any health plan, Medicare now negotiates what it will pay hospitals and doctors, Wolfe notes; why not do the same for drugs? "This is just chickenshit behavior on the part of the Congress. They just bowed over to the pharmaceutical industry."

Under the 2003 law, prices and "formularies" -- the lists of which drugs are covered according to different "tiers" of coverage -- are set by the individual companies that offer Part D plans. Each company makes its own deals with drug manufacturers for discounts in the form of rebates (to the companies, not the consumers). There's little real competition among these insurers, and to the extent they are able to squeeze discounts out of the manufacturers, they go straight to their bottom line -- not to consumers. In an investigation last October, the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform found that the discounts negotiated by private plans reduced overall drug spending by only 8 percent in 2007; in contrast, the Medicaid program, where the government buys drugs directly, cuts costs a full 26 percent via rebates.

In fact, one of the Medicare Modernization Act's biggest handouts to the drug industry was its reclassification of 6.2 million low-income elderly and disabled people who had been receiving drug coverage through the Medicaid program. The new law forced these people into Part D; now the government subsidizes the same drugs at higher prices. According to the 2007 House report, that change alone stood to increase drug company profits by an estimated $2.8 billion in 2007.

People talk about the red tape of government bureaucracies, but dealing with true government-run programs like Social Security and original Medicare is child's play compared to navigating the miasma created by the "marketplace" of Part D. On the government website that introduces the plan, the headline reads, "America, Pull up a Chair. We've Got Something Good to Talk About." That's an upbeat way of saying that most oldsters don't have an ice cube's chance in hell of understanding this thing on their own.

When I signed up for Part D, I was in my 60s with my faculties reasonably intact, computer literate, and lucky enough to have friends who were doctors and consumer advocates. I still didn't have a clue how to choose from among the 52 Medicare prescription drug plans offered by about 20 different companies in the District of Columbia. Their monthly premiums ranged from about $15 to nearly $100, their yearly deductibles from $0 to $275. And that was the simple part. More important, and way more complicated, was the matter of whether each of my particular drugs was on their formulary lists, which would determine the size of my copayments. To really find out which was the best plan for me, I would have to look up each of my six maintenance drugs on various plans' formularies, figure out the annual cost of my copayments, and add this number to the annual cost of the plan's premiums and deductibles. In other words, I'd need a spreadsheet.

So I gave up. That is, I turned to aarp. Something has always annoyed me about the group, whose mailings depict old age as something enjoyed by good-looking people whose dentures sparkle as they dance the tango or race along the coast in a convertible, one hand on the wheel and the other holding a frosty can of Ensure. Absent are any shots of old folks eating ramen noodles so they can afford their blood pressure meds. But aarp's real loss of credibility came with its last-minute support for the flawed Medicare drug plan, which its ceo -- who once ran a PR firm representing major health care industry clients -- declared to be "not a perfect bill, but America cannot wait for perfect."

With 39 million dues-paying members and a building that occupies almost an entire block in downtown Washington, you'd think aarp could have waited for something a little bit closer to perfect. But the organization also stood to make a bundle off a program run through private insurers. For years now, aarp has been as much a health plan as an advocacy group; according to a report by Physicians for a National Health Program, in 2002 $160 million -- a quarter of aarp's annual income -- came from insurance-related sources, most of it in the form of aarp-branded policies marketed by private companies. The group's revenue from similar partnerships in the prescription drug program could reach into the billions over the coming decade, the report found.

But aarp has one thing going for it: human beings manning its telephones -- pleasant and endlessly patient human beings, willing and in most cases able to answer every question and explain every minute point. I signed up for their midpriced Part D plan -- and, it turns out, so did a lot of other people. When the prescription drug benefit went into effect, there were about 90 companies offering some 3,000 plans. By the end of the open enrollment period for the second year of Part D, UnitedHealth -- whose most popular plan is offered through aarp -- had the largest market share, with 27.6 percent. The other market leader was Humana, with 20.6 percent; all others had 7 percent or less.

