Friday, August 14, 2009

Just a small part of why our healthcare system is the most expensive in the world.

Our health care system is built on the “fee for service” model – meaning that for each test or procedure that a doctor orders, an insurance billing is generated. This billing model, coupled with their need to defend against lawsuits, leads Doctors to duplicate orders, and to “over-test.”

In the last year I have had some dental work to correct a problem with my bite. This has involved seeing my Dentist, an Orthodontist, and a Periodontist, often all three of them on the same day. On multiple occasions they all ordered exactly the same x-rays, at $35 per film, on the same day. This quickly racked up to $250 – $350 in unnecessary billings in each office.

I protested, and asked why they couldn’t share the x-rays that had been taken earlier in the day. This was met with vague mutterings as to how “they needed different views of my teeth.” I observed that the bitewing sets were a perfectly standard view, and that they were identical to the x-rays taken that morning. This was met with more mutterings about “copies for their records” and other important sounding doctoral bluster. The evasion continued until I confronted the extremely wasteful procedure head on: “It’s really so you can generate billings to my insurance isn’t it?” Two of them stammered and stuttered, murmured something about how they “weren’t setup to share x-rays.” and quickly changed the subject. The third (and by far my favorite Doc) laughed, and said, “You know, you’re absolutely right, it’s really wasteful isn’t it?” I explained that my insurance company had canceled my dental coverage without warning or explanation. I told him was paying out of pocket for the x-rays. He sent me off to the next appointment with my x-rays in an envelope.

My Sister in Law is Taiwanese, and when I visited there two years ago she described their system to me. They have a very efficient (single payer) health insurance system. In Taiwan, my x-rays would be encrypted for privacy, and loaded onto a microchip embedded in my health insurance card. When I went to the next office they would pop my card into a scanner, and boom, there are my x-rays, saving everyone hundreds of dollars and reducing the potential for error. This is a prime example of how better electronic recordkeeping saves everyone money.

It also protects against malpractice, as each Doctor in Taiwan instantly knows the patient's allergies, medications, and has easy, legible and secure access to all of the health records.

What is tragic about the current healthcare debate is that both the Republicans and Democrats have valid points, and good ideas to reduce costs and increase coverage. Both sides are so locked into their ideological positions that honest discussion becomes nearly impossible. As long as the screaming continues, we all lose.

The Republicans are right about tort reform: Doctors perform gobs of un-needed and vastly expensive testing all the time to defend against possible lawsuits. Have you ever asked a Doctor what a test they are ordering costs? They generally have no idea. If the burden of defending against malpractice were made less onerous they would have to carry less liability insurance, and the cost of medical care might eventually fall. *

Democrats are right about the fee for service model being problematic, and about the rationing imposed by abusive underwriting procedures that make it nearly impossible for many people to get or afford private coverage.

A simple, yet damming truth: the way we do health insurance and deliver care now is the least cost-effective and most wasteful way to deliver medical services on the planet. We are the only major developed economy in the world that operates on this model, and our healthcare outcomes are ranked 37th among developed nations, behind the economic powerhouses of Dominica, Croatia, and Cyprus. The good news: our system does outrank such paragons of enlightened public policy as Angola, Ethiopia, and Myanmar. (Source: http://www.photius.com/rankings/who_world_health_ranks.html )



__________________________________

* I say “might” because the virtual monopolies of our vast industrial complexes are very quick to raise consumer prices in reaction to market forces, but very slow to lower them. One look at gas pricing over the last decade makes this abundantly clear.

Thursday, July 09, 2009

Sotomayor and old white guys..

Supreme Court Nominee Sotomayor's remarks that "a wise Latina would come to a better conclusion than a white male judge" have been mis-quoted out of context ad nauseam in right wing media. The spin on this has bled over into more neutral media as well, as her statement is nearly always printed out of context.  

This has been trotted out over and over again as indication of racism on the part of Sotomayor.  Her remark, when manipulated by these linguistic dog and pony tricks can seem disturbing.  What she said was that "in cases related to racial discrimination" she believed that a "wise Latina would come to a better conclusion than a white male judge"  What no one in the media seems willing to say is that this is so obviously true that is rises to the level of self-evident.  

