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One Absolutely Horrifying Obamacare Stat For Democrats That Could Spell Electoral Doom

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One Absolutely Horrifying Obamacare Stat For Democrats That Could Spell Electoral Doom A new Bloomberg poll released Thursday suggests the Affordable Care Act will be a major factor in Americans' decisions to turn out to the polls this November, especially with its opponents.

According to the poll, 73 percent of respondents who said they would repeal the health-care overhaul known as Obamacare say the law will be a "major" factor in their vote. And 73 percent said they will "definitely" vote in this year's midterm elections.

By contrast, 45 percent of respondents who support modifications and 33 percent of those who support the law as it currently stands said Obamacare will be a "major" factor in how they vote. Meanwhile, 61 percent and 54 percent of those groups' respondents, respectively, said they will "definitely" turn out to vote.

As Tuesday night's special election in Florida showed, the combination of typically low turnout in midterm-election years — plus the more enthusiastic opposition to Obamacare — could spell broader trouble for Democrats.

"In off-year elections, turnout is a huge factor," J. Ann Selzer, who conducted the survey, told Bloomberg. "The anti-Obamacare segment is both more likely to say they will definitely vote and more likely to say their vote will be strongly influenced by their view of Obamacare. That can be enough to sway a race."

The premier elections in 2014 will come in the battle for Senate control — if Republicans swing six Senate seats currently in Democratic hands, they will take back the Senate. 

There are seven seats up for grabs in traditionally red-leaning states this November — West Virginia, North Carolina, Louisiana, South Dakota, Alaska, Montana, and Arkansas.

"Many vulnerable Senate Democrats are competing on more Republican turf and carrying more direct Obamacare baggage than Alex Sink was," Tim Miller, the executive director at the GOP research outfit America Rising, told Business Insider in an email on Wednesday.

Overall, more Americans are in favor of either keeping the law as is or making adjustments to it than fully repealing it — 51 percent want to keep it with "small modifications," 34 percent want full repeal, and 13 percent want to keep it as is. 

Individual provisions of the law are more politically popular. For example, 65 percent support a ban on insurance companies denying customers coverage based on pre-existing conditions, and 73 percent support letting children stay on parents' plans until the age of 26. But by a 51-47 margin, respondents opposed the provision mandating Americans buy health insurance.

Join the conversation about this story »

 
 
 
  Reported by Business Insider 11 hours ago.

Cintas Expands Document Management Services in Michigan with New Hard Drive Destruction Program

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Cintas Corporation, a leader in secure document management services, today announced the launch of its new hard drive destruction program in the Michigan market.

Detroit, MI (PRWEB) March 13, 2014

Cintas Corporation, a leader in secure document management services, today announced the launch of its new hard drive destruction program in the Michigan market. The new service safely and efficiently destroys computer hard drives, eliminating the risk of a data breach.

“Many discarded hard drives contain information that is confidential and recoverable,” said Patrick Day, General Manager, Cintas Document Management, Plymouth MI. “Our certified complete destruction solution also offers organizations the assurance that they will remain compliant with data privacy standards.”

Cintas’ exclusive LockDown™ process offers the most secure and efficient solution for permanent hard drive destruction.· Two onsite, background-checked employees ensures your hard drives are never out of sight
· Onsite hand-held scanner records each hard drive’s serial number
· Onsite onboard computer creates a manifest log of all hard drives recorded
· Onsite destruction-only process
· Hard drive platters and casing are physically destroyed to ensure complete data destruction
· Client can view each destroyed hard drive onsite before it leaves their parking lot
· Printed and/or emailed manifest log provided for each hard drive successfully destroyed

Typical hard drive destruction methods come with many risks because they are time consuming, prone to human error and, in many cases, not compliant with disposal laws. Additionally, compliance with data confidentiality rules carries risk of serious financial penalties. For example, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) allows fines of up to $1.5 million and 10 years in prison for each violation of patient health information privacy rules.

For more information about Cintas Hard Drive Destruction, please visit: http://www.cintas.com/MI/Detroit/Hard-Drive-Destruction.html

About Cintas Corporation:
Headquartered in Cincinnati, Cintas Corporation provides highly specialized services to businesses of all types primarily throughout North America. Cintas designs, manufactures and implements corporate identity uniform programs, and provides entrance mats, restroom cleaning and supplies, tile and carpet cleaning, promotional products, first aid, safety, fire protection products and services and document management services for more than 1 million businesses. Reported by PRWeb 11 hours ago.

M&T Merchant HealthCare Payment Manager℠ Helps Healthcare Providers Collect Payments in a Changing Marketplace

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New service helps hospitals, medical practices and dental offices better manage their account receivables.

Buffalo, NY (PRWEB) March 13, 2014

M&T Bank has introduced the M&T Merchant HealthCare Payment Manager℠, which helps hospitals, medical practices and dental offices better manage their account receivables.

The new service screens information regarding benefits eligibility from more than 400 third-party payers, including health insurance companies and government-administered health plans, to quickly perform an eligibility check and estimate what the patient will owe for a healthcare service. The system allows health care providers to collect patient deductibles and co-payments at the point of service or to easily establish terms for installment payments to make paying the bill more affordable for the patient.

The service improves managing uncollected invoices and reduces the time and cost required for collections management. The ability to e-mail invoices and upcoming payment notices also assists with operational efficiency and timely communication with patients.

The M&T Merchant HealthCare Payment Manager also acts as a traditional point-of-sale terminal, allowing the office to process credit and debit card payments in addition to ACH payments.

“This new service is designed to reduce the problem of uncollectible debt in the medical industry and to provide patients with flexible payment options,” said Chris Morphew, Group Vice President for Commercial Payment Solutions at M&T. “With a larger number of high-deductible health plans in use, patients are increasingly responsible for part of their total healthcare bill and this requires health care providers to more closely manage their receivables. M&T Merchant HealthCare Payment Manager ℠ is the right solution to help improve cash flow and provide the patient with best choices for making payments.”

Industry estimates put the amount of unpaid medical bills annually in the billions. M&T Bank, a regional bank with commercial and not-for-profit customers across several states in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions, serves many health-care providers.

About M&T Bank
Founded in 1856, M&T Bank Corp. is one of the 20 largest U.S. bank holding companies, with more than 700 branch offices and 1,500 ATMs in New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, Delaware and Washington D.C.

©2014 M&T Bank. Member FDIC Reported by PRWeb 11 hours ago.

Dependence Through Denial and Deception: How Health Insurance Companies Keep Your Premiums High

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We all know insurance companies like to insert themselves into just about every aspect of our health care. Many insurance plans make you go to an approved doctor at an approved hospital for approved procedures and take approved drugs. Even doctors often don't have much say in this. We hand all this control to insurance companies and they use it, they say, to control their own costs. Is that all they use it for?

About a year ago I prescribed cyclobenzaprine, a commonly-prescribed muscle relaxant, for a patient who had recently strained her back. About two hours after she left my office, Walgreens (her pharmacy) faxed me this message. (That's right: Doctors still use fax machines.)
According to Walgreens, the patient's insurance (Healthnet) didn't "cover" cyclobenzaprine. But they were willing to cover baclofen, another commonly-prescribed muscle relaxant, for a $12 copay.

This fax meant, first, that my patient went home without any medication, and second, that she wouldn't get any medication until I either changed her prescription to what Healthnet "approved" or filled out a form requesting an exception for this particular patient for this particular drug. Of course, if a doctor doesn't check his fax machine a lot, this might leave a patient without any medication that day.

