Friday, November 20, 2009  
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Archive for the ‘Health Care Controversy’ Category

The Art of Chinese Public Health Posters

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Maoist China during the period between 1958 and 1976 was one of the world’s widest users of public health posters and announcements. It was almost impossible to go anywhere in the country without seeing some form of health poster telling citizens to do a certain thing or not do a certain thing in the interest of public health. Then, unlike now, China had a nationalized health care system. Today, China relies on a variety of health care options, including employer provided coverage (known in China as laobao yiliao) and individual health insurance policies.

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Health Insurance and Medical Marijuana in America

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009
Demonstrators rally for legalization of marijuana

Politicians and decision makers seem to be worried that if we make cannabis legal for medicinal use, then it will become in higher demand and people would abuse the drug more than is happening now. The Institute of Medicine (someone I’d be highly included to trust based on name alone) released a report in 1999 on medical marijuana examining whether the medical use of marijuana would lead to an increase of marijuana use in the general population and concluded that, “At this point there is no convincing data to support this concern. The existing data is consistent with the idea that this would not be a problem if the medical use of marijuana were as closely regulated as other medications with abuse potential.” The report also noted that, “this question is beyond the issues normally considered for medical uses of drugs, and should not be a factor in evaluating the therapeutic potential of marijuana or cannabinoids.”

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Limiting Cost Sharing in Health Insurance

Monday, February 2nd, 2009
Paying too much for your health care?

Cost sharing, when you first hear it, might sound like a good thing. Something to help lessen the burden of costs you’re being socked with for your health insurance. Unfortunately, cost sharing in the United States often ends up to the detriment of the consumer, as health insurance companies raise their rates and have to ask consumers to pay a higher portion of what services cost. Sometimes insurance companies have to raise the rates for employers, who then have to turn around and raise the co-pays for their employers. It’s a vicious cycle, but other countries around the world have developed models to help lower and limit cost sharing that falls on the shoulder of consumers, and the United States might do very well to look into these models and implement them here. Especially with things as they are in our current economy, anything that can be done to keep hitting already weighed-down consumers with more costs should be a high priority.

What Exactly IS Cost Sharing in Health Insurance?

There are a few key specific points to understand when looking at the role cost sharing plays in health insurance. Direct forms of cost sharing between consumers and health insurance providers are things like the following: co-payments (what you pay per service), coinsurance (a percentage of the charge that you have to pay) and deductibles (the amount you have to pay out of your own pocket before coverage begins. This can be on all services or you can have a certain deductible on a type of procedure). Indirect cost sharing isn’t typically included in the standard definition of cost sharing in insurance, but they still cost consumers money and come right out of your pocket. These can be things like: charges when you go to see an out-of-network doctor, going to a specialist before seeing a primary care physician and being charged full price for that, any health services not covered by your insurance plan and health care premiums.

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Pediatricians Pushing Vaccines Does More Harm Than Good

Friday, January 30th, 2009
Are pediatricians giving your children vaccines they don't need?

Your kindly neighborhood pediatrician may be trying to get you to vaccinate your child this year against the flu virus. Maybe you’re already skeptical about whether the shot does any good for those receiving it, and you may be recoiling in horror as your baby’s doctor tries to inject your infant at just six months old. Such is the disturbing trend popping up by doctors who are a part of the American Academy of Pediatrics. Read on to learn about this organization’s drive to vaccinate babies and children, whether the shot has been proven helpful or not.

Flu Shots: Necessary Evil?

No parent likes to see their baby get shots-the screaming, the crying, the tears of despair over getting stuck with that big, mean needle. Studies have shown in recent years that the flu shot might not be necessary for keeping people healthy, unless the people in question are the elderly and infirmed or the very young and sickly. If you have a child, you may be hearing the AAP’s outcry that children from 6 months of age all the way up to 18 year olds should be required to have an annual flu shot. Well, for helpless babies at 6 months of age, this may have some validity. However, for children and especially teenagers, studies have shown that the flu vaccine only works in about 1% of the studied population. For parents who don’t want any unnecessary drugs injected into their little one’s bodies, this new insistence may raise more than a few hackles.

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Medical Marijuana and Insurance: Should It Be Covered?

Thursday, January 29th, 2009
Health insurance and medical marijuana

Bud, ganja, grass, herb, Mary Jane, weed…the ever-controversial marijuana has many nicknames, and just as people can’t decide what to call it, the United States can’t make up its mind on the drug’s legality, uses and whether or not insurance companies should cover it. It is a slippery slope, with many pros and cons on both sides of the argument, but just where are people coming from? Medical marijuana is legal in many other countries around the world, so why not here in the United States? Will we ever reach a point where not only is cannabis legal for medicinal purposes, but it is covered under a health insurance plan like other drugs of its ilk?

Medical Marijuana Facts and Figures

Medical marijuana, henceforth to be referred to simply as “cannabis” to save my poor fingers the typing exertion, has a different story if you are comparing state versus federal level here in the United States. At the federal level, cannabis is illegal, period due to falling under the Controlled Substances Act. As far as cannabis as a medical treatment goes, states have the right to choose whether the drug is or isn’t legal. Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington all have approved and regulate cannabis for medicinal use. One thing that it is important to be clear on: medical use does not mean that the drug is approved for a prescription as medicine.

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Recession Should Take Blame for Reduced Health Care

Monday, January 26th, 2009
How the current economic recession is affecting America's health.

Health care providers have to have seen this coming. It’s not like we woke up one morning and saw “Hey, the country’s in a recession.” The economic downturn was gradual and glaringly obvious, and people and organizations everywhere did their best to make preparations. However, many states throughout the United States are preparing to make drastic and unprecedented cuts in health care funds, and this couldn’t be coming at a worse time for consumers. The unemployment rate in December was 7.2%, which was up from November’s 6.8%. There doesn’t seem to be a light at the end of the tunnel any time soon (you can’t help but feel bad for the complete mess that Barack Obama is inheriting) and it is important to know how these health care cuts might affect you and your family.

Health Services for Poor First to Go

Obama has been promising since the inception of his campaign that he wanted to extend health care coverage to include more affordable and widely available health insurance to those in lower income brackets. Now, before he has even been sworn in as the next President of the United States, states are already tossing programs like these out the window. Many states have been gung-ho in the fight to expand their coverage for the working poor, but with the state of the economy the way it is, these once hopeful programs are getting the boot. And the working poor are now becoming more steadily just the “poor,” as jobs continued to get slashed across industries.

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