Health Care | featured news

Customer-Driven Health Care Gets Respect

After my posts of the last two weeks which spoke to the growth of health care spending and the coming-of-age of customer-driven health care, I was intrigued to see the same story break in the mainstream media, such as the New York Times article linked above. It looks like the Times reads Forbes ;-).

 

UK doc survey: Deny treatment to smokers, obese

Deny Healthcare to Smokers and Obese

A majority of doctors in a United Kingdom survey supported measures to deny non-emergency medical services to smokers and the obese, The Observer newspaper reported Sunday.

 

Obama healthcare reforms lead to $1.3 billion in insurance rebates

Barack Obama

U.S. consumers and businesses will receive an estimated $1.3 billion in rebates from insurance companies this year, according to a new study quantifying a key early benefit of the healthcare law that President Obama signed in 2010.

 

Obama team celebrates anniversary of Romney's health care law

Romneycare

Six years after Mitt Romney signed into law a signature health care reform package in Massachusetts, it's his chief political rival, Barack Obama, who's celebrating. President Obama's re-election team on Thursday released a three-minute web video marking the sixth anniversary of the law that's now known as "Romneycare," reminding voters that the signature effort in Massachusetts helped inspire Mr. Obama's landmark legislation.

Senh: Wow. Talk about lip service. Talk about jumping bandwagons. Romney wants to tear down health care reform that he favored and made work in Massachusetts when he was governor.

 

Obama disputes claims health care law will cost $340B more

Barack Obama: Universal Health Care

"In another attempt to re-fight the battles of the past, one former Bush administration official is wrongly claiming that some of the savings in the Affordable Care Act are 'double-counted' and that the law actually increases the deficit," said Jeanne Lambrew, a deputy assistant to the president for health policy. "This claim is false."

Senh: Ah, that explains yesterday's report. It's from a Republican. I wonder why Republicans are so against universal health care? Is it really just because it increases our deficit?

 

Health-care law will add $340 billion to deficit, new study finds

Health Care

President Obama’s landmark health-care initiative, long touted as a means to control costs, will actually add more than $340 billion to the nation’s budget woes over the next decade, according to a new study by a member of the board that oversees Medicare financing.

 

White House in damage control over Obama Supreme Court remarks

Barack Obama

The White House was forced on the defensive on Wednesday as it sought to explain controversial remarks President Barack Obama made earlier in the week about the Supreme Court's review of his signature healthcare reform law. "What he did was make an unremarkable observation about 80 years of Supreme Court history," White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters during a White House briefing dominated by the topic.

Obama expressed confidence on Monday that the Court would not take an "unprecedented, extraordinary step" by ov

 

Ruth Marcus: Obama’s unsettling attack on the Supreme Court

There was something rather unsettling in President Obama’s preemptive strike on the Supreme Court at Monday’s news conference. “I’d just remind conservative commentators that for years what we’ve heard is the biggest problem on the bench is judicial activism or a lack of judicial restraint — that an unelected group of people would somehow overturn a duly constituted and passed law,” Obama said. “Well, here’s a good example. And I’m pretty confident that this court will recognize that, and not take that step.”

 

Obama to justices: Mandate is needed

President Barack Obama weighed in Monday on last week's Supreme Court arguments about health care reform, saying he expected the justices to rule the act is constitutional.

 

If justices kill health law, California may just revive it

As the U.S. Supreme Court considers the fate of the federal Affordable Care Act, legislation in California could pave the way for a state substitute, if needed. As doubts grow about the survival of the federal healthcare law, state officials are considering ways to keep key elements of the legislation alive in California.

 

Subscribe to this RSS topic: Syndicate content