For me, aarp's MedicareRx Plan cost $26.40 a month last year, with no deductible. Fortunately, three of the six drugs I take are generics, which cost only $6 a month under the plan. Two are "preferred" brand-name drugs on aarp's formulary, which cost $28 a month. One of the two kinds of eyedrops I need is "non-preferred," so it costs $69.10. My total monthly cost, for premium plus copays, was $169.50. It's more than I paid in the past, but it could be worse -- if, for example, I were poor, but not poor enough for Part D. To qualify for any subsidy of your Part D premiums and copayments, your income must be less than 150 percent of the federal poverty level, or $15,600 for an individual.

I'm also lucky that only one of my essential drugs is not on my insurer's "preferred" formulary -- though that could change at any time. The price I'm charged by my insurer is based on a "list price" developed by the manufacturer, explains the Medicare Rights Center's Precht, and manufacturers can change this list price at any time without warning. By law, plans must report the net prices they pay (the list price minus any rebates) to Medicare, but not to consumers; since both insurers and drugmakers have a vested interest in maximizing their take from government coffers and old folks' pocketbooks, this means zero transparency exactly where it is needed most.

Further, according to Precht, the plans are counting on the fact that most old people will not, or cannot, shop around for a new plan every time one of their drugs' prices or their premiums go up. (The Center for Economic and Policy Research says premiums increased 25 percent this year alone.) "The senior market is viewed as sticky," he says. "Older people tend to want to stick with their plans," many of which "start off with a low premium and then the price goes up."

For 2008, my own monthly premiums are $32.50 -- an annual increase of $73.20 since last year. My total copays have gone up about $14 a month. But all in all I'd be doing okay -- if it weren't for "the gap."

The gap is also known as the doughnut hole, and it works like this. Whatever Medicare Part D plan you choose, you receive coverage up to the "initial coverage limit," a threshold based on the full cost of the drugs you've received (not your copay amount). In 2007, the standard was $2,400; in 2008, it's $2,510. After that you'll have to pay full freight for your drugs until you reach yet another level of spending, at which point Part D's "catastrophic" coverage kicks in. And guess what: According to the 2007 House oversight committee report, when beneficiaries are in the doughnut hole and paying full price, they don't benefit from the rebates regularly offered by pharmaceutical companies to insurers; instead, the companies pocket the discounts. Last year, according to the report, Part D insurers stood to receive a billion dollars in rebates on drugs that seniors had actually paid for on their own.

Most of the people who fall into the doughnut hole -- 4.2 million in 2006, the last year for which numbers were available -- probably have no bloody idea when the big plunge is coming. I certainly didn't. But then it happened, last August: Suddenly, my three $6 generic drugs cost $28.03, $29.00, and a whopping $106.29 for the generic version of the antidepressant Wellbutrin. My $28 drugs were now $33 and $61, and even my expensive "non-preferred" drug went up a few dollars. And I still had to keep paying my plan premiums. My monthly costs more than doubled, from $169.50 to $357.76.

Like a lot of people who fall into the doughnut hole, I'm never going to get out. The year ends before I reach the required out-of-pocket cost, and then the whole cycle starts over again. I could switch to a plan that offers gap coverage -- but those are expensive and generally limit their coverage to generics. In 2007, 92 percent of enrollees in stand-alone Part D drug plans had no coverage in the gap.

Fortunately, I can afford to pay $357.76 a month for four or five months to get the drugs I need. It pinches my budget, but won't overwhelm it, especially as long as I keep working. But that's not true for everyone.