This denial seemed especially odd to me since cyclobenzaprine has been generic for many years and there's clinically very little difference between it and baclofen. How could this be an issue of cost? I decided to look up the price of each medication at Costco.com to see if maybe the price of cyclobenzaprine was a lot more than I remembered.

As you can see, both medications cost less than the copay, meaning the insurance company wasn't actually being asked to "cover" anything. In fact, the one I prescribed was the cheaper of the two. So why were they preventing my patient from getting it? And even though my patient could have bought the medication herself -- for less money than the copay her insurance plan required, she couldn't do it at Walgreens. At most chain pharmacies, if you show them an insurance card, you're forced to play by your insurance company's rules.

That isn't the only time this has happened. Cigna also sent me a letter stating they won't cover cyclobenzaprine, Blue Shield won't cover hydroxyzine (which another one of my patients had been taking for years), and insurance companies have also sent me denials for pantoprazole and metoprolol tartrate -- all very inexpensive generic medications. In every case the message was the same: The patient's insurance plan doesn't "cover" this medication.

But if these medications don't cost very much, if they don't cost the insurance companies anything, why the denials? And what does this tell us about the role of health insurance in our lives?

Health care is the only industry in the U.S. where we go through an insurance company to purchase nearly everything no matter how trivial or mundane. You don't use your car insurance when your check-engine light comes on, but you use your health insurance to pay for a blood test. Why?

We've become so dependent on insurance companies for all of our health care expenses that most of us (including doctors) have lost track of what anything in health care actually costs. Not knowing what you pay for something is a big disadvantage. The more you depend on an intermediary (like a health insurance company), the more money they can extract for the dependence. And keeping you confused makes it harder to break away. So, for example, if they want to keep us going through them for every possible service or product in health care, it might help to make us think everything in health care is far more expensive than it really is.

By refusing to cover a medication, the insurance company sends both the doctor and patient a message: "All of your medical costs are very high. You need us." It works because we don't know when a test or medication is actually about the same price as an oil filter. They use this illusion of "high cost" to justify the price of their premiums. As long as neither doctors nor patients are willing to look up the actual price of these products, no one will see through their deception. Clever, aren't they?

You can't really blame an insurance company for trying to manage its own costs, even if they play a bit of hardball to keep people from making poor economic choices (like using an expensive name brand medication when the generic is just as good). But we've seen that when we stop watching, they start to extract money directly from the source -- patients -- by getting people to overpay for medical services. And in these examples, they're refusing a medical service altogether, and not for any good reason. Health insurance companies will directly interfere with your medical care just to play a game and deceive you about the real cost of a medication. How's that for a service? Reported by Huffington Post 11 hours ago.

On Leadership: A business upside to Obama’s overtime move

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Business groups are crying foul over the news that President Obama wants to expand overtime rights to millions more workers. It’ll cost jobs to force businesses to spend more on paying time-and-a-half, they say. The costs of hiring a worker go beyond just the wages people are paid — there are 401(k)s to fund, health insurance premiums to help cover and equipment to buy for each employee. Reported by Washington Post 10 hours ago.

Health Care for Immigrant Women and Families Benefits Us All

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National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health applauds new bill that would ensure women and families can access health care their tax dollars support

WASHINGTON, D.C. (PRWEB) March 13, 2014

Women’s health advocates, health care providers, and immigrant health and rights leaders applaud Congresswoman Michelle Lujan Grisham (NM-01) for introduction of the “Health Equity and Access under the Law (HEAL) for Immigrant Women and Families Act of 2014.” The groundbreaking legislation would restore access to affordable health coverage for immigrants authorized to live and work in the United States.

Nearly 200 national, state, and local organizations and associations have signed on to a letter of support for the legislation.

“The HEAL Immigrant Women and Families Act is about fair treatment, plain and simple,” Rep. Lujan Grisham said. “Immigrant women and families work hard, pay their taxes, and contribute to our communities, society, and economy. They shouldn’t be barred from accessing the health care they help pay for.”

Almost two decades ago, politicians began enacting harmful restrictions that have put affordable health coverage out of reach for many immigrants. The HEAL Immigrant Women and Families Act of 2014 would remove political interference so immigrants are able to access the health care their tax dollars support. The bill:·     Removes discriminatory barriers to health coverage for lawfully present immigrants imposed by the 1996 welfare law, including the five-year waiting period and restrictive and outdated list of “qualified” immigrants;
·     Restores full-scope Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) to lawfully present immigrants who are otherwise eligible; and
·     Removes the unnecessary and unjustifiable exclusion of lawfully present young people (DREAMers) granted deferred action through the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program from affordable health insurance plans.

“Immigrant women are the backbones of their families and communities. It’s not only fair, it’s common sense to remove political interference so they and their families can participate in the health care programs their tax dollars support,” said Jessica González-Rojas, executive director of the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health (NLIRH). “Good health care ensures women have the opportunity to realize their full potential, care for their families, and make their own decisions about their future. That’s good for all of us.”

“Our national leaders must commit to providing quality care for everyone, including the most vulnerable in our society, for the good of our communities and our economy. No one should be denied access to affordable health care based on income or immigration status. We applaud the legislation and look forward to its consideration,” said Marielena Hincapié, executive director of the National Immigration Law Center (NILC).

“We are proud that our own Congresswoman Lujan Grisham understands that improving access to health care for broader communities benefits us all,” said Tannia Esparza, executive director at Young Women United (YWU). “As a border state with diverse immigrant diaspora, we know eliminating barriers to care will have a real impact on the lives of immigrant women and families throughout New Mexico and across the country.”

"Given the high rates of uninsurance among Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, and the grave health disparities faced by immigrant women in our community, we applaud the introduction of the HEAL Immigrant Women and Families Act. Women in our community have some of the highest rates of cervical cancer and, if enacted, this measure could save their lives. This is very exciting news for our members across the country, whose families would greatly benefit from the changes this would bring," said Miriam Yeung, executive director of the National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum (NAPAWF).

“By restoring access to a full range of affordable health care, including essential reproductive health services such as access to contraception and screenings for cervical and breast cancer, this bill will help ensure every woman has the ability to make her own decisions about her family, her future, and her life,” said Nancy Northup, president and CEO of the Center for Reproductive Rights. “We applaud Congresswoman Lujan Grisham for her leadership in introducing the HEAL Immigrant Women and Families Act, and we urge her colleagues in Congress to support this crucial legislation.”

“For far too long, hard-working immigrant women and families have been locked out of the same critical health programs their tax dollars support,” said Kathy Ko Chin, president and CEO of the Asian & Pacific Islander American Health Forum (APIAHF). “With this bill, we have an opportunity to ensure that immigrant women and young people who want and need affordable health coverage are able to access it.”

“NCJW has long advocated for health care access as a critical aspect of building healthy families and communities; immigrants to our country are no exception. Immigrant women and their families often lack basic worker protections and benefits, and are less likely to receive adequate reproductive health care — including screening and treatment for cancer, family planning services, and comprehensive sex education,” said National Council of Jewish Women (NCJW) CEO Nancy Kaufman. “As contributing members of our communities and economy, immigrant women and their families should not face political impediments to essential health and reproductive care,” Kaufman added.

“Equity and good health policy demand that immigrant women and families have the same opportunity to live healthy lives and access quality care they can rely on,” said Emily Spitzer, executive director of the National Health Law Program (NHeLP). “The HEAL Immigrant Women and Families Act would help do just that by taking down legal barriers that have often stood in the way of good health.”