My understanding of this is informed by my experience as a white gay man in America. This allows me a different, and I would argue, clearer viewpoint for the observation of bias.  I am able, at my choosing, to have a foot in both "sides" of the culture wars.  I know what is it to be a white man of privilege. I also know what it is to be on the receiving end of bigotry, stereotyping, harassment and discrimination.  I KNOW that my judgement in matters of discrimination (at least as far as gay issues are concerned) is informed by a sharper sensibility than that of someone without that particular life experience. 

These attacks are part and parcel of the right's bizzare mania for claiming that rich, old, Christian white guys are somehow being discriminated against. Realizing that they cannot block her nomination, the right has decided to use the hearings to advance their ideas about "activist judges."   All "activist judge" means is "I disagree with that particular ruling." It would be far more intellectually honest to state their case in those terms.  Prepare yourselves for an avalanche of the weird mental gymnastics which assert justice should be colorblind when people of color are discriminated against, but should take great pains to protect the "rights" of white people.  

Following the Sotomayor discussion on right leaning forums is an exercise in Orwellian doublespeak.  Statements so shockingly racist as to be unrepeatable are routinely coupled with the assertion that Sotomoyer is a "reverse racist."  

Newsflash - there is no such thing as "reverse racism", there is just racism, and surprise; "everybody is a little bit racist." (thanks to Avenue Q for that.)  There is convincing scientific evidence that we all carry genetic markers that make us fear that which is different. It is an essential part of being human that we try to rise above our inbred, bestial fears and practice understanding.  This is called empathy, and despite the Republican howling to the contrary, it is not a vice

When your worldview becomes so pleistocene as to be repugnant to most people, I understand you may feel that you are being "discriminated" against. That doesn't make it true. 
  • It is NOT discrimination when you are not permitted to make all children in public schools pray the way you want your kid to. 
  • It is NOT discrimination when you are not permitted to enforce your religious views about abortion, marriage, or birth control on everyone in this country. 
  • It is NOT discrimination when a Christian Air Force officer is asked not to evangelize Jewish and Muslim troops under his command.  
Believe what you want, but leave the rest of us free to do the same.  That shining ideal is the real genius of the framers of the Constitution. 
  
Given these things, I'd much prefer the "wise Latina" on the bench. 
(Especially since we've already got a bunch of rich old white guys there...) 

Friday, June 12, 2009

Farmer Brown's, London

This is the bacon, lettuce, avacado & tomato sandwich at Farmer Brown's, on New Street in London just off St Martins Lane. The sandwiches here are famous, though the bacon is done in the English style, which is to say it is minimally cooked, to the degree that it approximates bacon sushi. Despite that mildly harrowing characteristic, the sandwich was great. They also have nice looking salads, and a range of side dish salads as well. This is a nice place for a quick bite in the heart of Theaterland.



Will H. -- Post From My iPhone

Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Our Free is better than Free...

Wow, that's pretty inexpensive...



-- Post From My iPhone

Susan Boyle: A cautionary tale for celebrity age


A cautionary tale indeed! So many of us were moved by her, even as we sensed the whole Susan Boyle phenom was more "packaged" than it initially seemed... 

Susan Boyle: A cautionary tale for celebrity age: "LONDON (Reuters) - Talent show contestant Susan Boyle's giddying rise from unemployed Scottish church volunteer to global superstar has come at a price, in what is being seen as a cautionary tale for the celebrity age.



"



(Via Reuters: Top News.)

Sunday, May 31, 2009

The glories of privatization... cont'd

Chicago recently privatized their parking meters in an effort to raise operating cash for the city. The private companies immediately did away with free parking on Sundays and holidays, quadrupled rates, instituted 24 hour a day / 7 day a week meter feeding requirements, and installed thousands of brand new non - working meters citywide.
"thousands of newly installed (privatized) credit-card and coin-taking parking meters simply do not work." - NY Times
The situation has gotten so bad that the city had to stop issuing parking tickets, because so many of the the privately run meters were inoperable.

If you believe that government is inherently bad, and can't do anything well, then privatization may make some sense. We need to recognize that this is a belief, and not a matter of fact. Isn't it time we started to govern based on what actually works as opposed to articles of faith? Why do the media so often fail to confront this unsupported belief as a superstition when it is trotted out?

Having live through the horrors of the privatization of the energy markets in California, I am well aware that the Republican mantra of "private business can deliver public services better and cheaper" is often flat wrong. This is just one more of literally dozens of examples of the utter failure of the drive to privatization.

2854440799_86a3d30fd2.jpg



























Please note, this photo is not an actual Chicago parking meter...

