Lessons to be Learned

by Sue Saltmarsh

I recently had the opportunity to see the Oscar-nominated “How to Survive a Plague.” It’s about the early days of the AIDS epidemic and the activism of ACT UP, which succeeded in moving the FDA, big pharmaceutical companies, and Congress into getting treatments developed, establishing compassionate use (which means making drugs available ahead of approval for those who are close to death and which still exists and has expanded to other diseases), making clinical trials more accessible, and the Ryan White CARE Act passed. It was particularly relevant for me because David Barr and Gregg Gonsalves, two of the ACT UP activists in the film, were the ones who lit the fire under me and were very supportive as I began to plan DUH back in 2011 and Mark Harrington, now executive director of TAG, the Treatment Action Group, a global advocacy organization, signed TAG on as an ally of DUH. Continue reading

The ACA: Fact, Fantasy, and Foresight

by Sue Saltmarsh

There is nothing more plentiful than confusion when it comes to the Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act (some call it “Obamacare” but because it isn’t what Obama wanted, I call it the ACA).  The Act itself is over 900 pages in length and with all that’s happening with the sequestration, the deficit, and the debt ceiling, much of the language of the bill seems outdated or moot. However, having read several summaries (I found the Community Catalyst ones most helpful), here is an overview (from March 9, 2013) of the provisions of the law listed by the year they went, or were/are supposed to go, into effect.

2010

  • No more denying coverage to children with pre-existing conditions. The new rules prevent insurance companies from denying coverage to children under the age of 19 due to a pre-existing condition. In effect, except for insurance companies who decided to discontinue covering ANY children.
  • No more rescinding coverage. In the past, insurance companies could search for an error or other technicality on a customer’s application in order to use it as an excuse to deny payment for services when he or she got sick. The healthcare law makes this illegal. In effect.
  • Elimination of lifetime caps on benefits. Under the law, insurance companies are now prohibited from imposing lifetime dollar limits on essential benefits, like hospital stays. In effect.
  • Regulation of annual limits. Under the law, insurance companies’ use of annual dollar limits on the amount of insurance coverage a patient may receive are restricted for new plans in the individual market and all group plans. In 2014, the use of annual dollar limits on essential benefits like hospital stays will be banned for new plans in the individual market and all group plans. In effect, though the vociferous fight over the medical loss ratio (see 2011) makes me think it’s not set in stone.
  • Appealing insurance company decisions. The law provides consumers with a way to appeal coverage determinations or claims to their insurance company, and establishes an external review process. In effect, though no evidence points to it being particularly effective.
  • Establishing Consumer Assistance Programs (CAPs) in the states. Under the law, states could apply to receive federal grants to help set up or expand independent offices to help consumers navigate the private health insurance system. These programs would help consumers file complaints and appeals; enroll in health coverage; and get educated about their rights and responsibilities in group health plans or individual health insurance policies. The programs were also supposed to collect data on the types of problems consumers have, and file reports with the Department of Health and Human Services to identify areas that need further oversight. Grants began being awarded in October 2010, but federal funding for CAPs was eliminated in 2012 and has not been reinstated.
  • Providing Small Business Health Insurance Tax Credits. Up to 4 million small businesses are eligible for tax credits to help them provide insurance benefits to their workers. The first phase of this provision provided a credit worth up to 35% of the employer’s contribution to the employees’ health insurance if there were 25 or fewer full-time equivalent employees making an average wage of $50,000 or less per year. Small non-profit organizations can receive up to a 25% credit.  In effect.
  • Medicare Prescription Drug “Donut Hole” relief.  Each eligible senior should have received a one-time check for $250. Too bad if you hit that donut starting in 2011. First checks were mailed in June, 2010, and continued monthly throughout 2010 as seniors hit the coverage gap. 
  • Free Preventive Care. All new plans must cover certain preventive services such as mammograms and colonoscopies without charging a deductible, co-pay, or co-insurance. In effect.
  • Preventing Disease and Illness. A $15 billion (over 10 years) Prevention and Public Health Fund will invest in proven prevention and public health programs such as smoking cessation and combating obesity. Funding did begin in 2010, but President Obama signed legislation on February 22, 2012 that cuts the fund by $5 billion over 10 years to help pay for a continuation of payroll tax breaks, among other things. Earlier, Congressional Republicans had targeted the fund for cuts or complete elimination. Thanks to the sequester being allowed to go into effect, the Fund will be slashed further by $76 million. So what started at $15 billion has now been reduced to $9 billion, 924 million over 10 years This is just the first of many provisions (most of which are the most popular and help the most people) that Republicans will use as weapons in budget and deficit negotiations, which is why I believe it will never be funded as it was meant to be. In effect, but questionable and endangered.
  • Cracking Down on Healthcare Fraud. Efforts to fight fraud returned more than $2.5 billion to the Medicare Trust Fund in fiscal year 2009 alone. The law invests new resources and requires new screening procedures for healthcare providers to boost these efforts and reduce fraud and waste in Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP. in effect.
  • Providing Access to Insurance for Uninsured Americans with Pre-Existing Conditions. The Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan provides coverage options to people who have been uninsured for at least six months because of a pre-existing condition. States have the option of running this program in their state (Illinois does). If a state chooses not to do so, a plan will be established by the Department of Health and Human Services in that state. In Illinois, and several other states, premiums for these plans have proven to put them, like COBRA, out of reach for most average Americans, let alone those who fall into the gap between being eligible for Medicare or Medicaid and being wealthy enough to afford the cost of premiums, high deductibles, and co-pays.. Unless you are young, don’t smoke, and can afford hundreds of dollars a month in premiums and thousands in deductibles, this insurance is no more accessible than is the care you need for a chronic condition. National program was in effect, but DHHS announced on February 15, 2013 that new applications for coverage will not be accepted after March 2, 2013.
  • Extending Coverage for Young AdultsUnder the law, young adults are allowed to stay on their parents’ plan until they turn 26 years old (in the case of existing group health plans, this right does not apply if the young adult is offered insurance at work). In effect.
  • Expanding Coverage for Early Retirees. Too often, Americans who retire without employer-sponsored insurance and before they are eligible for Medicare see their life savings disappear because of high rates in the individual market. To preserve employer coverage for early retirees until (if ever) more affordable coverage is available through the new Exchanges, the new law creates a $5 billion program to provide needed financial help for employment-based plans to continue to provide valuable coverage to people who retire between the ages of 55 and 65, as well as their spouses and dependents. There is an Early Retiree Reinsurance Program website at www.ERRP.gov, though it’s pretty confusing itself. Applications for employers to participate in the program became available June 1, 2010. There were no data I could find on how many have applied.
  • Rebuilding the Primary Care Workforce. To strengthen the availability of primary care, there are new incentives in the law to expand the number of primary care doctors, nurses, and physician assistants. These include funding for scholarships and loan repayments for primary care doctors and nurses working in underserved areas. Doctors and nurses receiving payments made under any state loan repayment or loan forgiveness program intended to increase the availability of healthcare services in underserved or health professional shortage areas will not have to pay taxes on those payments. Though this is undeniably a good idea, the funding for it is part of the Prevention and Public Health Fund, which has already been cut and chances are these scholarships and loan programs will not survive for long, if they have thus far. Technically in effect, but endangered.
  • Holding Insurance Companies Accountable for Unreasonable Rate Hikes. The law originally allows states that have, or plan to implement, measures that require insurance companies to justify their premium increases to be eligible for $250 million in new grants. That grant money was slashed and starting on September 1, 2011, health insurers “must justify any rate increase of 10% or more before the increase takes effect.” The problem is the widespread conflicts of interest that have been reported in many states, with insurance company executives or elected officials that rely on insurance company money for their campaigns being in positions of influence over review boards. There is no language in the law that creates a consistent standard and many companies are getting away with increases greater than 10% because of “rising costs” in the area, etc. In other words, technically in effect, but not very effective in the real world. “Insurance companies with excessive or unjustified premium increases may not be able to participate in the new health insurance exchanges in 2014,” the operative word being “may.” Of course, if there ARE no exchanges in certain states by 2014, what do they care? Since they’ll still be able to sell policies in states with no exchanges, or even in states that have exchanges if the plan doesn’t meet the “qualified health plan” threshold, they may decide that participation in exchanges is not to their advantage after all.
  •  Allowing States to Cover More People on Medicaid. States are supposed be able to receive federal matching funds for covering additional low-income individuals and families under Medicaid for whom federal funds were not previously available. The Supreme Court ruling in June of 2011 made it possible for states (most with Republican governors and/or legislatures) to refuse to expand Medicaid to the “takers” (you know, those poor people who are just waiting for government hand-outs) among their populations. Though to date, six Republican governors have “rethought” their initial decision to reject the expansion and the federal dollars that would come with it, there are still 16 states (as of Feb. 7) that refuse to expand Medicaid. Based on the attacks on Medicare and Medicaid in Congress, I believe this provision will never be funded or implemented fully, perhaps leaving the door open for more medical bankruptcies, hospitalizations, and deaths in those states.
  • Increasing Payments for Rural Healthcare Providers. Today, 68% of medically underserved communities across the nation are in rural areas. These communities often have trouble attracting and retaining medical professionals. The law provides increased payment to rural healthcare providers to help them continue to serve their communities. Supposedly in effect, though I could find no evidence and chances are if it does exist, it will be hit by the sequester cuts.
  • Strengthening Community Health Centers. The law included new funding to support the construction of and expansion of services at community health centers, allowing these centers to serve some 20 million new patients across the country.  Unfortunately, most of the money intended for this was cut in 2011 and it remains a bargaining chip in debt ceiling negotiations. Not in effect.

