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READ IN: Friday, April 18, 2014: ObamaCare hits 8 million, Transpo bill funding discussions begin, the Mitt Romney book club, LCV drops $1 mil in Colorado

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* A1: * The stories you need to read before your first conference call.

-- President Obama said Thursday that *more than 8 million people have signed up for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act*, after administration officials gave extra time to those who had already begun the sign-up process when open enrollment ended. Obama said Democrats seeking re-election "should forcefully defend and be proud of the fact that millions of people we're helping because of something we did." (Washington Post) Reported by Washington Post 3 hours ago.

President Announces Obamacare Enrollments Hit 8 Million

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President Announces Obamacare Enrollments Hit 8 Million President Announces Obamacare Enrollments Hit 8 Million
President Announces Obamacare Enrollments Hit 8 Million
Headlines
Politics
Has Been Optimized

President Obama announced Thursday that eight million people have signed up for private health insurance under the Affordable Care Act. That number beats the administration’s original goal by one million enrollees. It is also the third piece of good news for the embattled healthcare law, sometimes referred to as Obamacare, to come out this month.

The president hailed the new numbers as a victory. 

“This thing is working,” he told reporters in the White House press briefing room, according to the New York Times. “The Affordable Care Act is covering more people at less cost than most people would have predicted a few months ago.”

That announcement referenced a recent analysis by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO). Time magazine reported earlier this week that the CBO expected Obamacare to cost $104 billion less over the next decade than it had previously expected.

That news followed the announcement from the first of the month that the administration had met its 7-million-enrollee goal in the private healthcare exchanges by the March 31 deadline.

That is all good news for congressional Democrats who are facing stiff opposition in midterm elections later this year. Republicans have been planning for months to use the troubled healthcare rollout against their opponents. The chance to do so may be slipping away with each positive announcement.

"I find it strange that the Republican position on this law is still stuck in the same place that is has always been. They still can't bring themselves to admit that the Affordable Care Act is working," the president was quoted as saying in a Huffington Post story.

Republicans have previously argued that it is unclear whether the enrollment numbers, touted by the White House, are new enrollments or if they are simply enrollments by people who had lost their previous plans under the new laws.

Brendan Buck, a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, R-Oh., said the new announcement was just the president continuing to “obscure the full impact of Obamacare.”

Nevertheless, having the president be the first to make the recent announcement suggests that the administration is willing to meet Republicans head-on in a debate over Obamacare.

“We’ve got a sizable part of the U.S. population, for the first time, that are in a position to enjoy the financial security of health insurance,” the president said. 

That will be a powerful message for Democrats to carry into the midterm elections.

Sources: New York Times, Time, Huffington Post

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Global Market for Neurostimulation Devices to Grow To Nearly $4.1 Billion in 2018; Chronic Pain Segment to Reach $2.8 Billion

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According to a new report from BCC Research the global neurostimulation device market is expected to grow to nearly $4.1 Billion by 2018, with a five-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 1.5%. The chronic pain category, the largest segment in the overall market, is projected to reach $2.8 billion in 2018.

Wellesley, Mass., (PRWEB) April 18, 2014

BCC Research (http://www.bccresearch.com) reveals in its new report, NEUROSTIMULATION: TECHNOLOGIES AND GLOBAL MARKETS, the global neurostimulation device market is expected to grow to nearly $4.1 Billion by 2018, with a five-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 1.5%. The chronic pain category, the largest segment in the overall market, is projected to reach $2.8 billion in 2018.

Currently drug therapies are the primary treatment option for chronic pain; however, these therapies have proven virtually ineffective over the long term. Consequently, neurostimulation devices are increasingly used for pain management. The chronic pain category is the fastest moving segment of the overall market with a CAGR of 1.8%.

The gastrointestinal category, the second-fastest growing segment is moving at CAGR of $1.5% and is projected to reach $8.5 million by 2018.

"Currently, the market is underdeveloped despite technological advances due to low medical acceptance and equally low consumer awareness," says BCC Research pharma analyst Minal Patel. "Patients still fear the prospect of having a foreign object implanted into their bodies. This is anticipated to change with the commercialization of technologically advanced neurostimulators, physician training, increased venture capital and government funding and considerably due to the expansion of health insurance to the underinsured and uninsured."

NEUROSTIMULATION: TECHNOLOGIES AND GLOBAL MARKETS provides an overview of neurostimulation device market, including products, key players, entry-level players, market trend analysis, and factors influencing future incidence. It also presents market analysis by clinical disorder, including annual incidence, trend analysis and factors influencing future predicted surgical volume. Market share and information on key neurostimulation device manufacturers are also discussed.

This report is intended for anyone interested in better understanding the role of the rapidly growing neurostimulation technologies of the broader neuromodulation markets. Executives, consultants, trade associations, clinicians and marketing professionals in the medical device industry, health insurance industry, and experts in the neuroscience and neurosurgery fields will benefit most from this report.

Editors and reporters who wish to speak with the analyst, should contact Steven Cumming at steven.cumming(at)bccresearch(dot)com.

About BCC Research

BCC Research publishes market research reports that make organizations worldwide more profitable with intelligence that drives smart business decisions. These reports cover today's major industrial and technology sectors, including emerging markets. For more than 40 years we've helped customers identify new market opportunities with accurate and reliable data and insight. These include market sizing, forecasting, industry overviews, and identification of significant trends and key competitors. We partner with analysts who are experts in specific areas of industry and technology. Their up-to-date knowledge gives our customers unbiased measurements and assessments of these vital markets. Because our reports offer a global focus, our customers include the top companies in industries around the world as well as universities, major business schools, start-ups, consulting firms and investment companies. BCC Research is a unit of Eli Research LLC.

