Showing posts with label US HEALTH CARE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US HEALTH CARE. Show all posts

Monday, March 11, 2024

Informed Comment daily updates (03/11/2024)

 

Biden owes an Apology to the Volunteers of the Mavi Marmara, the First Aid Flotilla to Gaza

Biden owes an Apology to the Volunteers of the Mavi Marmara, the First Aid Flotilla to Gaza

Ann Arbor (Informed Comment) – President Biden owes an apology to fellow American Furkan Doğan, whom Israeli commandos murdered on May 31, 2010, as he videoed their illegal attack in international waters on the aid ship Mavi Marmara. At the time, Biden justified the massacre. Doğan and other volunteers were trying to bring food and […]







Those Air-Dropping Food Cannot also be Airdropping Missiles

Those Air-Dropping Food Cannot also be Airdropping Missiles

by By Sabri Saidam ( Middle East Monitor ) – What a mad world humanity lives in, where we see the US dropping missiles and bombs through its ally, Israel, on the helpless people of Gaza while, at the same time, we see it airdropping food to the same people. Is this a case of […]











The Failing Battle for Healthcare in the Dis-United States

The Failing Battle for Healthcare in the Dis-United States

( Tomdispatch.com ) – The slang definition of “unwinding” means “to chill.” Other definitions include: to relax, disentangle, undo — all words that, on the surface, appear both passive and peaceful. And yet in Google searches involving such seemingly harmless definitions of decompressing and resting, news articles abound about the end of pandemic-era Medicaid expansion […]






HEALTH CARE

The Failing Battle for Healthcare in the Dis-United States

( Tomdispatch.com ) – The slang definition of “unwinding” means “to chill.” Other definitions include: to relax, disentangle, undo — all words that, on the surface, appear both passive and peaceful. And yet in Google searches involving such seemingly harmless definitions of decompressing and resting, news articles abound about the end of pandemic-era Medicaid expansion programs — a topic that, for the millions of people now without healthcare insurance, is anything but relaxing.

Imagine this: since March 2023, 16 million Americans — yes, that’s right, 16 million — have lost healthcare coverage, including four million children, as states redefine eligibility for Medicaid for the first time in three years. Worse yet, the nation is only halfway through the largest purge ever of Medicaid as the expansion and extension of healthcare to millions, brought on by the Covid-19 pandemic, have ended, leaving some families no longer eligible, while others need to reapply through a new process in their state.

This thrusting of tens of millions of Americans out of the national healthcare system at a moment when healthcare outfits, pharmaceutical companies, and health insurance corporations are making record profits has been termed “the great unwinding.” And it couldn’t be more cruelly ironic. After all, states have the power and authority to expand healthcare to all their residents; the federal government could similarly extend the declaration of a public health emergency that would let so many of us keep distinctly life-protecting access to healthcare. Yet millions have instead been pushed violently and rapidly from such life-saving care.

Some states are feeling the impact especially strongly. In Georgia, for instance, more than 149,000 children lost their pandemic Medicaid enrollment in just six months. Perhaps unsurprisingly, Texas is the epicenter of Medicaid’s unwinding. There, more than two million Americans have been removed from the state’s Medicaid program since federal pandemic-era coverage protections were lifted last April. As Axios reported, new state data indicates “that’s the most of any state and nearly equivalent to all of Houston — Texas’ most populous city, with 2.3 million residents — losing coverage in less than a year.” In fact, 61% of enrollees in Texas have lost Medicaid since last April.

Death by Poverty and the Lack of Healthcare

In my home state, policy analysts predict that more than 1.1 million New Yorkers will be pushed off Medicaid roles in this same unwinding. Fortunately, people are organizing in response, calling for the right to healthcare, living wages, the abolition of poverty, and more. 

