Recent comments

  • Reply to: The Health Care Industry vs. Health Reform   14 years 8 months ago
    Dear Mr. Potter, I am a member of a very large patient support group that provides support to patients worldwide. The diagnosis that each patient has in common is Femoroacetabular Impingement (FAI). Basically, in layman’s terms, there are large bone spurs in the hip that contribute to torn cartilage. The medical profession, fortunately, is able to fix this with minimally invasive surgery (arthroscopy) such as what A-Rod just recently had. That is the good news! The unfortunate part is that there are two main insurers that are discriminatory in their coverage. Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Cigna and Kaiser all pay for this surgery. Aetna and United Healthcare do not. In fact, United Healthcare just wrote a policy that would deny all coverage for ANY surgery that would fix this (open or arthroscopic). Both United Healthcare and Aetna both have adopted the opinion that this surgery is “experimental” in direct contrast to their peers (BCBS, Cigna, Kaiser) who have recently adopted coverage policies based on scientific evidence and peer reviewed studies. United Healthcare and Aetna would prefer that young active patients become disabled enough to require a more expensive and potentially riskier hip replacement. As you also may be aware there have been multiple million dollar fines against United Healthcare specifically as well as a pretty recent class action lawsuit against UHC brought by Cuomo of New York. My experience with UHC is that the external reviewer that reviewed my claim for coverage indicated that UHC was being arbitrary and unethical in their decisions and UHC was ordered to pay it. It was shortly after this that UHC came up with a formal policy that indicated that the surgery was unproven. Our group is reaching out to your organization to be able to get UHC and Aetna to see the peer reviewed literature that does support this procedure and to also make contact with the media.
  • Reply to: Breaking News: Insurance Industry Launders $10M to $20M in Attack Ads   14 years 8 months ago
    The insurance industry denies (and their interest group) that payments to providers for treatments are purposefully delayed. Ask any doctor, hospital, dentist, lab and they will share the truth. Companies continually owe these providers 30 to 35% of the submitted claims. Add this to the quick rejection of procedures generally by non professionals.
  • Reply to: Smoking in "Avatar": Necessary to "Reflect Reality"?   14 years 8 months ago

    I couldn't help notice Sigourney clearly is not an ash-head ! Any committed shmoker knows - she ain't - the lips are a give-away. I found it a strange "implant" though, sets the movie apart from Disney where never a spliff shall be succked,. life imitating art?! I don't think so
    douglaski

  • Reply to: Luxury Cruises Resume to Haiti: Bad PR, Good Deed, or Both?   14 years 8 months ago

    The Guardian has has a better write up of cruise operatons in Haiti. The ships have some food and water aid for Haitians but the fenced compound they use was indefensible to begin with. Passengers are understandably disturbed.

    "It was hard enough to sit and eat a picnic lunch at Labadee before the quake, knowing how many Haitians were starving," said another. "I can't imagine having to choke down a burger there now.''
    Some booked on ships scheduled to stop at Labadee are afraid that desperate people might breach the resort's 12ft high fences to get food and drink...

    The cruise lines should be repurposing themselves to aid the survivors.

  • Reply to: Citizens United Is a Radical Rewriting of the Constitution by Pro-Corporate Supreme Court   14 years 8 months ago
    The next logical step is to allow corporations a fractional vote for each of their employees. It would be easier to declare ourselves slaves and let corporations cast votes for us than put up with the charade of rigged electronic voting machines and excruciating corporate political advertisements.

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