Data and analysis extracted from this press release must be accompanied by a statement identifying BCC Research LLC, 49-2 Walnut Park, Wellesley, MA 02481, Telephone: (+1) 781-489-7301; Email: editor(at)bccresearch(dot)com as the source and publisher. Thank you. Reported by PRWeb 3 hours ago.

New York recovers almost $23 million in Medicaid overpayments

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Millions of dollars have been spent improperly in connection with Medicaid payments in New York, according to a state report. On Thursday, state Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli released audits that detailed about $23 million in improper payments under Medicaid, the federal program providing health insurance coverage for low-income people. One of the examples is a loophole that resulted in the federal government paying twice for a single instance of health care service. Thousands of the double-dipping… Reported by bizjournals 2 hours ago.

Dobson wins temporary ObamaCare exemption

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Ministry spared ObamaCare requirement to include the morning-after pill, other emergency contraception in its health insurance Reported by FOXNews.com 2 hours ago.

Inside Paul Ryan, Inside the GOP

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After six months attacking Democrats for the alleged faults of Obamacare, Republicans finally went on the offensive with the budget plan developed by Representative Paul Ryan. The Ryan/Republican budget draws a stark contrast between the two parties.

*According to the Ryan budget, America's number one problem is the deficit.* Republicans claim their plan "...reduces deficits by $4.6 trillion over the next ten years... By tackling the debt, this budget will help grow our economy today and ensure the next generation inherits a stronger, more prosperous America."
Nonetheless, national polls have consistently shown that most Americans feel jobs and the economy are the nation's number one problem; we believe America should do something about the jobs crisis before we tackle deficit reduction. A January Pew Research Poll found that 80 percent of respondents wanted to strengthen the U.S. economy and 74 percent wanted to improve "the job situation." Only 63 percent of respondents wanted to reduce the budget deficit. However, 80 percent of Republicans felt this should be a top priority; only 40 percent of Democrats agreed.

In 2014, Republicans are championing an austerity budget that has been decried by economists such as Paul Krugman and Harry Stein and Michael Madowitz, who noted; "The Congressional Budget Office, or CBO, projects that [the Ryan] budget will actually shrink the economy for the next three years."

*The Republican job creation "plan" is tax cuts for the wealthy.* The Ryan budget has no plan for job creation other than cutting the tax rate for the rich from 39.6 percent to 25 percent (thereby handing them an average $265,000 per year tax break) and reducing the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 25 percent. This diminishes federal revenue by $6 trillion. Republicans pray their tax cuts will stimulate the economy and create the lost tax revenue.

Ryan and his fellow Republicans adhere to their failed "trickle down" ideology. Economists Harry Stein and Michael Madowitz observed: "A 2012 paper by Thomas Piketty and Emmanuel Saez also found that cutting top marginal tax rates has not led to economic growth, but that it does seem to help the rich get richer."

*The Ryan budget clobbers the social safety net.* The Republican philosophy is: "For years, the federal government has been encroaching on the institutions of civil society. A distant bureaucracy has been sapping their energy and assuming their role -- when it should have been supporting them." Accordingly, the Ryan budget repeals Obamacare, cuts welfare programs, destroys Medicaid, and turns Medicare into a voucher program.

Despite its rocky start, the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) has provided insurance to more than 13 million uninsured. "[The Ryan] budget repeals the President's onerous health-care law. Instead of putting health-care decisions into the hands of bureaucrats, Congress should pursue patient-centered health-care reforms that actually bring down the cost of care by empowering consumers." (A February Kaiser Family Foundation Poll found that the majority of respondents (56 percent) wanted Congress to keep or improved the Affordable Care Act. Once again, opinions were divided by party; with 83 percent of Democrats positive about Obamacare and 62 percent of Republicans negative.)

The Ryan budget would repeal the Affordable Care Act's expansion of Medicaid and turn the existing Medicaid program into a block grant system administered by the states. For those Americans aged 55 and younger, the Ryan budget would turn Medicare into a voucher program.

*The Republican Budget penalizes the middle class.* A recent ABC News/Washington Post Poll found that when asked "which political party... do you trust to do a better job helping the middle class?" respondents preferred Democrats to Republicans by a 47 percent to 34 percent margin. (In the same poll, 68 percent of respondents described Republicans as "out of touch... with the concerns of most people in the United States.")

The Ryan budget is consistent with the perception of the GOP being out of touch with the 99 percent. Not only does the budget repeal the Affordable Care Act and radically alter Medicare and Medicaid, it also cuts welfare programs, agricultural programs, the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program and the popular Pell grant program for student financial assistance. Republicans cut domestic programs by $791 billion over a decade, while adding $483 billion for the Department of Defense.

*The Republican plan disproportionately impacts women* The National Women's Law Center observed: "[The Ryan budget] changes would leave millions of women and their families without the financial security of high-quality health insurance, unable to access the health care services they need, and facing dramatic increases in their healthcare costs."

It's startling to see the difference in perspective offered in the Ryan/Republican budget and the progressive Better Off Budget. The Democratic budget creates jobs while protecting the middle class and demanding that wealthy Americans pay their fair share.

The Ryan/Republican budget puts the 2014 midterm election in perspective. Americans will choose between a new congress that caters to the 1 percent or one that protects the 99 percent. We will choose between plutocracy or democracy. Reported by Huffington Post 2 hours ago.

