Quote from: noahvale on November 29, 2012, 07:59:10 AMMy complaint against Obamacare is changing the whole system when 80%-85% of Americans were happy. Source? I have a strong feeling you are misrepresenting what was actually found. There is no way - no way at all - that 80-85% of Americans were happy with the US health care system. I have yet to meet a single, live adult who did not decry the state of American healthcare when Obama took office. If they are happy with their coverage or their current doctor, they can keep it. Anyone who is not clear on that point by now just doesn't want to be informed. Quote from: PatDowns on November 23, 2012, 12:34:46 PMYou know, Bill, you don't need to be sarcastic with your responses. I started my post with "don't be surprised if..." You have no better handle on what's going to happen down the road than me or anyone else who posts an opinion on here. If you did, then we dialysis patients would already be experiencing better medical care due to your expertise and insider influence.You know, PatDowns, you don't need to be insulting with your responses. Bill has done as much for the CKD community (not just dialysis patients, but all of us!) as anyone I can name. When my transplant was failing and I was trying to get a handle on what the future was going to hold for me, I can credit two sites with providing me with the priceless information that I needed to navigate the system and get where I wanted to go. The first is IHD, and the second is DSEN, Bill's site. I received better medical care from what I learnt from reading Bill's articles and participating on IHD. He has an excellent handle on how the health care maze operates and to suggest that this should somehow translate into everyone with CKD receiving better medical care because of him is ludicrous. As far as I know, Bill is not paid a cent to put in all of those hours maintaining his site, talking to journalists, participating on other CKD sites and everything else he does in the advocacy world. If Bill had never got into advocacy, CKD patients would be all the poorer for it.
My complaint against Obamacare is changing the whole system when 80%-85% of Americans were happy.
You know, Bill, you don't need to be sarcastic with your responses. I started my post with "don't be surprised if..." You have no better handle on what's going to happen down the road than me or anyone else who posts an opinion on here. If you did, then we dialysis patients would already be experiencing better medical care due to your expertise and insider influence.
Quote from: cariad on November 29, 2012, 10:05:29 AMThanks for the speedy reply, noah. Yes, it's pretty much as I expected. This is not suggesting that people did not want to see reform. Back in 2009 (the year of this poll) I can clearly remember both Democrats and Republicans in Congress agreeing that the system needed to be overhauled, the argument was over how. There have also been polls (that I don't have time to research right now) showing greatly increased support for the ACA once people were disabused of paranoid rumors such as compulsory death panels.From June, 2012Most Americans would be happy if "Obamacare" is overturned.With the U.S. Supreme Court set to decide on President Obama's health-care law on Thursday, more Americans say they would be pleased if the law is ruled unconstitutional than constitutional, according to a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll.In the survey, 37 percent say they would be pleased if the Supreme Court finds the law unconstitutional, versus 22 percent who say they would be disappointed with that outcome.On the flip side, 28 percent say they would be pleased if the court rules the law is constitutional, compared with 35 percent who say they would be disappointed.But pluralities on both questions maintain they would have mixed feelings with either outcome, suggesting that opinion could change depending on how the Supreme Court ultimately decides on Thursday.What's more, if the law's individual mandate is found to be unconstitutional, 25 percent say that would hurt them and their families; 18 percent say it would help; and 55 percent say it wouldn't make a difference.http://firstread.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/06/26/12419577-nbcwsj-poll-more-would-be-pleased-if-health-law-ruled-unconstitutional
Thanks for the speedy reply, noah. Yes, it's pretty much as I expected. This is not suggesting that people did not want to see reform. Back in 2009 (the year of this poll) I can clearly remember both Democrats and Republicans in Congress agreeing that the system needed to be overhauled, the argument was over how. There have also been polls (that I don't have time to research right now) showing greatly increased support for the ACA once people were disabused of paranoid rumors such as compulsory death panels.
Yes, Bill has done much for the renal community in helping folks deal positively with esrd. I greatly respect Bill's renal disease treatment knowledge, especially when it comes to Nxstage, and have referred people with questions on here to his blog (as well as Hemodoc's). However, that does not mean he is the all powerful know all when it comes to policies and potential effects/fallout from them. While, Bill might be a wonderful consumer go-to, he has minimal influence when it comes to policy decision making. That's not a knock on Bill - it's a by product of the system.
I was listening to a radio program on NPR today. In some states, they said LA, eligibility for Medicaid is 15% of federal poverty level. That's appalling! You can only get Medicaid if you earn less than about $2500/year. We in America treat out poor horribly.
Well, I'm glad you recognize Bill's contributions. I have been reading his writings for five years and discussing issues with him on IHD for over 3 years and I have to say that I have never known him to profess to be "the all powerful know all" when it comes to government policy or anything else. My transplant surgeon also has minimal influence on policy decision making, it doesn't mean that he doesn't understand more than most when it comes to the effects of new laws and regulations. (Incidentally, he is pro-Obama and quite vocal about this on Facebook.) It also does not mean that this surgeon has not changed many lives for the better within the world of organ failure patients.
