What’s Happening to Us?

Original Source Video: The Columbus Dispatch. On March 17th outside of Rep. Mary Jo Kilroy’s district office teabaggers mocked and threw things at a man who said he had Parkinson’s. They told him “he’s in the wrong end of town to ask for handouts”, called him a communist and threw money at him to “pay for his health care”.

How can these people justify this? It seems as if the behavior being modeled by Rush Limbaugh and his ilk IS having an affect on our civility. THE MAN HAS A LIFE-THREATENING CHRONIC ILLNESS AND PERFECTLY HEALTHY PEOPLE ARE TAUNTING AND THROWING MONEY AT HIM? IN AMERICA?

But what can you expect when false and misleading information on policy are being reinforced by people who make fun of a 12-year-old kid speaking for health insurance reform because his mother, who didn’t have access to affordable healthcare, is now dead?

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I’ve already written a little about my own situation with regard to healthcare. I’m not particularly concerned, but let’s review the scenario:

I recently resigned from an employer to start a new business. Having a thorough personal understanding of the importance of health insurance (ranking it just underneath food and just ahead of rent/mortgage in terms of financial priorities), I planned to enroll in an individual plan. I also have a pre-existing condition, which makes any change to my insurance circumstances somewhat of a hurdle. So right now, I face:

  • getting approved for the individual plan for which I applied, albeit delayed while underwriters (at the same provider!) re-review my medical and health history because of my pre-existing condition, which has never resulted in the need for access to healthcare
  • or, getting denied for the individual plan for which I applied, forcing me to rely on COBRA, which not only is extremely expensive but also expires after 18 months

At the moment, my situation is not an emergency. It could become extremely expensive in the short term if I’m denied for the individual plan for which I applied, but I’m not too worried about being declared to be uninsurable, although that is a slight risk, as it is for all Americans. But is this health security?

And this brings me to my point. The primary reason we need health insurance reform in America right now is to ensure that Americans have adequate health security in a world with better diagnostics and rising healthcare costs. As life expectancy has increased, so has medical technology and information improved. We know more about chronic conditions now, and we have data that gives us a better grip on epidemiology. And there are epidemics. Everything from diabetes to cancer. And right now we operate in a world where, for most Americans, health insurance benefits are a function of employment and employers, and private insurers prefer working with groups rather than individuals, from among whom they’re quite satisfied cherry picking.

Here’s the thing about healthcare. Unless we achieve some type of actual health insurance reform, every single one of the 47 million uninsured Americans who is uninsured because they are uninsurable as designated by a private insurance company will continue to lack access to health insurance until they have spent down their assets–cash, house, investments–to poverty level, which allows them to qualify for Medicaid. They must then remain at a function of the federal poverty line– lest they become ineligible for Medicaid–until they qualify for Medicare at age 65. The alternative is to keep one’s assets and hope that one can just keep living long enough to survive visits to the emergency room when things get really terrible because that’s the only place that has a mandate, and the mandate is just to stabilize emergency conditions. And don’t forget: They’ll still bill you later.

So let’s be clear: Every American who gets an unexpected diagnosis just before changing jobs, or while covered under COBRA, lives with the extreme risk that they will lose access to insurance. Every American who actually has private insurance, maybe even likes their plan, might not realize that that plan likely carries a lifetime maximum in terms of what the policy covers. Maybe $1m. Maybe $5m. Or an annual maximum. Or a high enough deductible that, if an injury or illness preventing work occurs, might become punitive when extended across 30 years.

Our system of healthcare in America right now is the best in the world… for healthy Americans! For unhealthy Americans, it becomes a nearly guaranteed system of oppression. This is why some form of universal healthcare is a necessity. Because anything short of that is a systematic short circuit of the American dream for anyone who winds up injured or ill. This is why we’re all in this together. This is why we either need to pool our risk in a national consensus of some kind to ensure that no unhealthy American is left behind. Or we need a better idea that I haven’t yet heard.

So I want to hear from a Republican who opposes anything a Democrat proposes regarding health insurance reform: What do you say to the 47 million Americans without access to health insurance? What do you say to the hundreds of millions of Americans who are not independently wealthy and rely on meaningful health security to remain healthy and working? I get that you want to give ‘em all a tax credit. I get that. I’ve read John Mackey’s 8 Whole Foods Half Healthcare reforms that would lower costs, and not a single one of ‘em solves the problem of access to insurance when you’re uninsurable. So what else ya got, Republicans, because a tax credit ain’t gonna cut it in terms of keeping 47 million Americans out of poverty and ensuring that all Americans have health security. But I get this sneaking suspicion that you don’t actually care.