“Every day, NFPRHA’s members in all 50 states serve those who might otherwise go without health care,” said Clare Coleman, president & CEO of the National Family Planning & Reproductive Health Association (NFPRHA). “They understand from experience the critical importance of all patients having affordable access to health care. I commend Representative Michelle Lujan Grisham for championing the HEAL Immigrant Women and Families Act, to increase access for millions of vulnerable people in our country.”

“We applaud Congresswoman Lujan Grisham for her leadership in introducing this critical bill. Barriers to heath care take a toll on the health of immigrant women and widen health disparities. Health coverage is needed for a range of sexual and reproductive health care, including prenatal visits, contraceptives, sexually transmitted infection screenings, breast-feeding support, and routine gynecological care. As physicians who take care of immigrant women and families every day, we look forward to working with Congress and our organizational partners to see that it is enacted,” said Physicians for Reproductive Health (PRH) board chair Dr. Nancy L. Stanwood, M.D., MPH.

"As the nation’s leading women’s health care provider and advocate, at Planned Parenthood our mission is making sure all of our patients — no matter where they come from or where they live — receive the health care they need to lead healthy and productive lives. We see the difference that health care makes for women and their families," said Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA). "We know that when a mother is healthy, her whole family benefits."

“The HEAL Immigrant Women and Families Act is a step in the right direction to address disparities in access to health services for young immigrants and their families,” said Debra Hauser, president of Advocates for Youth. “This bill does away with misguided and harmful restrictions that leave too many of our young people vulnerable. This bill will remove obstacles, such as unnecessary waiting periods or denial of coverage, to help create opportunities and promote young people’s overall well-being.”

Please click here for an analysis from the Guttmacher Institute of the current policies that block immigrant women and families from obtaining health insurance. For more information on the legislation and organizational supporters, please contact the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health.

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The National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health is the only national reproductive justice organization dedicated to building Latina power to advance health, dignity, and justice for 26 million Latinas, their families, and communities in the United States through leadership development, community mobilization, policy advocacy, and strategic communications. Reported by PRWeb 8 hours ago.

WSJ Editors Seem To Think Widely Reported Obamacare Extension Is A 'Secret'

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On Wednesday, the editors of The Wall Street Journal filed a diatribe about "ObamaCare's Secret Mandate Exemption," bragging about unearthing a closely guarded "secret" that only their super-cool sources had noticed and passed on exclusively to them. Scoop, if true! But spoiler alert: It's not. How did this happen? Let's begin at the beginning of their editorial:
ObamaCare's implementers continue to roam the battlefield and shoot their own wounded, and the latest casualty is the core of the Affordable Care Act -- the individual mandate. To wit, last week the Administration quietly excused millions of people from the requirement to purchase health insurance or else pay a tax penalty.

This latest political reconstruction has received zero media notice, and the Health and Human Services Department didn't think the details were worth discussing in a conference call, press materials or fact sheet. Instead, the mandate suspension was buried in an unrelated rule that was meant to preserve some health plans that don't comply with ObamaCare benefit and redistribution mandates. Our sources only noticed the change this week.

That seven-page technical bulletin includes a paragraph and footnote that casually mention that a rule in a separate December 2013 bulletin would be extended for two more years, until 2016. Lo and behold, it turns out this second rule, which was supposed to last for only a year, allows Americans whose coverage was cancelled to opt out of the mandate altogether.

Here are some things that are true. The White House did authorize an additional two-year extension of certain policies that were put in place under the administration's discretionary authority in order to mitigate the fallout from The Great 'If You Like Your Plan ... Well, Funny Story Actually' Foofaraw of 2013. Here's specifically what the White House did. In November 2013, President Barack Obama announced a policy that gave health insurance companies permission to extend for one year the plans that had been canceled because they failed to comply with the Affordable Care Act. As The Huffington Post's Jeffrey Young reported:
The White House acknowledged this new policy could have a limited reach. "It may not be taken by all insurance companies and by all state insurance commissioners," a senior White House official said during a conference call with reporters prior to Obama's remarks.
And with regard to that "limited reach," the solution for those who couldn't get these old plans re-extended through their insurer or state regulator was to exempt them from paying the individual mandate fine for one year as well. Now, this policy, in toto, has been extended for two additional years.

Much like the original fixes-by-fiat, these more recent two-added-year extensions have been offered out of the best of intentions and targeted at customers caught up in the administration's myriad cock-ups. However, good intentions don't exempt a policy decision from criticism or scrutiny, so the editors of The Wall Street Journal are well within their rights to critique and scrutinize. Furthermore, you wouldn't be thought a fool to observe that the two-year extension smacks of political opportunism: The new deadline rather conspicuously pushes this problem past upcoming elections. Convenient, that.

But the notion that any of this has somehow escaped the attention of the media is straight nonsense. And it's an accusation that's rubbing some of the reporters who have covered these policy changes the wrong way.


Like I'm at a loss here. Do WSJ opinion writers not have access to Google? http://t.co/S8aYWANFJZ

— Dylan Scott (@dylanlscott) March 12, 2014



Here's our story, for the record: http://t.co/WlyZKI2my2

— Dylan Scott (@dylanlscott) March 12, 2014


From Dylan Scott's article at Talking Points Memo:
The Obama administration has reportedly decided to extend its Obamacare 'fix' for people whose health plans were canceled last fall for an additional two years.

Bloomberg News and the Associated Press reported the decision, citing anonymous sources. The proposal has been under consideration since at least last month.

The Obamacare 'fix' allows insurance companies, if permitted by their state insurance regulators, to continue offering non-compliant health plans to people already enrolled in them. Under the extension, according to the AP, the 'fix' can now be applied to plans issued through Oct. 1, 2016.

From that Bloomberg News story:
Americans who kept health plans that don’t comply with Obamacare requirements will be able to renew those policies for two more years, according to a person familiar with the matter.
And here's the Associated Press, which even makes note of the obvious political convenience:
Warding off the specter of election-year health insurance cancellations, the Obama administration Wednesday announced a two-year extension for individual policies that don't meet requirements of the new health care law.

The decision helps defuse a political problem for Democrats in tough re-election battles this fall, especially for senators who in 2010 stood with President Barack Obama and voted to pass his health overhaul.

Also covering the story: The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, Reuters, McClatchy Newspapers, USA Today, ABC News, NBC News and CBS News.

Now, perhaps the WSJ editors' beef here is that none of these recent reports specifically cover the extension of the individual mandate exemption for those whose plans were canceled. That's because all of these reporters essentially understood that the real news here was the extension of this policy to allow some people to remain in plans not compliant with the Affordable Care Act for two additional years. That's particularly newsworthy for a number of reasons. Chiefly, these extensions persist as a reminder of Obama's original "if you like your plan, you can keep it" broken promise. Perhaps more significantly, the extension of these non-compliant plans represents a contradiction in both the administration's professed philosophy and its policy choices. Remember, to the creators of the Affordable Care Act, these non-compliant plans are junk. They're the sort of bad plans that no one should be forced into buying -- the kinds of plans to which the Affordable Care Act is meant to supply a superior alternative. And yet, here is the Obama administration allowing these subprime insurance plans to persist for two more years.