2011

  • Offering Prescription Drug Discounts. Seniors who reach the coverage gap will receive a 50% discount when buying Medicare Part D covered brand-name prescription drugs. Over the next ten years, seniors will receive additional savings on brand-name and generic drugs until the coverage gap is closed in 2020, if it actually is. In effect.
  • Providing Free Preventive Care for Seniors. The law provides certain free preventive services, such as annual wellness visits and personalized prevention plans for seniors on Medicare. Not stated is the caveat “if you get them from a doctor or other healthcare provider who accepts assignment.” Finding a provider who takes Medicare might be the biggest challenge and if you’re a woman who gets mammograms at Planned Parenthood, you may be out of luck soon. In effect.
  • Improving Healthcare Quality and Efficiency.  The law establishes a new Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation that tests, or demonstrates, new ways of delivering care to patients. These methods are expected to improve the quality of care, and reduce the rate of growth in healthcare costs for Medicare, Medicaid, and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). Additionally, HHS was supposed to submit a national strategy for quality improvement in healthcare by January 1, 2011 – it actually did so on March 21, 2011. The Center is in effect.
  • Improving Care for Seniors after They Leave the Hospital. The Community Care Transitions Program will help high risk Medicare beneficiaries who are hospitalized avoid unnecessary readmissions by coordinating care and connecting patients to services in their communities. Amazingly, no budget cuts have affected this program and there are now 102 organizations participating in these transition programs, resulting in an estimated 700,000 in 40 states having access to these services and preventing 70,000 Medicare readmissions in 2012. In effect until 2016.
  • Establishment of the Independent Payment Advisory Board. The Independent Payment Advisory Board was supposed to begin operations in October, 2011 to “develop and submit proposals to Congress and the President aimed at extending the life of the Medicare Trust Fund.” Controversy has surrounded the IPAB*, mostly due to the “doc fix” issue. A 2009 Kaiser Health News article predicted primary care doctors would likely see benefits from an “independent Medicare commission because the panel would be more likely to increase their fees and lower specialists’ rates.” While payment cuts to hospitals and hospices are supposedly off-limits until 2020, and clinical laboratories are off limits until 2016, physician fees may be cut unless a doc fix to Medicare’s sustainable growth rate formula makes those cuts off limits.” It remains to be seen A) whether or not the IPAB will remain as intended, B) be rendered toothless by various lobbying efforts, and C) would even be moderately successful at its original mission.  Not in effect.

*Note: On February 15, 2013, 32 Republican senators introduced S 351, a bill to repeal the provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act providing for the Independent Payment Advisory Board. There’s been no movement on the bill and no other co-sponsors so far.

  • Increasing Access to Services at Home and in the Community. The Community First Choice Option allows states to offer home- and community-based services to disabled individuals through Medicaid rather than institutional care in nursing homes. Effective beginning October 1, 2011. However, in states that are cutting Medicaid, these services are usually among the first to go. Disabled people, especially children not covered by their parents’ insurance, may be left with reduced services and nowhere to turn.
  • Bringing Down Healthcare Premiums. To ensure premium dollars are spent primarily on healthcare, the law generally requires that at least 85% of all premium dollars collected by insurance companies for large employer plans are spent on healthcare services and healthcare quality improvement. For plans sold to individuals and small employers, at least 80% of the premium must be spent on benefits and quality improvement. This is what’s known as the “medical loss ratio.” If insurance companies do not meet these goals, because their administrative costs or profits are too high, they must provide rebates to consumers. Effective January 1, 2011. Before this provision went into effect, insurance companies tried and tried to get agents’ commissions included as “healthcare services.” Though Secretary of Health & Human Services Kathleen Sebelius held strong, something tells me we should be prepared to see this battle take place over and over again. Word has it that rebate checks were actually mailed out – once. However, I have yet to meet anyone who actually got one. Like most provisions in the ACA, the language is vague; there is no oversight of insurance company operations or budgets, and no way to know that they are being compliant with the law. Some advocates argue that the companies may decide that the amount they’d have to pay in “rebates” doesn’t even come close to what their profits would be if they still refused to pay claims for more expensive costs.
  • Addressing Overpayments to Big Insurance Companies and Strengthening Medicare Advantage. Today, Medicare pays Medicare Advantage insurance companies over $1,000 more per person on average than is spent per person in traditional Medicare. This results in increased premiums for all Medicare beneficiaries, including the 77% of beneficiaries who are not currently enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan. The law levels the playing field by gradually eliminating this discrepancy. People enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan will still receive all guaranteed Medicare benefits, and the law provides bonus payments to Medicare Advantage plans that provide high quality care. Effective January 1, 2011. The operative word there is “gradually” – the elimination of the discrepancy may never be complete and I predict the insurance companies will find some other way to keep

