Author Topic: Obamacare  (Read 4884 times)

Necrosis

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Re: Obamacare
« Reply #50 on: December 06, 2011, 02:36:43 PM »
a newer better measure
http://www.photius.com/rankings/healthranks.html

usa ranks 37


dario73

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Re: Obamacare
« Reply #52 on: December 07, 2011, 09:12:31 AM »
With Obamacare, USA will be dead last in health care.

Soul Crusher

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Re: Obamacare
« Reply #53 on: January 03, 2012, 06:36:11 PM »
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2011 medication shortages set new record at 267
Associated Press ^ | January 3, 6:27 PM EST | By LINDA A. JOHNSON
Posted on January 3, 2012 8:30:25 PM EST by bd476



TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- The number of new prescription drug shortages in 2011 shot up to 267, well above the prior record and about four times the number of medication shortages in the middle of the last decade.

Figures just released by the University of Utah Drug Information Service, which tracks national drug shortages, show there were 56 more newly reported drug shortages in the U.S. last year than in 2010, when there were 211. By contrast, there were only 58 drug shortages reported in 2004.

As the drug shortages worsen, so does their impact on patient care, particularly in hospitals. The inability to get crucial medicines has disrupted chemotherapy, surgery and care for patients with infections and pain. At least 15 deaths since 2010 have been blamed on the shortages, which have set a record high in each of the last five years.

"At the beginning of the year, we were on a pace of about a shortage every day," Erin R. Fox, manager of the service, told The Associated Press. "Luckily, that pace has definitely diminished."

< Snip >

Besides disrupting patient care, the shortages have delayed clinical trials comparing experimental drugs to older ones and have led to unprecedented price gouging, with hospitals sometimes having to pay outrageous markups for scarce drugs.

End of short excerpt. The rest of the article continues here: 2011 medication shortages set new record at 267

Soul Crusher

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Re: Obamacare
« Reply #54 on: January 05, 2012, 02:38:54 PM »
Lawyers, courts see weaknesses in defense of Obama’s healthcare law
By Sam Baker - 01/05/12 12:59 PM ET
   


The Obama administration is headed into a Supreme Court case over healthcare reform without a clear answer to significant questions about Congress’s power.

The Justice Department will file its first brief on the merits of the case Friday — the beginning of a long process that will almost surely culminate in a ruling this summer. The first briefs will focus on the core question of whether it is constitutional to make almost every American buy health insurance.

The Obama administration has a winning record on that point in federal appeals courts. But even in the cases it has won, the administration has failed to answer a key question: If Congress has the power to enforce the insurance mandate, where does that power stop?


It’s known in legal jargon as a “limiting principle.” When courts evaluate a new application of Congress’s constitutional authority, they have historically wanted to see clear limits to those powers.

“The DOJ has to do a better job of answering, ‘What goes beyond your theory of federal power?' " said Ilya Shapiro, a legal scholar at the libertarian Cato Institute who opposes the insurance mandate. “They’ve been asked this in every court and they’ve never satisfied the court, even in the cases they’ve won.”

The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals — the specific case now before the Supreme Court — struck down the insurance mandate partially on the grounds that upholding it would open the door to a flood of regulation.

“Ultimately, the government’s struggle to articulate … limiting principles only reiterates the conclusion we reach today: There are none,” the court said in its ruling.

The mandate is, in a literal sense, unprecedented: Congress has never before required citizens to buy something from a private company solely on the basis of being citizens. The question is whether Congress is exerting a new power not authorized by the Constitution, or using its authority under the Commerce Clause in a new way, consistent with Supreme Court precedent.

Several lower courts have said the mandate falls within the bounds of the Commerce Clause, but even they have been wary about the Justice Department’s inability to clearly define a limit on Congress’s power.

The U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Columbia, which upheld the mandate, said it was “troubling, but not fatal” that the Justice Department had not identified a limit to Congress’s power.

“We acknowledge some discomfort with the government’s failure to advance any clear doctrinal principles limiting congressional mandates that any American purchase any product or service in interstate commerce,” the court’s opinion said.

Tim Jost, a Washington and Lee University law professor who supports the healthcare law and the mandate, also said the lack of a clear limiting principle is the government’s biggest weakness heading into the Supreme Court. 

The problem is “not insurmountable,” Jost said, but gained new importance when a lower-court judge asked whether Congress could also make citizens buy broccoli, since a healthier population would do more to cut health costs than universal insurance coverage.

In lower courts, the Justice Department has worked around the issue of a limiting principle by arguing that healthcare is a unique market. Because hospitals are legally required to treat people who can’t pay, the system is inevitably stuck with unpaid bills. Those costs are then passed on to insured people and the government.

A decision upholding the insurance mandate wouldn’t open the door to other mandates because no other products involve the same kind of cost-shifting, the Justice Department says. The D.C. Circuit court accepted that rationale, but the 11th Circuit said the logic would simply put the courts in charge of determining whether future mandates are close enough to the insurance requirement.

