I have been silent here for too long and I apologize.
The end of the month marks the two year anniversary of The Ouchie.
How far have we come? How far, as Americans & human beings, will we let this go?
I have been silent here for too long and I apologize.
The end of the month marks the two year anniversary of The Ouchie.
How far have we come? How far, as Americans & human beings, will we let this go?
With the GOP in control of the US House, everything we have worked for over the past 40 years hangs in the balance. I don’t know what wave of feminisim we’re in, but this is an act of inhumanity from one human being against another. If you post anything today, please consider posting this link, signing the petition and passing it along.
It wasn’t that long ago that we were fighting for our reproductive rights, we shouldn’t have to start that fight all over again. We’re not going to send women back into the alleys and deny the hundreds of thousands of American’s who visit Planned Parenthood centers for other basic and lifesaving medical care.
The U.S. House of Representatives has just voted to bar Planned Parenthood health centers from all federal funding for birth control, cancer screenings, HIV testing, and other lifesaving care.
It is the most dangerous legislative assault in our history, and it cannot go unanswered. We — Planned Parenthood and the three million women, men, and teens who are at risk of losing access to basic care — need you to stand united with us now.
The startup plans to target diagnosed problems like heart disease, diabetes and obesity that can be largely controlled by changes in behavior.
“With consumers already benefiting from the law, this litigation is really about the Republican Party protecting health insurance company profits at the expense of working families. The Republican politicians who marched in lockstep to bring this suit aren’t really interested in the new law’s individual-responsibility rule. This lawsuit is just another tactic in the Republican Party’s campaign to give our health care back to the insurance companies no matter what the cost.”
An Op-Ed from News-Leader.Com (Link)
My interest in health care reform is both personal and professional because I have a daughter who cannot afford health insurance and I am a health care provider. I decided to research how we are affected by the health care crises financially and medically. I learned how we compare to other countries in health costs and outcomes. And finally I was surprised that there are “socialistic” models of health care already operating in the U.S.
How do health care costs affect our pocketbooks? Health care represents 17 percent of our GNP and we spend about $7,000 per capita. France, Germany and Japan spend about half that. In the U.S. the costs of treating the uninsured are shifted by providers to the insured. Employer-sponsored health insurance premiums rose by 119 percent from 1999-2008, leaving more people uninsured or underinsured. High health care costs account for $2,000 of the price of a U.S.-made luxury car, affecting America’s ability to compete in the global marketplace. Defensive medicine adds $1,700 to $2000 to each insured families’ yearly insurance bill. The employee portion of premiums has increased by 79 percent with wages only increasing by 10 percent from 1996-2006. In 2007, 62 percent of bankruptcies were due to medical bills.
How does the high cost of medical care affect America’s health? 22,000 people die each year from lack of health care. Most of these are people with jobs but no health care. 25 million Americans are underinsured, 45 million are uninsured. The World Health Organization in 2000 ranked the U.S. 37th, just behind Costa Rica and ahead of Cuba in quality and fairness of our national health systems. The U.S. ranks below European countries and Japan, Taiwan, and Singapore in life expectancy. In infant mortality, the U.S. ranked last among 23 developed countries. Being uninsured is associated with receiving fewer necessary services, substandard care, and greater risk of dying in the hospital or shortly after discharge.
We already have “socialistic” models of health care in the U.S. Those with employer-sponsored insurance have the same model as in Germany, Japan, and France. Those with Tricare or who are Native American have the same model as in Britain, Italy and Spain. Those over 65 on Medicare have the model found in Canada. And 17 percent of our citizens have the uninsured out-of-pocket model found in China and India.
In countries with universal health care, citizens regard access to health care as a right, not as a commodity. This is how we regard fire protection, law enforcement and K-12 education. None of the universal health models is perfect, and many countries struggle with the increasing costs of delivering health care to all. But in all of these countries, my daughter would have affordable health care. What can be done for her and the 45 million other uninsured people who can’t afford health insurance but who work just as hard as those with employer-sponsored insurance? The United States needs our own universal health plan that will bear the stamp of the American way of doing things. We can’t afford to wait any longer.