2012

  • Linking Payment to Quality Outcomes. The law establishes a hospital Value-Based Purchasing program (VBP) in traditional Medicare. This program offers financial incentives to hospitals to improve the quality of care. Hospital performance is required to be publicly reported, beginning with measures relating to heart attacks, heart failure, pneumonia, surgical care, healthcare- associated infections, and patients’ perception of care. Effective for payments for discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2012. Who knows? If it is indeed in effect as intended, it might make a difference, but once again, who is in charge of oversight?
  • Encouraging Integrated Health Systems. The new law provides incentives for physicians to join together to form “Accountable Care Organizations” (ACOs) These groups allow doctors to better coordinate patient care and improve the quality, help prevent disease and illness, and reduce unnecessary hospital admissions. If ACOs provide high quality care and reduce costs to the healthcare system, they can keep some of the money that they have helped save. This is, I believe, window dressing for the old HMO model. I have the HMO plan of my agency’s insurance and the two major priorities, as far as I can tell, are making sure I have referrals from my primary care doctor, and when there are none of the specialists I need in my “network,” that I am assigned to the cheapest alternative outside the network. Most of my doctors are good and I have no complaints about them, but whenever anything is incentivized by money, you’re asking for corruption.  Effective January 1, 2012.
  • Reducing Paperwork and Administrative Costs. Healthcare remains one of the few industries that relies on paper records. The new law will institute a series of changes to standardize billing and requires health plans to begin adopting and implementing rules for the secure, confidential, electronic exchange of health information. Using electronic health records will reduce paperwork and administrative burdens, cut costs, reduce medical errors and most importantly, improve the quality of care. All of my doctors have been forced to make this transition. While it certainly does save paper, there is now a new species of waiting in the doctor’s office – waiting for the computer to boot up, for the nurse or physician’s assistant to determine if he/she has the correct record, for the doctor to enter new information correctly. I suspect most of this is just learning curve stuff and it will get better, but what happens when some 16-year-old hacker decides to wipe out the entire U.S. healthcare system by deleting all those electronic records in one fell swoop? Technology is great, until it isn’t. I just hope major back-up is done constantly! First regulation effective October 1, 2012.
  • Understanding and Fighting Health Disparities. To help understand and reduce persistent health disparities, the law requires any ongoing or new federal health program to collect and report racial, ethnic, and language data. The Secretary of Health and Human Services will use this data to help identify and reduce disparities. If the collection of data was the answer to these kinds of conundrums, we would know why HIV affects blacks more than any other race; why abused women stay with their abusers; why poor people who can barely afford food somehow scrape together the money to perpetuate their addiction. The fact is that data collection and analysis is only part of the process. We have to have the courage and tenacity to go beyond the data and ask WHY. And then we have to have legislators who are willing to do something about it instead of dismissing the people involved as “takers,” unable to break their dependence on the government and unwilling to take responsibility for their lives. To understand and fight disparities, you have to care enough to ask those whys. Effective March 2012
  • Providing New, Voluntary Options for Long-Term Care Insurance. The law was to create a voluntary long-term care insurance program – called CLASS — to provide cash benefits to adults who become disabled.  On October 14, 2011, Secretary Sebelius transmitted a report and letter to Congress stating that the Department does not see a viable path forward for CLASS implementation at this time. And why not? I admit I haven’t read that report, but I suspect it was because, like COBRA and the Pre-existing Condition insurance, both of which are also “voluntary,” no one could afford it, certainly not a disabled person living on Social Security disability. Not in effect

2013

  • Improving Preventive Health CoverageTo expand the number of Americans receiving preventive care, the law provides new funding to state Medicaid programs that choose to cover preventive services for patients at little or no cost. Great if your state still has Medicaid, but for those states that have cut their programs to the bare essentials, there may be no funding for this, cost-effective as preventive care is proven to be. Effective January 1, 2013
  • Expanding Authority to Bundle Payments. The law establishes a national pilot program to encourage Medicare hospitals, doctors, and other providers to work together to improve the coordination and quality of patient care.  Although the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) delayed the implementation of this pilot, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation began a parallel initiative. Under payment “bundling,” hospitals, doctors, and providers are paid a flat rate for an episode of care rather than the current fragmented system where each service or test or bundles of items or services are billed separately to Medicare. For example, instead of a surgical procedure generating multiple claims from multiple providers, the entire team is compensated with a “bundled” payment that provides incentives to deliver healthcare services more efficiently while maintaining or improving quality of care.  It aligns the incentives of those delivering care, and savings are shared between providers and the Medicare program. Effective no later than January 1, 2013. Though the pilot programs have not operated long enough to garner any significant conclusions, there are now 450 organizations across the country participating in the programs.
  • Increasing Medicaid Payments for Primary Care Doctors. As Medicaid programs and providers prepare to cover more patients in 2014, the Act requires states to pay primary care physicians no less than 100% of Medicare payment rates in 2013 and 2014 for primary care services. The increase is supposed to be fully funded by the federal government. This goes back to the states and their stance on Medicaid – will they still get the funds if they don’t expand their Medicaid programs and if so, will the funds really go to primary care docs? Time will tell. Effective January 1, 2013
  • Providing Additional Funding for the Children’s Health Insurance Program. Under the law, states will receive two more years of funding to continue coverage for children not eligible for Medicaid. Effective October 1, 2013. CHIP is exempt from sequestration cuts…so far.

2014 and Beyond

It’s rather pointless to even attempt to present a concrete scenario for 2014 and beyond. Too much can happen—the 2014 election could well put current Republican governors out to pasture and give Democrats control of both the House and the Senate. States could have such trouble implementing insurance exchanges, Medicaid expansion, and rural access that they throw their hands up in frustration and give up. So many medical bankruptcies, homelessness, and deaths could happen that there will be a massive uprising to put a stop to it and establish single-payer healthcare. Republicans could be successful in repealing or defunding the law, as Paul Ryan has said he will focus on.

Below you’ll find descriptions and predictions that are a mix of what is supposed to be and my (some might say cynical) view of what is likely to happen. I don’t claim to be clairvoyant or prescient, just not gullible or naïve. I’ve heard so many people insist that “the ACA is the law of the land” and in the face of everything the Wrong Right has done since President Obama was elected and then re-elected, I can’t believe that any reasonably intelligent adult could be so idealistic as to think that means a thing! Roe v Wade is also the law of the land, has been for decades, and yet all you have to do to gauge the level of foaming-at-the-mouth insanity in Congress is count how many superfluous, misogynistic, just plain stupid bills were introduced in the 112th Congress that had anything to do with abortion, not to mention the number of them that have already started to pile up in the 113th. The Voting Rights Act has been the law of the land for 50 years and yet the Supreme Court may strike down Section 5, rendering it pointless in the places where it is needed the most. In any case, it seems crystal clear that nothing is guaranteed just by virtue of being “the law of the land. But this is what the law says.