Noah/Pat if you want to debate the over all merits of Obamacare or the over all merits of my volunteer activities feel free to start another thread.
You know, PatDowns, you don't need to be insulting with your responses. Bill has done as much for the CKD community (not just dialysis patients, but all of us!) as anyone I can name. When my transplant was failing and I was trying to get a handle on what the future was going to hold for me, I can credit two sites with providing me with the priceless information that I needed to navigate the system and get where I wanted to go. The first is IHD, and the second is DSEN, Bill's site. I received better medical care from what I learnt from reading Bill's articles and participating on IHD. He has an excellent handle on how the health care maze operates and to suggest that this should somehow translate into everyone with CKD receiving better medical care because of him is ludicrous. As far as I know, Bill is not paid a cent to put in all of those hours maintaining his site, talking to journalists, participating on other CKD sites and everything else he does in the advocacy world. If Bill had never got into advocacy, CKD patients would be all the poorer for it.
I know this is a touchy subject for people. I had trouble staying on Facebbok before the election because so many viewpoints think that sick people are like that lawyer joke. You know, what do you call 10 lawyers at the bottom of the ocean? A good start. I think many people would rather not think about sick people. Maybe they think dialysis is contagious!My take is that the system was not perfect before the law change and will not be perfect after. We just have to do our best to stay educated and advocate for what we need. Or else move to Sweden. I've considered that but I don't like winter.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on November 29, 2012, 07:53:10 PMNoah/Pat if you want to debate the over all merits of Obamacare or the over all merits of my volunteer activities feel free to start another thread.Cariad brought up your actvities in a post to me and I responded to her comments. Feel free to chastise your acolyate.Quote from: cariad on November 29, 2012, 09:28:49 AMYou know, PatDowns, you don't need to be insulting with your responses. Bill has done as much for the CKD community (not just dialysis patients, but all of us!) as anyone I can name. When my transplant was failing and I was trying to get a handle on what the future was going to hold for me, I can credit two sites with providing me with the priceless information that I needed to navigate the system and get where I wanted to go. The first is IHD, and the second is DSEN, Bill's site. I received better medical care from what I learnt from reading Bill's articles and participating on IHD. He has an excellent handle on how the health care maze operates and to suggest that this should somehow translate into everyone with CKD receiving better medical care because of him is ludicrous. As far as I know, Bill is not paid a cent to put in all of those hours maintaining his site, talking to journalists, participating on other CKD sites and everything else he does in the advocacy world. If Bill had never got into advocacy, CKD patients would be all the poorer for it.
So, let's say they do turn to extended medicaid for insurance. Well guess what, lifetime coverage for immunosuppresives isn't included!
Quote from: Bill Peckham on November 29, 2012, 07:53:10 PMNoah/Pat if you want to debate the over all merits of Obamacare or the over all merits of my volunteer activities feel free to start another thread.Cariad brought up your actvities in a post to me and I responded to her comments. Feel free to chastise your acolyate.
Quote from: cariad on November 29, 2012, 09:28:49 AMQuote from: noahvale on November 29, 2012, 07:59:10 AMMy complaint against Obamacare is changing the whole system when 80%-85% of Americans were happy. Source? I have a strong feeling you are misrepresenting what was actually found. There is no way - no way at all - that 80-85% of Americans were happy with the US health care system. I have yet to meet a single, live adult who did not decry the state of American healthcare when Obama took office. If they are happy with their coverage or their current doctor, they can keep it. Anyone who is not clear on that point by now just doesn't want to be informed. http://www.gallup.com/poll/123149/Cost-Is-Foremost-Healthcare-Issue-for-Americans.aspxExamples that "If they are happy with their coverage or their current doctor, they can keep it," is wrong. Not if their MDs leave private practice or retire early, or no longer accept medicaid or medicare. Anyone who is not clear on this by now just doesn't want to be informed.EDIT: "Millions of Americans may lose their healthcare plans" One of the major selling points of ObamaCare was the president's oft-repeated promise that if you liked the coverage you have now, you would be able to keep it. As Obama's team drafts the regulations for implementing this massive government takeover of the healthcare industry, it's becoming evident – if not undeniable – that the president and his supporters misled the American people. As many as 1.5-million Americans may lose their health coverage this year due to ObamaCare regulations. Now, we're learning that new regulations may force tens of millions of people to lose their employer-provided healthcare plans. Here's what happening: Come 2014, the federal government is going to dictate what kind of coverage you must have. We were told that the federal mandates would apply only to policies sold in the new federal healthcare "exchanges." Polls found that large majorities of Americans (75%) with health insurance were happy with the coverage they currently have. So, Democrats reassured a nervous public that employer-provided plans would be "grandfathered in", or exempted from the new requirements. However, that's not what the latest draft regulations from the Department of Health and Human Services seem to suggest. James Gelfand, health policy director at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce said, "These rules are extremely strict. Almost no plan is going to be able to maintain grandfathered status." Here's why: According to the New York Times, "An employer would