Did I say there was a lot going on?
Here is a look at regional healthcare - a comparison of major centers around the country, in a recent article in Time by Michael Grunwald.
The title is:
More Data + Less Care = Lower Cost + Better Health
It includes a comparison of major hospitals around the country, and highlights tremendous differences in costs, quantity, quality and outcomes.
The Mayo Clinic has the lowest costs overall, and who would doubt the quality of the care the Mayo system provides? On the one hand, why is Mayo so much less costly than other centers? On the other, Mayo loses almost 50% on the dollar of the care it provides for Medicare services. This gives you some idea how far from sustainability healthcare in the US is as presently funded.
Then there is the practice of charging medical insurers more to subsidize the care provided at a loss. All hospitals do this, and it represents a "stealth tax". Who bears the brunt of this "tax"? Businesses do, and the employees who are nowing picking up more of their own premium costs as businesses pull back.
Critics of healthcare reform say the government should stay out of healthcare. Too late, really, and also not very fair. If you consider that the federal goverment already funds medicare, medicaid and the VA, nearly half the country is already on the government tab. It seems unfair to have the government responsible for one half, and not the other, especially when the insured segment is subject to that stealth tax. That stealth tax not only provides for the losses due to underpayment by medicare, but it covers the care of the uninsured across the system.
In one respect, Healthcare reform is not about raising taxes, but shifting from a system of "secret taxes" to one in which there is fair coverage and fuller transparency. A system that is fairer to all citizens, and where dollars are spent on healthcare, not insurance administration, a large part of which is geared to refusing payment for care already provided.
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Monday, June 15, 2009
Lots of action, lately . . .
*
Can't keep up with this all.
Here is just a short list:
An interesting turn in the elections in Lebanon, mentioned in 2 articles by Thomas Friedman. The most recent is "Winds of Change", an overview of current suprising trends in Lebanon, Iraq and Iran. Before that, "Ballots over Bullets", on the Elections in Lebanon. One point that comes out is that there has been a backlash against extremism in several places. In regard to Lebanon, the population has taken a second look at Hizballah and the way it incited a war with Israel, to the detriment of the Lebanese at large.
There is a current backlash against the Taliban in Pakistan too.
Then there is Colbert in Iraq, just tune in to comedy central online. Best line - Obama's "big e" response on the first night.
Then there is the problem of domestic terrorism, whether it is at the Holocaust Museum or an abortion clinic, the fringe right is spiralling out of control. This is not good, and good people need to be heard on these matters.
Last, but not least, there is the peace process - Obama from Cairo, Bibi on a "two-state solution". And other perspectives abound: Klein in Time - "talking to Hamas".
Don't forget to take out the trash, and feed the dog.
Can't keep up with this all.
Here is just a short list:
An interesting turn in the elections in Lebanon, mentioned in 2 articles by Thomas Friedman. The most recent is "Winds of Change", an overview of current suprising trends in Lebanon, Iraq and Iran. Before that, "Ballots over Bullets", on the Elections in Lebanon. One point that comes out is that there has been a backlash against extremism in several places. In regard to Lebanon, the population has taken a second look at Hizballah and the way it incited a war with Israel, to the detriment of the Lebanese at large.
There is a current backlash against the Taliban in Pakistan too.
Then there is Colbert in Iraq, just tune in to comedy central online. Best line - Obama's "big e" response on the first night.
Then there is the problem of domestic terrorism, whether it is at the Holocaust Museum or an abortion clinic, the fringe right is spiralling out of control. This is not good, and good people need to be heard on these matters.
Last, but not least, there is the peace process - Obama from Cairo, Bibi on a "two-state solution". And other perspectives abound: Klein in Time - "talking to Hamas".
Don't forget to take out the trash, and feed the dog.
Sunday, June 14, 2009
Lion in a garage . . .
*
Look, man, it's enough to give you a Skrik!
Well, if you look at it quickly, you might get a skrik, but if you look longer, you might see it is a bit small, you know, maybe a pigmy lion!
Ek se vir jou nou, my vriend! Don't go looking at me in that tone of voice!
***
Look, man, it's enough to give you a Skrik!
Well, if you look at it quickly, you might get a skrik, but if you look longer, you might see it is a bit small, you know, maybe a pigmy lion!
But the truth is simpler. A shop owner in Brakpan, South Africa, was tired of people breaking into his yard, so he came up with the idea of shaving his dog like a lion.
Everyone in SA knows a lion! when they see one.
So now he has no problem with break-ins! That's South African ingenuity – as the saying goes, " 'n Boer maak ‘n plan ” (A farmer finds a solution.)
Ek se vir jou nou, my vriend! Don't go looking at me in that tone of voice!
***
PS - and so, from a wild dog to a wild goose
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