2014

  • Prohibiting Discrimination Due to Pre-Existing Conditions or Gender. In 2014, the law will prohibit insurance companies from refusing to sell coverage or renew policies because of an individual’s pre-existing conditions. Also, in the individual and small group market, the law eliminates the ability of insurance companies to charge higher rates due to gender or health status. Unless insurance company lobbyists prevail in efforts to repeal this provision or Congress renders it toothless by amending it, it will be effective January 1, 2014.
  • Eliminating Annual Limits on Insurance Coverage. The law prohibits new plans and existing group plans from imposing annual dollar limits on the amount of coverage an individual may receive. Again, insurance companies may lobby successfully or find a way to wriggle out of this, but if not, it will go into effect January 1, 2014.
  • Ensuring Coverage for Individuals Participating in Clinical Trials. Insurers will be prohibited from dropping or limiting coverage because an individual chooses to participate in a clinical trial.  This applies to all clinical trials that treat cancer or other life-threatening diseases. I suspect those qualifications will be the basis for insurance companies to circumvent this provision – what about diseases that are chronic, manageable, and may not be immediately life-threatening (HIV, HCV, diabetes, Alzheimer’s, etc.), but which need better, more effective treatments? Effective January 1, 2014, if all goes well.
  • Making Care More Affordable. A major provision of the ACA, tax credits to make it easier for the middle class to afford insurance will become available for people with income between 100% and 400% of the poverty line who are not eligible for other affordable coverage. 2013 Federal Poverty Level is $11,490 for an individual and $23,550 for a family of four—400% would be $45, 960 and $94,200 respectively. The tax credit is advanceable, though I suspect that in formulating rules for the provision there may be restrictions imposed, so it can lower your premium payments each month, rather than making you wait for tax time. It’s also refundable, so even moderate-income families can receive the full benefit of the credit. Some people may also qualify for reduced cost-sharing (co-payments, co-insurance, and deductibles). But you still have to come up with the cash to pay your share of the premium and the co-pays, co-insurance, and deductibles, so people who can’t go to the doctor now because they don’t have the $20 co-pay will still not be going to the doctor and the sky-high deductibles that usually go with “affordable” premiums will continue to prevent people from having necessary treatments and procedures until it’s ER time. Plus, there is always the possibility that Congress will somehow gut this provision and there seem to be several opportunities for disaster—at the time of this writing, final rules about the tax credits have not been crafted and there is not as yet any indication of how, or if, the implementation of this part of the law will be affected by sequestration or other cuts. So anyone who seriously believes this whole convoluted, theoretical system will somehow magically fall into place by its effective date of January 1, 2014 is in danger of major disappointment at the very least.
  • Establishing Affordable Insurance Exchanges. Starting January 1, 2014 (I’ll believe it when I see it), if your employer doesn’t offer insurance, you are supposed to be able to buy it directly from an “Affordable Insurance Exchange.”  An Exchange is a new “transparent and competitive” insurance marketplace where individuals and small businesses can buy affordable, qualified health benefit plans.  (Notice how many times the word “affordable” is mentioned? My question is who decides what’s “affordable?”) Exchanges will offer you a choice of health plans that meet certain benefits and cost standards.  Starting in 2014, Members of Congress will be getting their health care insurance through Exchanges (the “platinum” plan, undoubtedly), and you will be able buy your (“bronze” plan) insurance through Exchanges too. There is SO much that isn’t said here and so much that’s left up in the air. The question of just what “essential health benefits” will be offered by every plan and the additional ones you get by paying more is not decided. As someone with multiple co-morbidities who would only be able to afford the bronze plan, will I still be able to get the endoscopy I need every six months, the ultra sounds, the blood work? Will all six of my prescription drugs be covered? And as my liver disease progresses and I need more and more specialized care, medications, and tests, will I or my family end up bankrupt because my crappy insurance only covers two primary care visits and one CBC blood test per year, no specialists, and perhaps other procedures that  currently help me manage my condition? What’s to stop all the insurance companies from joining together to set those “competitive” prices so that people essentially have no choice?Also, though subsidies will supposedly be available for those making less than 400% of FPL, even those making up to 133% of FPL will have to pay 2% of their income for just their premium. So if you’re making $14,856, you have to come up with $297.12 per year ($24.76 per month) just to pay your premium. If you’re making 300% of FPL ($33,510, grossing $2,793 per month), you’re expected to pay 9.5% of your income ($265.33 per month), two times what you’d pay under the proposed funding for single-payer. All people who buy coverage through an Exchange would have a cap on their total out-of-pocket spending, including deductibles, co-pays and co-insurance. These limits are based on the out-of-pocket limits that apply to high-deductible plans used with Health Savings Accounts (HSAs). People making under 400% FPL will get subsidies based on their income ($2,975 for those making 300% FPL). Charts for this info are at http://101.communitycatalyst.org/aca_provisions/subsidies. So for someone making 300% FPL the cost for your premiums, co-pays, deductibles, and co-insurance would be $6158.96 per year. Subsidies are supposed to be paid directly to insurance companies, but there is no language about what happens if they aren’t paid on time, if the check gets “lost in the mail” (if the USPS even exists by 2014). We all know what happens if you don’t pay your premium—will bureaucratic screw-ups or malfeasance cause massive cancellations of coverage? Also, like much of the entire Affordable Care Act, this provision relies on we, the consumers, trusting that insurance companies will actually follow the intent, as well as the letter, of the law when we’ve already seen plenty of evidence that their one concern is making money, regardless of whether their customers receive the medical care they need. We do not trust them and I highly doubt that the Exchange experience will inspire us to. It’s way too easy to imagine millions of low and middle income people deciding not to throw away another dollar paying for insurance that provides miniscule or no care, mandate be damned. And then how many uninsured people will there be? How many empty doctors’ offices and standing-room-only ERs will there be?

    Note:  On March 12, 2013, 24 states and D.C. had chosen plans that meet the “essential health benefits” rules released by DHHS in February. The core set of benefits must cover 10 broad categories, such as emergency services, maternity and pediatric care, prescription drugs, and mental health and substance-abuse services. Nineteen states chose existing small-group plans, or the typical employer-based plans for businesses with fewer than 50 employees. The other five states opted for HMO or state employee benefit plans. For states that did not select a benchmark plan, the federal government will designate the largest small-group plan in the state as the benchmark.

    Karen Ignagni, president and CEO of the trade group America’s Health Insurance Plans, has said that the minimum standard “will still require many individuals and small businesses to purchase coverage that is more comprehensive and more expensive than they choose to purchase today.”