Obama: Health plan ‘is working’ and many enrollees are young

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President Obama announced Thursday that 8 million people had signed up for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act and that 35 percent of them were under the age of 35, countering those who predicted that it would attract mainly older and sicker people. Reported by Seattle Times 2 hours ago.

Rep. Tim Huelskamp Claims Kansas Has More Uninsured Since Obamacare

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WASHINGTON -- Rep. Tim Huelskamp (R-Kan.) said Monday he believes the uninsured rate in his state has increased since implementation of the 2010 health care reform law.

"It's hard to get accurate numbers on anything," Huelskamp told his constituents at a town hall in Salina, Kan., according to video posted by Eagle Community Television. "But the numbers we see today is that -- as I understand them -- we believe there are more people uninsured today in Kansas than there were before the president's health care plan went into effect. And I thought the goal was to bring more people into insurance."

Elected to Congress in 2010 as part of the tea party wave, Huelskamp has been a staunch opponent of the Affordable Care Act, repeatedly calling for its repeal and telling Newsmax last fall that his constituents were supportive of conservatives' decision to shut down the government as they attempted to defund the health care law.

But, with the law in effect since January, the national uninsured rate has decreased from a record high of 18 percent during the third quarter of 2013 to 15.6 percent, according to a Gallup poll released Wednesday. The survey found Kansas' uninsured rate was 12.5 percent as of January, which is a marginal decrease since 2012.

A report published in December by the Kansas Health Institute found the state's uninsured rate declined from 13.2 percent to 12.6 percent between 2009 and 2012. Scott Brunner, a senior analyst at the nonprofit organization, told The Huffington Post on Wednesday that "it will be next year before we even get much of a read on the first year of implementation." That's when the U.S. Census Bureau should release more data.

Still, Brunner cast doubt on Huelskamp's claim that Kansas' uninsured population has grown since the health care law was implemented. "I'm trying to think of how you would even get to that. I don't think the data would support that," said Brunner, who led the state's Medicaid program a decade ago.

Huelskamp's office did not return multiple requests for comment on where he got his numbers.

Kansas declined federal funding to create a state-based health insurance exchange under the law and is participating in the federal marketplace. As such, the Kansas Insurance Department receives enrollment statistics from Washington. "We're a federal exchange," Bob Hanson, the agency's communications director, said on Thursday. "We don't know numbers."

The Gallup survey found that states that set up their own exchanges and expanded access to Medicaid have seen greater declines in their uninsured populations than those, such as Kansas, that did neither.

But Kansas' uninsured rate is "certainly lower" than it was in 2009, Brunner said.

Though the health care law remains unpopular nationally and suffered a poor initial rollout under the leadership of Kathleen Sebelius -- who was once the Democratic governor of Kansas -- at least 8 million Americans have signed up for health insurance plans through the federal exchange, President Barack Obama said Thursday.

Sebelius, who resigned last week as Health and Human Services secretary, is reportedly considering a bid for Senate this year in Kansas, according to The New York Times. Reported by Huffington Post 39 minutes ago.

Oracle Wants Everyone To Stop Blaming It For Oregon's 'Disaster Zone' Obamacare Website (ORCL)

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Oracle Wants Everyone To Stop Blaming It For Oregon's 'Disaster Zone' Obamacare Website (ORCL) For months, Oregon officials have publicly blasted software giant Oracle over the state's problematic health insurance exchange website.

Oracle was the state's primary contractor hired to build the website.

Oracle has so far refused to comment publicly. Now, a letter from Oracle's President Safra Catz to Cover Oregon has surfaced giving insight into what Oracle thinks about the whole thing, reports Jeff Manning at the Oregonian

The upshot: Oracle blames the state for mismanaging the project, particularly for its decision not to hire what's known as a systems integrator, or a tech consultant that builds computer systems by combining hardware and software from lots of different tech companies.

Catz has also offered an olive branch: "We encourage Cover Oregon to immediately hire a systems integrator to lead the project, as it represented it would do in the first place," she said in the letter.

Oregon's website was supposed to be the crown jewel of state health insurance exchanges. It was to be the model by which other states could build their own. Now it's the poster child of the awful technical rollout of Obamacare. It has been called "the worst disaster zone" of state exchanges by the Washington Post's Ezra Klein.

The site has cost $200 million so far, with more than $130 million going to Oracle. Oracle wants to charge still more reports Manning.

After missing deadline after deadline, the site is limping along today, requiring people to use paper forms for at least part of the application process. All told, about 217,000 Oregonians have enrolled in coverage through Cover Oregon, reports the Statesman Journal. Work on the website continues.

Like all massive IT projects that spiral out of control (and research shows that 66% of them do), the truth is there's plenty of blame to go around.

Oracle declined to comment.

*SEE ALSO: The Stress Of Being A Computer Programmer Is Literally Driving Many Of Them Crazy*

Join the conversation about this story » Reported by Business Insider 23 hours ago.

Clock ticking for states to adopt health exchanges

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More than 30 states that defaulted to the federal government to run their health insurance markets under President Barack Obama's health care law must decide if they want to take a crack at it themselves. Time is running out with hundreds of millions of dollars in federal money at stake. Reported by Miami Herald 23 hours ago.

Time's Running Out For States To Adopt Health Exchanges

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CHICAGO (AP) — For the more than 30 states that defaulted to the federal government under President Barack Obama's health care law, time may be running out to decide whether to create their own state-run insurance exchanges.