On Saturday, March 2nd, I stood next to Becca Forsyth of Elmira, New York, at the Poor People’s Campaign’s Mass Poor People and Low Wage Workers Statehouse Assembly in Albany, New York. Becca was one of dozens of low-income people who testified at simultaneous assemblies held in 31 state capitals and Washington, D.C. These assemblies launched 40 weeks of the mobilizing and organizing of poor and low-income eligible voters in the lead-up to the 2024 elections, while challenging those running for office, as well as elected officials, to confront poverty as the fourth-leading cause of death in America. Becca was not the only speaker to touch on the crisis of healthcare (and its connection to poverty and death), but her words stuck with me:

“Just since December 19th, I have lost more than a dozen people I loved dearly. In 74 days, I’ve watched as people I’ve known most of my life were literally squeezed to death by poverty and the catastrophic impact it has on our entire lives. People like Missy, a 47-year-old woman who was found lying beside the railroad tracks, dead… Or Gary, who died at the hands of the police while in a hospital for a mental breakdown. Or Loretta, a friend who was a friend before I even knew what the word friend meant, who is no longer with us because my community won’t spend money on substance-use treatment. Chemung County leads this state in way too many negative ways. We rank 59 out of the 62 counties in New York for health outcomes. We have outrageous homelessness, food insecurity, premature death rates, and lead poisoning. Our chances for getting out of poverty are extinguished before we even have a chance!”

Just two days before I stood with Becca in Albany, the state capital, demanding the right to thrive and not just barely survive, I rallied with healthcare workers and community members at SUNY Downstate Hospital. With the support of New York Governor Kathy Hochul, SUNY Chancellor John King recently announced that his outfit may close SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York, one of the few remaining public-safety-net hospitals in the state.

At that rally, community members, hospital workers, local politicians, and faith leaders shared information about the crucial role that hospital has played in the community. It served as a Covid refuge where thousands of lives were saved in the heat of the pandemic, as a critically safe birthing place for Black moms (crucial given the maternal health outcomes for so many women of color), as the only kidney transplant hospital in Brooklyn, and as one of the only remaining teaching hospitals in the area after the closure of such facilities, particularly in impoverished neighborhoods, across Brooklyn and the rest of New York.

Sadly, closing down hospitals or reducing their services in poorer neighborhoods is becoming all too typical of this nation. Big conglomerates are buying up chains of them and making decisions based only on their bottom lines, not the needs of our communities. In fact, more than 600 rural hospitals are now at risk of closing due to financial instability and that’s more than 30% of America’s rural facilities. For half of them, the possibility of closure is immediate, according to a new report from the Center for Healthcare Quality and Payment Reform (CHQPR).

Our Unwinding Health

Such Medicaid cuts and hospital closures are but two manifestations of a far larger attack on American health and healthcare in what’s fast being transformed into a death-dealing nation. They are but harbingers of an even larger “unwinding” of our health as a nation. Before the pandemic and the most recent cuts, 87 million Americans were already uninsured or underinsured. We’re talking about people sharing heart-attack medicine because they can’t afford their own prescriptions, burying their children for lack of healthcare, and relying on emergency rooms rather than preventative care, while going bankrupt in the process.

It’s simple enough. All too many of us are skipping needed care. In 2022, more than one of every four adults (28% of us) reported delaying or going without some combination of medical care, prescription drugs, mental healthcare, or dental care simply because they lacked the ability to pay.

Meanwhile, medical debt is growing all too rapidly. A Census Bureau analysis of such debt found that, in 2021, 15% of all American households owed medical debt — or 20 million people (nearly 1 in 12 adults). Indeed, the SIPP (Survey of Income and Program Participation) survey suggests that, in total, Americans owe at least $220 billion in medical debt, the biggest source of bankruptcy in the nation.

And of course, as I’ve written before, this is all connected to another reality: that life expectancy is down for everyone, while the poor can expect to die, on average, 12 to 13 years earlier than rich people. Worse yet, the death-rate gap between rich and poor in this country has risen by a staggering 570% since 1980. As the Washington Post reported, “America is increasingly a country of haves and have-nots, measured not just by bank accounts and property values but also by vital signs and grave markers. Dying prematurely has become the most telling measure of the nation’s growing inequality.”

Poor Health

In the face of all of this, you might wonder how things could get any worse. Recently, Congress announced potential cuts to another crucial food and health program for the poor. The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (known as WIC) is at risk of a $1 billion shortfall, essentially guaranteeing harmful cuts to that lifeline for low-income families and children. If Congress refuses to fully fund the program, current funding levels simply won’t cover all eligible participants.

