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cyberswede Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-23-09 08:59 AM
Original message
TODAY -- White House health forum at 10 a.m. CDT
From and email I received from the Vice President for Medical Affairs at the University of Iowa:

About a dozen leaders from The University of Iowa will be among 500 people participating in the third Regional White House Forum on Health Reform from 10 a.m. to noon today at the Polk County Convention Center in Des Moines. The forum will be moderated by Iowa Governor Chet Culver and South Dakota Governor Mike Rounds. Nancy-Ann DeParle, director of the White House Office on Health Reform, will represent the Obama administration. Discussion will focus on the need to provide high-quality, affordable health care for all Americans and to curb skyrocketing health care costs.

Forum will be live streamed on http://www.healthreform.gov/ beginning at 10 a.m. central daylight time.
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biopowertoday Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-23-09 09:05 AM
Response to Original message
1. Unions for Single Payer Health Care.............
They need to be fully represented.


http://unionsforsinglepayerhr676.org/

Welcome to Unions for Single Payer Health Care
Pass HR 676! Make health care a human right!

Workers, our families and our unions are waging a difficult struggle to win or to keep good health care coverage.

There is a better way. Congressman John Conyers, Jr. (D-MI) has introduced HR 676, national single payer legislation.

The single-payer financing in HR 676 saves the money to improve coverage for all of us as we expand care to those who have been left out. The bill restores free choice of physicians to patients.
HR 676 would cover every person in the U. S. for all necessary medical care including prescription drugs and dental.

HR 676 ends deductibles and co-payments and saves hundreds of billions by eliminating the private health insurance industry with its high overhead and profits.
Our unions must lead the way!

We must build the movement that wins passage of HR 676 and makes health care a human right.
1,000 unions cannot be ignored!

The All Unions Committee for Single Payer Healthcare — HR 676 has undertaken the task to win the endorsement of 1,000 local unions and other labor bodies for this bold and just legislation.

We're creating an honor roll of those unions that have endorsed HR
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cyberswede Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-23-09 09:08 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. Agreed
I hope there's someone present at this forum who will advocate for single payer. Sadly, I'm not optimistisc.
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biopowertoday Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-23-09 09:40 AM
Response to Reply #2
6. Hundreds Turn Out To Support Single Payer Healthcare At "Stacked Deck" Forum - 03/18/09



this is from a previous meeting: but we need to keep talking and showing up and calling our reps. day after day after day...........


http://www.laborradio.org/node/10721

Hundreds Turn Out To Support Single Payer Healthcare At "Stacked Deck" Forum - 03/18/09

By Doug Cunningham

Hundreds of people turned out in favor of single payer national health care at the Vermont regional healthcare reform forum Tuesday. Traven Leyshon is on the Executive Board of the Vermont AFL-CIO. He says these forums are packed with insurance and business reps.

: “Well, it was clearly a stacked deck. We had several hundred single payer supporters there and we had people saying that the administration must act on the principle that healthcare is a human right. not a commodity. That was clearly the overwhelming sentiment. But entrance into this was by invitation only. And it was stacked in favor of big corporations, the insurance companies and the Chamber of Commerce."
Posted 03/17/2009 - 5:57pm | 153 reads
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biopowertoday Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-23-09 09:08 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. here is some background about these meetings:




Physicians For National Health Program
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 5, 2009
3:10 PM

Single-Payer Advocates Win Seats at White House Health Summit
Dr. Oliver Fein releases prepared remarks

WASHINGTON - March 5 - Two leading advocates of single-payer health reform, sometimes characterized as an improved Medicare for All, received last-minute invitations to attend the White House health care summit being held today. The invitations were greeted as a victory by single-payer supporters.

Rep. John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.), chief sponsor of the single-payer U.S. National Health Care Act, H.R. 676, was invited to attend the meeting late in the day on Tuesday, and Dr. Oliver Fein, president of Physicians for a National Health Program, was invited on Wednesday afternoon.

The White House invitations were extended to the two leaders after intense grassroots lobbying efforts by single-payer supporters, who were concerned that no single-payer voices would be present at the meeting. The efforts included an outpouring phone calls and e-mail messages to the White House, along with a threatened demonstration outside the White House gates by doctors and other health professionals wearing their white coats. The demonstration was called off when word arrived that Rep. Conyers and Dr. Fein had been invited.

In his prepared remarks, the full text of which follows, Dr. Fein says, "We are pleased to be here today and appreciate the implicit recognition of the majority support for single payer in our country. We hope this is the beginning of a serious dialogue on how to enact single-payer health reform and we look forward to working with and the Congress toward this end."

Dr. Fein's prepared remarks for the summit follow.

Prepared remarks by Dr. Oliver Fein
Mr. President, Physicians for a National Health Program agrees with your statement during your presidential campaign: health care should be a basic human right.

Physicians recommend an improved and expanded Medicare-for-All - that is, a single-payer national health insurance program, providing care that is publicly financed but largely privately delivered. This fundamental health reform - which enjoys solid majority support among physicians and the public - has become even more urgently needed in view of our severe economic recession.

Millions of people are losing their employer-sponsored health insurance, joining the 46 million who already lack coverage. Millions more, including those with insurance, are finding it harder to pay their co-pays and deductibles and are scrimping on their medications and doctor visits. Many go without care, risking their health and often their very lives.