The individual mandate has, throughout the larger Obamacare debate, been a point of much contention. But in terms of the changes announced earlier this month, the extension of the mandate exemption is simply part and parcel of extending the original policy affording insurers the opportunity to re-offer non-compliant plans while ensuring that customers who could not obtain this option would not be subject to a penalty. There's no logical way to extend the first part without also extending the second. And when the policy was enacted in the first place, reporters took great care to note that this limited exemption of the individual mandate was part of the change. That they don't mention it explicitly now is more about making a news judgment and has nothing to do with keeping a secret. To the minds of these reporters, it's something they reported months ago. (More on that in a minute, so hold that thought.)

Besides which, if all these reporters are keeping some sort of secret, then the same thing can be said of the story written by Louise Radnofsky, who covers these two-year extensions in the same way. Oh, and by the way, Radnofsky covers this beat for The Wall Street Journal -- so maybe before the Journal's editorial writers police the way the rest of the media covered this story, they should get their own house in order first.

But a close read of the first three paragraphs of the editorial reveals a blurring of this issue: It's the individual mandate extension itself that the editors believe "has received zero media attention." Indeed, they seem to believe that they have found the first mention of this in the "seven-page technical bulletin" that described the two-year extension of the restored insurance policies (which the editors seem to think is "an unrelated rule"). For whatever reason, the Wall Street Journal editors seem to suggest that they have ferreted out the December 2013 individual mandate exemption. "Our sources," they write, "only noticed the change this week.""Lo and behold," they intone, implying that this had all somehow escaped the media's attention.

Guess what? It hadn't. This is where things get really embarrassing for the Wall Street Journal editors. Let's get them caught up with the current events of December 2013.


WSJ says mandate exemption has gotten "zero media notice." Here's our December story about it. http://t.co/2IRYXlMhmn via @dylanlscott

— Sam Baker (@sam_baker) March 12, 2014


From Clara Ritger's piece at National Journal:
The Obama administration will not require the millions of Americans who received health-insurance plan cancellation notices to purchase a new policy next year.

They're granting those consumers an exemption from the Affordable Care Act's individual mandate, a Department of Heath and Human Services spokeswoman confirmed. The mandate requires everyone to have health insurance or face a tax penalty, the greater of $95 or 1 percent of income in 2014.

Here's The Huffington Post's Jeffrey Young:
On Thursday, the administration revealed that individuals whose policies were canceled because they don't meet the Affordable Care Act's standards won't be subject to the law's individual mandate, and will be allowed to buy bare-bones catastrophic plans originally intended for people younger than 30 or those who demonstrated financial hardship. Senior administration officials estimated this option will apply to fewer than 500,000 people.

"If people are trying to get coverage by Jan. 1, have a policy that's running out and need that coverage, we are committed to getting them through the system," Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said on HuffPost Live Thursday.

Here's the little-known writer Ezra Klein, writing for an obscure media outlet known as The Washington Post:
Today, the Obama administration announced that people whose insurance plans were canceled this year will "temporarily" be exempted from the law's individual mandate. Here's how they're doing it -- and what it means for the law.
Klein then launches into a detailed account of what happened with these temporary exemptions and the reasoning behind offering them to people who had lost their insurance. Klein's assessment? "This puts the administration on some very difficult-to-defend ground," he writes. The whole post is given the headline, "The individual mandate no longer applies to people whose plans were canceled," which -- I'm sure we'd all agree -- is a pretty clever way of obscuring the fact that the individual mandate no longer applies to people whose plans were canceled.

Also, there's The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Reuters, The Hill, Bloomberg, and ... yes, The Wall Street Journal, once again in an article written by Louise Radnofsky, whose work is tragically flying under the radar of the Journal's eagle-eyed editors.

But it's a good thing the Wall Street Journal editors and their "sources" finally unraveled the mystery this week and issued a complaint about the lack of media coverage -- which is totally true if you except all the news organizations that covered it. It really, really came close to falling between the cracks.

Of course, I haven't told you the best part yet.
It seems Nancy Pelosi was wrong when she said "we have to pass" ObamaCare to "find out what's in it." No one may ever know because the White House keeps treating the Affordable Care Act's text as a mere suggestion subject to day-to-day revision. Its latest political retrofit is the most brazen: President Obama is partly suspending the individual mandate.

...

Individuals whose health plans were canceled will now automatically qualify for a "hardship exemption" from the mandate. If they can't or don't sign up for a new plan, they don't have to pay the tax. They can also get a special category of ObamaCare insurance designed for people under age 30.

And that, ladies and gentlemen, are the editors of The Wall Street Journal, back in December 2013, remarking on the exemption of the individual mandate in the cases of individuals who had their health care plans canceled. Which ... I guess they didn't remember? (Or perhaps they are complicit in their own media conspiracy! Who knows how far this thing goes?)

At any rate, the extension of all of these exemptions was rather relentlessly covered, as it turns out. So I'm forced to conclude that the editors of The Wall Street Journal need some better "sources" (their own reporter will do for a start) and -- I guess some ginkgo biloba for the memory loss?

[Would you like to follow me on Twitter? Because why not?] Reported by Huffington Post 7 hours ago.

Health, Equity & Access under the Law (HEAL) for Immigrant Women and Families Act of 2014 Grants Access to Health Care Coverage

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LULAC Praises the Bill for Allowing Immigrant Families Access to Quality Care

Washington, D.C. (PRWEB) March 13, 2014

LULAC supports the introduction of the Health, Equity & Access under the Law (HEAL) for Immigrant Women and Families Act of 2014. Through HEAL Immigrant Women and Families Act, lawfully present immigrants would be given access to Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) by eliminating the current five-year bar on enrollment and the outdated and restrictive list of “qualified” immigrants. In addition, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) recipients would be able to participate in health care coverage through the Affordable Care Act and are able to enroll in Medicaid or CHIP.

“The bill is a powerful step in improving the health outcomes for immigrant families,” said LULAC National President Margaret Moran. “The current law restricts these hard-working Americans from having access to a valuable resource which would improve their quality of life.”

At last month’s LULAC Legislative Conference over 200 advocates gathered to participate in discussions on issues that most impact the Latino community. At the conference, Representative Michelle Lujan Grisham announced that she would be introducing the HEAL Immigrant Women and Families Act. To watch the announcement, click here.

About LULAC:
The League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) is the nation’s largest and oldest civil rights volunteer-based organization that empowers Hispanic Americans and builds strong Latino communities. Headquartered in Washington, DC, with 900 councils around the United States and Puerto Rico, LULAC’s programs, services and advocacy address the most important issues for Latinos, meeting critical needs of today and the future. For more information, visit http://www.LULAC.org.

### Reported by PRWeb 6 hours ago.

OF COURSE Health Insurance Will Cost More Next Year ... It Does Every Year

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Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius let loose a bombshell during her appearance before a congressional committee Wednesday: Health insurance will cost more next year than it does this year!

Enter House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio).


HHS Secretary confirms: health plan premiums “likely to go up" in 2015 http://t.co/VJC5tLoN6S From @WSJ

— Speaker John Boehner (@SpeakerBoehner) March 13, 2014


Here are some other things that are "likely" to happen in 2015: The sun will rise every morning, "The Big Bang Theory" will be popular, and the Chicago Cubs will not win the World Series.

Health insurance premiums go up. That's what they do. Health insurance gets more expensive every year, like pretty much everything else. In fact, health insurance gets more expensive faster than lots of things, such as wages and overall economic growth.


