Re: I liked former Republican Senate majority leader Bill Frist's comments.
callandor1000 Send a noteboard - 22/03/2010 02:12:16 PM
"Medicare 45 years ago and the current health care legislation are historic in that they are both huge coverage bills, focused primarily on distributive justice: a country as prosperous as ours should ensure affordable access to health care for every American. But Medicare was a reform bill, and today’s Congressional bill is not. Without substantive reform that includes purposeful alignment of incentives throughout the care delivery value chain, spending will skyrocket, deficits will definitely increase, and the country’s recovery from recession will be slowed. With passage, we should immediately unite and commit to a true reform initiative that is patient-centered, provider friendly and consumer driven, fueled by 21st-century information and choice."
He's very much right about that "purposeful alignment of incentives throughout the care delivery value chain". Of course, he's not in the Senate anymore, so he's not really bound by political considerations.
He's very much right about that "purposeful alignment of incentives throughout the care delivery value chain". Of course, he's not in the Senate anymore, so he's not really bound by political considerations.
I agree with that. I'm not quite sure of all he's trying to say, though I like his positive attitude. But to gain some of the things he's talking about something needs to be passed and it needs to be worked on. Changes do indeed need to be made, but first of all we need something in place. This is one of the largest nations in the World population wise and one of the most powerful (and arguably the most powerful). Switches can't just be flipped to one making something happen, two make it happen correctly and three get everyone to agree on it. The last one is the toughest thing. We need to mold our product (healthcare) to the sculpture we want. We can't just go to the store and buy it ready to go and that is a problem for many of us Americans since we're such a country of demanding consumers.
Your mom. That's right. The cat is out of the bag. Your mom.
My mind isn't always in the gutter, it just has VIP access
No posts on the bill passing?
- 22/03/2010 08:22:27 AM
1451 Views
Meh
- 22/03/2010 09:07:27 AM
787 Views
Re: Meh
- 22/03/2010 01:53:43 PM
809 Views
I know what you mean. I love hearing that the "majority" are against this.
- 22/03/2010 01:57:15 PM
899 Views
surveys are crap anyways.
- 22/03/2010 01:59:39 PM
741 Views
That's ignorance speaking.
- 22/03/2010 02:02:46 PM
766 Views
well yah. Sorry, I wasn't meaning to say surveys as a whole are nonsense
- 22/03/2010 02:09:42 PM
692 Views
A question?
- 23/03/2010 01:11:07 AM
793 Views
I accept that there are situations where leaders must go against popular opinion
- 23/03/2010 02:53:00 AM
824 Views
on the other hand *edited stupid spelling error*
- 23/03/2010 03:09:47 AM
934 Views
Ahahahahahahahaha
- 23/03/2010 12:57:17 PM
884 Views
- 23/03/2010 12:57:17 PM
884 Views
why?
*NM*
- 23/03/2010 03:37:00 PM
383 Views
*NM*
- 23/03/2010 03:37:00 PM
383 Views
Because "populous" is not a noun in English. *NM*
- 23/03/2010 03:42:16 PM
364 Views
This.
- 23/03/2010 03:46:25 PM
796 Views
It's not as simple as "doing what the majority opposes is bad government. "
- 23/03/2010 06:42:04 AM
854 Views
I think with the saturation coverage it has been getting people are just worn out *NM*
- 22/03/2010 01:27:59 PM
398 Views
Re: No posts on the bill passing?
- 22/03/2010 01:39:14 PM
773 Views
I chose to read about it first at the NYT, then the WSJ, then the Economist.
- 22/03/2010 01:43:07 PM
956 Views
Re: I chose to read about it first at the NYT, then the WSJ, then the Economist.
- 22/03/2010 02:01:07 PM
768 Views
I liked former Republican Senate majority leader Bill Frist's comments.
- 22/03/2010 02:06:41 PM
813 Views
Re: I liked former Republican Senate majority leader Bill Frist's comments.
- 22/03/2010 02:12:16 PM
840 Views
I am worried. The official reports show that it will actually erase some debt. But . . .
- 22/03/2010 01:39:26 PM
873 Views
I think reform had to start now.
- 22/03/2010 02:27:11 PM
967 Views
That's a good column.
- 22/03/2010 02:44:56 PM
850 Views
Yea, he's going to be adding to it all day, trying to explain the various facets of the bill.
- 22/03/2010 03:05:03 PM
889 Views
I think the problem highlight what I don't like about this bill
- 22/03/2010 03:20:54 PM
790 Views
Re: I think the problem highlight what I don't like about this bill
- 22/03/2010 03:33:31 PM
754 Views
Let's be realistic here at least....
- 22/03/2010 04:16:23 PM
756 Views
You must have an interesting definition of "most"
- 22/03/2010 05:43:38 PM
762 Views
My definition of most is obviously quite defective.
- 22/03/2010 08:05:22 PM
797 Views
- 22/03/2010 08:05:22 PM
797 Views
As long as you define "most" as "some time" you're just fine with it as it stands
*NM*
- 22/03/2010 08:15:03 PM
357 Views
*NM*
- 22/03/2010 08:15:03 PM
357 Views
I'd say "most" people would agree with my definition of "most" in my original post....
- 23/03/2010 05:16:59 AM
870 Views
I hope your house is built on fimrer foundations then your reasoning
- 22/03/2010 04:25:49 PM
794 Views
You should worry about cost control (AKA the only real reason for healthcare reform to begin. )
- 23/03/2010 07:02:24 AM
887 Views
bingo
- 24/03/2010 03:45:48 AM
909 Views
Next question: WTF do we do about it?
- 24/03/2010 04:00:39 AM
782 Views
It is a good start
- 22/03/2010 03:01:08 PM
740 Views
I really like what GRR Martin wrote in his blog.
- 23/03/2010 09:55:11 AM
874 Views
I would say it is rather weak point
- 23/03/2010 01:12:43 PM
775 Views
You realize that most countries with socialized healthcare have private healthcare, too.
- 24/03/2010 04:16:28 AM
902 Views
