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Former Secretary of State George Shultz discusses his new book, "Putting Our House in Order: A Guide to Social Security and Health Care Reform." From the World Health Care Congress in Washington, DC.
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In the News

This Week

Tues. Aug. 26, 2008

How the Economy Could Affect Obama's Health Reform Plans -- The Wall Street Journal Health Blog
As Private Insurance Declines, Medicaid and Medicare Pick up the Slack -- The Wall Street Journal Health Blog
Delaware GOP's Lee and Copeland Issue Health Care Plan -- Denver Business Journal
Experts: Insurance Won't Solve Health Problems -- The Denver Post
Insured Patients Being Asked for Higher Fees Before Hospital Procedures -- South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Hawaii Health Care Faces Rises Costs, Few Answers -- Forbes

Mon. Aug. 25, 2008
Health Care: How Involved Should the Government Be -- The Wall Street Journal
Blue Cross Plans Feeling Pressure to Consolidate -- The Wall Street Journal
Mass. Health Finance Administrators Call for More "Shared Responsibility" -- The Boston Herald
Experts Agree, Fixing Healthcare Will Be Costly -- Denver Business Journal
Uninsured to Spend $30 Billion -- The Wall Street Journal
Both Candidates' Plans Would Heighten Physician Accountability -- MedPage Today
Sun. Aug. 24, 2008
Democratic Platform Promises Lots of Goodies -- San Francisco Chronicle
Tues. Aug. 19, 2008

Obama Touts Single-Payer System for Health Care -- The Wall Street Journal Health Blog
439,000 More in Mass. Get Health Insurance -- The Boston Globe
Mon. Aug. 18, 2008
Pilot Program Cuts ER Costs -- The Fresno Bee
McCain's Health Plan More Radical Than the Democrats'? -- The Dallas Morning News
Harry and Louise are Back -- Politico
Widening Gender Gap Includes Health Care Cost Concerns -- Politico
Fri. Aug. 14, 2008
Medicare Bears Brunt of States' Budget Crunch -- Christian Science Monitor
Wed. Aug. 13, 2008
5 Voting Groups to Watch -- US News and World Report
Leavitt Pushes Value-Driven Health Care -- Healthcare IT News
Tues. Aug. 12, 2008
More Turn to Professional Groups for Insurance -- The Wall Street Journal
Changes Brewing on Capitol Hill for Health Insurance -- The Wall Street Journal Health Blog
Mass. Businesses Rip Healthcare Proposal -- The Boston Globe
Mass. Businesses Resist Reform Rules -- The Wall Street Journal Health Blog
Family Doctors Called Scarce -- The Baltimore Sun
Safety Net Frays as Hospitals Shift Resources From Poor -- The Wall Street Journal Health Blog
Mon. Aug. 11, 2008
Medicare Plan Changing -- The Wall Street Journal
Prioritizing Health Care -- The Wall Street Journal
Insurers Expect Health Care Costs to Rise More than 10% Next Year -- The Wall Street Journal
Dems Agree on Health Care Guarrantee for All -- San Francisco Gate
Cal. Governor's Pared Plan May Have Slim Chance -- San Diego Union Tribune
Prices for Some Drugs Skyrocket -- USA Today
 

Experts Comment

We've asked readers of our newsletter for their selected "fixes" for the health care system, and other comments. See featured responses here:

Susan Fraley, MS & RN

Medicare should have never been changed to begin with. This "donut" hole thing is ridiculous. Many seniors are adversely effected and the program(s) are difficult to understand. I think it should have been left alone and more tax dollars and withholding should have been utilized to pay for it. Cost would actually go down because people who can't afford such things as insulin and hypertensive medications ultimately become sicker and cost the system more. More...
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Weekly Newsletter

Candidates Quiet About Medicare
Issue #22, Date: August 21, 2008.

Can health care reform really happen in  '09?  Why or why not?  Tell me at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Week's Top Trends:
1. Both presidential candidates are playing down Medicare as the elections near because they both know this favorite entitlement needs major changes to survive.
2. Not only are Harry and Louise back, but AHIP says it welcomes their return, even with the new sponsors.

SPECIAL NOTE: I’ve been getting a stream of great suggestions from our readers about  health care fixes they think would make a difference. Read some of them here...
1. NPR’s Julie Rovner has pointed out that both Obama and McCain are trying to avoid talking about Medicare very much, because it’s such a looming problem. This quote, from health policy analyst Marilyn Moon says it all: “Somebody is going to have to take a hit. It's either going to be taxpayers, or the beneficiaries of the program, or the people who provide the services. And nobody wants to tackle any of those groups…”.  Read More...

2. The famous “Harry and Louise” ads that helped undo Hillary Clinton’s first attempt to redesign the country’s health system are back, just with different sponsors who are now trying to use the once skeptical pair to keep health reform alive. Those sponsors include the AHA, Families USA, and NFIB.  An insurance industry group sponsored the first “Harry and Louise” ads.  Still, this time around, Karen Ignagni, CEO of AHIP, at least appeared with the new sponsors at a press event   and said AHIP supports the campaign because good reform stems from “…diverse stakeholders from across the spectrum working together to find common ground.”

See how AHIP’s own reform plan compares to AHA’s and others on our unique Plan Comparison Grid.

NEW PLAN BRIEF ADDED: We’ve added a plan brief for Physicians for a National Health Plan to the website.


Check in for news, analysis, facts, and opinion highlights at www.reformplans.com

BY THE NUMBERS:
The total number of consumer-driven health plans increased by 43 percent over 2007. They now account for nearly 13 percent of all plans offered by employers according to United Benefit Advisors (Atlanta Business Chronicle, 08/19/08).

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