So, quite a bit after I went to bed last night, and after a lot of Chicken Little histrionics (Republican Devin Nunes says it will bring about a Socialist Utopia; gee, Utopia – how terrible would that be? And, BTW, isn’t Devin a girl’s name?) and faux outrage (and an anti-abortion executive order by that liberal scoundrel President of ours), the House passed Health Care Reform and reconciliation. So, now the Senate has to do whatever it is they have to do, and it’ll be a done deal. Yay. I guess. At least a couple of good things will come out of it. You can keep your kids on your insurance plan (assuming you have one) until they’re 26. Doesn’t do much for me, of course, but I’m sure that’ll help a lot of people. It also supposedly closes the Medicare prescription drug “doughnut hole.” Again, not much help for me, and the way I’ve been feeling lately, I’m starting to doubt I’ll live long enough to get Medicare. Hopefully it’ll make things easier for my in-laws, though.
It gives some subsidies for lower income people (up to 400% of the poverty level, which, for family of four, is $22,050) to buy insurance. Of course, it’s pretty darn good news for insurance companies, too, since it requires you to buy insurance or get fined $695 a year. That’s, what, about $58 a month. A lot less than insurance will cost you, so I’m guessing a lot of people will opt for the fine instead. I have no problem with the “mandate” part, but clearly it should be either you buy private insurance, or you enroll in Medicare (at a means-based rate). But, well, that was just too much of a threat to the for-profit middlemen known as the insurance industry. They collect your money, take their cut, ration your care and tell your doctor what they can and can’t do in order to increase their cut, and add no value to the transaction (unless you consider paperwork, phone tag, and the denial-appeal-denial process valuable).
I was asking a passionate supporter of single-payer health care whether this crappy bill is better than nothing, or if nothing would be better than this (as in, better to have nothing than to have this, not “wow, nothing is better than this!”). It’s a question I don’t have an answer to, personally. I reckon maybe for some people it’ll be better, and for others it’ll be worse. Especially when it allows insurance companies to raise their rates unckecked and still have a captive (mandated) market.
But, whatever. Maybe now that this crappy legislation is in place (once the Senate does their thing and Obama signs it, anyway), they can gradually fix things. But I kinda doubt that.
As for me, I found my insurance card yesterday, so I guess I’m good to go in terms of trying to find a podiatrist. I think I found a picture of what at least part of the deal with my foot is. Looks like, of the two heel spus I have, one is sticking into the bursa where my Achilles tendon attaches. So, it’s kind like I have a nail sticking into it (or them, or whatever they are). No wonder I can’t walk. I don’t think that’s the only thing wrong in there, but I think everything must have gotten so inflamed and swollen, everything was pushing on everything else. Kinda sucks. I’m not sure how I’m gonna be able to keep ice on it all day at work, and I think I’ll have to limit my water drinking, so as to limit trips hopping to the potty. This definitely blows.
Oh well, at least I can spend time reading all about the Sweet 16.
Have a good one.
I believe the bill also mandates that a certain percentage of money insurance companies charge must go to healthcare and fixes the percentage which can go to administrative expenses.
Feel better, PJ. Just thinking about heel spurs makes my feet hurt.
Sorry about your feet, PJ. My friend in Milwaukee had some foot surgery and has been recovering all winter. It’s slow and she had a hard time with all the snow.
I doubt this is the case but, does the healthcare bill cover dental at all? I’m getting a toothache. :smack: :holla:
Well, made an appointment with a foot guy. The first available appointment was May 4th. Thank god I don’t live in Canada, where you have to wait forever to get an appointment…. 🙄
First question when requesting an appointment? “What insurance?”
When do the death panels kick in?
Here is a supposedly clear explanation of the Healthcare bill from the NY times.
What the times calls a graphic detailing the healthcare plan.
According to Healthy Canadians—A Federal Report on Comparable Health Indicators 2008:
And six weeks for a Podiatrist here.
Damn socialized medicine!
When I had surgery from something that caused excruciating life changing pain, it was a six week wait. I began to feel almost completely better during that time so I decided to cancel. Of course, my problem returned a day or two later so I called to get my appointment back. Nope, six weeks.
:fu:
One thing that struck me (beside nausea) in the whole healthcare debate, was that fewer Rethugs referred to US healthcare as “the best.” What astounds me are the teabaggers and the other loonies who believed in death panels and the idea that government healthcare would take away their freedom. Freedom to do what? I really don’t understand them.
Dunno if you looked at the Canadian report, but around 90% of Canadians are extremely or somewhat happy with their health care.
I don’t have the numbers to back it up, but I think 90% of tea baggers and republicans are extremely unhappy. With everything. They lead miserable, pathetic little lives, and resent anybody who isn’t as miserable and pathetic as they are.
I think they have foot problems. That shit’ll make you pretty miserable in a hurry.
I’m not sure they’re just miserable, because they are also astonishingly ignorant.
Should their teachers be blamed or the students? Or perhaps the school board.
I’m with Bill Maher. I blame the parents. And Fux News.