White House Changing Strategy to Sell Health Care Reform

Jonathan Weisman of The Wall Street Journal provided an update on health care reform yesterday.  Come September, the Obama administration will try to take control of the health care debate.  Doing so will not be easy, as Americans worried about the government overhaul continue to show up and protest the plan at their representatives’ town hall meetings.  The shifting strategy will include more speeches and less informal town hall style meetings. 

The public has been confused on the White House’s stance on the public option for the past couple of days.  Health and Human Services Secretary, Kathleen Sebelius, said over the weekend that the government option was not the central part of the bill.  In addition, President Obama indicated during a town hall meeting in Colorado that the public option might not be included in the final bill.  These statements created cause for concern amongst supporters of the public option. 

On Wednesday, the president will try to add an emotional appeal during a conference call with liberal religious groups.  Conservatives still say this bill has too much government control that a majority of Americans don’t want.  A senior Republican Senate aide said Obama has failed to convince Americans that they will benefit from his plan.  He also stressed the battle between Americans’ personal costs vs. ideals, and that ideals almost always lose. 

The Democrats are not giving in.  A Democratic strategist said, “If you are going to sell something as big and monumental and transformative as health care, you cannot get small with it.  You’ve got to be larger.  You’ve got to call on the better angels out there.”

Another point Weisman made is that during his presidential campaign, Obama scolded opponent Hillary Clinton for allying herself with Washington power brokers.  With the AARP and drug companies in favor of health reform, it seems as if Obama is the one signing up the special interests. 

Polling has been less than favorable to the proposed HR 3200 bill.  An NBC News poll released yesterday shows 41% in favor of the way Obama is handling health care reform, while a troubling 47% disapprove.  Now, only 21% want a complete overhaul of health care, down from 33% in April. 

How do you feel about the president’s handling of health care reform?

To read the entire Wall Street Journal article, click here: White House Rethinks How It Sells Health Overhaul

White House not Ready to Forfeit Public Option

Naftali Bendavid, a reporter for the Wall Street Journal, gave an important update to health care reform earlier today.  Health and Human Services Secretary, Kathleen Sebelius, caused some uproar amongst Democrats on Sunday when she said that a public option is not the “essential element” to health care reform.

In a Q-and-A email sent out to members of Congress on Monday, the White House said “nothing has changed” in regards to the plans of including a public option into the final health care reform bill.  President Obama is still convinced that the best way to reform the system is to lower costs and increase competition; he believes a public option will achieve these goals. 

Ironically, two groups have formed due to the White House’s latest indications that it is backing away from a public option: liberal activists, who say they would never support a reform bill without a public option, and moderates, who say the government option will lead to complete government control of the system.  The White House is trying to appease both groups. 

Even if the public plan is dropped altogether, Republicans and moderates are still wary of the rest of the provisions in the bill.  Specifically, they are worried that the estimated cost of $1 trillion over 10 years is too much to put on the American people in a down economy.  Some experts believe these estimates, must like original estimates for Medicare, are inaccurate, and this kind of reform will end up costing a lot more. 

One House Republican leadership aide said, “It doesn’t make a difference to us [if the public plan is dropped].  This plan is so bad that changing this one particular provision is not going to fix it.”

Currently, three committees in the House have completed different versions of HR 3200.  All three of them include the controversial public option.  The Senate, however, is still working on its version.  The Senate Finance committee is trying to churn out their ‘bipartisan’ bill, which will certainly not include the public plan. 

Michael Mahaffey, spokesman for Senate Finance Committee member Mike Enzi (R-WY) said, “The government-run plan does not have the votes to pass in the Senate, it never has.” 

So while Sen. Enzi is pleased to see the White House backing away from its insistence on including a government-run plan, the fact is this doesn’t change the dynamic in the Senate very much”. 

