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Saturday, December 1, 2012

If the PPACA - the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) was a putt, it would be short and to the right.  It demands a lot of good things happen, but it still has shortcomings, like the individual mandate.  The people in our country need care not insurance that subsidizes insurance companies and pays multi-million dollar salaries.
You need to stand up to be counted as wanting truly complete reform: universal, complete healthcare.  Learn more of what you need to know.  Don't reject what you know little or nothing about.  Don't reject what has been labeled by the 1% to scare you so they can keep their gravy train.

What this 4:20 minute video for the basics.

What is Single Payer

More to come soon.

Am I preaching to the choir? Maybe, but we need a bigger, louder choir.  Tell a friend about this blog.  All parties are welcome, Left, Right, down the middle.  OSU and Michigan fans, Browns and Bengals fans, Sabres and Red Wing fans.  Workers and business owners, school boards and local governments wanting the stretch their budgets. Get the idea?

Saturday, August 11, 2012

These are the times that try men's souls, the summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crises shrink from the service of his country; but he that stands now deserves the love and thanks of men and women. Tyranny like hell is not easily conquered, yet we have this consolation with us, the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph, what we obtain too cheaply, we esteem too lightly; it is dearness only that gives everything it's value. ~ Thomas Paine

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Letter to Editor DDN published 7-19-12


Regardless how you view the SCOTUS decision on Obamacare, the fact remains we finally have improved access to care. President Obama deserves credit and support for it.  The bad news is care will still not be accessible to all and taxpayers will be forced to buy inferior policies which subsidize insurance company profits.
A better option few know about would end the insurance overhead.  The cost of labor would be reduced, creating jobs.  There is so much money involved; opponents will use any tactic to stop real reform.
If you learn some facts and how voters are manipulated, you will want to know more.  When you know enough, you will join the true reformers demanding Single Payer, H.R. 676. 
Start with a free showing of The Healthcare Movie to your civic, business, union or church group or family, friends and neighbors. Contact your spanohio.org representative. 
Learn the truth.  Join us in the human rights fight of OUR time. 

Sunday, June 17, 2012

What can you say about Single Payer?

If you don't want Single Payer, odds are you don't know enough about it.
If you learn a little, you'll want to know more.
If you learn enough, you will want to help us fight for it.

Healthcare was declared a human right by the UN General Assembly.

Through my affiliation with SPANOhio.org, I support the Healthcare for all Ohioans Act, which with other states working to the same end, will lead the country to Improved Medicare for All.
I am a member of PNHP.org, an organization of care providers and other caring people who recognize the good a single payer system would do for America's people.

I urge you to visit healthcaremovie.net to find a showing or schedule a showing of your own.  I have DVD's available for a $15 donation to SPAN to readers in the Ohio counties of Champaign, Clark, Darke, Greene, Miami, Montgomery, Preble and Shelby.

Bill Davis
SPAN Ohio Region 7 Coordinator

ObamaCare or RomneyCare


Maybe we should call the HC reform RomneyCare. It is, after all, quite similar to what was passed in MA. Now the voters there are warming up more toward Single Payer. If this reform were a putt, it would be short and to the right. I guess Obama was being a practical politician, but that's not why I voted for him. I really thought he would push harder for the public option. He has half the union members mad at him for not passing card-check. I'm not sure what Independents expected, but he didn't deliver for them either, I guess. In the mean time, I will continue campaigning for SPANOhio.org. Maybe we can get Ohioans Improved Medicare for All and show Congress with other states making the effort what we can do. I don't like the changes any more than most, but, looking at the picture logically, it seems the time has come for the inevitable. The longer people remain ignorant of the truth hidden by the medical industry, the more it will cost before its fixed. We certainly cannot afford to wait.

Friday, June 8, 2012

Test Your Knowledge About Single Payer Healthcare


Test Your Knowledge About Single Payer Healthcare – Answers

1.      50,000,000. A great wealth of information on the uninsured is available at Kaiser Family Foundation’s website. http://www.kff.org/uninsured/upload/7451-07.pdf

2.      Also 50,000,000. The challenges of the uninsured are discussed well in Too Great a Burden, Families USA, December 2007. They report that in 2007, 10.9 million uninsured Americans spent more than 10% of their income on healthcare, but shockingly, that same year 50.7 million Americans who had medical insurance also spent more than 10% of their income on healthcare.