What would I do if I couldn't afford my drugs? Where would I cut back? The antidepressants are the most expensive, so I could stop taking those. I'd feel shitty, but since I've never actually been suicidal, at least it wouldn't kill me. I could take my chances on giving up my acid-reflux drugs, since only a fairly small percentage of people with untreated Barrett's syndrome actually develop esophageal cancer. I'd rather starve than give up my glaucoma meds. How many old people in the United States are facing these choices today? And now ask yourself: How many old people face similar dilemmas in France, or Japan, or Australia?

you start to wonder whether it's worth joining Medicare Part D at all. According to my calculations, in 2007 I spent $2,975 on drugs and premiums. If I didn't have a drug plan, I would have spent $3,976. So being on Medicare Part D saved me just $1,001.

I could have saved a lot more just by being Canadian. A 2004 analysis by the Health Reform Program at Boston University's School of Public Health found that drugmakers' US prices for brand-name drugs were 81 percent higher than the averages in Canada and six European countries. If the United States instituted the same policies (primarily, strict government price controls) that help force drug companies to sell their products to Canadians for 30 to 50 percent less, many American seniors could have no prescription plan at all, and still pay less than they do now. And the federal government could save itself the estimated $723 billion that Part D will cost during its first 10 years.

As it stands, investigators for Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) have found that in the six months after Part D went into effect, profits for the 10 largest drug companies increased a total of $8 billion -- on average, 27 percent. The House oversight committee estimated insurance companies' 2007 profits from Part D would be $1 billion. As for the efficiency of the marketplace, according to the committee, "the administrative expenses, sales costs, and profits of the privatized Part D program are almost six times higher than the administrative expenses of traditional Medicare."

None of the health care advocates I have spoken with expect to see much improvement anytime soon. Democrats tried to pass a bill allowing the government to negotiate drug prices in Part D last year, but couldn't pull together the 60 votes needed to move it through the Senate (and Bush had promised to veto it regardless). Another mild reform involves letting the federal government offer its own drug plan under Part D; the public option likely would be a little cheaper for seniors, and the competition could curb some of the private plans' price increases. But unless the prices of the drugs themselves are lowered, advocates believe, the savings will not be significant. Narrowing the doughnut hole is another option: Edwin Park, senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, says Congress could elect to start catastrophic coverage quicker, but that would cost money.

None of these measures addresses the core weakness of the program -- its obligations to the insurance and drug industries. Medicare Part D is a small-scale model of just the kind of system some Democrats, including Barack Obama, now propose -- a government-subsidized health insurance plan, one that preserves the profits of private middlemen at a high cost to citizens' and government coffers.

For conservatives, meanwhile, the goal is to take Part D as a model for the rest of Medicare -- and they've already made some inroads. The 2003 law that established Part D contains a "demonstration project" beginning in 2010 that will require Medicare to compete with private plans (which, via a complicated pricing formula, will be rigged to have lower rates) in six metro areas. This is meant to be the model, the seed that will grow into the Brave New World of privatized Medicare.

Back before the drug bill passed, the senior advocacy group Gray Panthers saw the writing on the wall and denounced the legislation as "bait in an insidious strategy to undermine traditional Medicare and convert it into a private industry using taxpayers' subsidies to pay for it." They were right, and the way things are going, I may yet live to see it happen -- as long as I keep taking my drugs.

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James Ridgeway is the senior correspondent at the Mother Jones Washington, DC, Bureau.

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Hogwash!
Posted by: Col. Jackleg on Sep 9, 2008 4:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bush is a total piece of shit and that is irrefutable. In November, '06 Pelosi and the Dipocrits got their chance to move this issue to the front burner and do something for every American. In my view, it embraces expanding Medicare to universal healthcare with the elimination of any consideration whatsoever for the medical lobby, pharmaceuticals and insurers. Until that happens, we all need a little purple pill to tolerate the acid reflux from carpet-bombing bullshit!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Hogwash! Posted by: LMNOP
» LMNOP Posted by: bobtr900
» RE: LMNOP Posted by: LMNOP
» RE: Hogwash! Posted by: Lincoln fan
Cost Control is Also Imperative
Posted by: drricklippin on Sep 9, 2008 4:27 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry folks. Compassionate cost control is also very important.

My answer -individual (health behaviors) and institutional(public health) prevention- incrementally and always compassionately implemented .

