Medicare Maneuvers, Part 2: The Solution?

July 3, 2008

Capitol Building, D.C.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.

Medicare Maneuvers, Part 1: The Problem

July 2, 2008

Capitol Hill, Washington. D.C. Payment cuts for doctors who treat Medicare patients - which have been looming for about a year - finally went into effect yesterday. The payment cuts of 10.6% will affect the 600,000 doctors who treat Medicare patients, and thus millions of elderly and disabled Medicare enrollees who rely on them.

Maybe if you’re under 65 and/or not relying on government health care benefits you think this isn’t your problem. You’re wrong.

A little history (based on the writings of Jonathan Cohn):

DNA, Disease, and Discrimination

June 10, 2008

DNACan you imagine being faced with the difficult decision of having your breasts removed - not because you have breast cancer, but because you’ve determined that you carry the genes for it? Women at risk for the disease can now find out whether they have the same DNA that killed their mothers and grandmothers.

In recent years, advances in genetic research have helped push medicine into realms once reserved for science fiction.

In the 1850s there were only 140 categories of disease, differentiated by their symptoms. By 1993, genetic mapping had allowed scientists to distinguish 12,000 categories of disease, to determine that some diseases were linked genetically despite having widely different symptoms, and to find better drugs and measures to treat or prevent these diseases.

Next President Faces Obesity

February 18, 2008

Hillary Rodham Clinton Mike Gravel Mike Huckabee Alan Keyes
Clinton Gravel Huckabee Keyes
John McCain Barack Obama Ron Paul
McCain Obama Paul

As the race to determine the next President of the United States begins to pick up steam and public attention, the issue of health reform is also gaining traction. But on top of figuring out how best to revise our health coverage system, many are concerned with how to improve our actual health. A recent 2007 conference convened a host of Democratic and Republican presidential candidate advisors to discuss what the next president needs to do about obesity.