Friday, May 22, 2009

Credit Card reform - Sen. Chris Dodd says Bang Bang, Shoot Shoot!

t1home.obama.credit.cnn.jpg
President Obama signed the much overdue credit card reform bill into law today, with a completely non-sensical "gotcha" earmark added by Republican Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla allowing people to conceal and carry loaded weapons into our National Parks. 

Is Sen Chris Dodd (D, Conn) making a playground stye finger gun in this photo?  "Bang! Bang! Shoot! Shoot!"

"New law will curtail fees and rate hikes starting in February. Industry opposition fell under populist push, culminating year's long drive by consumers." - CNN Money


Saturday, May 16, 2009

Pelosi and Waterboarding...

I must be missing something.  According to the partisan hacks at Fox News, It's perfectly OK for Cheney / Bush / Woo to authorize waterboarding "to keep us safe", but it's not okay for the house minority leader to know about it?     HUH? 

Oh, it's the timeline of when she knew.... 

Isn't this the same kind of botched timeline garbage we've seen in every one of the dozens of Republican scandals in the Nixon / Reagan / Bush / Bush W administrations? 

Come on Fox - is it that hard to fill the hours now that the American electorate has left you behind?  

(Not that Nancy isn't something of a partisan hack herself, and I'm a lifelong democrat...) 

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

The Return of Grace - Obama turns controversy into jokes, lesson at commencement - CNN.com


Obama turns controversy into jokes, lesson at commencement - CNN.com:  

"TEMPE, Arizona (CNN) -- President Obama on Wednesday turned a flap over his commencement speech at Arizona State University into a joke -- then a lesson about never being satisfied with one's accomplishments." - CNN
Thank God for the return of grace and good humor to the Presidency.  Remember the brouhaha over ASU not offering an honorary degree to president Obama when he spoke at ASU's commencement?   The University said it was refusing the honorary degree to Obama, because "his accomplishments were still before him."    

WTF?   

Being President of the Harvard Law Review, sponsoring the most significant ethics reform bill in Illinois history,  raising a family, and being the first African American President at age 47 aren't significant accomplishments? 

Oh right!  ASU is the state university of the same state that refused to recognize the Dr. King Holiday until nearly Ten years after the rest of the country was celebrating it. 

Today President Obama delivered a wry, funny and graceful speech to the graduates, gently parrying the slight and turning it into a moving "teachable moment" about their "best accomplishments being before them." 

I was proud to see the grace and humor with which the President handled the speech.

Refreshing, as when was the last time the words graceful and the Presidency commingled?

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Sen. Arlen Specter to become Democrat - CNN.com


Arlen Specter's announcement that he is changing party affiliations underlines that the Republican party has moved so far to the right as to become functionally irrelevant in large parts of the country. Sen. Specter says says he didn't leave the Republican party, but that the party left him.

I grew up in Pennsylvania, and have been dismayed in recent years as conservatives hoodwinked blue collar rural and suburban voters there into voting against their own interests, through crass manipulation of their social and economic fears.

The Rove, Bush & Cheney crowd convinced a lot of moderate folks that they were conservative, against logic and common sense. It is good to see this pendulum swinging back..

Friday, February 13, 2009

Gallery Floor - Art is where you find it!

I was at the Tucson museum of Art last month - they were painting the gallery walls, and this cardboard laid down to catch the drips caught my attention.  I love the Diebenkorn-esque colors and the "accidental" composition.  

Gallery Floor, Tucson Museum.  Cardboard and paint drips on concrete. 

- Will

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

All time best ever Politician name...


Could there be, under any circumstances a better political name than Tzipi Livni (pronounced  "Zippy Livney") of the Kadima party in Israel? 

It's been a joy to listen to the Israeli election returns, largely because I keep thinking that Zippy the Pinhead has been elected! 

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Obama busts a move

President Obama Busts a move... Is is just me, or is the whole country infused with a sort of carnival mood? Of course there are huge challenges ahead, but here in CA anyway there are grins and smiles everywhere you go...

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

My neighborhood health food store welcomes change...

 

This made me smile... 


- Will

Tears of Joy for President Obama!

The peaceful transfer of power always touches me, but this one... Wow!

"we reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals. Our founding fathers, faced with perils we can scarcely imagine, drafted a charter to assure the rule of law and the rights of man, a charter expanded by the blood of generations. Those ideals still light the world, and we will not give them up for expedience's sake." - President Obama, January 20th. 2009

Amen!

- Will