In fact, the $1 billion shortfall now slated to occur equals 1.5 months of benefits for all program beneficiaries or six months of benefits for all pregnant women and infants participating in WIC. House Republicans are currently refusing to approve the budget for this vital program that helps mothers and children up to age five access staples like fruit, vegetables, and infant formula, and connects them to healthcare resources.

In a statement to NBC News, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack called WIC, “one of the most consequential, evidence-based public health programs available.” He implored Congress to fully fund the program, which provides “life-changing benefits and services” to its participants.

And Vilsack is anything but wrong when he speaks of the importance of that pro-poor, pro-health program. An abundance of research suggests the critical role that WIC plays in “supporting maternal health and child development. WIC participation during pregnancy is associated with lower risk of preterm birth, lower risk of low birth weight, and lower risk of infant mortality.” Children on WIC are more likely to consume a healthier diet, and this impact only grows the longer a child stays in the program, which also has a significant reach. As the Department of Agriculture reports, “Nearly 40 percent of America’s infants participate in WIC, which is available only to pregnant women, new mothers, infants, and children who meet income guidelines and are determined to be at nutritional risk by a health professional.”

So Much More Is Needed

But as such programs are cut to the bone and more people experience a plethora of problems already plaguing the health of the nation, many are likely to give up entirely, assuming there’s nothing to be done and that it’s just too costly to address inequality and poor health. As someone who has been organizing among the poor for more than 30 years, however, I want to suggest that, as a nation, this just can’t be as “good” as it gets.

Across the span of my lifetime, there have been debates about how to address the larger health crisis in American society. When I was in high school, there was already debate about the effectiveness of establishing a national healthcare program, as President Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton campaigned on expanding healthcare and actually proposed a new plan for it in 1993. At the time, I remember hearing criticism of the Canadian system of nationalized healthcare. People there, it was said, experienced long lines, way too much paperwork, and a lack of options for patients.

Today, considering the way our healthcare system is unwinding, I could almost laugh (however grimly) at what it would mean to have that Canadian system of years past. All too sadly, however, that country has followed the United States in cutting and privatizing its healthcare system.

Many consider the Affordable Care Act (ACA) one of the most important policies adopted under the presidency of Barack Obama, given that more than 20 million people gained health coverage through it and the ACA’s policies made it easier for eligible people to enroll in Medicaid. In particular, the ACA expanded Medicaid coverage to nearly all adults with incomes up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level ($20,783 in 2024) and helped states with matching federal dollars expand Medicaid to more of their residents. Yet the ACA didn’t go nearly far enough. To date, 40 states and Washington, D.C., have adopted Medicaid expansion, while 10 states have not. Even in states with Medicaid expansion, too many of us are still not covered. And now we’re witnessing one of the greatest attacks on health and healthcare in decades (and just imagine what we’re likely to face if Donald Trump becomes our next president and/or the MAGA Republicans take Congress).

What this nation truly needs is a complete overhaul of its healthcare system. As a start, Medicaid needs to be expanded, extended, and built into a single-payer, universal healthcare plan. Workers need the right to living-wage jobs with generous benefits, including guaranteed paid family sick leave. Social welfare programs like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, WIC, and the Child Tax Credit need to be strengthened so that the abundance of this society is experienced by everyone. Household and medical debt would have to be cancelled, while drug-recovery programs would need to be fully funded. And parks and recreation centers, as well as grocery stores with quality, affordable food, would have to proliferate, starting in poor communities.

It’s not enough to protest the unwinding of pandemic Medicaid programs. Even that classic protest chant — “They say cut back, we say fight back!” — doesn’t go far enough. Instead, the 135 million poor and low-income Americans, and for that matter, the rest of us, must make healthcare and so much more into basic human rights.

Let me end then not with words of mine but with Becca Forsyth’s challenge to Americans in her Poor People’s Campaign testimony that day in Albany. “We must stop this raging storm of policy violence that is killing our friends and neighbors,” she said movingly. “It doesn’t have to be this way! We can wield our votes as powerful demands. The time for sitting on the sidelines is over. We have to move forward together like our lives depend on it… the lives of our children! Because they do!!”