also lose its exempt status if it increased co-payments for doctor's visits to $45, from $30 – a 50 percent increase – while medical inflation was 8 percent." So, if an employer attempts to offset the increased costs of health insurance by adjusting the co-payments in the policy, it will likely lose its exemption and be forced to cancel the policy entirely. Where's the incentive for employers to continue to offer health insurance if they can't protect their bottom lines? There isn't any. In fact, ObamaCare actually creates a perverse incentive for businesses to drop whatever coverage they do provide, something conservatives repeatedly warned it would do. What is even more amazing is that Secretary of Health and Human Services, Kathleen Sebelius, had the audacity to claim that this rule is intended to keep the president's promise. As she put it, "If you like your doctor and your plan, you keep it." In reality, these new regulations make it far more likely that you will lose your current coverage. Well over 100 million Americans are currently insured through their employer. The Wall Street Journal reports, "The law could leave more than half of employers without a grandfathered plan in 2013, the draft estimated. Its worst-case assumption is that 80% of small-employers will lose grandfathered rights by 2013." Senator Charles Grassley (R-IA) said, the rules are "more proof that you actually can't keep what you like. Change is coming for a lot of people, whether they want it or not." Writing in yesterday's New York Post, Dr. Scott Gottlieb notes that the HHS bureaucrats who are writing these new regulations are "true believers" in a single-payer nationalized healthcare scheme. He adds, "They are massaging the law's vagueness to give themselves the tight federal control over health care that will bring their vision into practice," by forcing more and more Americans into ObamaCare's government-approved plans. http://goodnewsfl.org/christian-news/millions_of_americans_may_lose_their_healthcare_plans/
Quote from: noahvale on November 29, 2012, 07:59:10 AMMy complaint against Obamacare is changing the whole system when 80%-85% of Americans were happy. Source? I have a strong feeling you are misrepresenting what was actually found. There is no way - no way at all - that 80-85% of Americans were happy with the US health care system. I have yet to meet a single, live adult who did not decry the state of American healthcare when Obama took office. If they are happy with their coverage or their current doctor, they can keep it. Anyone who is not clear on that point by now just doesn't want to be informed.
Quote from: cariad on December 01, 2012, 01:47:04 AMnoah, rather than fundamentally change a post that I had already replied to before the edit, could you please just create a new post? I am only just seeing this, I note that the link is for some Christian blog and upon skimming it, noticed that the Wall Street Journal is quoted. I am so not in the mood for Murdoch's big bag of bullshit this morning, so I am not going to bother looking at an article that you hid away in an edit. The sources are too far from credible anyhow.An edit done maybe 25 minutes after the original post is hiding?? Hiding would be if I didn't qualify it has an edit. Plus, it wasn't a change. It's called an addition! However, I'm sure you would say the same if done by Peckham or Meinuk, right? The Wall Street Journal or Christian based reporting source are far from credible? But then again, you do consider anything not found in one of your socialist liberal media sources like MSNBC/HuffPost/The New Republic as BS.Just shows how truly mean spirited you lefties truly are! Thanks for the laughs. "Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a great battle."
noah, rather than fundamentally change a post that I had already replied to before the edit, could you please just create a new post? I am only just seeing this, I note that the link is for some Christian blog and upon skimming it, noticed that the Wall Street Journal is quoted. I am so not in the mood for Murdoch's big bag of bullshit this morning, so I am not going to bother looking at an article that you hid away in an edit. The sources are too far from credible anyhow.
On a more general note regarding the ACA and dialysis, I don't see how anyone could not understand that the very free market and lack of regulation that some here admire is responsible for making DaVita the company that it is today and Kent Thiery fabulously wealthy off of human misery.
QuoteOn a more general note regarding the ACA and dialysis, I don't see how anyone could not understand that the very free market and lack of regulation that some here admire is responsible for making DaVita the company that it is today and Kent Thiery fabulously wealthy off of human misery. Actually, the lack of a free market prevents meaningful price competition. Compare the trend in pricing for surgery that is almost always insurance paid (cataract) vs. almost never insurance paid (refractive correction). The later actually has vendors advertising prices; competing based on price; and prices that are now hundreds per eye rather than the thousands per eye common when the procedure was new.
Actually, the lack of a free market prevents meaningful price competition. Compare the trend in pricing for surgery that is almost always insurance paid (cataract) vs. almost never insurance paid (refractive correction). The later actually has vendors advertising prices; competing based on price; and prices that are now hundreds per eye rather than the thousands per eye common when the procedure was new.
Many experts recommend avoiding discount laser eye surgery centers with aggressive advertising campaigns. Such centers often employ bait-and-switch tactics by bringing customers in with the promise of a low LASIK eye surgery price, then tagging numerous added fees onto the final cost of the surgery. Some surgeons advertise a low price, but patients come to realize this price applies only to patients who need very minimal corrections, and more extensive corrections boost the cost of LASIK eye surgery significantly. Furthermore, some surgeons may charge less for LASIK because they do not have the experience or technology that other, more expensive surgeons may possess.