For the first time ever in the history of insurance! RT: @hillhealthwatch: Premiums will rise in 2015, says Sebelius http://t.co/AjLnMOXrC9

— Jeffrey Young (@JeffYoung) March 12, 2014


This chart from the Henry J. Kaiser Foundation and the Health Research and Educational Trust, based on a survey of employers, shows just how much costlier health insurance has become. Since 1999, premiums for a single worker rose almost 270 percent.
Source: Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation
Those figures refer to job-based health insurance, so prices are different than the cost of individual coverage available via Obamacare's health insurance exchanges, which are for people who don't get coverage from employers. Comprehensive data on the individual market are harder to come by, but a report from online insurance broker eHealth about the products they provide shows rate increases are the norm for these plans, too.

The average premium for an individual rose 32 percent between 2005 and 2012, according to the company's report.

The Wall Street Journal article Boehner tweeted starts like this:
Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said health-insurance premiums are "likely to go up" in 2015, an acknowledgment that the Obama administration doesn't believe the sweeping changes to the health-insurance marketplace will end premium increases in the near term.
Here, the newspaper appears to take President Barack Obama's administration to task for not believing something it never claimed to believe in the first place: That, within the remarkably short period of 24 months, decades of health insurance rate hikes would suddenly reverse themselves.

And here's how the Daily Mail characterized the Health and Human Services secretary's banal statement: "Sebelius admits Obamacare will raise health insurance premiums in 2015."

Granted, Obama and his deputies shoulder blame for making it easy for people to believe that acknowledging something as obvious as increasing health insurance premiums constitutes news.

The health care reform law is called "the Affordable Care Act," for one thing. And the administration routinely cites the lower prices that some people will pay for coverage bought on the health insurance exchanges, chiefly those with low incomes now getting subsidized rates, and those whose pre-existing conditions, gender or age subjected them to higher rates under the old system. What they don't spend much time talking about are the people whose premiums rose this year as a result of the law's benefit mandates and the fact that those other folks are paying less.

And then there's the lingering aroma of Obama's implausible 2008 campaign pledge that his health care policies would save every household $2,500 a year on insurance. Obama's campaign platform isn't the same as the Affordable Care Act, but PolitiFact still rates this a "broken promise."

But the more salient question for the millions of people who've used the health insurance exchanges to buy coverage, and the millions more who buy directly from insurers, and the millions on top of that who are eligible to use the exchanges is: How much will premiums go up in 2015?

Sebelius has a guess, via the Wall Street Journal:
"I think premiums are likely to go up, but at a smaller pace than what we've seen since 2010," Mrs. Sebelius said, adding that she thought the likely increases would be less significant than they had been in the years before the federal health-care law was enacted.
Of course, Sebelius is only speculating. No one knows what health insurance premiums will look like on the exchanges next year.

The relatively small number of younger (and presumably healthier) people who've signed up so far is a cause for concern that mostly sick people bought this coverage, and that they'll run up big medical bills. That would lead insurers to raise rates for 2015 to make up the money. There are guardrails built into the law to mitigate this problem, so the effects on premiums may be modest anyway.

Even health insurance companies don't know what's going to happen because they don't yet know how their new customers will behave, and won't have much time to figure it out before they propose next year's rates to federal and state regulators.

But Sebelius isn't making her rosy prediction in the absence of at least some evidence.

Overall national health care spending has been growing at historically low rates over the last few years, for a start. Whether that's related to the Affordable Care Act is debatable, but the trend isn't. Furthermore, health insurance premiums for job-based plans also have been rising more slowly than usual, as the Kaiser Family Foundation and Health Research and Educational Trust data show. If things continue along this trajectory -- a very big if -- then future annual premium increases could be smaller than what consumers have gotten used to.

John Boehner didn't tweet about any of that, though. Reported by Huffington Post 5 hours ago.

GOP Hits Hard On Obamacare After House Election

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Congressional Republicans attacked Obamacare with new ferocity but sometimes questionable veracity Thursday, energized by a campaign triumph in Florida that gave health care issues their first airing of the election year.

"We're reminded this week that the American people are still concerned about the president's health care law," House Speaker John Boehner said at a news conference where he also challenged Obama to roll back pending cuts for private Medicare coverage plans.

Yet in their zeal to capitalize politically, some Republicans made accusations that were unprovable or even untrue.

Among them was a claim by Boehner that Obamacare had resulted in fewer people having health insurance coverage than before the law was passed. "I believe that to be the case," he said, citing estimates that 6 million Americans have had their insurance canceled in recent months as opposed to administration claims that 4.2 million have signed up for coverage.

Despite Boehner's statement, Census Bureau figures show that the number of insured has risen from 255.3 million in 2009, the year before the law was passed, to 263.2 million in 2012, the most recent year for which figures are available on the agency's website. That represents an increase of nearly 8 million individuals covered by insurance.

Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington, a member of the House GOP leadership, said the administration had made a unilateral change earlier this month that would "essentially delay the individual mandate for the remainder of the year."

The mandate is a requirement for most individuals to purchase health coverage or pay a penalty, and is one of the parts of Obamacare that Republicans object to most strenuously.

Officials at the Health and Human Services Department said that contrary to claims by McMorris Rodgers and others, a change was made in December, not in the past few days. They said it was designed to permit a limited number of individuals to seek a hardship exemption from payment of the penalty for non-compliance.

The charges came as Republicans reaped the fruits of their victory in Tuesday's election, swearing in Rep. David Jolly as the newest member of Congress in place of the late Rep. C.W. (Bill) Young. Jolly won a narrow victory after a race in which the political parties and outside groups spent millions of dollars in television advertising, much of it relating to Obamacare and Medicare.

Other Republicans accused the administration Thursday of acting unilaterally to ease its impact on individuals and insurance companies alike and thus make it more tolerable.

Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said Obama was "cherry-picking" to exempt payments the law makes to insurors from across-the-board spending cuts designed to control deficits.

There was no immediate response from the White House, but the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a non-partisan, private group, said the administration had exempted $8 billion in payments from the cuts, even though similar funds were subject to curtailment last year.

Additionally, more than two dozen Republican senators accused the administration of signing off on a regulation that would "exempt some self-insured health plans, such as those commonly run by unions," from a fee contained in the law for 2015 and 2016.

The blizzard of charges came as House Republicans readied yet another attempt to repeal, roll back or dismantle the health care law, arranging a vote for Friday on a measure to eliminate the so-called individual mandate.

The same measure would revise the system for paying doctors and others who provide care for Medicare patients, ending a stop-gap system in which reimbursement levels are often threatened with cuts until Congress can pass a short-term fix.

The bill will mark the 51st since Republicans won control of the House a little more than two years ago that they have held a vote to undo part or all of Obamacare.

While the bill is certain to clear the House, GOP officials hope to pressure individual Democratic lawmakers to support it, and thus declare their political independence from the controversial health care law as their own re-election campaigns approach.

Boehner also couched his challenge to Obama to rescind pending cuts to private Medicare plans in terms of a recent policy reversal.

In that case, he said that in the face of strong bipartisan opposition, the administration dropped plans to limit Medicare coverage of brand-name medicines in three areas.

"There is similar bipartisan opposition to the law's looming changes to Medicare Advantage, and the president should act in a similar fashion," he said. The private plans have become increasingly popular in recent years, about one-third of all beneficiaries are now enrolled in one.

Critics say many companies that offer the plans receive more money from the government per customer than it costs to cover someone under traditional Medicare. Even if the cuts are enacted, insurors are barred from reducing benefits that are guaranteed by law to all Medicare beneficiaries, meaning the companies must find savings elsewhere. Reported by Huffington Post 4 hours ago.