With the chance to apply for hundreds of millions of dollars in federal help set to expire in a few months, even Obama's home state of Illinois is expressing little interest in taking the next step. The law's disastrous rollout and lingering unpopularity have made it risky to raise the issue in a tense election year despite Obama's announcement Thursday that 8 million Americans have signed up for subsidized private insurance. Health care advocates are pushing the Democrats who control the Illinois Legislature to pass a measure enabling a state exchange. They note many states already running their own were able to enroll customers at a faster clip and will have more opportunity to scrutinize insurance rate increases for their residents.

But it has barely been mentioned in the state capital of Springfield, with just weeks left to take action before the Legislature adjourns.

"The Democrats run this state. President Obama's from Illinois. It's up to them to do it," said Jim Duffett of the Campaign for Better Health Care, a nonprofit coalition that has been helping Illinois residents sign up for coverage. "Who's in power makes a difference; you can't hide from it anymore."

Many of the remaining states that declined to adopt their own exchanges are controlled by Republicans, some of whom want to eliminate what they call "Obamacare." But Sonya Schwartz of the Georgetown University Health Policy Institute, which has been tracking states' implementation of the health law, puts Illinois at the top of a list of states more likely to approve an exchange. Her list also includes Iowa, Arkansas, Michigan, West Virginia, New Hampshire and Delaware.

But the same reluctance is holding back many of those states, despite a November deadline to get access to funds to help secure a state exchange, with in Illinois' case could mean up to $500 million. In Michigan, Republican Gov. Rick Snyder prefers creating a state-run exchange, but has been rebuffed by the GOP-controlled Legislature. In Iowa, where the health care law is expected to be a big issue in a U.S. Senate race, the Legislature is expected to adjourn soon without any action on a state-run exchange.

In Illinois, Republicans are expected to exploit the health law's problems in election campaigns against incumbent Democrats in Congress, including Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Democrat in the U.S. Senate.

The governor's race, between incumbent Democrat Pat Quinn and his Republican opponent, wealthy businessman Bruce Rauner, is expected to be one of the most hotly contested in the nation.

While state lawmakers have less connection to the federal law, the idea of any state measure associated with the Affordable Care Act remains unpopular with both parties, said Pat Brady, a former Illinois GOP chairman.

"A lot of people don't want to have their names associated with it," Brady said.

The health care law was designed for each state to run its own insurance marketplace, but just 16 states and Washington, D.C., opted to do so. The federal government ended up running exchanges for the other states, plus Idaho and New Mexico, which ran out of time to fully implement their own exchanges.

Illinois and a handful of other states formed partnerships with the federal government, a hybrid model that allowed the states access to a first level of federal grants. In Illinois, that totaled nearly $154 million, roughly half of which has been spent or committed to outreach workers, advertising, a telephone help desk and analysis of health insurance plans.

With a few notable exceptions, state-run exchanges outpaced the ones run by the federal government. The Oregon exchange's technology glitches forced people to sign up using a time-consuming hybrid paper-online process. Earlier this month, Maryland chose to replace its glitch-filled exchange with technology from Connecticut at an estimated cost of $40 million to $50 million.

Time is now running out for the final round of federal grant funding, which requires state enabling legislation or a governor's executive order. The grants can't be awarded after Jan. 1, 2015, and federal rules set Nov. 14 as the deadline for states to apply.

"This is your last chance to pull this off," Schwartz said.

However, many state legislatures will soon adjourn their spring sessions, leaving election-minded lawmakers free to go home and campaign until November.

In Illinois, Duffett's group is trying to collect pledges of support from lawmakers to persuade Democratic leaders to introduce a bill creating an exchange before lawmakers adjourn on May 31. But a spokesman for House Speaker Michael Madigan, who is also the state Democratic Party chairman, acknowledged a lack of "real interest" in pursuing an exchange but wouldn't rule it out "if a consensus would develop."

Christopher Mooney, director of the University of Illinois' Institute of Government and Public Affairs, said the health law is "probably" more popular in Obama's home state than elsewhere, and that individual state lawmakers know whether their smaller districts either support or oppose it. But he said legislators normally like to avoid "unpleasant stuff," especially in an election year.

"It's such a polarizing issue, I can easily imagine them saying, 'Why bother?'" Mooney said.

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Associated Press writer David Eggert in Lansing, Mich., contributed to this report.

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Associated Press medical writer Carla K. Johnson can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/CarlaKJohnson Reported by Huffington Post 22 hours ago.

Suddenly Health Insurance Is Not for Sale

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Suddenly Health Insurance Is Not for Sale Reported by ajc.com 22 hours ago.

Republicans Aren't Moving On From Obamacare

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The Republican National Committee sent a message to President Barack Obama Friday: the GOP is not moving on from Obamacare.

The Republicans' message came in the form of a web video, posted one day after the president announced 8 million people had signed up for private health insurance using the exchanges created by the Affordable Care Act. During the announcement, Obama said it was time for Republicans "to move on to something else," and chastised states that chose not to expand Medicaid "for no other reason than political spite" against him.

"You have 5 million people who could be having health insurance right now at no cost to these states, zero cost to these states, other than ideological reasons, they have chosen not to provide health insurance for their citizens," Obama said during a press conference Thursday. "That's wrong. It should stop. Those folks should be able to get health insurance like everybody else."

