lorinpda's blog

BREAKING: History in a Number: Senate Amendment 2837

Originally Published at pdamerica.org  By Donna Smith, Co-chair PDA Healthcare NOT Warfare campaign

TAKE IMMEDIATE ACTION: Ask your Senators to support Sander's Amendment 2837

The idea of a Medicare for All type, single-payer healthcare system will be heard on the Senate floor. Late last evening, Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont filed Senate Amendment No. 2837, and there are two additional original co-sponsors of this amendment, Senator Roland Burris of Illinois and Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio.

KFF’s health subsidy calculator

KFF’s health subsidy calculator -

Premium Assistance for Coverage in Exchanges

Health Reform Subsidy Calculator

Kaiser Family Foundation

An example for a 50 year old with a family of four, with income at 401% of federal poverty level:

$93,934 – Projected income in 2014

$16,858 – Unsubsidized health insurance premium in 2014

N/A – Maximum % of income the family has to pay for the premium

PPACA’s redistributive aspects are at great risk

PPACA’s redistributive aspects are at great risk -

The Political Challenges That May Undermine Health Reform

By Theda Skocpol
Health Affairs
July 2010

Abstract

Proof that individuals game the individual mandate

Proof that individuals game the individual mandate -

Short-term insurance buyers drive up cost in Mass.

By Kay Lazar
The Boston Globe
June 30, 2010

The number of people who appear to be gaming the state’s health insurance system by purchasing coverage only when they are sick quadrupled from 2006 to 2008, according to a long-awaited report released yesterday from the Massachusetts Division of Insurance.

Sen. Evan Bayh’s fortunes tied to WellPoint

Sen. Evan Bayh’s fortunes tied to WellPoint -

By Chris Gray

Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., a staunch opponent of single-payer national health insurance who waffled on his support of even a meager government-run public option in this past year’s health care debate, has about a third of his stock invested in just one company: Indianapolis-based WellPoint, Inc., perhaps the most notorious of health insurance companies.

A second opinion on U.S. health care reform

Democrats Ponder Health-Care Suicide

Democrats Ponder Health-Care Suicide -

Robert Pary for Common Dreams - Democrats Ponder Health-Care Suicide :

If Democrats enact something like the health-care bill emerging from the Senate Finance Committee, they may call it a legislative victory and it may keep the campaign donations flowing from the insurance industry, but the Democrats would surely infuriate millions of American voters.

Indeed, it seems like some Democrats, such as Sens. Max Baucus and Kent Conrad, have lost themselves so much in the inside-Washington reeds of legislating a convoluted compromise acceptable to the insurers, that they are inviting an angry backlash from average Americans.

The danger for Democrats is that this industry-friendly legislation would impose new burdens on citizens, including government fines for failing to sign up for a health-insurance plan, without guarantees that the coverage won't be almost as crappy and expensive as it is now. ...

[K]ey elements of the bill, like the so-called shopping "exchanges," aren't to take effect until 2013, meaning that Americans will have watched this messy process unfold for months and then be told that the current system, which has cruelly pushed millions of sick people into bankruptcy, will get four more years to bankrupt more Americans.

By contrast, Medicare, the single-payer health system for senior citizens, was signed into law on July 30, 1965, and took effect on July 1, 1966, less than a year later.

Read more.

Syndicate content