Coming This Summer: Health Care Wars

Ron Van D

Guru
100+ Post Club
669
2_smallpersonimage_380911.gif

Coming This Summer: Health Care Wars by Newt Gingrich (more by this author)
Posted 05/27/2009 ET



The Washington battle that will most directly and profoundly affect you and your families’ lives is the battle for the future of our health care system, which will play out this summer.

On one side are forces advocating a big government, big regulation approach that will transform the private health system into a government-dominated bureaucracy.

On the other side is a new plan that gives individual Americans control over their health care, and provides the affordability and choice that makes that control meaningful.

Both sides share the goals of providing health insurance to all Americans and reining in health care costs. The difference is how each plan would get there. One by government controlling -- and ultimately rationing -- your care. The other by you controlling and making informed decisions about you and your families’ most precious possession: Your health.

A Transformative Proposal for Health Care: The Patients Choice Act

While the nation waits to see the plan President Obama will put forward, last week Senators Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) and Richard Burr (R-N.C.) and Representatives Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) and Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) introduced The Patients’ Choice Act of 2009.

They should be applauded for their leadership. The Patients' Choice Act is a serious, transformative proposal that, if enacted, would dramatically improve our health care system and the health of individual Americans.

Unlike government-centered plans that empower bureaucracies, The Patients’ Choice Act empowers individuals.

Empowering Individuals Instead of Bureaucracies

The Patients’ Choice Act takes on the toughest challenges we face: improving individual health and managing chronic disease; delivering the best quality care; expanding affordable coverage to every American; and putting Medicare and Medicaid on solid, sustainable ground.

And every idea starts in exactly the right place: with the individual. Individuals should be empowered and encouraged to decide for themselves what is best for them. From choosing what doctor to see to what insurance to buy to what course of treatment to take, only an individual-centered health care system will bring about the real change we need.

According to its sponsors, the main goals of The Patients’ Choice Act are these:
  • Emphasize Prevention: Focusing on prevention not only leads to better health but lowers long term costs.
  • Create a Market that Works for Patients: The Patients’ Choice Act gives insurance companies incentives to cover chronically sick patients, provides businesses transparent rules, and gives patients convenient and affordable options.
  • Guarantee a Choice of Coverage Options: Patients can choose from a variety of private insurance plans.
  • Insist on Fairness for Every Patient.
  • Fairly Compensate Patient Injuries: The bill creates a legal system that serves the interests of the injured, not the interests of trial attorneys.
  • No Tax Increases or New Government Spending: For each American, our country already spends almost twice as much as other industrialized countries spend on health care. It’s time we got something better for our money.
  • Restore Accountability to Government Programs: Our children and grandchildren will face future tax increases to pay for the $36 trillion in unfunded liabilities in the Medicare program alone unless something changes. And, according to some estimates, fraud and waste account for 10 percent of all health care spending. That’s approximately $100 billion each year.
  • Include Ideas for Governors and States: Washington has proven time and again that a one-size-fits-all mandate won’t work. True health reform must include governors, states, and every American citizen.
It’s Time to Move From Ideas and Options to Real Solutions

The Patients’ Choice Act complements the thoughtful work done so far by Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, and Sen. Chuck Grassley, the ranking Republican member. They have published three detailed papers exploring what reform options are being considered in three major areas: improving the delivery of care, expanding coverage, and paying for reform. They’ve invited public comment throughout the process and worked with industry representatives, in public hearings and in private meetings.

The introduction of this transformative legislation is proof that it’s time to move from options to real solutions.

The Center for Health Transformation (CHT), which I helped found, is working with both sides of this debate to encourage legislation that encompasses a number of policy proposals that are necessary to transform our health system. Our proposals span the entire health care spectrum from improving individual health, converting to an electronic health system, combating fraud and waste in our Medicare and Medicaid programs, and expanding coverage to every American.

10 Essential Principles of Health Care Reform

CHT has developed the following 10 principles which we believe must be included in any major health reform bill:
  1. Every American should be encouraged and incentivized to take personal responsibility for his or her health.
  2. Every American should have genuine access to quality, cost-effective care that best meets his or her individual needs.
  3. Every American should have health insurance coverage (private or public) that is affordable, accessible, and portable -- no matter where he or she chooses to work or live.
  4. Health care providers should deliver the best possible care based upon best evidence or best practice.
  5. Every provider of care, from doctors and nurses to pharmacists and hospitals, should be interconnected with an electronic health record for every American.
  6. Payment to providers should be based on the quality of care delivered, not the number of transactions or services provided.
  7. Cost, quality, and performance information should be available and accessible to all consumers.
  8. Government should promote and encourage competitive, market-based solutions in the private sector.
  9. Government should offer effective, efficient, and sustainable public programs for those who need them.
  10. Government should aggressively invest in targeted clinical research, laying the foundations for future breakthroughs and cures.
You can read our entire plan here along with a checklist for you to grade any proposals your representatives put forth.