Physicians find that private, for-profit health insurance companies add cost but no value to the health care system. The administrative waste associated with the private-insurance-based industry - enormous paperwork, marketing costs, and other costs that have nothing to do with delivering care - consumes 31 cents of every health care dollar.

As long as we rely on private health insurers, universal coverage will be unaffordable.

Mandates to buy private insurance are not the answer. Experience with mandate plans in Washington state (1993), Oregon (1992) and Massachusetts (1988 and today), shows they simply don't work, achieving neither universal health care nor cost containment.

Some of these plans offer a Medicare-like, public option that people could buy into, but experience with Medicare shows that the private plans refuse to compete on a level playing field. They cherry-pick healthier patients and insist on more than their share of payment.

In contrast, single payer guarantees everyone access to comprehensive, quality health care and choice of their own doctor and hospital.

Single-payer health reform, an improved Medicare for All, is the only reform model that offers $400 billion in annual savings in administrative costs. It is the only approach that contains effective cost-containment provisions such as bulk purchasing and global budgeting.

Such economies would allow for expanding health coverage to everyone - with no co-pays or deductibles - with no overall increase in health care spending. In other words, it's the only health reform proposal that pays for itself.

The single-payer model is the only fiscally prudent proposal available, an especially important consideration at a time of economic distress. And we know from our experience with Medicare and other single-payer systems that it will work.

With a single-payer national health insurance program we can assure lifelong, high quality, comprehensive and affordable coverage for everyone. Such a program will lift the heavy burden of crushing medical expenses off the shoulders of our population, expenses that often lead to personal bankruptcy. And we can save lives: the Institute of Medicine estimated in 2002 that more than 18,000 Americans die each year from lack of health insurance. That number is certainly higher today.

From the standpoint of what benefits our patients, single payer is the health policy model that best reflects their needs and values.

Support for single payer is extensive. In a peer-reviewed statistical study in the Annals of Internal Medicine, 59 percent of U.S. physicians said they would support government action to establish national health insurance. In a recent Associated Press poll, 65 percent of the respondents said, "The United State should adopt a universal health insurance program in which everyone is covered under a program like Medicare that is run by the government and financed by taxes."

Single-payer health reform is embodied in the U.S. National Health Care Act, H.R. 676, sponsored by Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.). It had 93 co-sponsors in the 110th Congress, the most of any health reform legislation.

We are pleased to be here today and appreciate the implicit recognition of the majority support for single payer in our country. We hope this is the beginning of a serious dialogue on how to enact single-payer health reform and we look forward to working with you and the Congress toward this end.

- The above article is a public news release and is not copyrighted material -



Physicians for a National Health Program is a single issue organization advocating a universal, comprehensive single-payer national health program. PNHP has more than 15,000 members and chapters across the United States.

http://www.pnhp.org /

Dr. Oliver Fein is president of PNHP. A general internist who is active in clinical practice, he is also professor of clinical medicine and clinical public health at Weill Medical College of Cornell University, where he serves as associate dean responsible for the Office of Affiliations and the Office of Global Health Education. Dr. Fein has advocated for an expanded role for primary care, for academic health centers in urban health care delivery systems, and for national health system reform. He was Robert Wood Johnson Health Policy Fellow during 1993-1994, when he worked in the office of Senate Democratic Majority Leader George Mitchell. He spent 17 years at the Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center developing community-based ambulatory care practices and the Division of General Medicine. He is chair of the NY Chapter of PNHP and immediate past vice president of the American Public Health Association.

Dr. Oliver Fein


http://www.commondreams.org/newswire/2009/03/05-0
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biopowertoday Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-23-09 09:10 AM
Response to Original message
4. and here is a DU thread about this issue:
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biopowertoday Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-23-09 09:17 AM
Response to Original message
5. Healthcare Foxes are Building the Taxpayer Funded Hen House



http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/03/23-1


Published on Monday, March 23, 2009 by CommonDreams.org


Healthcare Foxes are Building the Taxpayer Funded Hen House

by Donna Smith
If we want to know who is truly at the helm of our national healthcare reform effort, all we need to do is keep watching who is asked to provide official testimony and guidance to Congress and who is left out completely. Those decisions are made at the highest levels in our government and the choices are purposeful and meant to illicit just the information that will bolster a predetermined outcome.

Last week I wrote about Karen Ignagni, CEO of America's Health insurance Plans (the industry trade group known as AHIP) who was called on and recognized by President Barack Obama during his White House Summit on Healthcare Reform in late February and who was also the only "stakeholder" seated in the front of the room later for a briefing by the staff of the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee (the committee chaired by Senator Ted Kennedy). Clearly, Ignagni has been afforded a sort of access and status in this debate and in the reform effort that many others have not.

The fox isn't just in the hen house. The fox is building it.

I've got to hand it to Congress right now. Most members of Congress are making sure they remember "on which side of the toast you find the butter" in terms of making the for-profit health insurance industry comfortable in their deeply entrenched roles not only in our broken healthcare system but also in the deep-pocket funding of many Congressional campaigns. The insurance industry's influence is purchased with millions and millions in campaign contributions and with the preventable deaths of tens of thousands of American citizens every year. That is fact.

So why does it even warrant mention that the hearing this week to discuss health insurance reform has a witness list populated with industry-friendly voices, including Ignagni? I write this because it is so deeply dishonest and offensive to me that we are told we have an allegedly open and inclusive process to explore what's best for the nation's healthcare reform while the drafting and crafting thunders forward with very closed very elitist and very non-human rights oriented effort................
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