And yes-the dirty "R" word= rationing will be necessary

Former GAO head David Walker has got it right. Medicare is an economic tsunami in its present form especially with 78 million US boomers moving into the system.

Be Well,

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa
ralippin@aol.com

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Cost Control is Also Imperative Posted by: drricklippin
» RE: Cost Control is Also Imperative Posted by: drricklippin
» Old Skeptic Posted by: bobtr900
» RE: Cost Control is Also Imperative Posted by: drricklippin
» It's worse than that Posted by: LMNOP
» RE: It's worse than that Posted by: Old Skeptic
Every year
Posted by: Last Chance on Sep 9, 2008 4:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It never fails. Every year there are millions more people needing Medicare, and every year those same new millions need more gasoline for more cars and trucks and jet planes and more electricity from coal-fired power plants and more products made by chemical factories, all of which makes more people sick who then need more medicine and more Medicare -- and around again!

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The Whole Thing Is A Nightmare
Posted by: dbag01 on Sep 9, 2008 5:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Like the author I am in the same boat (and he has told the story so well), to the tune of over three THOUSAND dollars a month, and I am not even in the donut hole yet. I have an incurable cancer that is treatable, all my drugs but one are tier three which means basically that they cost me a fortune out of pocket and there is nothing else that can be substituted. SO, because I would like to remain with the living, I will spend every dime I have ever made to take my drugs and when my money runs out I am not sure where that will leave me considering the way things are. Incidently, I was a single parent and worked my butt off my entire adult life, now at the ripe old age of 51 I am looking at welfare because of how this all may play out. I am appalled and disheartened. I have lived a frugal life and now I am losing everything because I got sick....doesn't that seem like being penalized for working hard to anyone else? I mean Congress gets it all for free, illegal and legal immigrants get it all for free, but the working middle class (if there if even such a thing anymore), we get it right up the wazzu.......

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» RE: The Whole Thing Is A Nightmare Posted by: Last Chance
» dbag01 Posted by: bobtr900
» RE: dbag01 Posted by: aussidawg
I'm on D
Posted by: bookie on Sep 9, 2008 5:38 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And its a nightmare. I have systemic lupus which causes intermittant attacks of pneumonia and kidney dysfunction as well as the arthritis in every joint. I take a large cocktail of drugs just to maintain. Every year I slide deeper into debt to take the meds that will keep me alive. Sometimes you have to wonder what is the point. Two - three times a year I'm in the hospital when the lupus zooms out of control. 50% of my income goes to medical costs, yet I'm not eligible for extra help because disablity pays me 500 dollars a year too much.
If Medicare D was allowed to negotiate drug costs these expenses would go down some. But the pigs in Pharma don't want that. Med D is their cash cow on the backs of the elderly and disabled. And Congress won't grow enough guts anytime soon to challenge the status quo. Congress gets way too many pretty toys from Pharma to stand up to the folks handing out the goodies.

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At the moment I have no health care.
Posted by: Nightstallion on Sep 9, 2008 6:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am 62, I have a plethora of ailments that accompany aging. None of them are survivable. If it gets bad enough there is the whole north woods out there that is within dirtbiking distance. I damn sure know how to get away from the rest of you. When it is time I will.

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» Me too. Posted by: wolfgangmo75
Me and the purple pill.
Posted by: Gracchus on Sep 9, 2008 6:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I took Prilosec to control acid reflux for many years. I had health insurance but my co-pay on a month's supply of this drug was $30 dollars.

Lo! The patent on Prilosec ran out. It was made an "over-the-counter" drug available without prescription, and so insurance companies would not pay for it, but was replaced as the "purple pill" by Nexium.

The generic name of Prilosec is omeprazole. The generic name of Nexium is esomeprazole.

They added a little side chain and got a new patent. Same clinical effects, same side effects ... A suspicious person might suspect it was almost the same drug.