To read the entire Wall Street Journal article, click here: White House Reassures Allies

Democrats: No Reform without Government Option

FoxNews.com reported yesterday that Democrats’ hopes for a public insurance option are waning fast.  After two weeks of grassroots efforts on both sides to either extinguish or support the plan, it has come out that a public insurance option simply will not pass in the Senate.  However, several Democrats in the House have also pledged not to vote for a bill that leaves out a public option.

Jim Dean, chairman of progressive group Democracy for America, sent an email to supporters on Monday urging them not to settle for non-profit cooperatives in place of a public option.  He wrote: “Let’s be clear: A health care bill without a public option is D.O.A. in the House.  Period.  To pass any bill in the House, they need at least 218 votes but 64 House Democrats have stood up and said they will not vote for a bill without a public option.  That means a bill without a public option would only have 193 votes.”

Over the weekend, several members on the left as well as President Obama admitted the public option is not the key element in the health care reform bill.  Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said Sunday that, “We need some choices, we need some competition”.

Many liberal supporters have criticized the Obama administration for backing away from a public option.  Representative Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.) said, “Leaving private insurance companies the job of controlling the costs of health care is like making a pyromaniac the fire chief”.

Moreover, former presidential candidate, Howard Dean, said meaningful change in the health care system is not possible without a public option.

However, as Senator Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) pointed out on Fox News Sunday, “The fact of the matter is there are not the votes in the United States Senate for the public option.  There never have been.  So to continue to chase that rabbit I think is just a wasted effort”.

For more health care reform details, click here: No Government-Run Health Insurance, No Bill, Say Liberal Supporters of Reform

Public Plan Option Fading Fast

Elizabeth Williamson and August Cole of the Wall Street Journal reported today that the Obama administration, alongside Democrats, is close to throwing in the towel on the most controversial piece of the proposed legislation for health care reform: a public insurance option.  Yesterday, Health and Human Services Secretary, Kathleen Sebelius, said that this provision is not the most “essential” part of a reform bill.  President Obama’s press secretary, Robert Gibbs, also said Sunday that while the President believes a public option would be the best way to increase choice and competition in the insurance marketplace, there are alternatives that can accomplish the same goal.

On Saturday, Obama held a town hall meeting in Grand Junction, CO.  Towards the end of the meeting, he said, “Whether we have it [public insurance option] or we don’t have it, is not the entirety of health care reform”. 

Opponents have formed on all sides of this key issue in the health care reform debate.  Angry protesters have turned out in many numbers across the country.  Fearing an eventual governmental overhaul of the system, Americans who have never been involved in politics have become ensconced in the debate. 

Health care reform could be devastating for private insurance company owners, who have been demonized in the past couple of weeks for posting record profits year after year.  The fear is justified because if a public plan is put in place, hospitals and doctors would begin charging private insurers more per claim to make up for the expected losses from reduced reimbursement by the government.  Americans are worried that these businesses would be driven out as private insurers already pay more per claim due to Medicare and Medicaid. 

To read the entire Wall Street Journal article, click here: Chances Dim for a Public Plan

Provision for End-of-Life Care Losing Support

Janet Adamy, of the Wall Street Journal, wrote that a controversial section of the health care reform bill is losing favorability in an article yesterday.  The provision, as it stands right now in the House bill, states that Medicare would provide end-of-life counseling to patients once every 5 years.  Even though the consultation is optional, the public isn’t going for it.

During the proposed sessions with patients, doctors could discuss matters such as living wills or getting hospice care.  This part of the bill adds about $3 billion to the cost of health care overhaul over the next 10 years.  Proponents of the provision claim that in the long run, money will be saved by reducing end-of-life care that patients do not want. 

Critics of the provision claim that health care rationing would occur under these conditions.  A bipartisan group composed of three democrats and three republicans in the Senate Finance Committee are working through a bill that excludes the provision.  As of yesterday, however, it is still in the House bill. 