Republicans argued that "Americans don't think it's time to move on" in the video. Some prominent Republicans personally promised to keep up the fight against Obamacare, with House Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) saying "Republicans cannot and will not accept this law." The office of House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) also released a statement, according to NBC:
If the president is so confident in his numbers, there is no reason not to release transparent and complete enrollment data, and answer the questions, how many enrollees were previously uninsured and how many people had lost their previous plans due to Obamacare.
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) -- who led the charge in 2013 to tie funding for Obamacare to a continuing resolution to the fund the government, a strategy that ultimately shut down the government for 16 days, cost $2 billion in lost productivity and made no changes to the health care law -- tweeted the following after Obama's remarks Thursday:


The repeal debate is far from over. #FullRepeal

— Senator Ted Cruz (@SenTedCruz) April 17, 2014


*Watch the RNC's web video above.* Reported by Huffington Post 21 hours ago.

Hamstreet to brokers: Be patient, Cover Oregon is working on those commissions

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Cover Oregon’s new leadership appears to be addressing the problem, reported earlier this week, of unpaid commissions to brokers who have written health insurance policies using the exchange. David Berg, director of Lake Oswego-based Spc Benefit Advisors, said he met with the new leadership at Cover Oregon concerning commissions, which the exchange has been slow to pay. One good piece of news is that commissions will be paid on the entire premium, including the federal subsidy. The federal government… Reported by bizjournals 21 hours ago.

Hobby Lobby Leaders Hope To Spread Bible Course To Thousands Of Schools

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The president of a company that is currently challenging Obamacare laws before the Supreme Court is also trying to bring a class about the Bible to thousands of schools.

Earlier this week, Mustang Public Schools in Oklahoma voted to adopt a Bible course developed under the leadership of Hobby Lobby president Steve Green, according to The Washington Post. Those involved with the course told the outlet they hope other school districts will soon follow suit.

The course, which Mustang schools will offer as an elective during the fall 2014 semester, focuses on the history of the Bible and the influence of the Old and New Testaments, according to the Christian Post. Mustang Schools Superintendent Sean McDaniel told the outlet the course is totally nonsectarian and was written by scholars with various religious backgrounds.

"The curriculum has been through a rigorous review to check for bias and ensure the content is neutral," McDaniel told the Christian post.

However, others are concerned the course -- which reportedly does not violate the separation of church and state -- could be more dangerous in practice.

A blog post by Americans United For Separation Of Church And State points to a 2013 speech Green gave to the National Bible Association as evidence of his religious agenda. During the speech, Green said the purpose of the course is to “reintroduce this book to this nation. This nation is in danger because of its ignorance of what God has taught.”

Green Scholars Initiative boss Jerry Pattengale, whose organization helped oversee the development of the course’s curriculum, spoke to the Washington Post about the speech, saying, “The curriculum may or may not espouse those views. The last people (Green) wanted to hire were scholars who would embellish the facts to support his religious position."

Green and his family are currently arguing they should be exempt from providing their thousands of Hobby Lobby employees with health insurance coverage for 20 federally approved methods of birth control, as required by the Affordable Care Act. The family says these requirements are infringing upon their religious freedom. Reported by Huffington Post 20 hours ago.

Dear President Obama

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Dear President Obama,

I wanted to make out with you. I was so in awe of the way you managed to get Obamacare through that insane Congress, run mostly by a bunch of Republicans. (OK, maybe they are not all lunatics, just the obstructionist, obnoxious ones -- does that narrow it down?)

And now you have something like eight million people signed up, despite all the glitches and the fights and the name calling -- you prevailed! Congratulations on a worthy accomplishment, bringing health care to millions of Americans. Whoohoo!

Except for one thing. For those of us who had to give up our insurance policies (because they were phased out) and sign up for an ACA exchange -- we are now SCREWED. BIG TIME.

Thank you, President Obama, for leading us up the river (or is it down?) with no paddle. Thank you, American doctors, for NOT accepting any of these new policies and THANK YOU, insurance companies, for your part in this mess, which is too mild a word for what has been created.

We cannot find doctors to treat us. I have a knee injury which suddenly got much worse, so I went in to see my internist, God bless him, he's one of the few doctors I know who takes the new insurance. And then he gave me several names of orthopedists to call and I called every one of them and when I told them the insurance plan I have -- EMPIRE BLUE CROSS, Silver Guided Access -- they said, "Oh, sorry. We don't take that."

Twelve specialists. I called 12 and then I called more (I lost count) and then I called Empire Blue Cross to register a complaint and ask for help with this and the representative apologized and said, "We are so sorry. Many doctors aren't accepting the insurance just yet and we are going crazy." And then she called numerous orthopedists who, according to their website, are signed up for these plans and they also said, "No. We are not accepting that insurance."

Now, why aren't the doctors accepting the insurance? Didn't they sign the Hippocratic Oath which states something like "First do no harm"? Well, they are harming us. I suspect they're not getting paid as much, or that it's taking forever, or whatever and that the insurance companies are just as complicit in this debacle -- but ATTENTION MUST BE PAID. My injury is just my knee, so what if I can't walk? But what about people who are dying? People with life-threatening illness? Can they no longer be treated? Are hospitals refusing to accept these plans as well?

PRESIDENT OBAMA, I'm not saying throw it out, but I am saying: DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT. And don't put it into committee or write a report. Get on the f*cking phone and fix it. Make the insurance companies talk to the doctors and get them to agree to take insurance plans that are being used by eight million Americans and eventually more -- because it's the right thing to do.