The kicker is of course that a month's supply of Prilosec OTC (over-the-counter) sells for $10 less than my copay when it was by prescription only. They make a profit on it at $20 so they must have made a profit on it from my co-pay alone.

And of course my insurance company kicked in some unspecified amount.

But that is a business expense so they write it off. The pharmaceutical company makes an marvelous profit from the inflated price.

Now consider the fact, sometimes mentioned, that in the US something like 10% of the people own 70% of everything, and it may occur to you that, by and large, the same folks who own the insurance companies are folks who own the pharmaceutical companies. They are also the same folks who make bri.. er ... campaign contributions to our lawmakers.

I have heard it suggested that a red light be hung over the capital steps. But congress is not made up of honest whores. They are pimps. It is the working-class American who gets screwed.

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» Nexium is a Fraud Posted by: FoonTheElder
How to get off Statin Drugs....and save $$$
Posted by: johnjmccarthy on Sep 9, 2008 6:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
On a recent visit to my new doctor I was asked if I was taking medication for my cholesterol. I had, for five years, been trying the different BRANDS, Lipitor, etc. My joints and muscles took a hell of a beating for each of the five different kinds I tried and quit taking after a few months each...and my cholesterol remained high. The bad was 190 and the good was 35, five below the minimum for good cholesterol.

My Dr. sympathized with me and prescribed 500 Mg of Niancin, daily, at night, because this much Niacin makes you flush red or pink. That's all gone by morning.

After 45 days/nights of this miracle, my bad C was down to 135 and my good C was up to 56, on the way to 100 without Statin!

Taking Statin Drugs screwed up my sex life, too.

Talk to your Doc about Nianin 500Mg prescriptions. It's not expensive. My Copay for 180 of these beauties was $8.00

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» Cholesterol is Bogus Posted by: FoonTheElder
» Alternatives to Statin Drugs Posted by: sharonsylvie
My Kind of Doctor...
Posted by: drricklippin on Sep 9, 2008 6:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Give a doctor short and stout with rosey cheeks and a twinkle in his eyes that says to me-it is my time to die"

Dr.Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa
ralippin@aol.com

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» RE: My Kind of Doctor... Posted by: johnjmccarthy
Two things
Posted by: LMNOP on Sep 9, 2008 6:41 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"[C]onservatives see [Medicare] as a dangerous step toward socialized medicine. Only privatization, they say, will prevent this foolhardy entitlement program from going bankrupt. [T]he Heritage Foundation proposed a market-based system. Government cannot negotiate or set prices. Six months after Part D went into effect, profits increased on average, 27 percent. How many old people face similar dilemmas in France, or Japan, or Australia?"

Just a few obvious things. "Privatization is competition and is good", "Socialism is bad" and "the market regulates itself" are all bald faced lies. Good rule of thumb: if the conservatives advocate it, they are lying about and it will be bad for you. Is there even one counterexample? Even one?

"You've got 7 out of 10 [on the depression questionairre]" Turning on the electric motor in his chair, he winched himself upright and reveal[ed] shelf after shelf of pill samples. He pulled out a package and said, "Here, see how this works." I went through a string of antidepressants before settling on one with side effects I could endure. And like many people, I kept on taking it. For most of us, [getting old is] actually pretty dispiriting: You feel lousy, your friends are sick or dead, and you worry about dying or running out of money. In the United States about 1 in 7 [seniors have] depression, and the elderly have a higher suicide rate. Antidepressants win out over costly psychotherapy ..... antidepressants are the most expensive, so I could stop taking those. I'd feel shitty"

I've got to be nuts to address this issue again - the antipathy here is so pervasive and intense, but nevertheless, to all of you who see this as some kind of conspiracy between Pharma and doctors, like this author. Note how she presents this doctor like Dr. Strangelove: mechanized questionairre, so fat and slouching back that he has to winch himself upright, menacing drug cabinet, too lazy to give psychotherapy. That attitude is reflected in myriad articles such as the ones HERE, HERE, and HERE.