How right she is!

Via Tomdispatch.com









Friday, February 24, 2023

Trump turns train catastrophe into gross ego trip *****Wisconsin’s Supreme Court election in April!*****

 

atAdvocacy

OD Action is now atAdvocacy!

Tell the Biden admin to restore the train safety rules Trump killed!

Today’s Action: Register voters for Wisconsin’s Supreme Court election in April!

Daily Dose of Democracy:

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Trump brags about bringing "Trump water" to families affected by Ohio train derailment

The disgraced ex-president tried to upstage the Biden team by visiting the chem-drenched town of East Palestine, Ohio, but it was clear from the outset that — shocker — this was allllll about him and his ego. Trump turned up with 12 pallets of what he called "Trump Water" and some "other, lesser quality water," wandered around a bit before going to McDonalds, and no we are not joking. It is beyond grotesque to see Trump show up at the site of a disaster that his regulation-hacking administration played no small part in causing and then turn it into an infomercial for yet another subpar Trump-brand product. Truly, there is no bottom.

Take Action: Demand the Justice Department investigate Jared Kushner for shady investments from the Saudis!


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VIDEO OF THE DAY: Jared and Ivanka slammed with bad legal news from special counsel

The disgraced ex-president's daughter and her crook of a husband have finally been subpoenaed by Special Counsel Jack Smith over their role in allowing the January 6 attack to unfold, as the investigation probes deeper into Trump's inner circle. Will the cynical, self-serving, spoiled sociopaths throw Daddy-o under the bus? We can't wait to find out.

Take Action: Tell Congress to overturn Citizens United!


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Lauren Boebert gets bad news in Colorado

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: Wow.


Former Arizona attorney general conveniently failed to release report disproving election fraud claims
Get a load of this bozo. Former AG Mark Brnovich had his agents spend over 10,000 hours investigating 638 complaints of "voter fraud" allegedly committed during the 2020 election and found no evidence of the widespread conspiracy incessantly pushed by Trump and his cronies. Brnovich conveniently failed to release the final report that would have decisively disproved those claims, giving bullshit conspiracies life and allowing Trump's outrageous accusations to flourish among his supporters. He's got a lot to answer for.

Take Action: Tell Congress to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment ASAP!


Reporter shot dead while covering earlier fatal shooting in Florida
Keith Melvin Moses, 19, shot and killed a woman in Orlando on Wednesday, then returned later to the scene of the crime and killed a reporter covering the incident. A nine-year-old girl and her mother were also found dead nearby, also shot by Moses. Just another senseless and heart-wrenching day of preventable gun violence in America, where the epidemic of killing grows more morbidly absurd by the day.

Take Action: Tell Congress to expand the House and make America more democratic!


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Steve Bannon’s ex-lawyers sue him over nearly $500,000 in unpaid legal bills

It appears the many-shirted liquor goblin is trying his hand at Trump's infamous One Weird Trick to get out of paying nearly half a million dollars in legal fees. Somehow, we don't see this ending well for Bannon, who is already facing charges of fraud, conspiracy, and money laundering.


New report paints dire picture of US healthcare
An investigation by the Milbank Memorial Fund found that the United States doesn't have enough primary care doctors, is systematically underinvesting in primary care, and is putting almost no federal funding into primary care research. The richest country in the world should be able to do much better for its citizens, but instead we continue to maintain an exploitative and inhumane for-profit healthcare system that prioritizes corporate profits over the well-being of the American people.


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It’s happening! (WATCH)

Evergreen Action: Thanks to the leadership of President Biden and bold governors like Wisconsin’s Tony Evers, the Inflation Reduction Act has already led to historic progress in our fight for a green future. Good, new UNION jobs in clean energy are exploding across the country and rekindling American manufacturing, addressing both the climate change crisis and building a fairer, greener economy for a better future.


Utah judge throws out case by 94 women against doctor who sexually assaulted them
In yet another disturbing glimpse into how the legal system shelters predatory men, a judge ruled that because a serial sexual predator was a doctor, the case must be judged by medical malpractice standards, which means that claims of appalling abuse are literally worth less than lawsuits brought by someone assaulted in a non-medical setting — even if a jury rules in the women's favor, a judge is REQUIRED to limit how much money they receive in damages.


