Friday, April 29, 2011

This will bankrupt our Elderly!

No Comparison

Earlier this week, Speaker John Boehner said Rep. Ryan’s plan to privatize Medicare “transforms Medicare into a plan that's very similar to the President's own health care bill.” This comparison is deeply flawed.

Here’s why:

No Guaranteed Coverage

The Congressional Republican plan privatizes Medicare, ending the program as we know it. Insurance companies would be under no obligation to offer insurance to seniors, so many older Americans could be left with no insurance at all.

The Affordable Care Act preserves Medicare and improves it by making prevention and prescription drugs more affordable, lowering its costs, and improving the quality of care. And health reform extends the life of the Medicare Trust Fund and helps ensure Medicare will continue to provide coverage to seniors in the decades to come.

Get Older, Pay More

The Republican plan repeals Medicare’s current policy where seniors are not charged more because of their age. Under the Republican plan, seniors could be forced to pay more for their health care every year, simply because they’ve grown older.

No Affordable Choices

The Republican Medicare plan makes health coverage less affordable for seniors. In the first year it goes into effect, a typical 65-year-old who becomes eligible for Medicare would pay an extra $6,400 for health care, more than doubling what he or she would pay if the plan were not adopted. And the Republican plan would replace extra coverage for low-income enrollees with a capped, insufficient medical savings account.

In sharp contrast, the Affordable Care Act lowers costs for people in Medicare by improving its performance and squeezing out waste, fraud and abuse. The law also provides free preventive care and cheaper prescription drugs for people in Medicare. As a result, we estimate that a typical senior could save $3,500 over the next decade as a result of the Affordable Care Act.

Less Transparency

The Affordable Care Act will help make the health care system more open, more transparent and easier to understand.

The Republican plan takes us in the opposite direction. Today, people in Medicare can quickly learn about their benefits. Under the Republican plan, they’d be left in the dark. The Republican plan would force seniors to purchase insurance on their own and critical consumer protections that would make the insurance marketplace easier to understand would be repealed.

Silver Lining

The facts are clear: the Affordable Care Act and the Republican plan to end Medicare as we know it are very different. It’s heartening to see Republicans aspire to produce a plan that resembles the historic reforms President Obama signed into law.

But if they want a proposal that is similar to the Affordable Care Act, they’ll have to head back to the drawing board.

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Friday, August 21, 2009

We The People.

Share this with we the people and I guarantee you that we the people will stand up for change of the current health care system! It comes close to this monopoly of money.

I come forth with numbers that don't lie! The reason that we are having such a great problem with passing this heath care reform bill because of GOOD OLD AMERICAN GREED! The Trillion Dollar Question? How much money is spend annually on the 250,000,000 insured?

Question? If we have three hundred million US population 300,000,000 and fifty million 50,000,000 are uninsured, what is the dollar amount being spent on a monthly/annual basis for the two hundred fifty million if the 250,000,000 that are insured, pay an average monthly premium of $500.00?

250,000,000
x $500.00
$125,000,000,000.00 Billion dollars Per month
1,500,000,000,000.00 Trillion dollars Per year

Yahoo, Google, - How much money is it? How many zeros are in a trillion? In the US the progression is: Hundred - 100. Thousand - 1000. Million - 1,000,000. Billion - 1,000,000,000.
Trillion - 1,000,000,000,000.
Quadrillion - 1,000,000,000,000,000 ...

Should Blue Cross, Blue Shield, Aetna, Kaiser, and all the other insurance carriers help fund the National Health Insurance Plan? YES!

Here is an excerpt from Physicians for a National Health Program: http://www.pnhp.org/news/2003/april/blue_cross_of_califo.php The funding of Blue Cross' administration is quite high when compared to public programs. 13.8% of the risk pool is much more than Medicare's ~3%. The size of their business equates with 13.8% of the risk pool. (13.8% of the pool), is actually a return of 52.9% on their net administrative revenues (which is 34.4% of their gross revenues, administrative costs and profits combined). No wonder WellPoint is the darling of Wall Street.

We the TAX Payer must create fear of our elected officials to follow through with a National Health Plan or we will impeach them...

_Mr. Jose A. Montes, Sr.