Obama Uses 'Mom' Character to Push Young People to Buy Obamacare

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Obama Uses 'Mom' Character to Push Young People to Buy Obamacare President Obama is now scolding young people who have resisted buying into Obamacare, using an ad campaign featuring a mother-like character, with crossed arms and raised eyebrow, who warns the young adults that they better get covered--or else.

The president famously sold Obamacare by saying that people up to 26-years old could stay on their parents' health insurance policies. To properly fund his pyramid scheme-like plan, Obama needs a lot more young people paying into the system so that the older folks drawing out for coverage can get paid without bankrupting the system. Unfortunately for Obama, few young people--the so-called "young invincibles"--are interested in signing up.

So, here comes "Mom" to scold young Americans into buying Obamacare coverage.

The image debuted on Twitter this month and features a stern mother, eyebrow raised and arms crossed, stating, "Don't worry about me, I'll just wait here until you #GetCovered." It’s signed, "Mom."

Certainly, the president has had a very hard time selling his healthcare takeover to the youth of America. According to some reports, only 27 percent of enrollees thus far are from that young age bracket that Obama is so desperate to get signed up. This compares unfavorably to the administration's own goal of the 38 percent needed to prevent the financial collapse of the scheme.

When this meme debuted, Ashe Schow of the Washington Examiner did some scolding of her own, telling Obama, "Your lame attempts to connect with the youth have become condescending."

 
 
 
  Reported by Breitbart 4 hours ago.

Deadline Looms for 'High Risk' Enrollees

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Thousands of 'high risk' people with existing medical conditions remain enrolled in a federal health-insurance program slated to close March 31, making it likely the Obama administration again will have to extend the program. Reported by Wall Street Journal 2 hours ago.

Cover Oregon: Exchange won't launch in March

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Officials with Oregon's troubled health insurance exchange said the full online Cover Oregon portal will not be open to the public before the end of March, when nearly all Americans are required to have insurance under the federal health care law. Reported by Miami Herald 2 hours ago.

Shane Osborn: Harry Reid Should Stop Lying About Obamacare

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Shane Osborn: Harry Reid Should Stop Lying About Obamacare U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid stood on the Senate floor recently and feigned outrage over the “horror stories” being told about ObamaCare, unequivocally stating that “all of them are untrue.”  Reid’s comments are disparate from reality and have come to represent exactly how disconnected he is from the plight of the American people.

It is no secret that the Affordable Care Act is having damaging consequences throughout our country.  Every day there is a new story about someone losing their coverage and access to doctors with many facing skyrocket costs. Even The New York Times has reported that “cities, counties, public schools and community colleges around the country have limited or reduced the work hours of part-time employees to avoid having to provide them with health insurance.”  The private sector has been hit hard by ObamaCare with companies facing sometimes as much as triple the healthcare costs or alternatively being forced to lay off droves of employees. In short, the Affordable Care Act is simply unaffordable. 

In my home state of Nebraska, the situation has become untenable. Forbes is predicting that individuals in Nebraska will face an average premium increase of 74 percent, the eighth largest in the country. Moreover, ObamaCare has compounded the problem by severely limiting access to healthcare, so much so that nine insurance companies reportedly pulled out of Nebraska’s medical insurance market, some of them specifically citing ObamaCare as the reason for their withdrawal. It does not take an expert to know that the state of healthcare in Nebraska is in dire condition under this deeply flawed law.

President Obama and his Democrat allies are waging a desperate campaign to save face, searching high and low for any positive spin, while downplaying negative stories documenting how the law is hurting everyday Americans. The President has made some changes, for instance, delaying the enforcement of the health insurance mandate for both medium and large sized companies. Yet, the efforts are clearly politically motivated coming as the election season gears up and are anything but sincere. In addition, he is abusing his authority making changes to a law that even Democrats believe require legislative approval.

And now Senator Reid, the president’s lapdog, is doing his part in the misinformation campaign by unfairly lashing out with spectacular impunity against anyone who criticizes the law, claiming Americans’ stories are universally false. 

But the truth of the matter is that Senator Reid is the one being dishonest as he participated in the lie of the year telling Americans the healthcare law “means making sure you can keep your family’s doctor or keep your health care plan if you like it.”  This has proven to be patently false and the Pulitzer Prize winning PolitiFact declared that a very similar statement made by President Obama was most untruthful of 2013. 

Senator Reid can continue lying to his colleagues and the American people telling them that stories by fellow citizens concerning their suffering under ObamaCare are fabricated, but I can assure you that when I arrive in the U.S. Senate, I will not stand for it. 

In Washington, I will stand up to people like Senator Reid and give a voice to the people of Nebraska and the victims of ObamaCare.  I will fight to repeal and replace this travesty that, contrary to Mr. Reid’s opinion, has resulted in too many horror stories to count.

Osborn is former Nebraska State Treasurer and served in the U.S. Navy.  He is a Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate.

 
 
 
  Reported by Breitbart 1 hour ago.

New health site lets the crowd rate treatment effectiveness

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See which treatment others consider the most effective for whatever may ail you on the CureCrowd site.

(Credit: Screenshot by Dennis O'Reilly/CNET)

You have a back ache. Like millions of others in your situation, you open your browser and search for "back pain." The various health sites in the search results instruct you to apply ice, to apply heat, to rest it, and not to rest it.

They advise you that the pain should go away on its own within 72 hours, while simultaneously informing you that your achy back could be a symptom of a serious, even life-threatening illness, so you should make an appointment to see your doctor right away.

In other words, your guess is as good as theirs.

According to a 2013 Pew Research Center report (PDF), 35 percent of US adults have searched the Web for information about a specific medical condition they believe they or someone else may have. Of the 72 percent of Internet users who report having looked for medical information online in the previous year, more than three out of four began their search at Google, Bing, Yahoo, or another search engine, according to the survey. Thirteen percent of respondents started their search on a specialty health-information site such as WebMD.

When I searched "back pain" on about a dozen popular health-information sites, the recommended treatments for a mild or moderate back ache often contradicted each other. For example, the Treatment & Care page of WebMD's Back Pain Health Center states that "No specific back exercises were found that improved pain or increased functional ability in people with acute back pain."

Go to Wikipedia's back-pain page and you find this statement: "Exercises can be an effective approach to reducing pain, but should be done under supervision of a licensed health professional." (Granted, the entry later points out that exercise may not be as effective for reducing acute back pain as resuming regular activities as quickly as possible.)

Speaking of Wikipedia, consumers aren't the only ones turning to the user-written encyclopedia for treatment advice. The Atlantic's Julie Beck reports on a survey by the IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics that found 50 percent physicians search for health information on Wikipedia. That makes Wikipedia the most popular source for medical information by patients and doctors alike.

Many big-name health sites seem to emphasize professional treatment alternatives over self help. For instance, WebMD's back-treatment page describes about a dozen surgical and nonsurgical procedures before providing, near the very bottom, a link to an explanation of various home treatments.

Similarly, the Mayo Clinic site lists dozens of potential causes of back pain, including polio, thoracic and abdominal aortic aneurysms, osteoporosis, and eyestrain. The site's "When to see a doctor" page helps you determine whether your condition is serious, but it doesn't offer any treatment advice beyond recommending over-the-counter pain medicine and the application of heat or cold.

I understand wanting to err on the side of caution. In this vein, as it were, most of the health-info sites begin by helping you determine whether you have an emergency on your hands, and if so, to call for help immediately (more on identifying medical emergencies below).