In the meantime, the Affordable Health Choices Act (in the Senate) and America’s Affordable Health Choices Act (in the House) provide an opportunity to expand health security to millions more Americans. Consider contacting Lamar Alexander, Bob Corker, and Jim Cooper and encouraging them to support these bills.

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Summary: Guest Reesa Webb and our Celebration of Health!

A Celebration of Health – Part 1 The “to do” list of upcoming healthcare rallies, excerpts from President Clinton’s Jackson Day speech, recap of Thirdrailcost.com symposium, why we need health security for all, the Little League World Series (USA!), a phone call from the world famous Dave Cloud, and the mainstream news media gets distracted by bright, shiny objects. [24MB download mp3]

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A Celebration of Health – Part 2 Freddie shares his story on his current search for health security, we interview Reesa Webb, project director for John Snow, Inc. (the company contracted to assess the current delivery of health care to the medically underserved and indigent population in Nashville), “The Cause of My Life,” by Teddy Kennedy, your phone calls, and the discussion continues on why we need health security for all continues: choice, affordability, efficiency, accountability, and investment in our people. [21MB download mp3]

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As listeners might be aware, I am currently a healthy American who is struggling to ensure continuity of coverage as I transition voluntarily from full-time employment with benefits to self-employment with an individual plan. The absurdity of the complications involved in staying with the same provider, albeit transitioning from a group plan to an individual plan, could not be greater.

A number of related items finally created the perfect storm for me this weekend, and I took action.

Congressman Cooper,

I have watched with admiration as you have persisted in encouraging your colleagues and your fellow Americans to give serious consideration to the Healthy Americans Act during this debate about healthcare reform. I gave it serious consideration, and I believe it is a strong bill.

Recently, though, three things have happened in my life that have caused me to write to you to ask you to support America’s Affordable Health Choices Act, HR 3200.

1. I recently elected to resign a full-time job that provided me with health insurance. I have a pre-existing medical condition, and I am now having difficulty insuring continuity of coverage. I must either wait to discover the whims of underwriters, likely past the point of expiration of my current coverage, or I must exercise my HIPAA rights, causing a dramatic increase in my premiums.

2. I saw Pres. Clinton and Vice Pres. Gore speak at the Jackson Day dinner here in Tennessee. Their remarks spoke powerfully to the need for healthcare reform now.

3. I read Sen. Kennedy’s statement about the HELP Committee’s passage of the Affordable Health Choices Act after his recent death, and I am convinced that he found it to be an acceptable final compromise for “the cause of his life”: universal healthcare for Americans.

I trust you to do all you can to strengthen this bill for American patients and would-be patients who are in dire need of health security. I know because I’m one of them.

Best regards and thank you for your service,
Freddie O’Connell

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Summary: A Liberadio(!) Healthcare Reform Virtual Town Hall and guest Elbert Ventura and the Media Matters for America Smackdown.

Healthcare Reform Virtual Town Hall – Part 1 The “to do” list (Tennessee town halls with Davis, Gordon, Tanner), an O’Connell Factor on why our system of healthcare is a nearly guaranteed system of oppression for unhealthy Americans, where are the Christians on healthcare reform, your calls (including a shout-out to Governor Bredesen’s Cover TN), and tales (tails?) of Barney Frank. [25MB download mp3]

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Healthcare Reform Virtual Town Hall – Part 2 More of your calls, emails and stories about healthcare and healthcare reform, including the expertise of registered nurse and healthcare reform activist Michael Chapman. Plus, the insurance companies are spending a lot of dollars on opposition to reform and Media Matters research fellow Elbert Ventura tells us that it really, really, really, really, really matters that our mainstream media chooses to report on controversy instead of what really matters – public policy. [23MB download mp3]

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From Tony Garr and the Tennessee Health Care Campaign:

President Barack Obama has accepted an invitation to join clergy on a conference call on Wednesday, August 19, at 4:00 pm central, 5:00 pm eastern. You will have the opportunity to listen live to this call on Radio Free Nashville (RFN). It will be a wonderful moment to share with thousands of others who want to be part of the solution and are working to raise a moral vision for our health care future.

List of conference call sponsors (as of 8.12.09):

African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME)
Catholics In Alliance for the Common Good
Catholics United
Christian Community Development Association
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
Faithful America
Faithful Reform in Health Care
Faith in Public Life
Gamaliel Foundation
Islamic Society of North America
Jewish Council for Public Affairs
National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc.
National Council of Churches in Christ
Network, A National Catholic Social Justice Lobby
PICO National Network
Progressive National Baptist Convention
Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism
Samuel Dewitt Proctor Conference
Sisters of Mercy of The Americas
Sojourners
The Episcopal Church
The Latino Leadership Circle
The New Evangelicals
Unitarian Universalist Association
United Church of Christ
United Methodist Church General Board of Church And Society
United Methodist Church, Washington Office of Women’s Division, General Board of Global Ministries

Listen to the call live today at 4PM at RadioFreeNashville.org.