  • Increasing the Small Business Tax Credit. Starting in 2014, the second phase of the small business tax credit for qualified small businesses and small non-profit organizations kicks in. In this phase, the credit is up to 50% of the employer’s contribution to provide health insurance for employees. There is also up to a 35% credit for small non-profit organizations. Yes, give the non-profits LESS credit because surely they have more money to pay for insurance than for-profit companies do. Seriously? And even though it’s better than nothing and ostensibly business-friendly, because it’s in the law that this president passed, won’t Republicans use this provision as a ransom demand in some future financial finagling? Supposed to be effective January 1, 2014.
  • Increasing Access to Medicaid. Americans who earn less than 133% of FPL ($15, 281 for an individual, $31,322 for a family of four) will be eligible to enroll in Medicaid IF the state they live in is participating in the expansion. States will receive 100% federal funding for the first three years to support this expanded coverage, phasing to 90% federal funding in subsequent years. As of February 22, 13 states, all with Republican governors, have refused to participate. In addition, many of the states that do plan to participate have already cut their Medicaid programs so much that the expansion may be more of a resumption for people that got shut out due to cuts rather than opening up the rolls to those who weren’t eligible before, the goal of the provision. Plus, there’s no telling what Congress might do to this provision before next January. Supposedly effective January 1, 2014.
  • Promoting “Individual Responsibility.” Don’t you just love the implication that forcing us to buy a potentially useless product is supposed to motivate us to be “personally responsible?” The assumption that anyone who has little or no access to care is irresponsible, lazy, just not willing to pay for what they need with the oodles of cash they have stashed under their mattresses? For once, I agreed with Republicans—the mandates IS unconstitutional, but not just that, it’s immoral and just plain mean and so far from what I believe to be Democratic principles that it was the most blatant, undeniable evidence of lobbying money’s power to control the democratic process that I’ve ever seen (though Citizen’s United comes in a close second). Under the law, most individuals who can afford it will be required to obtain “basic” health insurance coverage or pay a fee to help offset the costs of caring for uninsured Americans (in short, no change from now when we pay into Medicare/Medicaid, except we’ll also have to pay insurance companies tons more for crap and still not get the care we need.). If “affordable” coverage is not available to an individual, he or she will be eligible for an exemption, so why bother with the mandate to begin with? Oh, I know all about how it’s supposed to even out risk pools and prevent insurance companies from only covering healthy people, but can anyone seriously believe they won’t find a way to game that system?. Just the condescending language of this provision is bad enough, but the issue of what “basic health insurance coverage” consists of rises again. If people are forced to buy high-deductible, low-benefit insurance, they’re throwing money away and getting nothing in return. If a catastrophic illness strikes or they’re hit by a bus, they would still be essentially uninsured and dependent on ER care, vulnerable to bankruptcy and homelessness. How does that “promote individual responsibility?” Because the insurance companies benefit, this is perhaps the one provision that actually WILL be effective on January 1, 2014.

2015

  • Paying Physicians Based on Value Not Volume. A new provision will tie physician payments to the quality of care they provide. Physicians will see their payments modified so that those who provide higher value care will receive higher payments than those who provide lower quality care. Of course, this would rely on the IPAB (or some other regulatory body) to assess the quality of care and the IPAB (or something else like it) is non-existent now and seems likely to remain so. While most physicians support establishing high quality standards of care as opposed to the current fee-for-service model that promotes duplicative testing, unnecessary treatment/procedures, and frequently results in doctors having to spend less time with patients in order to meet quotas, the less-than-objective term “quality” is troublesome to some. I imagine much will depend on what happens with the “doc fix” for Medicare providers and if rules for this provision restrict physicians from refusing to take patients who are insured through Medicare, Medicaid, and low-benefit Exchange plans. I really can’t see this provision being implemented as is – perhaps with some amending. Supposedly effective January 1, 2015.
  • The Basic Health Program (BHP) is an optional coverage program under the ACA that allows states to use federal tax subsidy dollars to offer subsidized coverage for individuals with incomes between $15,971 and $22,980 who would otherwise be eligible to purchase coverage through state health insurance Exchanges. This program was supposed to go into effect in 2014, but in February 2013, implementation was postponed for a year. Federal officials have yet to provide details about how the program will be financed, administered, and certified, and states are struggling to evaluate the BHP’s impact on the viability and effectiveness of state Exchanges. Federal regulations may help states decide if they want to participate, but are unlikely to reduce the complexity of implementation or eliminate the financial risk to the states if they establish a BHP and then federal funding is cut or eliminated. It seems quite possible that this program will be left by the wayside, as logistics and funding remain significant hurdles.

Conclusion

As I’ve said, there are several good things that the ACA provides, but there are also even more that lend themselves to various interpretations, non-compliance, and even downright corruption and fraud. The large majority of the American public doesn’t know and doesn’t care about the nitty-gritty details. Their main concerns are:

  • How much will I have to pay just to walk into a doctor’s office?
  • Will I be able to go to the doctor, dentist, or optometrist (or take my child) whenever there’s a need for medical attention?
  • Will I be able to see the doctor(s) I trust who know me and my history?
  • How much will my premiums, deductible, and co-insurance be?
  • Will I have to fight with the insurance company to get the treatment, tests, or drugs my doctor says I need?
  • If all I can afford is the “bronze” plan, what if I need more?

There is only one way to answer all those questions with what your average consumer wants to hear—honestly. If we establish a national, single-payer healthcare system, you will pay 4.75% of your income (more if you’re wealthy) and get the care you need. No co-pays, no deductibles, no co-insurance, no fighting, no debt, no unnecessary hospitalizations because you put off care until it was too late, no doctors in or out of the “network,” no choosing between mortgage/rent, food, electricity, and medical bills. No 900 pages of confusing, vague, inscrutable language that no one can explain. Only time will tell if my cynicism about the ACA is warranted and if, as Republicans and Libertarians fear, the ACA proves to be a doorway to true universal healthcare.

Unlike many of my fellow liberals, I do not blame President Obama for the mess that the ACA is, since I doubt any of us could’ve gone into that “lion’s den” of insurance, pharmaceutical, and other medical industrial complex players, along with their Congressional lackeys, and come out alive, let alone with even as much as he managed to get. In fact, I believe we must shoulder some of the blame, especially those of us who call ourselves single-payer advocates. As Dr. Claudia Fegan often says, if we want single-payer, we need to make our legislators do it. We, as well as many Congressional Democrats, did not have the president’s back in the past, we didn’t make enough noise, we allowed the public option to be killed without a fight, or at least without a fight that anyone knew about, except the single-payer advocates who were in it.

But it was a different time in 2009 when the ACA was debated, disected, and ultimately passed. Occupy was something that you did in airplane bathrooms. Closets with soldiers inside were still locked in the military. The Voting Rights Act really was the law of the land, as was Roe v. Wade. Teachers, nurses, and first responders were respected and admired and we were willing to protect them and their unions. The idea that any one church could break the law by pointing to religious dogma as justification for denying employees of different faiths the right to healthcare was ludicrous. And 84 people, including 20 children, had not been killed in shootings, largely with legally purchased guns, from College Station to Minneapolis; Seattle, to Newtown.

In those days, the majority of us were proud of ourselves for electing the first black president, for taking one big step further into Dr. King’s “promised land,” not yet aware that there were still plenty of people, including those in Congress, who would prove to hate that president so much – not for the content of his character, but for the color of his skin, for his refusal to “know his place,” for the audacity of his thinking he could change anything in Washington – that they would be willing to violate the accepted, and sometimes even codified, rules of governing, making it impossible for any progress to be made on behalf of the American people without a long, wasteful fight.