Shapiro said the position is a policy argument, not a legal one.

“Everything is unique in some way,” he said. “A rutabaga is not a car.”





Source:
http://thehill.com/blogs/healthwatch/legal-challenges/202573-lawyers-courts-see-weaknesses-in-defense-of-obamas-healthcare-law

Soul Crusher

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Re: Obamacare
« Reply #55 on: January 06, 2012, 01:33:42 PM »
HHS finalizes over 1,200 waivers under healthcare reform law
The Hill ^ | Sam Baker



Roughly 1,200 companies received waivers from part of the healthcare reform law, the Health and Human Services Department said Friday.

Friday marks the last time HHS will have to update the total number of waivers, putting to rest a recurring political firestorm. The department had been updating its waiver totals every month, prompting monthly attacks from the GOP.

Republicans say the need for waivers proves that the healthcare law is unworkable. HHS argues that the waivers show the law provides flexibility.

All told, 1,231 companies applied for and received waivers from the law’s restrictions on annual benefit caps. The law requires plans to gradually raise their benefit limits, and all annual limits will become illegal in 2014. Companies that received waivers can keep their caps intact until 2014.


(Excerpt) Read more at thehill.com ...

Soul Crusher

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Re: Obamacare
« Reply #56 on: January 06, 2012, 09:21:27 PM »
Labor unions primary recipients of Obamacare waivers
9:18 PM 01/06/2012

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Labor unions continued to receive the overwhelming majority of waivers from the president’s health care reform law since the Obama administration tightened application rules last summer.

Documents released in a classic Friday afternoon news dump show that labor unions representing 543,812 workers received waivers from President Barack Obama‘s signature legislation since June 17, 2011.

By contrast, private employers with a total of 69,813 employees, many of whom work for small businesses, were granted waivers.

The Department of Health and Human Services revised the rules governing applications for health reform waivers June 17, 2011, amid a steady stream of controversial news reports, including The Daily Caller’s story that nearly 20 percent of last May’s waivers went to businesses in House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi’s district in California.

The labor unions receiving waivers include those that are monitored under the 1947 Taft-Hartley Act, and those that are not. The waivers granted since June 17 are valid until 2013, but recipients must make sure their employees understand the “limits of their coverage,” according to HHS documents.

HHS granted waivers on a year-by-year basis under its initial application process, but waivers granted after June 17 are valid for a maximum of two-and-a-half years. (RELATED: Full coverage of the health care law)

By and large, unions backed the health care overhaul, a law from which nearly a half million of their workers are now exempt.

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Soul Crusher

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Re: Obamacare
« Reply #57 on: January 07, 2012, 05:22:44 AM »
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Labor unions primary recipients of Obamacare waivers
dailycaller.com ^ | 01/06/2012 | By Paul Conner
Posted on January 7, 2012 8:08:06 AM EST by rawhide

Labor unions continued to receive the overwhelming majority of waivers from the president’s health care reform law since the Obama administration tightened application rules last summer.

Documents released in a classic Friday afternoon news dump show that labor unions representing 543,812 workers received waivers from President Barack Obama‘s signature legislation since June 17, 2011.

By contrast, private employers with a total of 69,813 employees, many of whom work for small businesses, were granted waivers.

The Department of Health and Human Services revised the rules governing applications for health reform waivers June 17, 2011, amid a steady stream of controversial news reports, including The Daily Caller’s story that nearly 20 percent of last May’s waivers went to businesses in House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi’s district in California.

(Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...

Necrosis

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Re: Obamacare
« Reply #58 on: January 08, 2012, 11:53:42 AM »
are you metally stable? what do you do for a living because it appears all you do is post propaganda at a staggering pace.

Shockwave

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Re: Obamacare
« Reply #59 on: January 08, 2012, 12:03:28 PM »
Obamacare is unconstitutional, plain and simple.

The government should not be able to mandate that people HAVE to purchase something in a free market. People should have the right to choose, and they should NOT be punished for choosing to go a different route (see premium insurance tax)

The idea of HC for everyone is nice in theory, but Obamacare isnt it. Its beyond flawed - and more importantly, its against the founding ideals of our republic and it should GTFO.

Soul Crusher

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Re: Obamacare
« Reply #60 on: January 08, 2012, 12:04:33 PM »
are you metally stable? what do you do for a living because it appears all you do is post propaganda at a staggering pace.

Propaganda?   Like what?   ThugbamaCare is a disgrace.

Necrosis

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Re: Obamacare
« Reply #61 on: January 08, 2012, 12:26:54 PM »
Propaganda?   Like what?   ThugbamaCare is a disgrace.

you post article after article from republican sites and never really add your piece, when proven wrong you just post more articles.

socialized medicine is perhaps a better system as i think issues like hypertension etc could be treated easily which in turn reduces cardiovascular events and saves everyone money. You need a system based on prevention and universal coverage.

if people want to pay for a doctor and emergency room visits then fine, but based on the data and other systems thats probably not the best remedy.