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Approximately 20,000 Americans die annually due to lack of insurance or under-insurance. 137,000 between 2000 and 2006. Uninsured adults are 25 percent more likely to die prematurely. Insurance companies deny care, delay necessary and life-threatening medical procedures, and rescind previously existing coverage because of paperwork errors.

The real “death panels” already exist, and Joe Conason sums them up:

So who are the members of the death panels?

You can find them among the corporate bureaucrats who concoct excuses to deny coverage and throw the sick off their rolls. You can find them among the politicians and lobbyists who have stalled reform for years while people died. You can find them among the morons who show up to shout slogans at town halls rather than seek solutions. And you can find them among the cable and radio blabbers, who invent scary stories about reform to conceal the sickening truth.

H/T: @brucebarry and @freddieoconnell.

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Baptist & St. Thomas say: Check your hyperbole at the door, Congressman

Check your hyperbole at the door, Congressman

Congressman Blackburn seems to be everywhere discussing healthcare these days. But on Monday, August 24, 2009, she will be participating in a panel discussion presented by Saint Thomas Health Services and Baptist Hospital that might be her most balanced, informative, and unemotional appearance all summer.

Titled “Shaping Healthcare: Reform for Future Generations,” the panel will feature Blackburn, Virginia Trotter Betts, Commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities, and Dr. Cornelia Graves, a Nationally-recognized Maternal Fetal Medicine Specialist and Medical Director of Baptist Hospital’s Perinatal Program.

More info and RSVP:

This signature event is part of Ascension Health’s 100% Campaign to help raise awareness and influence healthcare policy to achieve 100% access and 100% coverage.

Welcoming more than 7,000 new lives into the world every year, Baptist Hospital knows the need for a stronger healthcare system that cares for future generations.

That’s why we hope you’ll join Baptist Hospital and Saint Thomas Health Services for a discussion from three leading women whose perspectives on healthcare are shaping today’s reform.

Ascension Health is “the nation’s largest Catholic and largest nonprofit health system.

The panel discussion is scheduled for 9:00 am and will be held at the Gladys Stringfield Owen Education Center Auditorium at Baptist Hospital, 2000 Church Street. Free parking is available in the 21st Ave. Parking Garage and parking lot at the corner of 21st Ave. N. and Patterson Street.

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True words on the battle (yes, it is a battle) for healthcare reform from Maria Brewer, chairperson of the Sumner County Democratic Party:

When did Americans decide that policing our city is a public good, but affordable treatment when you are sick is not; that schools are a public investment in our society’s future, but preventive medical care for you when you need it is not. Streets and stop lights and crosswalks are part of what makes our city run, and woe unto the mayor who doesn’t get the potholes filled, but as for access to simple affordable health care? Forget about it. It is as if “the government” is code for black helicopters and a “one world order” of tyranny, euros and lattes for all! No, my conspiracy-impaired friends: the government is us. And We the People, charged with the responsibility of being citizens, hold the power to protect ourselves from unwise policies, unfettered profit taking, and unhinged lies….

The truth is that scary lies are often believed because they carry an essential kernel of truth. Sarah Palin’s Death Panels are real, they already exist and they are at work right now, for anyone who already has insurance. But the real death panels are not in the government, nor will they be. They are at the insurance companies. A healthy person paying a premium is profit. A sick person needing care is loss. Rest assured that should you or any loved one be diagnosed with a deadly disease, a panel will be convened. But not of doctors and nurses and those capable of administering the fantastic healing powers of modern medicine that the US is world-famous for. No, on that panel will sit the people for whom you are nothing more than a money making machine who has stopped being profitable, looking out for their bottom line.

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Announcement:

The time is now to stand up for Affordable Health Care, and you can make a national impact in Murfreesboro TN!

Join supporters of the President, partners in Labor, and average Tennesseans that know we need reform now.

While the opposition spread lies about health care reform and tries to shout down the majority of supporters, we will rally outside Congressman Bart Gordon’s office to make a clear demonstration of support.

Bring homemade signs and invite friends, neighbors, and family. We can’t wait for change this year!

Murfreesboro Rally for Health Insurance Reform NOW
Time: August 22, 2009 from 11:30am to 1pm
Location: The Office of Congressman Bart Gordon, 305 West Main Street Murfreesboro, TN 37130 (Map)

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