But then she goes on to describe the magnitude of the problem in numbers, more than all the psychotherapists in America could see, which somewhat undermines the idea that all of this prescribing is contrived and for nothing. Truth is, very few will take an antidepressant for long if it doesn't help ("See how this works"). She describes her medication as the one that sickened her the least (most patients have tolerable or no side effects, or they stop their drugs). Though she refuses to say so explicitly, she apparently benefits from hers tremendously and is not willing to give it up. This is a typical manifestation of this vendetta mentality that refuses to acknowledge a tremendous need and benefit to antidepressants. Take them out of the world, and it is a worse place.

I am not saying that there is not much to complain and worry about here. I agree. And I am unqualified to comment about the issue of antidepressants like Paxil and Cymbalta in young patients and the possibility that they facilitate suicide. Maybe.

My message is balance. There is also a lot of need and a lot of relief here, too, and not everybody involved is conspiring against the patient.

This AlterNet article HERE has a lively comment section with several of those who can find nothing good in antidepressants being contradicted by a dozen depression patients who testify to their benefit. The naysayers are uninterested, and will not hear this argument either.

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» The Bush NeoCON whores... Posted by: jvaljon1
Sad
Posted by: GreyFoxThree on Sep 9, 2008 6:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
isnt it sad. I pay $400 a month for good health insurance. As the economy worsens I think of the first things I will let go. Sadly, Health insurance is at the very top of the list. That is jsut downright sad. We have MORONS in the White House (Dictator Bush at the top of the list) and more idiots running for the White House) "McSame". these folks have milions in the bank, multiple homes and no worries in the world. Government is so OUT OF TOUCH with the sheeple its scary.

Jin
Whats hiding on your PC?

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» give up something else Posted by: somegirl
HR 676 !! ONLY Healthcare legislation to SUPPORT!!
Posted by: Purple Girl on Sep 9, 2008 6:56 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have worked in Long Term Care and am very familiar with Medicare vs HMO's.
The HMO's cam in about the early 90's and swindled seniors out of their Medicare Coverage. What was normally reimbursed under Medicare was continually denied under HMO's- 'GateKeepers'.
Granted I saw some milking of Medicare, but more often had to FIGHT with HMO's for necessary services and equipment. Their Follow up In home Services were far more limited in scope and duration- leaving many elderly with inadequate followup care once they were able to reurn to independent living- reprehensible and Dangerous!
Beware of your Med interactions! As Dir. of Social Services I worked with Docs to reduce esp. psychotropics- often elderly are put on multiple anti depressants. Real information as to what the sideeffects are on the elderly is limited, inadequate- most notagbly when used in conjunction with othr meds!Some 'Dementia' is Drug induced.
This is also why I am a staunch advocate for Medical marijuana- millenia worth of 'Longitudinal Study' indicates it is not only safe (eaten/drank) but also stimulates appetite- something many elderly need due to side effects from varius necessary meds. 'Failure to Thrive' is a problem with the elderly in Skilled nursing.
Reason it Won't be legalized, even just for Medical purposes- You can Grow it Yourself! No Profit for Pharms!Meanwhile those on Chemo, Struggling with AIDS Suffer Needlessly!

HR676 allows for the change over to Universal Health insurance for All. Even makes provisions to transfeer over Insurance Co personnel into the new system for jobs.
This would also benefit Docs by lowering Malpractice insurance, level the financial opportunities for all Areas of medical practice- thus encouraging Docs to work in area where the need is the highest- OB/GYN,Geriatric, Inner cities and Rural areas. Plastic surgery will not get all the top graduating MD's
health care is Not a For Profit venture- it is a national responsiblity and asset. By helping families & Industry cut the unnecessary Fat out we'll have more docs where needed, increase productivity and assure the Older &future generations Welbeing
I too was a great advocate of AARP, Not so much now, they Not only rolled for the Insurance corps,AARP became one!Not just health, but Auto!My bet they get no better rates for Seniors either!