And obstructionist Republicans, pick another battle. This one is beneath you. Americans should have the right to affordable health care. Move on. Let it go. Shut up about it. You fought social security when that was introduced and where would this country have been without social security? What have you got against having a healthy workforce? Do you like having employees out sick all the time? How the hell is your money going to trickle down to us if you can't get your job-creating-doodads made and ready to sell?

I'm assuming you are aware of this issue, President Obama -- the fact that doctors are refusing to take your insurance. I'm assuming you get that this is not acceptable. What kind of country do we live in? Never mind, I know. I know there are people (the majority of them members of the Tea Party) who don't want people to have health insurance, or minimum wage, or equal pay for equal work, or jobs, or the right to marry, or benefits for veterans or ANYTHING that is humane.

And I know that doctors didn't get into medicine just to get rich, right? I believe they genuinely care about saving lives. And insurance companies are not only in it for the... oh, nevermind.

Affordable health care is a good idea -- it's just not there yet. It's a beautiful car and I can't wait to drive it, but it's missing a fourth wheel. I hope when you met with the state insurance people before your press conference you gave them what for. If not, please give them my phone number. I have a few thoughts on the matter.

All I'm saying is let's just find a way to fix this, OK, President Obama? And then I can make out with you.

Best,

Robin Reported by Huffington Post 20 hours ago.

Mark Emmert's Clown Show

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NCAA president Dr. Mark Emmert was on ESPN"s Mike and Mike this morning with Jorge Sedano and Mike Golic to spout his increasingly desperate sounding pabulum about the NCAA's commitment to change and to its athletes.

Some especially choice comments:

1) About transfer rules, Emmert purported to agree that they were unfair. He said: "You don't want to be punitive to an athlete who makes a change, obviously, but you don't want to have coaches recruiting people off other people's benches." This is absolutely classic NCAA stuff -- in order to prevent the coaches from engaging in improper practices, we're going to punish the players. Brilliant. In professional sports, they have this thing called "tampering." Why can't the NCAA have such a rule? Hint: Their main concern isn't coaches recruiting off each other's benches. It's about restricting player movement to increase control over them.

2) Emmert repeated the claim that the NCAA is just an amalgam of its member schools subject to the decisions and preferences of its members and decisions take a long time to make. Or they don't get made at all. Fine. But if your argument for why you can't do a better job of meeting the players needs -- which you profess so much concern for -- is that you preside over a slow, unwieldy apparatus, you're only adding to the players' case that some other mechanism might be necessary to prompt the changes you say you favor. Like mandated bargaining. Only if you are incapable of conceiving of the players as adults with minimally valid rights would you believe that there are only two possible choices -- 1) either wait for the NCAA to spend years at a time ruminating over issues like "full cost of attendance" 2) or DESTROY THE WORLD AS WE KNOW IT.

3) Not surprisingly, Emmert's least coherent comments came when he tried to address all of the horrible things that would happen if unionization were to come to pass. He claimed that universities would no longer cover health insurance because that would be covered by workmen's compensation. Totally, Mark. No employers in the United States cover health care. I am sure that you, for example, as an employee of the NCAA must rely solely on workers' comp to cover your own medical bills.

(Not making that up. He actually said that).

Dr. Emmert also said that such a decision would "completely" change the relationship between coach and player, because he would no longer be "a coach, a teacher or a mentor." Exactly, just like there are no coaches in the NFL or NBA.

But my favorite one, which has gotten less attention in the Twitterverse than it should is that since they don't allow "public unions in parts of the South" he "guessed" they'd be "scab labor." Absolutely. Every single public employee in the southern United States, including yours truly, is a scab, because state laws prevent us from collectively bargaining. Again, not making that up. He actually said that.

The whole interview was an embarrassment, from his insistence that recent changes have nothing to do with the unionization effort, to his pathetic claim that many universities would just go to Division III sports if unions became a reality -- you wanna bet, Mark, that schools are not going to walk away from these gargantuan television contracts? -- to his idiotic statements about scabs and health insurance.

This is what happens when you try to defend the indefensible.

Check out my musings on ESPN and other sports media here. Reported by Huffington Post 19 hours ago.

Steven R. Gerst of SRG Consulting Discusses Health Informatics: Integrating Science and Technology Will be Crucial to the Affordable Care Act Reforms

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Dr. Steven R Gerst is an innovator in the field of Health Informatics, a field that is setting new standards in healthcare. Learn more at: http://www.stevenrgerst.com.

Fort Lauderdale, FL (PRWEB) April 18, 2014

Healthcare in the United States is on the verge of a major shift. The latest advancements in research and technology provide the potential to increase patient longevity, and streamline the practice of medicine. The Affordable Care Act's goal is to cut costs by making health insurance more affordable. Health Informatics has become a crucial component in cutting costs and improving up to date system-wide knowledge of patients' needs. Health informatics has gained in popularity recently as a result of the Affordable Care Act mandate for electronic medical records.

Health Informatics is the realization of that potential of streamlining the healthcare system. Health Informatics is the integration of information technology, computer science and health care, with the goal of developing systems that will create improved operating capabilities in three basic sectors of health care: clinical, administrative and economic.

Health Informatics facilitates the collection, organization, and securing of information systems and health related data in order to greatly improve the delivery of health care to patients. It also creates a standardized method for billing, storing medical records, and exchanging medical information between health care providers. Health Informatics also advances the development of information systems that aid in vital clinical research.

A new segment of workers will be needed by hospitals and medicare staff to handle technology support and the implementation of data systems required to adhere to ACA.