3.      62% of bankruptcies are due to medical expenses. Himmelstein et al. Am J Med. Aug. 2009

4.      Over 75% of the medically bankrupt had medical insurance at the onset of their illness. Himmelstein et al. Am J Med. Aug. 2009

5.      44,798 Americans are estimated to die each year from lack of insurance. Wilper et al. Am J Public Health 2009

6.      Private insurance overhead and profit, on average, fluctuates between 12% and 14% nationally. This figure is somewhat lower than the 16-20% at many of the big insurers because it includes self-insured plans of many big employers that have overhead of about 6-7%. On the other hand, overhead in the individual market is often substantially higher than 20%, and in some cases above 30%. The estimate that total administrative costs consume 31% of U.S. health spending is from research by Drs. David Himmelstein and Steffie Woolhandler and published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2003. The figure would undoubtedly be higher today. Insurance overhead accounts for a minority of the overhead. Much more occurs in physicians’ offices, hospitals, and nursing homes - driven by our current fragmented payment system.

The fact that insurance overhead per se accounts for a minority of the bureaucratic waste in the system explains why implementing a public option plan would not achieve most of the potential bureaucratic savings that can be realized through single payer. Even with a public option, hospitals, physicians and nursing homes would still have to maintain virtually all of their internal billing and cost tracking apparatus in order to fight with private insurers.

7.      Medicare overhead is roughly 3%. Recently, right-wing “think tanks” have released studies claiming that Medicare’s administrative costs are far higher than the official 3% estimate. These estimates add to Medicare’s costs a share of the salaries of the President and members of Congress, the cost of running the Internal Revenue Service, etc. But none of these added costs would go away if Medicare were abolished, or up if Medicare were expanded to cover everyone. Most economists agree that such expenses should not be included in calculating Medicare’s overhead.

8.      The correct answer is zero. Single payer would not increase the deficit, and would actually reduce it over the long-term.

There are three reasons why the U.S. health care system costs more than other systems throughout the world. One, we spend two to three times as much as they do on administration. Two, we have much more excess capacity of expensive technology than they do (more CT scanners, MRI scanners, and surgery suites). Three, we pay higher prices for services than they do.

There is no doubt that we do not need to spend more than we currently spend to cover comprehensive care for everyone. But the initial transition to a universal system would be very disruptive if we spent less. That is because we have a tremendous medical infrastructure, some of which would likely retain its excess capacity during the transition phase. Secondly, we would likely retain salaries for health professionals at their current levels. Thirdly, we would cover much more than most other countries do by including dental care, eye care, and prescriptions. And for these reasons we would need the extra 40% that we are already spending - but NOT more. We could cover all the uninsured and improve coverage for those who have skimpy coverage for the same amount we are currently spending!

9.      Three. The United States, Mexico and Turkey each fail to provide universal health insurance.  Every other modern nation has decided that your wealth should not determine your health.

10.  76. In fact, until the ACA, HR676 has consistently been the most popular health reform legislation in Congress.

Source:  www.pnhp.org

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Mainline churches support single payer, but...

A number of mainline churches have endorsed HR 676, unfortunately, they don't have the power or the will to effectively encourage their congregations to learn the facts and support spreading the 'good news'. I belong to a PCUSA church and I have spoken with ministers all around the area offering to speak to a group of their congregation and have received no calls. The issue is contentious to say the least. 

It's unbelievable that people are so closed-minded. The conservatives and insurance and drug companies have very effectively seen to it that Americans are brainwashed into thinking Social Security and Medicare are evil and Socialistic and that having universal, comprehensive care for all is a slippery slope to a socialist state. HOGWASH. It's not socialized medicine, it's a socialized payment system, the same as the way we have paid for fire and police protection, our armed forces, libraries, schools and the like. 

What is wrong with people today? Do they really, really support a Christian theocracy? I fear for my children's and grand children's future it their generation doesn't wake up to the political realities in this country and help take steps to maintain the rights and privileges fought for by our and prior generations.

The TrueMajority OREO video... featuring an animated Ben Cohen.