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Uninsured RX

Bringing up to date news and articles for the uninsured.

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Tag: healthcare

  • ISBN13: 9780262113144
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description
The shocking statistic is that forty-seven million Americans have no health insurance. When uninsured Americans go to the emergency room for treatment, however, they do receive care—and a bill. Many hospitals now require uninsured patients to put their treatment on a credit card—which can saddle a low-income household with unpayably high balances that can lead to personal bankruptcy. Why don’t these people just buy health insurance? Because the cost of coverage that doesn’t come through an employer is more than many low- and middle-income households make in a year. Meanwhile, rising healthcare costs for employees are driving many businesses under. As for government-supplied health care, ever higher costs and added benefits (for example, Part D, Medicare’s new prescription drug coverage) make both Medicare and Medicaid impossible to sustain fiscally; benefits grow faster than the national per-capita income. It’s obvious the system is broken. What can we do?

In The Healthcare Fix, economist Laurence Kotlikoff proposes a simple, straightforward approach to the problem that would create one system that works for everyone—and secure America’s fiscal and economic future. Kotlikoff’s proposed Medical Security System is not the “socialized medicine” so feared by Republicans and libertarians; it’s a plan for universal health insurance. Because everyone would be insured, it’s also a plan for universal healthcare.

Participants—including all who are currently uninsured, all Medicaid and Medicare recipients, and all with private or employer-supplied insurance—would receive annual vouchers for health insurance, the amount of which would be based on their current medical condition. Insurance companies would willingly accept people with health problems because their vouchers would be higher. And the government could control costs by establishing the values of the vouchers so that benefit growth no longer outstrips growth of the nation’s per capita income. It’s a “single-payer” plan—but a single payer for insurance. The American healthcare industry would remain competitive, innovative, strong, and private.

Kotlikoff’s plan is strong medicine for America’s healthcare crisis, but brilliant in its simplicity. Its provisions can fit on a postcard—and Kotlikoff provides one, ready to be copied and mailed to your representative in Congress. We’re electing a new president in 2008; let’s choose a new healthcare system, too—one that works.

The Healthcare Fix: Universal Insurance for All Americans

Product Description
American healthcare spending reached $2.4 trillion in 2008 and will exceed $4 trillion by 2018, with costs soaring at two to three times the rate of inflation.

Traditional health insurance options haven’t just failed to stop the bleeding they’ve also kept Americans in the dark and robbed them of choice. Everyone is responsible for a small part of healthcare spending, and individuals have the power to turn the situation around.

Consumer-driven health plans (CDHPs) put knowledge and power back into people’s hands. In this book, you’ll discover:

  • Three CDHP principles and how they work together to lower insurance costs and improve the health and well-being of your employees
  • Effective step-by-step strategies for creating, implementing, and managing CDHPs in your workplace
  • Tips for building a culture of health and wellness that benefits everyone
  • Tools for analyzing and fine-tuning your health plan strategy to maximize employee wellness, productivity, and financial savings year after year
  • Real-life case studies that illustrate how CDHPs are a proven solution to rising healthcare costs

Bend the Healthcare Trend: How Consumer-Driven Health and Wellness Plans Lower Insurance Costs

I saw a recent press release that said the latest Census survey shows 11% of people living in the City of Tracy do not have health insurance. Where can I find this data? I’d like to have access to the entire Census file that shows the uninsured percentage by U.S. City and/or Zip Code. I need this for a research paper.

Why do Democrats insist that giving healthcare to the uninsured & poor requires obliterating the middle class’s reliance on market-driven risk-sharing pools that have allowed them to pay for their own healthcare with no involvement of the government?

Since you can completely keep you insurance you already have, how is giving the uninsured an option a governent takeover?