But now, in 2013, we’ve seen more of how destructive, selfish, mean-spirited, violent, and stupid our fellow citizens can be; we’ve experienced or observed more injustice, hatred, and oppression; we’ve gotten poorer, sicker, and more frustrated. But we’ve also gotten mad. We’ve taken up signs and banners and megaphones; we’ve Occupied, blogged, SignedOn, Facebooked and Twittered. And we’ve shown Mitch McConnell that he had no power to “make this president a one-term president.” Women showed Republicans that they cannot control our bodies or our vote. We defied fundamentalist haters by increasing the number of states with legal same-sex marriage.  We proved that Karl Rove, Grover Norquist, and the Koch brothers could not overcome our focused will, no matter how much money or how many threats they threw around. We stuck our tongues out at Republicans who tried every dirty trick to stop us and then stood incredulous, slack-jawed and staring, as we stayed in line for five, six, eight hours just to vote for that audacious man who refused to know his place and for Democrats who could begin to bring sanity back to Congress. We started to prove the 50-year-old censored words of a civil rights hero to be true—“We all recognize that if any radical social, political, and economic changes are to take place in our society, the people, the masses, must bring them about.”But we haven’t done John Lewis full honor yet. There is still too much change to achieve, too much injustice to remedy, too much wrong to right.

Dr. King said, “Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane.” I contend that healthcare and economic equality are the civil rights battles of this age and they are, of course, intertwined. So nurses march to tax Wall Street and traders, bank tellers, and secretaries secretly join Occupy Healthcare. Unions add support of single-payer to their charters, Forbes publishes pro-single-payer comments, and business owners talk in low voices about how great it would be if they only had to pay 4.75% for employees’ healthcare. The people, the masses. It is up to us.

Report from the Land of Labor

By Sue Saltmarsh

When I first got the email announcing that the Labor Campaign for Single-Payer National Strategy Conference would be taking place January 11-13 in Chicago , I thought it would be a great opportunity to promote DUH among the union members who’d be attending, but I wasn’t sure DUH could afford the $100 registration and at that time, I knew I couldn’t. But Christmas brought some money in my stocking, some of which I donated to DUH. Also, my UAW friend and steadfast DUH supporter Bob Sisler encouraged me to attend and so I wrote the check and registered. That was perhaps the best investment of $100 I’ve made in this lifetime! Continue reading

I Told You So, Part 1

By Sue Saltmarsh

It gives me no joy or satisfaction to say it, but the story I read in the New York Times today only confirms what I’ve been saying since the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was passed.

“Health insurance companies across the country are seeking and winning double-digit increases in premiums for some customers, even though one of the biggest objectives of the Obama administration’s health care law was to stem the rapid rise in insurance costs for consumers. Continue reading

Bare Naked Activism

By Sue Saltmarsh 

I internally cheered when recently reading about the protest in House Speaker John Boehner’s office wherein protesters from ACT UP (NY and Philadelphia) and QUEEROCRACY stripped down to their slogan-painted skin and chanted, “Boehner, Boehner don’t be a dick – budget cuts will make us sick!” 

Having worked in the HIV/AIDS services field for almost 20 years, I’d already established a rather steel-belted reverence for ACT UP and the many ways in which they fought and won battles with pharmaceutical companies and the FDA in the early days of the epidemic, but it was good to see the “next generation” displaying (some literally) the balls and fervor of their predecessors. 

There have been many times when I’ve despaired over the ineffectiveness, despite its good intentions, of the single-payer movement, wishing they would learn some ACT UP lessons. Perhaps it comes from so many advocates being doctors, seniors, or pacifists, but whatever the cause, a little rage might serve us well. 

ACT UP was formed in 1987 by a group of activists who were outraged by the response (or lack thereof) to the AIDS crisis, much as we are outraged by the 48,000 unnecessary deaths that occur each year due to lack of access to healthcare, not to mention the untold pain, bankruptcy, and despair that our fellow Americans endure. Their first demonstration was to infiltrate the trading floor of the NY Stock Exchange to protest the profiteering of pharmaceutical companies, just as Occupy Healthcare protests the profiteering of insurance companies. ACT UP activists in New York and San Francisco mobilized their communities, just as Healthcare-NOW! and DUH and other single-payer organizations seek to mobilize the “Sicko” community.

But ACT UP and other AIDS activists got results almost instantly compared to the glacial progress being made with single-payer—the FDA accelerated their approval process, the price of AZT was lowered, compassionate access to experimental drugs was established by the pharmaceutical companies, Ronald Reagan was shamed into finally, after seven years in the White House, speaking the word “AIDS” and acknowledging the crisis existed, and the Ryan White CARE Act was passed. 

And now we have these warriors in the nude from ACT UP and QUEEROCRACY daring to not just speak Truth to Power, but to do so without the armor of clothing, thus, perhaps unintentionally (or maybe not) proving that bodies that contain HIV are really no different from bodies that don’t, that they are beautiful and strong, tall and short, skinny and round, and every color of the rainbow. 

Will it take our nakedness; our revealing of our “defects,” the ravages of cancer, arthritis, diabetes, or skin diseases; our dragging of oxygen tanks, walkers, and wheelchairs up the Capitol steps? That might be just too much truth for Power (or anyone else) to bear! 

In any case, real activism is alive – may we all see our place in it, clothed or naked, loud or quiet, at our keyboards or in the streets. Before hundreds of thousands more die, may we all see the wisdom in Larry Kramer’s words, “…until we organize ourselves block by neighborhood by city by state into a united visible community that fights back, we’re doomed.”

 

Rebuttal

By Sue Saltmarsh

 

On the DUH Facebook group page, an article from BalancedPolitics.org outlined the pros and cons of universal healthcare. I could resist result all the cons. Here it is – their original point in black, my rebuttal in red.

  1. There isn’t a single government agency or division that runs efficiently; do we really want an organization that developed the U.S. Tax Code handling something as complex as health care? The VA and Medicare both run way more efficiently and at lower administrative cost than private insurance and the CONGRESS developed the tax code, not an “organization.”
  2. “Free” health care isn’t really free since we must pay for it with taxes; expenses for health care would have to be paid for with higher taxes or spending cuts in other areas such as defense, education, etc. True, it isn’t free, but considering that most people over the age of 40 pay at least 10% of their income for insurance premiums, co-pays, deductibles, and uncovered costs, the single-digit raise in taxes would save everyone thousands per year, thus stimulating the economy at the same time as improving the health of every U.S. resident. Continue reading

Renewed Fierceness

By Sue Saltmarsh

 

“My scans again showed progression. The cancer has continued to climb through my bones and is present throughout my sternum, ribs, clavicle, hip, and more. The cyberknife treatments, however, did work on my spine—good news!

 

“Unfortunately, there are too many ‘lesions’(hate that word) throughout my body for another concerted cyber treatment at this point (plus, even with insurance it was a ridiculously costly procedure—I am now on an 18-month payment plan for those five sessions—I liken it to a ‘car payment for sick people’!)”

 

That was an excerpt from my friend Jennie’s blog which chronicles her incredible journey from a small lump discovered in her breast to the cancer that has now metastasized throughout her body.

 

I was working with her at TPAN when she first found the lump and I witnessed her entry into the world of chemo, vomit, weakness, fatigue, and pain. I also heard her early tales of how our “gold standard” Blue Cross Blue Shield health insurance had denied her a doctor-recommended MRI (according to them, an X-ray would be just as good) and how her out-of-pocket costs were soon overwhelmingly more than her entire annual non-profit salary.