Dr. Steven R Gerst with SRG Consulting: Leading Expert in the Field of Health Informatics.

Dr. Steven R. Gerst is a top expert in the field of Health Informatics, having graduated from Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons (M.D.), Columbia College (B.A.), Columbia School of Public Health (M.B.A.) and the Goizueta School of Business at Emory University (M.B.A.). For more information about Dr. Gerst, go to http://stevenrgerst.com.

He has worked with the Broward Health System, Memorial Health System and Jackson Memorial Health System on projects involving Florida Statewide ITN Medicaid, impacting over 500,000 Medicaid patients in South Florida.

Dr. Steven Gerst is also the Dean Emeritus of the Masters of Science Program in Applied Health Informatics at Bryan University, where he also serves as on the Board of Advisors and is a member of the faculty. Additionally, Dr. Gerst serves as an Adjunct Biomedical Informatics professor at Nova Southeastern University College of Osteopathic Medicine in Davie, Florida.

In a recent comment, Dr. Steven Gerst talks about the importance of health informatics and why he went into the field.

“I chose to go into health informatics because of the job opportunities. The U.S. healthcare system is by far the largest industry in the world, with currently over 2.9 trillion dollars or 17.6 percent of our economy going to 4.8 trillion meaning over 20% of our 14 trillion dollar economy in the next 8 years. Most of that is going to be spent on patient care and health informatics in order to manage these patients.” This video explains the importance of the health informatics field, especially in light with the major changes going on in health insurance reform in the last couple of years.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GoUNlZdPo6M

New workers will be needed to manage health care records of millions of individuals who need urgent care from doctors, whether treatment is needed in primary care facilities, hospitals, urgent care clinics, or community clinics.

Dr. Gerst lectures on the new reforms in ACA. He is also a Diplomat in the American College of Healthcare Executives and is currently completing his Doctorate in Business Administration and Masters in Taxation. He currently serves on the Board of Advisors of Allevion, Inc., an “early stage Healthcare Logistics Company.”

Dr. Steven R. Gerst SRG Consulting: Sharing and achieving a vision to improve health care overall.

When full, wide spread implementation is achieved between primary care, general, and specialized practices, hospitals, and rehabilitation facilities, Health Informatics enables seamless communication between health care providers, making vital data immediately accessible to them. This results in improved patient care, better health outcomes for patients, stronger clinician-patient relationships, and restructured clinical support systems.

Health Informatics includes the development of tools that promote patient care which is effective, timely, safe, patient focused, and unbiased. Dr. Steven R. Gerst educates others in the healthcare industry on Health Informatics, which focuses on the study of methods, devices, and resources for the management of health information.

To learn more about the groundbreaking field of Health Informatics and Dr. Steven R. Gerst, visit http://stevenrgerst.com. Reported by PRWeb 20 hours ago.

A Very Good Friday

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The good news today is that eight million people have now signed up for medical insurance under the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

The better news is that, of those eight million, more than a third were under the age of 35.

The best news is that, in addition to those eight million signees, three million more have signed up for expanded Medicaid made possible by the ACA, another three million young people are now covered under their parents' health insurance plans, and an additional five million individuals have signed up for non-exchange plans.

All of this is thanks to Obamacare. The enrollment numbers exceeded projections by more than one million, and the fact that at least a third of those enrollees were under 35, with another three million under 26 year olds covered by Mom and Dad's plan, was especially important. The 18-35 year olds are the so-called "young invincibles." They must be part of the covered population if Obamacare is to succeed. In fact, the only way to keep premiums down in a system that delivers health care through market based insurance is to make sure the insured pool is large enough for the healthy young to effectively absorb the cost of caring for the aged sick. And this is exactly what the ACA is doing.

Everyone should be cheering.

But, of course, everyone isn't.

John Boehner greeted the news of eight million enrollees by asserting that the president was ignoring the "havoc" the law ostensibly created for the "hundreds of thousands" who had plans they liked but had to re-enroll in new plans that met the ACA's minimal standards. Others complained that any claim of success was premature -- either because the newly enrolled might not pay their premiums, or because it was not clear how many of those enrollees actually were uninsured prior to Obamacare, or because health care premiums and costs are still rising.

None of these claims has merit.

Private insurance companies are in the business of making money. For years, they did so by denying coverage to those with pre-existing conditions and by otherwise cherry picking premium payers to increase the chances that those payers would never actually need health care. The minimalist plans put out of business by the ACA simply aided and abetted this strategy. Most of them were high deductible, minimal coverage or catastrophic plans; as such, they did not encourage or incentivize wellness because they did not cover a lot of the routine care needed to do so, especially routine care for women.

One of the goals of Obamacare is to radically reduce the rate of medical inflation which for decades has been running at well in excess of the inflation rate as a whole. And one way to do this is to incentivize the preventive or routine care that cures small health problems before they become large, expensive ones. The minimalist plans did not do this.

The minimalist plans also threatened to capture the young. The plans were cheap and the provided care was thin. In other words, it was made to order for the young invincibles who thought they'd never get sick or be hospitalized. An insurance system, however, can't keep costs down if it gives away the young and healthy or, more particularly, if it allows the cost savings inherent in good health to be captured by the young and healthy -- in the form of much lower premiums, but only for them -- rather than being spread over the risk pool as a whole.

Nor do any of the remaining complaints carry weight.