-Tapping the crowd for healthcare tips-

A new site called CureCrowd attempts to aggregate the collected wisdom of its visitors to offer ratings of the effectiveness of various medical-treatment alternatives. Enter your malady or a type of treatment in the search box on the site's home page, and then select one of the entries that appears. If there is no entry for your illness or treatment, you can add it to the site.

Start to enter the name of a medical treatment or malady, and then choose one of the entries that appears to view its crowd rating.

(Credit: Screenshot by Dennis O'Reilly/CNET)

The various treatments for the selected malady are graphed with an effectiveness rating of 0 (no improvement or worse) to 4 (cured). The screen at the top of this post shows the initial treatments listed for back pain. To rate a treatment yourself, you have to register with the site by providing an email address and password. You can also use your Facebook ID to sign in.

The nonprescription back-pain treatment rated highest by the CureCrowd crowd is yoga, followed by inversion therapy and massage. However, no more than a few dozen users have rated any single treatment, so the sample may be too low to be statistically significant. Not being a statistician, I'll take the CureCrowd survey results at face value.

CureCrowd invites visitors to complete their own survey of their experiences with various medical treatments. The site was founded by doctors but makes no recommendations of its own. Instead, the service's "medical team" reviews all user treatment suggestions before adding them to its database, according to CureCrowd's About page.

The CureCrowd privacy policy states that the site doesn't use cookies and doesn't share personally identifiable information with third parties other than is required to operate the service or comply with orders from law-enforcement agencies. Unlike many health-info sites, you can access the treatment survey results without having to provide any personal information, apart from that delivered by your browser automatically to all the sites you visit.

-Gauging the trustworthiness of health-info sites-

Online health-information services are not subject to the restrictions of the US Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and other privacy regulations with which healthcare providers must comply. Nor is there a way to determine whether the information the sites provide is accurate and up to date.

The US Department of Health and Human Services' National Institute on Aging provides guidelines for assessing the trustworthiness of online health information. Among the suggestions are to look for the site's sponsor and a way to contact the sponsor. Articles should be attributed to a specific author whose qualifications are listed, and all the site's content should be reviewed by an editorial board or other advisory body.

- Related stories-

· Apple patent application hints at future health-related plans
· iPhone case doubles as a health monitor
· Fitbit Force users report roughly 10,000 cases of skin irritation

Be sure the site has a privacy policy that's easy to find and to make sense of. However, nearly every site reserves the right to change its privacy policy without notice, so share only as much personal information as is necessary. The site should also use a secure connection, so look for "https:" at the beginning of the URL in your browser's address bar.

Last but definitely not least, beware of unrealistic claims of miraculous cures, and be cautious about any offers that require a payment. Always look for corroboration of claims from other sources, and be sure to check with your doctor or other health professional before starting or discontinuing any treatment.

Another resource for evaluating online health information is MedlinePlus, which is operated by the US National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health. The site links to dozens of legitimate public and private sources for health information and journal articles.

The NIH also sponsors the National Human Genome Research Institute, which has created a resource for assessing the reliability of online health information. The page explains how to review scientific and medical literature, and how to judge the quality of educational materials relating to genetic conditions.

One of the resources the NHGRI links to is Trust It or Trash It? The site is designed to help consumers "think critically about the quality of health information" regardless of the information's source. The three options on the home page are "Who said it?", "When did they say it?", and "How do they know?"

The US Federal Trade Commission offers a guide to reliable medical information geared specifically to seniors. Among the organizations the site links to are HealthFinder.gov, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Womenshealth.gov.

The US Department of Health and Human Service's Womenshealth.gov site is one of several government agencies providing safe, reliable health information.

(Credit: Screenshot by Dennis O'Reilly/CNET)

The claims of alternative-medicine purveyors can be particularly difficult to vet. The National Institutes of Health's National Center for Complementary and Alternative medicine provides guidelines and resources for evaluating nontraditional health treatments. As with any treatment suggested online, the agency recommends that you check with your health care provider before trying it.

-Help for your aching back-

After visiting more than a dozen online resources for back-pain sufferers, the one I found most effective is from InsiderMedicine, not only because it combines video and text explanations of the causes and treatments of back pain, but also because it starts by helping you determine whether your pain is an indication of a medical emergency.

In the video, Alan Platt, a physician's assistant and instructor at the Emory School of Medicine, describes the symptoms that might indicate the need to seek immediate medical help, such as severe pain radiating from your stomach to your back, or loss of bladder control.

Another helpful resource in determining whether your back pain requires the attention of a medical professional is Handout on Health: Back Pain from the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. The handout recommends that you call your doctor if the pain is due to a recent fall or is accompanied by fever or numbness/weakness in your legs.

Healthline's SymptomChecker lists 29 possible causes for lower-back pain. The conditions are listed in order from most common to least common, and while the entries are often technical, they include information on when to seek medical attention and recommended at-home treatments.

Medicine.net offers a slideshow that explains the symptoms, causes, and treatments for lower-back pain. The site also features an interactive symptom checker "powered by WebMD" that starts by asking your gender and age, and then has you select a body part and symptom to see a list of possible conditions.
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A Samsung Unpacked drama in 3 acts (or how Samsung mended its event strategy)
To diagnose prostate cancer faster, scientists bring aboard engineers
IBM to take Watson mobile with developer challenge

 
 
 
  Reported by CNET News.com 1 hour ago.

LeBron James, McDonald's Pitchman, Sells ObamaCare

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LeBron James, McDonald's Pitchman, Sells ObamaCare LeBron James endorses McDonald’s, Sprite, and Powerade. Is his product pitch to get young people to sign up for health insurance through the federal government’s exchanges then a kind of penance?

Barack Obama has enlisted the Miami Heat forward to sell ObamaCare. James cut a commercial promoting enrollment in health insurance plans through healthcare.gov. The spot will reportedly run on ESPN, ABC, TNT, and other networks broadcasting basketball games.

“Hi, I’m LeBron James,” the four-time MVP announces in the ad. “I know how important it is to take care of yourself, your friends, and your family. That’s why I wanted to tell you about the health insurance marketplace at healthcare.gov. You can go there to find an affordable health plan as part of the health care law. The deadline to enroll is March 31. So sign up now.”

With the March 31 deadline approaching, the administration has been in a frantic push to enroll Americans, particularly young, healthy Americans, in the government’s exchanges. The Congressional Budget Office estimated that the Affordable Care Act needed seven million enrollees to keep the program solvent but earlier this week the administration announced that just 4.2 million people had enrolled, with numbers declining month-to-month. It’s unclear how many of the enlistees in the program have actually paid anything to the insurance companies providing coverage.

Along with the president’s appearance on Zach Galifianakis’s “Between Two Ferns” earlier this week, the LeBron James ad suggests the administration’s desperation in attracting young people to ObamaCare. Earlier this year, the Department of Health and Human Services reported that 18- to 34-year-olds represented just shy of a quarter of the sign-ups. With an older, sicker population disproportionately comprising the exchange’s insurance pool, many fear that the program will require a massive taxpayer bailout.

James follows NBA greats Alonzo Mourning and Magic Johnson in lending prestige to the president’s policy. Celebrity endorsers convincing their young fans to subsidize the health-care costs of older generations plays as a key part of the president’s plan to keep ObamaCare from running aground.

How is buying into that any better for twentysomethings than biting into a Big Mac?

“Any way I can help the president,” James told Bleacher Report earlier this week, “that’s pretty cool.”

 
 
 
  Reported by Breitbart 7 hours ago.