 

In this blog she continues, “As far as next treatment steps, we are looking to change my chemotherapy and hormonals upon insurance approval/payment. I have already spent over 20 hours on the phone with my insurance company in the past week trying to gain approval…but it’s still a work in progress at this point. Without approval, this chemo will cost over $9,000 a month! That comes to $335 per day…yowza. I asked the insurance rep, ‘When did trying to stay alive become so expensive?!’ She didn’t really seem to have an answer for me.”

 

Jennie is 31. She is the kind of beauty that makes all the men in a room, gay or straight, turn to stare as she walks by. She has always eagerly done work that helps others, especially in the AIDS community. Her presence in this world is one tiny but powerful pushback against all the ignorance, hate, selfishness, and greed that seems to surround us. The thought of losing her to this disease which might have been rendered powerless if she’d had unfettered access to the best health care from the very beginning devastates me. It also galvanizes me.

 

Through her entire journey, except perhaps while running to the bathroom to throw up, Jennie has always had a smile that lights up the room, a witty, sardonic sense of humor, a realism that, while leaning toward optimism, never gets close to that phony Disney-esque illusion that love and beauty and goodness will always win out. Jennie has seen enough, even before the cancer, to know that all too often that just isn’t true.

 

Jennie and other cancer-fighters like her are precious reasons for me to continue to fight for universal healthcare in this country. As are all the people I love who battle HIV/AIDS. As are my diabetic friends and my mother, experiencing dementia and emphysema. And the millions I will never know personally whose lives are affected every day by pain, disability, suffering, and lack of access to the medical care that would at least provide some relief, if not a solution to the problem.

And now, perhaps appropriately, me.

 

As tests show a speedy progression of my liver disease, my belly gets more and more pregnancy-like, my energy lowers to the point where walking a block is a challenge, different pains come and go, more tests are done, more drugs prescribed, more urgings to get my name on the transplant list are delivered, the state of healthcare in this country becomes more than just a driving force in my life. It is in my blood, my belly, my liver.

 

I admit, I’ve been discouraged—DUH is in suspended animation, the thought of revving up again to spend every weekend on the phone and the computer, of having to apply for permits, raise money, win people over seems right now like a Mt. Everest I just can’t climb while keeping my “day job,” making all my doctors’ appointments, dealing with freaked-out friends and family. But ten times all of that is nothing compared to what Jennie lives with. Who am I to complain or feel discouraged?

 

Jennie closes her blog with, “So, I will dance. I will sing. And I will keep fighting and living as long as I can…embracing the highest of highs and the lowest of lows, because that is what living is.”

 

And she and I will be sitting on that stage at DUH, whenever and wherever it ends up being, the power of her story and her fighting spirit part of the fuel that ignites the crowd and makes our demand be heard, setting a stagnant battle into action, bringing all kinds of people with all kinds of healthcare needs together, creating the reason our political leaders must join them in that action and put an end to profit over people. Thanks, Jennie, for inspiring me, for reminding me to put my “fierce” on and get back to the fight.

Convention-al Behavior

Convention-al Behavior

By Sue Saltmarsh

 

Every four years we are treated (or subjected) to the audio and visual demonstrations of the differences between the Republican and Democratic political parties in the form of their national conventions. This year, the Republicans met inTampa,Florida, amid threats from hurricane Isaac which luckily decided to avoid politics. The Democrats met in Charlotte,North Carolina, not exactly a friendly environment for racially diverse, anti-gun, pro-choice, gay-loving liberals, though in the comparison of the two Carolinas’ female governors, Democrat Bev Perdue leans left while Tea Partier Nikki Haley is, well, a Tea Partier.

 

In the interest of full disclosure, I forced myself to watch the debacle inTampa while I happily looked forward to turning on the MSNBC coverage of the Charlotte success. I will not pretend to be free of bias, but seriously, how could anyone watch both events without some measure of incredulity at the Republicans’ and admiration of at least the Democrats’ skill at hiring talented speechwriters?

 

Visually, the contrast was also stark, an avant garde movie art director’s dream perhaps. As the camera panned the crowd inTampa, there was not one colorful face to be seen in that sea of glaring white. The lacquered hair, the J. Crew clothes, obligatory ties for the men and pearls or crucifixes for the ladies, peppered with a few veterans wearing the hats of their units and some tasteful political buttons pinned to equally tasteful cardigans could not have been purposely designed more appropriately for the gathering.

 

Conversely, black, brown, yellow, and red faces mingled with white ones in Charlotte; costume included everything from t-shirts to tube tops, suit coats to ponchos, the customary “Mad Hatter” Uncle Sam hats bobbed alongside cowboy hats and veterans once again wore their caps, this time the women’s version as well as the men’s. Though some of the hair probably started out lacquered, mostly it was a bit mussed, eyeliner and mascara ran freely from both sweat and tears, and if there had been a floor-level camera, I’m sure it would have picked up plenty of Birkenstocks and Naturalizers among the Prada and Manolo Blahniks.

 

As speakers at each gathering held forth on the grand plans of the men they were proposing as leaders, there were also stark differences. I am not alone in noting the falsehoods that tripped off Republican tongues – even their own Wrong Right media criticized the oh-so-easily fact-checked lies that were repeatedly uttered and one regrettable campaign staffer actually had the misfortune to say their campaign wouldn’t be “dictated by fact-checkers.” When Mitt Romney robotically told us he just wants to help our families, I screamed at my TV, “Oh, yeah?? How? By continuing to ruin our environment? By pushing us into more war? By ending public education, Planned Parenthood, and the best things about the ACA? By forcing women to have children conceived in violence? By denying equal pay, collective bargaining, and the right to vote? Is that how you’re going to ‘help’ me?”

 

On the Democratic side, there is one lie, an exaggeration, really. But it is the one closest to my heart and I will not let it go unnoticed. Every time one of the speakers claimed that the ACA has provided healthcare to everyone, I screamed at my TV, “NO, it hasn’t!! Thirty million people left out in the cold is not ‘everyone!’ Insurance companies still controlling who gets what based on their ability to pay is not ‘healthcare for everyone!’ The ACA IS NOT UNIVERSAL HEALTHCARE!” But no Democrat is claiming superhuman running ability. No Democrat is saying that Republicans will require women to prove they do equal work if they want equal pay. No Democrat is accusing Mitt Romney of being an anti-American polygamist.

 

And then there were the women. Ann Romney perkily spoke about her love for her husband and children, how Mitt made her laugh (?), the hardship of their early years eating tuna and pasta (imagine!), and how all the ladies knew it was them who worked the hardest, worried the most, shouldered the heaviest burden, not the men, oh no. But all those ladies could be sure of one thing – the Romneys loooove them! I shook my head in disbelief at the squeals of delight coming from the females in the audience who were obviously willing to believe Ann’s transparently desperate attempt to win back some of the women’s vote that has been eroded by the misogynistic policies and pronouncements of her husband and other Republican men who don’t even seem to know how the female body reproduces. And, seriously, five children? Have these people never heard of overpopulation?