Iowa Senator Charles Grassley was quoted in the article saying, “You shouldn’t have counseling at the end of life.  You ought to have counseling 20 years before you’re going to die.” Many people are concerned with how end-of-life care is often discussed in conjunction with cost savings. 

According to a 2001 study published in Health Affairs, 5% of people on Medicare die every year while about 28% of total Medicare spending comes during the last year of life.  Meanwhile, the Urban Institute estimated that the government could save about $91 billion over 10 years by better managing end-of-life care.  The nonpartisan research center says that there are two ways to save money with Medicare: by discouraging doctors from providing care just because they would get paid for it and having teams at hospitals assisting people to manage their pain who decide to stop treatment.

Robert Berenson, a former Medicare official in the Clinton administration and a fellow at the Urban Institute, was quoted in the article saying, “People are getting overtreated at the end of life.  This would save money and improve the fidelity to people’s wishes.”

However, according to Adamy, reducing overtreatment is not easy.  It is difficult for doctors to tell whether a patient is near death and most patients want to avoid death at all costs.

Question: What do you think about this provision?

To read the entire Wall Street Journal Article, click here: End-of-Life Provision Loses Favor

Doctors have Issues with Health Care Reform

Bernadine Healy, M.D., health editor of U.S. News and World Report, wrote an article back in June detailing doctors’ concerns about President Obama’s proposed health care plan. 

Obama spoke to the American Medical Association (AMA) in June and outlined one of his concerns with doctors: their common over treatment of patients.  Indeed, many doctors across the country admit to giving patients additional tests that may not be absolutely necessary.  What’s more, these tests accounts for 20-30 cents of every health care dollar.  However, the doctors’ reason for administering these tests is hardly monetary; instead they are protecting themselves from frivolous lawsuits. 

While some of these suits are just and reasonable, a majority of them are frivolous and end doctors’ careers.  For example, Healy said she ran into a physician who told her he had recently won a case involving a stroke patient.  The doctor decided not to use risky therapy, and the patient died.  The doctor said he also would have been sued had he administered the treatment and the patient died.  Either way, the doctor loses.

For the moment, Healy explains that President Obama and democratic leadership have ignored the problem of defensive medicine.  Also, she claims that Medicaid reimburses doctors at such a low price that some end up losing money treating patients.  How will a bigger government entity with more people under their plan be able to properly reimburse doctors for patient care so that they don’t lose money?

A Gallup Poll released 2 days after the AMA meeting showed that when it comes to health reform, Americans trust their doctors more than they trust their political leaders. 

To read the entire U.S. News and World Report article, click here: Why Doctors Take Issue With Obama’s Health Reform Plan

Obama holds NH Town Hall to Promote Health Care Bill

Yesterday, President Obama spoke at a high school in New Hampshire, a state known for being independent on many issues.  Obama iterated that the government would not be in control of individuals’ health insurance.  Critics on the right have questioned the public option piece of the reform that they say will ultimately lead to a single-payer system. 

Obama encouraged critics of his plan to ask questions at the forum; however a majority of the inquiries came from proponents of the plan.  At one point, the President had to request that skeptics of his plan step up to the microphone. 

Obama said, “I don’t think government bureaucrats should be meddling but I don’t think insurance company bureaucrats should be meddling.” Obama also reiterated the “wild misrepresentations” that he claims have been floating around. 

Yesterday throughout the country, many senators and members of congress held town hall meetings of their own.  Senator Arlen Specter had a meeting in Mount Lebanon, PA, which was highlighted by a member in the audience who got boisterous while asking his question. 

It is clear that health care reform is rising on the list of important issues to Americans.  People on both sides are very passionate and want to make sure that this bill is either passed or completely destroyed.  In fact, a recently published Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey shows support of the plan declining.  Only 42% of Americans now support the plan and 53% oppose it.