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Let's just get rid of the ban on Cannabis
Posted by: maxpayne on Sep 9, 2008 6:59 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And let it compete on the market. Plenty of good stuff can be made with it. Medicare has already been bankrupted by both parties anyway especially these last 8 years.

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What Impressed me
Posted by: JSquercia on Sep 9, 2008 7:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What impressed me about the article was the treatment the author received in France . A doctor visits his hotel room for $50 and an Emergency Room Visit including a CT Scan for $200 . Ask yourself what that would have cost here in the USA . The ER visit alone would be WELL Over $1000 dollars .
Think about that the next time someone talks about the EVILS of "Socialized" Medicine .

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AND THEY GET HEALTH CARE FOR FREE
Posted by: dbag01 on Sep 9, 2008 8:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes indeed, Washington gets health care 100% FREE, No co-pays, no worries.....out of touch? PUL-EEZE, they simply have NO CLUE! Bet they don't even know what things cost......

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here's the kicker
Posted by: Levon on Sep 9, 2008 8:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
members of congress, most of whom are wealthy, have fully socialized healthcare at taxpayer expense. the kind of healthcare everyone wants but which they reserve only for themselves. the reason they do not want the rabble to have comprehensive healhcare- they think they are better than the masses, they are top of the food chain and that's the way they like, democrats and republicans. this is class warfare and our class is losing.

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» Piss us off tho' Posted by: wolfgangmo75
It's time for some real change in America!
Posted by: thinkverybig on Sep 9, 2008 8:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EM58nqX1ehE

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Don't conflate the issues!!!
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Sep 9, 2008 10:54 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The U.S. is one of the few "industrial" nations that does not have universal health care, and it is a shame! Nothing, nothing ever happens in a vacuum, and if you don't believe than you need to open your eyes and pay attention! I am so g-d- tired of hearing about the "free market" and how it is the panecea and will take care of everything! The "free market" is only taking care of their own profit margins! Don't want to believe that, than look around, the financial service sector lobbied hard and got regulations rolled back - our tax $$ are now going propping up Bear Sterns, Freddie Mac & Fannie Mae! Want another example - both the people in California suffered, and the workers suffered under Enron excesses and I'm sure they can tell you how much they all paid in the end! Need another, those S&L scandals of the 1990's (once again taxpayer $$ bails out the wealthy)which by the way involved Sen. John McShame and his friends as they swindled the general public in another ponzi scheme!

No, I don't believe that government has all of the answers, but government has a responsibility to make sure that it protects the average guy from the sharks we call business! I am not opposed to profit, I'm opposed to avarice, and when and why is "health" a business!? Health is a basic right, and sometimes sh-t happens! Does that give anyone the right to take advantage of you when you are at your most vulnerable? Conservatives would have you to believe it's "socialize medicine", than what do we call those men and women stationed in Iraq & Afghanistan that wear a uniform, "socialized military"? It's crap to keep your attention diverted as "the cabal" keeps it's other hand in your pocket!

It's funny (not haha)how we the people keep falling for these b.s. sleight of hands/words, all the while these are the very people that are stealing us blind, and shoveling the sh-t (when they fail into bailouts) to us to pay for! Does anyone else care to stand and say ENOUGH!

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Want to fix this medicare mess? Then, GIVE 3RD PARTIES A CHANCE !!!
Posted by: maxpayne on Sep 9, 2008 12:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nader, McKinney, Paul, etc ...

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» We need instant run off balloting. Posted by: wolfgangmo75
about that acid reflux...
Posted by: somegirl on Sep 9, 2008 1:32 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
okay, this is just my story but i bet you anything there's plenty of truth for others here.