US authorities accuse Mormon Church of misrepresenting its investments
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has been ordered to pay a $5 million fine for creating a string of shell companies to hide their holdings from the public for more than two decades. Their wealth is valued at the staggering sum of $100 billion dollars, which raises pressing questions like "which other churches are doing this?" and "why the hell aren't we taxing the bejesus out of them?"


Israeli West Bank raid kills 11 Palestinians and injures more than 100 others
Yet another brutal IDF raid, this time on the city of Nablus, left ten dead — including a 72-year-old man and a teenager — and scores more wounded. A raid ostensibly conducted to arrest three wanted militants left homes and cars destroyed, shops riddled with bullets, and blood staining the concrete as overwhelming force was once again brought to bear on a civilian area. Two months into the year and already 62 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces, triggering fears of escalation and further bloodshed.


Judge blocks 9/11 families from seizing Afghan central bank funds
In a victory for the people of Afghanistan, an absurd US plan to split the central Afghan bank's frozen assets with the families of 9/11 victims has been put to an end. "Just like the families of the September 11th attack victims, the Afghan people are no stranger to the Taliban's brutality and rule. We support the 9/11 families' quest for just compensation, but believe justice will not be achieved by 'raiding the coffers...' of a people already suffering," George B. Daniels of the Southern District of New York ruled.


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Why pay workers more when you could just hire kids

America, the beautiful?

Hope...

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Today’s Action: Register voters for Wisconsin’s Supreme Court election in April!

Abortion rights are taking center stage once again, this time in Wisconsin, where progressive voters have a chance to flip control of the state Supreme Court and help restore equitable access to reproductive healthcare. Securing Democratic seats on the state’s high court could spell the end of the current, near-total abortion ban that’s been on the books since 1849. And since Republican gerrymandering in Wisconsin is some of the most egregious in the country, this may be our best chance at restoring reproductive rights for marginalized people currently being denied equitable access to care.

While progressives have managed to deliver a string of recent statewide abortion-rights victories in the wake of last summer’s disastrous SCOTUS ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade, we must be steadfast in our pursuit to restore and preserve access to abortion care to the millions of folks living in Republican-dominated red states. The battle for reproductive healthcare is raging, and we must stand ready to fight.

Sign up to register voters for Wisconsin’s upcoming Supreme Court election every Friday from 12-2pm CST now until April 4! You don’t have to be in Wisconsin to join the fight, just be ready to put in the work to help identify and register new Wisconsin voters!

PS — Please don't forget to sign the petition to tell the Biden admin to restore the train safety rules Trump killed, and be sure to follow us on TwitterFacebook, and Instagram.

 @advocacy | 1002 Hull St., Louisville, KY 40204





Saturday, July 25, 2020

FOR PROFIT HEALTH CARE SUCKS!









PERSPECTIVE
It seems to me that our continuing national failure to deal with the virus, beyond the willful and malevolent stupidity of our man in the WH, has highlighted what I consider a failure in overall health policy. Let me present you with some statistics taken from 2020 Edition of "The Pocket World in Figures" published by "The Economist":
1. Health spending as a % of GDP: USA-17.1, Greece-8.5.
2. Doctors per 1,000 pop.: USA-2.6, Greece-6.3.
3. Hospital beds per 1,000 pop.: USA-2.9, Greece-4.3.
4. Life expectancy in years: USA-80.4, Greece-82.4.
Now, given that the USA GDP is $19,485 billion and that of Greece is $203 billion and given the respective populations of 324.5 million versus 11.2 million, the USA spends on an average at least ten times more per capita than Greece. So, the question is: why are the results significantly lower?


Image may contain: text that says 'Trump recently spoke about how great his life was before he became president. My life was better too.'








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Image may contain: 1 person, text that says 'Robert Reich @RBReich So let me get this straight: Elon Musk doesn't think the government should bail out the American people during the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, but he has no problem collecting government subsidies and tax breaks to line his own pocket? 8:10 AM 7/25/20 Twitter Web App 4,162 Retweets and comments 13.3K Likes'







Trump rips his own party in wild Memorial Day screed

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