To read the entire article from FoxNews.com, click here: Obama to Critics: Health Reform Not About Government Takeover

Public Option for Health Care Reform Fading as Possibility

FoxNews.com reported today that the number two Senate Democrat, Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin, has somewhat conceded Democrats’ efforts to include a public plan in the health care reform bill.  The Illinois Senator said Sunday he is “open” to a bill that does not include a government-run option. 

This comes in response to the countless protests at town hall meetings throughout the country by Americans who are trying to combat a government overhaul of health care.  The Senate Finance Committee is trying to complete a bipartisan bill by mid-September.

Democrats are worried that liberals in the Senate and Congress may not vote to pass the bill in mid-October if it does not include a public plan. 

As September approaches, we will soon have a concrete plan in place that will surely change health care in the future.

Click here to read the entire FoxNews.com article: No. 2 Senate Democrat ‘Open’ to Health Care Bill With No Public Option

Healthcare Reform Isn’t so Transparent

Stephanie Condon, a blogger for the Political Hotsheet of CBS News, said the White House is not living up to some of their promises made during the campaign.  Specifically, at a town hall meeting in August 2008, Obama said, “I’m going to have all the negotiations around a big table.  We’ll have doctors and nurses and hospital administrators… Insurance companies, drug companies…we’ll have the negotiations televised on C-SPAN, so that people can see who is making arguments on behalf of their constituents, and who are making arguments on behalf of the drug companies or the insurance companies…that approach, I think is what is going to allow people to stay involved in the process.” In fact, the President has held private meetings in the White House with several representatives about the reform bill.

There has been misinformation on both sides of the aisle.  Many Americans, whether they generally agree or oppose the reform proposals, don’t really have all the facts to make an educated decision.  The White House’s effort to correct ‘fishy’ information is generating anger from the Republicans.  They say that this will discourage Americans from voicing their opinions on the issue for fear of it being reported directly to the White House.  The Obama administration says the reason why it is in place is to shoot down misinformation and tell the American people the facts. 

There have been ongoing secret meeting within the Senate Finance Committee between three Republicans and three Democrats vying for a bipartisan bill.  Democrats across the board complain that these three Democrats are conceding too much to the Republicans, including scrapping the controversial government-run insurance option, even though it is the Democrats who have the majority in both the House and the Senate. 

Ms. Condon contends that if there were more C-SPAN broadcasts on health care legislation, there would be room for more understanding and make for real debate.

Click here to read the entire post: Transparency Lacking in Health Care Reform Battle

Health Reform Protests Forming on Both Sides

According to a recent New York Times article, the majority of protests on health care reform have come from conservative interest groups.  However, democrats will begin protests of their own at town hall meetings run by republican representatives.  Thus far, angry crowds have gathered at town hall meetings held by democrats across the country.  Senator Arlen Specter and heath and human services secretary Kathleen Sebelius were booed on Sunday in Philadelphia when Specter admitted he hadn’t read the bill in its entirety. 

At the meeting with Specter and Sebelius, one constituent who opposes the plan said, “I look at this health care plan and I see nothing that is about health or about care. What I see is a bureaucratic nightmare, senator. Medicaid is broke, Medicare is broke, Social Security is broke and you want us to believe that a government that can’t even run a cash for clunkers program is going to run one-seventh of our U.S. economy? No sir, no.”

Other public gatherings have gone poorly for Democrats.  Independent groups are taking a page out of the Obama 2008 campaign by utilizing social networking sites such as Twitter to alert constituents about politicians’ town hall meetings.  Many are showing up in crowds to protest the reform bill. 

Democratic leaders insist that these groups are being disruptive and are harming efforts to move health care reform in the right direction.  Democrats are planning on being at Republican leaders’ town hall meetings in the near future to advocate for health care reform.  However, Michael Steel, a spokesman for the House Republican leader John A. Boehner of Ohio said, “The more the American people hear about the Democrats’ plan, the less they like it.”

Politicians are asking constituents to be respectful during these critical town hall meetings. 

Click here to read the entire New York Times article: Health Plan Opponents Make Voices Heard