Tom Tommorow Cartoon PDF Print E-mail
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Tuesday, 16 March 2010 18:23

(If this is too small to read, click on the image to bring it up larger.)

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 16 March 2010 18:27 )
 
5 Painful health-care lessons from Massachusetts PDF Print E-mail
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Tuesday, 15 June 2010 16:37

By Shawn Tully, Fortune Magazine

The best guide to how President Obama's historic health-care legislation will reshape the nation's medical marketplace and fiscal future is the pioneering model in Massachusetts. The Bay State's reform program started in late 2006, and it shares virtually all the major features of the new federal plan.

Both programs greatly expand Medicaid coverage for low-earners, and provide heavily subsidized policies for a broad swath of the middle class. They tightly restrict the range of premiums for customers of different ages and medical conditions; they bar insurers from charging older patients, or even coach potatoes who abuse their health, anywhere near their actual cost. Both plans impose a long list of expensive benefits insurers must provide whether patients want to pay for them or not, ranging in Massachusetts from in-vitro fertilization to chiropractic services.

At the same time the plans offer lavish subsidies that swell the demand for health care, they do nothing to increase the supply of medical services in a market suffering from shortages of everything from family doctors to nurses to hospital beds. Two years after enacting health-care reform to rein in costs, Massachusetts strengthened "certificate of need laws" that prevent hospitals and other providers from competing with high-cost, entrenched suppliers. The state now requires that ambulatory surgical centers and outpatient treatment facilities get permission from regulators before they can enter the market. Their rivals invariably lobby the regulators to block competition, and usually win.
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 15 June 2010 16:51 )
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Pitching Single Payer PDF Print E-mail
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Friday, 06 August 2010 15:29

Ever get stuck when asked a question about Single Payer?  Ever hear a talk that makes everything clear and then couldn't explain the idea?

Practice answering questions about Single Payer.  See how others respond to questions. Then, go to Bryant Park, only a block away, and practice on the public.

Light refreshments.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

1-3 PM 

25 West 43rd Street, 18th Floor

Manhattan

Any questions, you can call Paul: 347-278-4267.

Otherwise, just show up, bring friends, bring doubters. 

Last Updated ( Friday, 06 August 2010 18:16 )
 
Health Care Forum PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Wednesday, 28 July 2010 16:23
Astorians for Peace and Justice and the West Queens Greens present  
A Forum on Health Care Reform

Health Care for All:
Are We Almost There?

Thursday, July 29th at 7:30pm
 
Location: Bohemian Hall, 29-19 24th Avenue between 31st and 29th Streets in Astoria. Take the N or Q train to Astoria Blvd.  When you leave the train station,   walk north to 24th Avenue and turn left.   The building will be on your right. 
 
Dr Mary O'Brien is a primary care physician at Columbia University who has been practicing medicine in NYC for the past 30 years and has been  a strong advocate for single payer health care through her work with  NY Metro Physicians for a National Health Program.

Ajamu Sankofa, Esq. is a co-founder and chair of the Private Health Insurance Must Go! Coalition, a NYC-based grassroots organization demanding a national single-payer healthcare system. He also coordinates the Urban Leadership Program at the Murphy Institute for Worker Education and Labor Studies/CUNY and is a graduate instructor in urban affairs at Queens College. Mr. Sankofa is a former trial lawyer with the ACLU National Prison Project where he wrote the first model HIV Prevention Policy in the nation for incarcerated youth while representing prisoners throughout the United States on their conditions of confinement.

Mark Hannay is Director of the Metro New York Health Care for All Campaign, a citywide coalition of community groups and labor unions founded in 1993 that advocates for fundamental health care reform leading to a universal health care program. Mark began his health activist career in the early 1990s as a member of the Insurance and Health Care Access Committee of ACT UP/New York.  Since 2002, Mark has also co-hosted the weekly “Health Action” program broadcast over WBAI/Pacifica radio.  He is also a member of the Steering Committee of “Health Care for All New York”, a consortium of groups across New York State working for state-based health care reform.  He serves on the Board of Directors of the New York Metro Chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program.

Contact:   This e-mail address is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it for more information

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 28 July 2010 16:27 )
 
10,779 PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Friday, 21 March 2008 19:03

Another reason we need to shift from Warfare to Healthcare? Jobs.

Via TreeHugger blog, U.S. Employment Effects of Military and Domestic Spending Priorities:

8,555 -- Number of jobs created by spending $1 billion on defense.
10,779 -- Number of jobs created by spending $1 billion on health care.
17,687 -- Number of jobs created by spending $1 billion on education.
19,795 -- Number of jobs created by spending $1 billion on public transportation.

Last Updated ( Friday, 21 March 2008 19:21 )
 
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