 

Michelle Obama, on the other hand, spoke about her and her husband’s upbringings under very different circumstances than the Romneys’. While Mitt’s father saw the fulfillment of the American dream, Michelle’s father saw only mornings of struggle to go to work with his MS and Barack’s father wasn’t even there. While Mitt and Ann were eating their tuna alfredo, Michelle and Barack were paying off more in student loans than they paid in rent and considering themselves lucky to have tuna at all. While Ann went through her own struggles with MS and beast cancer, Barack’s mother died of ovarian cancer after fighting her insurance company to get treatment. But Michelle didn’t pit women against men, rich against poor, black against white – her stories were about triumph over challenge and her honesty in acknowledging the fears she had about how his being president might change her husband and her (two) daughters drew her audience in so that when she said, “Being president doesn’t change who you are; it reveals who you are,” I doubt there was one person watching who didn’t think of what it would reveal about Mitt Romney and who wasn’t grateful for what it has revealed about Barack Obama.  

 

As I write this, it is three hours before we’ll hear President Obama speak for himself. After Bill Clinton’s speech last night reminded us of why we loved him (even when he couldn’t keep it in his pants), and how possible détente is when both sides work at it (“Heck, he even appointed Hilary!”), I can’t wait to hear our President make his own case.

 

When I heard him speak at the 2004 convention and knew I was listening to the first black president of the United States, he was new and starry-eyed and full of hope and truly believed what he was saying about there not being red states and blue states, but rather one United States. Eight years later, I hope I hear an older, wiser, more realistic, maybe a little harder, but still hopeful man, still confident that we can be that one country rather than the divided two that have emerged in the last four years. I don’t know if that unity is possible – I fear not enough of us want it. I myself have sometimes wished all the haters, bible-thumpers, bigots, racists, gun-toters, and profiteers would just move into the South together and leave the civilized rest of us alone.

 

But that’s the thing about a family – there are always going to be some members who don’t know how to behave in public, who need to bathe more often, who aren’t the brightest bulbs in the box, or who don’t seem to know basic biological facts, but when push comes to shove, they’re part of the family and you don’t leave them out in the cold, hungry, thirsty, or in need of help. You breathe through your mouth, explain things twice (or more), forgive them their faux pas, and sit down to eat together.

 

We could’ve learned that from the only true Americans if our ancestors had just stopped moving, infecting, and killing them in order to steal their land, food, and natural resources. Maybe it will take the first Native American president to finally teach us how to be a tribe. Or maybe a man who knows something about the tribes inKenya. One thing is for sure – it won’t be a rich white guy with a car elevator in his house.

 

 

 

 

 

The Morning of November 7

My sister Kathy was born on November 7, so it’s no surprise that she’s been into politics since her days of wearing “Pass the ERA!” buttons in high school. It’s also no surprise that that particular day has held life-changing events for me starting when I was 18 months old. I will be celebrating Kathy’s birthday on that day, but I hope that this year I, along with the rest of the country, will also be able to celebrate dodging a mega-bullet.

I hear a lot of grumbling and whining from otherwise reasonably-minded, progressive friends and colleagues who seem to be indicating that they’re just going to stay home on election day – after all, what’s the use? ThoseWashington politicians are all the same, nothing’s ever going to change, why waste your time voting for the lesser of two evils?

This is why—while our lives may not change much if President Obama gets re-elected (though I believe they will), it is a certainty that change will be catastrophic if the Wrong Right wins. Did we learn nothing from 2004?

The Left and the Center either staying home or voting with puffed-out chests for Ralph Nader, plus a stacked-deck Supreme Court, got us another four years of W. And that got us TWFCSTGD (the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression), two wars, increased poverty, homelessness, hunger, and lack of healthcare, record unemployment, and the rise of the Tea Party terrorists.

In 2010, bigots, fascists, and Wrong Right wingnuts were joined by pouting liberals who don’t understand that NO president can do anything without Congress and were set on punishing Obama for not fulfilling every campaign promise by “voting out the bums!” That unlikely “coalition” gave us a Congress of wackos, ideologues, and obstructionists who made no effort to hide their naked hatred of the President (while disavowing their racism) and their intent to defeat him at every turn, no matter the harm it did to the rest of us.

Hey, liberals in Wisconsin who voted out Russ Feingold and replaced him with Tea Bagger Ron Johnson, have you learned your lesson? Kentucky, are you glad you picked Rand Paul over Jack Conway? How about you folks in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Florida—happy with what those Wrong Right governors are doing to your state, your vagina, your voting rights?

On the other hand,Delaware, aren’t you glad you picked Chris Coons over the “I’m not a witch” lady (though as one who applauds Wiccan beliefs, all I can say is what coven would want her?).Arizona, aren’t you glad you voted to keep Sharron Angle’s “second amendment solution” out of Congress?

If we wake up on November 7 to the reign of the Wrong Right, one thing is certain—our lives will change. For those of us living with chronic medical conditions who don’t make 1%-type money, we can kiss healthcare good-bye. Think that’s melodramatic?

Not only is the threat to Medicare very real, but if the Ryan budget is enacted, Medicaid would lose about three-quarters of its federal funding by 2050. Over the next 10 years, the program’s budget would be decimated by about $810 billion.

And that’s just Medicaid as it is right now. Also at stake is the much-touted 2014 expansion of Medicaid provided by the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Not that there was any way that was going to happen unless the Dems gain control of both chambers, but if they lose the White House and Congress, not only will there be no Medicaid expansion, there will be no ACA.

So here’s something to think about. If you’re angry, disgusted, or frustrated with the President and Congress, instead of blindly voting the incumbents out, or believing everything you see in ads (from either side) on TV or the Internet, do your own research.  It’s really easy.

Go to www.politics1.com. Click on your state to see all the candidates who are running for office in your state. Click on their name and you’ll be taken to their website where you can read about them and find out where they stand on issues you care about. If your issue isn’t mentioned, you can call or email their office and ask. Here’s a hint—if you get the “We’ll get back to you on that” response, chances are they don’t have a position on it, which is not a good sign. 

There are also several sites that enable you to escape the spin and find out the facts.  FactCheck, PolitiFacts, and Project Vote Smart are three of my favorites.

There’s no question that American voters are regarded as stupid, pliant, and lazy by the very people who are trying to win their vote. That’s why there’s so much pandering to the lowest common denominator – people who can be manipulated by fear-mongering, lies, and hearing what they want to hear. Don’t be one of them. If we demand more than that from ourselves, we would deserve it from our political leaders. 

 

 

The Battles Are Raging

If you aren’t already aware of the assault that is ongoing from the Wrong Right on our democracy and electoral process, you must have been living in a cave for the last year. Though the major media tends to ignore the very real violations of the decades-old voters’ rights laws; the Constitution’s design of representative democracy as our governmental system; the destructive, corruptive effects of the obscene Citizen’s United ruling by the least respected Suprreme Court in the history of the institution; and the out-and-out tampering with ballots that has taken place in Wisconsin and other states run by fascist Republicans, there will never be a lack of “coverage” of the irrelevant BS that occurs on the campaign trail. Continue reading