Recent comments

  • Reply to: The Health Care Industry vs. Health Reform   15 years 2 months ago
    Another 'Anonymous' expert, I see, though this one took some more time to push some insurance industry talking points as well as attack Mr. Potter. Let's take this as an opportunity to go through some of them, a 'vaccination' against insurance-monger spin, if you will. :^) "absent from his post is any idea of how he would reform the current system." - this could simply be a lack of understanding; this article is about how the Health Care Industry has put itself in the way of Health Reform and why it has been profitable to do so. Perhaps this writer is unaware that this is PR Watch, a watchdog group that points out false statements and spin, not a health care reform advocacy group. If the writer or anyone else would like to hear Potter's solutions, you can see him discuss this in more depth on his recent "Democracy Now!" interview. "Does anyone know how Medicare "balances" its fiscal obligations? By reducing payments to physicians and hospitals." - Again, possibly just ignorance on the writer's part. First, let's establish a reasonable context: Medicare has been one of the most functional and efficient programs in the history of the US government. It has been so successful at handling its finances and taking care of its beneficiaries that it has been a cash cow for hundreds of other federal programs that have been dipping into its funds for decades. Having a central, consistent, single payer of benefits has meant enormous savings on the hundreds of billions of dollars of overhead costs that multiple insurance companies now incur and have burdened our healthcare system with, according to GAO findings. Medicare also has consistently higher approval ratings by doctors and other professionals than any private insurance company. One small part of Medicare's success is the use of negotiated rates, a tactic used far more often by HMOs usual suspects like Kaiser Permanente. In fact, because groups like Kaiser negotiate individually instead of setting a consistent rate for all, insurance companies push the larger burden of costs onto smaller businesses and individuals who do not have the leverage to negotiate more advantageous contracts. The statements that follow are similarly remarkably ignorant or radically disengenous; of course CPAs and lawyers give discounted services under negotiated contracts. Perhaps the writer has never owned a new car, but my last one came with a year of insurance for oil changes and tune-ups. Much like the attempted accusation, the writer makes allusions to 'knowing the flaws' in the current system, but doesn't say what they are. The writer says "the profit incentive" can be controlled by oversight, but gives no indication why this would suddenly start working after several decades or why the insurance industry wouldn't fight this just as viciously. As someone who is supposedly an expert, why not add something useful into the discussion, rather than just attacking a known and recognized expert?
  • Reply to: CMD's Wendell Potter Interviewed by Amy Goodman   15 years 2 months ago
    Having talked to many friends in Canada, I’m not sure I buy those statistics. But, even if they are true, how long would tens of millions of American have to wait for cataract surgery right now? Forever, that’s how long, because they couldn’t afford it. This whole notion that we should deny or severely restrict the availability of health care to the poor and half the middle class in this country so that we, the chosen ones, don’t have to wait a little longer to get ours amazes me. It's a disgusting argument.
  • Reply to: Wendell Potter to Congress: Go Ahead, Please Make Our Day   15 years 2 months ago
    I'm not old enough to have lived when children were worked to death in factories. Perhaps this health care crisis is the equivalent in our day. I know of friends and family who have high deductable/high co-pay insurance. THey can't go for a yearly Pap smear, or Mammogram because it is way out of their reach... I am an Rn who watched a 40 something man pace the halls worrying how he was going to pay for his cardiac cath and my other patient who contentedly passed the hospital stay because he had worked for the railroad and had a "great " policy with 3 dollar prescripton co-pays. What makes the difference between these 2 persons? they are both HUMAN BEINGS that deserve care, and deserve not to have to worry themselves sick over the bills they may face....Thank you for speaking out
  • Reply to: CMD's Wendell Potter Interviewed by Amy Goodman   15 years 2 months ago
    The source for my statistics were The Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI), a government-funded body, as reported by Dr. David Gratzer before the United States House of Representatives Committee on Ways and Means.
  • Reply to: Honduras Tries for a PR Coup   15 years 2 months ago

    Both men have strong ties to Barack Obama (and to Arne Duncan). Why isn't that addressed in PR Watch's blog post? And why is it that Helen Thomas calls out the staged Obama press conferences but PR Watch is silent?

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