'High Risk' Federal Health-Insurance Enrollees May Extend Coverage

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The Obama administration said Friday that "high risk" people still enrolled in a federal health-insurance program slated to close may extend their coverage for one more month. Reported by Wall Street Journal 6 hours ago.

Halbig v. Sebelius: Is The Obama IRS Threatening To Ignore A Court Order?

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As readers of this blog know, the plaintiffs in Halbig v. Sebelius and three similar cases are challenging the IRS's attempt to issue certain subsidies and impose certain taxes where it has no authority to do so: in the 34 states that have chosen not to establish a health insurance "exchange" under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Oral arguments in Halbig are scheduled for March 25 before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. Reported by Forbes.com 7 hours ago.

New health insurance rights for same-sex couples

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Acting to expand health insurance access for same-sex couples, the Obama administration said Friday that plans offering benefits for heterosexual couples must also provide coverage for married couples who are of the same gender. Reported by ajc.com 6 hours ago.

Wisconsin Cuts Back On Cancer Program For Low-Income Women, Blaming Obamacare

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WASHINGTON -- Wisconsin is in the midst of dramatically restructuring a health care program for low-income women, attributing the move to the Affordable Care Act. The changes have taken women's health advocates by surprise, and they are now trying to convince the state that setting a six-month timeline to dramatically alter the program is unnecessary and could leave many women without services for breast and cervical cancer.

The Wisconsin Well Woman Program provides preventative health screening services to low-income women who are uninsured or underinsured. The program, which has been around for nearly 20 years, is funded by both the state and the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and has been credited with providing more than 500,000 breast and cervical cancer screenings to more than 70,000 women.

Wisconsin's system is designed to help women locally, with a "coordinating agency" in each of the state's 72 counties aimed at helping women navigate the system of more than 1,000 participating providers.

But on July 1, this entire system is set to change: There will be just 5-10 coordinating agencies in the state and only a handful of health care providers. And although the restructuring is set to go into effect in just a few months, no one knows who those providers will be.

"There are women who are being screened and detected for cancer now who cannot schedule their follow-up appointment because no one knows who the providers will be after July," said Sara Finger, executive director of the Wisconsin Alliance for Women's Health.

The Wisconsin Department of Health Services first announced the change on Dec. 12, when WWWP Director Gale Johnson sent providers a memo telling them about the changes and saying they had six months to get ready. She attributed the downsizing to the fact that the Affordable Care Act now requires employers to fully cover many preventative services, such as mammograms and certain chemoprevention drugs.

"We anticipate that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) funding and the need for WWWP services will diminish in the future as women gain access to expanded health insurance coverage for their more comprehensive health care needs as a result of the Affordable Care Act and recent changes to Wisconsin's BadgerCare Plus [Medicaid] Program. We will no longer be able to support the current service delivery system of over 1000 provider sites," Johnson wrote.

Women's health advocates and agents who spoke with The Huffington Post all said they expected there would be some changes to WWWP due to Obamacare. What they didn't expect was that it would happen so soon and without any input from the people on the ground.

On Feb. 28, Dawn Anderson, executive director of the Wisconsin Breast Cancer Coalition, co-wrote a letter to Gov. Scott Walker (R) expressing concern about the WWWP changes, as first reported by WisPolitics.

"We have not gotten a lot of detail about what motivated this change," Anderson wrote, adding that she hasn't yet heard back from the governor's office. "Why the rush? That is our question. Why the rush? The question to the director has been, 'Do you have projections for how many women are going to fall off and not re-enroll in WWWP?' No, they don't. They don't have data, they don't have numbers. They're just guessing."

Walker's office did not return a request for comment from HuffPost.

In an interview with The Huffington Post on Friday, WWWP Director Johnson confirmed that she did not have any projections on how many women would be leaving WWWP and going into BadgerCare or the federal marketplace.

"That is something that we do not know at this time," she said.

Johnson added that she has been meeting with women's health groups and hearing their concerns, albeit in the last three months -- essentially acknowledging the complaint that these groups were not allowed to give input before the state went forward with its plans.

"We actually made our initial announcement about the proposed changes in December. Since that time, we have talked with different organizations, both in person and via teleconferences," she said.

While some women will likely move away from WWWP and onto the ACA's exchanges, many women will not; a particular concern is undocumented women. And while WWWP will still be there for low-income women, health advocates are worried that the reduced number of providers and agents means services will be less accessible for the individuals who stay with the program.

"If you have to travel really far for a mammogram, you're not going to do it," said Anderson.

Kari Sievert is one of the local coordinating agents with WWWP, serving Madison and Dane Counties.

"We provide case management for every single woman who is enrolled in the program," she said. "Women with limited resources sometimes have significant barriers to care. The case managers help figure out what those barriers are and help them be successful in following through in getting their screenings and/or treatment. ... If a woman has other language or physical needs for her appointment, we help get those arranged. We help with transportation, and we help her figure out the providers she's going to be comfortable with."

"If we take out the piece of case management, women really aren't going to know where to go, and they're going to have a very limited choice of where to go," she added.

Opponents of the restructuring also questioned the state's argument that funding for WWWP may dry up anytime soon. State funding for the program is secured until June 2015, and there are another three years remaining in the agreement with the CDC.

Brittany Behm, a spokeswoman for the CDC, told WisPolitics this week that there are no plans to reduce funding for women's health screenings. In fact, funding for the agency's National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program -- which gives WWWP its CDC funding -- actually increased last year.

"CDC and our grantees are monitoring the impact that the ACA may have on the NBCCEDP program as it is implemented over time," a CDC spokesperson added in an email to HuffPost.

On Friday, Johnson repeatedly refused to give a direct answer about why the state chose July 1 as a deadline. Instead, she simply said that July 1 was the beginning of the third year in the five-year agreement with the CDC.

"We are coming up on our third year of our five-year cooperative agreement with CDC. That will begin the first part of July," said Johnson when asked about the timeline. "Secondly, we wanted to make sure that for the women who continue to need the Well Woman Program, that we wanted them to know, we wanted the providers to know, that the program services will be available to them."

When asked if the state approaching the third year of the funding was the reason for the short timeframe, Johnson again simply replied, "What we're saying is we're coming up on the third year of the five-year cooperative agreement. Which means that we have years three, four and five left. For us, the year three will begin July 1."

WWWP has not been without controversy during Walker's tenure. In 2011, his administration ended Planned Parenthood's contract to provide preventative health screenings under the program.

Walker also has been a vocal opponent of Obamacare and was one of the Republican governors who rejected federal funds to expand Medicaid to more residents in the state. But at the same time, he has used the passage of Obamacare to reduce certain state benefits for some of Wisconsin's neediest.

In addition to the significant restructuring of WWWP, Walker has also called for shifting 77,000 low-income adults -- most of them families -- off of BadgerCare and onto the federal marketplace. Instead, Walker wants to open up BadgerCare to 82,000 childless adults, which tends to be a less expensive demographic to cover.

Finger, the Wisconsin Alliance for Women's Health executive director, said that if the state wants more WWWP women to go onto the federal marketplace, it needs to help them do so.

"We need the state to be making a greater effort to identify the women currently served in this program who could now qualify for BadgerCare or the marketplace and actually help them transition into those options," said Finger. "And until they're ready to do that, and until they have the structure in place to help these women, there is no need to be pulling this rug out from underneath them in six short months."

"There's just no bridge being built for these women in the current program to alternatives like the marketplace," she added. "And without that bridge, we cannot get on board with this proposal." Reported by Huffington Post 6 hours ago.
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