2 years ago i went on my 4th round of antidepressants and a couple months later i ended up with huge digestive problems. i have always had an iron constitution. suddenly i couldn't eat or even drink water w/o terrible pain and bloating and the dreaded acid reflux.

i underwent thousands of dollars of tests, tried all the drugs. i also had a huge increase in chronic pain i've struggled with my entire adult life. it was so bad i couldn't even walk a block. after visits to a rheumatologist and thousands more in tests he put me on opiates that f'd me up so bad i ended up in the ER when i tried to withdraw ever so gradually from them. i was only on them for a few weeks too!

anyway the upshot is...once i went off all the drugs everything improved vastly. i started eating nothing but pretty pure food. the digestive problems went away totally. the psychiatrist who prescribed the lexapro said "yeah, that drug can really cause digestive problems for some people." thanks a f'in lot.

i have since discovered that whenever i have any industrially produced food the acid reflux returns. i suspect that the main culprit is gmo's so i will only eat organic corn, wheat, soy. if they're not labeled organic chances are they are genetically modified.

also, a good acupuncturist should be able to drastically reduce your acid reflux.

as for the depression, well some days i'm suicidal and i still meet the criteria for clinically depression. but i deal with it in other ways - psychotherapy (yeah it's expensive but it beats pharma-induced diseases), exercise, occasional xanax or a good drunk.

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» RE: about that acid reflux... Posted by: bcgirl125
adding another story
Posted by: sharonsylvie on Sep 9, 2008 2:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have been falling apart for years, used up all my money, was told that being disabled didn't mean I could get Social Security Disability, and of course I haven't had health insurance since 2002. I drive very carefully because I cannot afford to be injured in an accident. And I get my meds from any affordable third-world country. Now that Medicare finally kicks in this month, I can get medical help. A series of shots costing about $2000 would have helped my shoulders and hips, but I couldn't afford it. Now it's going to cost the government a bundle because I probably need joint replacements. Too bad I couldn't have saved the government some money by dying, but I guess I thwarted their plans. Every fricking member of congress needs to be strapped down and forced to watch Michael Moore's SICKO and then we need to take away all their perks and see how they cope.

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» RE: adding another story Posted by: maxpayne
What is wrong with everyone here?
Posted by: wireup on Sep 9, 2008 7:05 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am disgusted with this article and with the responses to it.

Did no one here ever for one little second think about doing something OTHER than prescription medications?

Did no one here ever for one little second think about using alternatives?

Did no one here ever for one little second think about lifestyle, diet, food, supplements?

Well, let me tell you - I've been using alternatives for more than 30 years, ie for more than half of my life. I have used them for all manner of illnesses. Recently, I reversed my osteoporosis without ONE DAMN DRUG. I used diet, exercise, and supplements.

I don't even possess a bottle of aspirin.

I suggest that instead of turning your life and existence over to Pharma that you begin to take responsibility for your own health. STOP expecting Pharma to save your life. START doing something to help yourself that doesn't involve the use of expensive and dangerous medications.

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» no I don't Posted by: wolfgangmo75
what to do while waiting...
Posted by: ellie on Sep 9, 2008 7:08 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
because you and your family want quality of life not quantity???

if you can type right now, you can raise hell and become a keyboard lobbyist for change to the system, and on the days you feel especially rotten, make the highest waves you can!!! this is a sure fire way to feel a little better and blow off some steam by officially claiming your right to be a pain in the ass... better then antidepressants!!!

if you can, instead of fattening the pockets of big pharma, take what $$ you saved from the 'not absolutely necessary to stay alive pharmacy bill' and do the one big thing in YOUR life you've always wanted to do... there's a sense of accomplishment, closure, peace and release you'll get, no matter how crazy the idea might seem to others... just don't get arrested... but then, getting arrested at this point would give us free access to medical care and those pesky meds that are robbing us blind...

live life every day as fully as you can, you know tomorrow may not come so why have personal regrets... that's the quality of life...

gee what would happen if we all who are a heartbeat away from death rejected the rules of part D??? who would go broke, it wouldn't be us... and if everyone who hits the donut hole without the cash way out, a little revolt should give some jail time with pretty good medical care... ok, it's outside the box but hey...

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