The problems we face in health care know no political party, and neither do all the solutions. As the debates begin in earnest over how to actually solve these problems, everyone should be encouraged to offer ideas [[email protected]]. We are at our best when we work collaboratively to put forth bold, transformative solutions.
 
Last edited:
While you may not agree with Newt, he is one of the most brilliant political minds around. I wouldn't consider him a has been. The problem is that he is so polarizing. If the average person were to read his ideas and recommendations without knowing it was Newt behind them, many people would agree with him (assuming of course they consider themselves a fiscal conservative).

As for fresh ideas, I like what Paul Ryan and the others have introduced for health care reform. If you like what Newt was writing about, it wasn't his bill. It is sponsored by those listed in the article.

If the Republicans continue to hang on to has-beens like Newt, Rush and Cheney...they're making it too easy for the Democrats.

They need some fresh ideas.
 
I totally disagree with the fresh idea anology. Our conservative ideals are sound. Too often fresh ideas especially when urged by the opposition means closer to their opinions.

The liberals are quite simply wrong and unless we act to stop them they will destroy the USA.
 
There has never been a single time in history where less choice has proven to be better. In fact, when public schools have been forced to compete for students the improvement has been fantastic:

Education Working Paper 2 | When Schools Compete: The Effects of Vouchers on Florida Public School Achievement

Why should my son "have" to go to the school in his district? Why can't I send him to what I consider to be the best school in my area?

Well, when schools don't have to compete for students where's the incentive to excel? There is none. However, have a low-performing school directly compete with a high-performing one and studies have proven the low-performing one improves.

National health care with no choices? If I'm pissed with Aetna I cancel. If a 300 person group is pissed with BX they cancel.

Can you cancel the gov't? No. And under single payer you suck it up. Don't like that that gov't denied your procedure? Go appeal and get back to me in a year.

If anyone wants to see the gov't in action talk to anyone who's applied for social security disability and THAT'S how it will be if anyone is either diagnosed with a major illness or needs a major procedure.

Universal health care? Anyone who's for it qualifies as possibly the most naive person on the planet. The gov't wants to help you? LOL!

Let's see....you need a $65,000 heart procedure? Ok, fill out these 25 pages for forms and remit it to the gov't for approval. You should hear back pretty soon....say October.

By the way, that's not sarcasm, that's exactly how universal health care would work.

Some one wants the gov't to run health care? What? Are we talking about the same gov't who put us in the state of affairs we're currently in? Am I missing something?
 
In the current (June, 2009) issue of U.S. News in the On Health article titled "When Health Reform Hits Grandma," we get a glimpse into the President's Utopian Socialist healthcare system.
"What's tried and true, however, is the government's power to restrict reimbursement and change medical behavior. Medicare, which covers virtually all of the elderly, can say "No" to expensive treatments. That's great if the care is unnecessary. But you can't always tell if you're not at the bedside.
"A classic example of this carrot-and-stick approach is the one Obama singled out in his budget. To reduce the rate of costly readmission to the hospital after discharge among the elderly, he laid out a plan to limit Medicare reimbursements if patients are back within 30 days, thereby saving $26 billion of "wasted money" over 10 years?
"Earlier this month, researchers analyzed the cases of more than 2 million Medicare patients who were readmitted to the hospital. What's sobering about their findings is that the patients are really, really sick. In fact, 90 percent of the readmissions in the first 30 days were emergencies. Top causes: heart failure, emphysema, pneumonia, and psychotic breakdowns.
"A sudden struggle for breath in someone with serious heart or lung disease can mean an acute deterioration that, left unattended, would lead to an imminent and needlessly cruel demise."

To paraphrase Scrooge, "Are there not enough hospices? Let the old and infirm go there!"

The study went on to state, "In fact, 93 percent of those 2 million Medicare readmits were alive a year later--despite, or probably because of, having had two or more hospital admissions in the course of that year."

t looks like Obama's health care solutions could be "the final solution" for the elderly. If they come up with universal healthcare, then all on the "Utopian" health plan could be at great risk.
"But, citizen, your death, ah, sacrifice, will help cut the healthcare expense of The People by billions a year."
 
Back
Top