Medicare Maneuvers, Part 2: The Solution?
July 3, 2008
As we wrote about yesterday, payment cuts for doctors who treat Medicare patients finally went into effect July 1. Unfortunately, the first legislative attempt to block the looming doctor payment cuts didn’t come until the end of 2007, and was part of the doomed legislation to improve public funding for children’s health care (see WhatIf’s piece on SCHIP). With the competing SCHIP bills finally all defeated this spring by Presidential vetoes and Republican opposition, there was little time left to deal with doctor payment cuts before the July deadline.
“Is Inequality Making Us Sick?”
April 4, 2008
As the rich get richer and the poor get poorer in America, the gap between the healthy and the unwell also widens. Several weeks ago, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released data showing that life expectancy for the most affluent group of Americans exceeds that for the poorest Americans by nearly 4.5 years or 6% on average.
- Health gains for the poor are decades behind those for the wealthiest Americans, whose life expectancy in 1980 was higher than that of the most impoverished in 2000.
Congress Ready to Promote Mental Health
March 5, 2008
Originally posted November 17, 2007: Metal Health Discrimination? The AP reports that the Senate has passed a bill that would require group health insurance to cover mental health services and substance abuse treatment at the same levels as typical medical coverage. From this little article one gets a glimpse at the way the US has treated mental health. There is a more expansive House version of the mental health parity bill that would also require insurance changes to begin in January 2008 - almost a year earlier than the Senate bill, which has the support of insurance companies. The House bill has made it through three committees.