As to overall cost, the available data from the Society of Actuaries -- in other words, from the people who know how to count -- tells us that premium hikes will actually be much less than expected. This is the reason the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) recently lowered its estimate of the federal budgetary cost of Obamacare by $104 billion over ten years.

As to the cry that enrollees will not pay their bills, this is simply chimerical. There is really no evidence for this claim and a lot that refutes it. The Department of Health and Human Services estimates that 80 percent of the enrollees already have paid their bills. And other than the rantings of the anti-Obama right wing, there is nothing about the other 20 percent which credibly suggests they are a unique group of deadbeats.

Finally, the notion that enrollment is not catching the uninsured is also baseless. The CBO expects the number of uninsured to decline materially this year, and private survey data indicates that the share of Americans without insurance went down by about 20 percent in the six months since the state and federal exchanges opened in October.

So, will the diehards be satisfied and stop demanding mindless votes to repeal in the GOP House of Representatives?

Uh...

Never.

The problems with Obamacare are neither administrative nor economic.

They are political.

The GOP is hell bent on re-capturing the Senate. It needs a net gain of six seats to do so, and the conditions for re-capture are particularly auspicious this year. Of the 36 Senate seats up for election, 22 are held by Democrats and 14 by Republicans. For the GOP, the Democrats who they believe can be beat are in seven states -- Montana, South Dakota, Arkansas, Louisiana, North Carolina, West Virginia and Alaska. Obamacare is popular in none of them, and though state exchanges, where they have been created, have worked very well, they haven't been created in thirty two states, nor in any of seven states the GOP is now targeting to take back the Senate.

Similarly, while the ACA expands Medicaid eligibility and provides enormous federal subsidies to defer the cost, four of the seven GOP target states wouldn't do that either. The result is that the voters in those states have little positive experience with Obamacare, a lot of negative experience (they all defaulted to the federal marketplace given the absence of state exchanges and thus were subject to the disastrous roll-out last fall), and an echo chamber of GOP opposition that will get progressively louder as we head toward November.

These political battles will continue. If past is prologue, they may even continue for generations, as has been the case with Social Security and Medicare since their inceptions.

But for now, this is still a very good Friday. The early data from Obamacare is in. And it undeniably proves that...

Sometimes...

Big Government works! Reported by Huffington Post 20 hours ago.

Little-Known Democrat Tries To Unseat Scott Walker

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MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Wisconsin Democrats and their allies who are trying to take out Republican Gov. Scott Walker have invested all their hopes in Mary Burke, a Harvard-educated political newcomer whose father started Trek Bicycle when she was a teenager.

For Democrats and their friends in organized labor, this race is personal. They mean to avenge Walker's evisceration of union power as he builds his resume for a possible presidential run. But for Burke, the campaign also poses an awkward challenge: She can't talk too stridently about her opponent's most provocative actions for fear of alienating independent voters, many of whom supported both Walker's union crackdown and President Barack Obama's re-election bid. And they will decide this contest, too.

That forces Burke to talk about supporting unions, but not to the point of overturning the law that took away nearly all collective-bargaining rights for public workers. She's even spoken in favor of the law's requirement that workers pay more for their health insurance and pension benefits.

"She flirts with that, and I think that's the best anyone is going to come up with in a campaign," said John Matthews, president of the Madison teachers union.

Walker and Republicans have successfully convinced voters that the law was necessary, making it difficult for Burke to speak out too strongly against it, Matthews said.

Such delicate maneuvering would be a test for even a seasoned office seeker. But this is Burke's first statewide campaign after working as a state commerce secretary and a Trek executive. The 54-year-old launched the bid less than two years after being elected to her first position, a seat on the Madison school board.

Walker pushed his signature legislation through the Republican-controlled Legislature in 2011, effectively ending collective bargaining for most public workers. Ever since, opponents have been searching for the right candidate to challenge him.

After failing with Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett in the 2012 recall, their hopes now rest with Burke, a businesswoman who's been crisscrossing Wisconsin introducing herself to voters as an alternative to Walker, the only governor in U.S. history to survive a recall.

Burke is hitting traditional Democratic issues like job creation and gay marriage instead of focusing on undoing the union law that attracted protests as large as 100,000 people and catapulted Walker onto the national stage.

Both sides seem to have concluded that the union law is off the agenda. Even the very unions hurt most by Walker's reforms are making their case against the governor based on other factors.

That's largely because Walker and Burke are going after the same 7 percent to 10 percent of voters that polls show are undecided. The so-called "Walker-Obama" voters are people who voted against recalling Walker in 2012 but said in exit polls that they intended to vote for Obama that fall.

Walker won the recall by 6.8 percentage points. Obama carried Wisconsin by 6.9 points.

A poll conducted just before the Walker recall showed that a majority of voters preferred to keep the union law rather than undo it, including 53 percent of the key independent-voter demographic.

Democrats learned from the recall that they can't win on the union issue alone. In fact, the recall candidate who promised to veto any state budget that did not undo the law could not even win the Democratic primary that year.

Burke, who declined to comment for this story, has been careful to articulate her support for collective bargaining and opposition to Act 10, but she won't promise to work on repealing it.

Burke's campaign website does not even mention her position on the union law, instead touting her jobs plan, her support for gay marriage and her opposition to school vouchers. A news release announcing her endorsement by the unions representing Wisconsin teachers, state employees and others failed to mention her view on the law known as Act 10.

"As a whole, we believe she wants what we want," said Betsy Kippers, president of the state teachers union. "There are many issues that are important to our members, not just Act 10."

Voters whose most important issue is Act 10 have already decided whether they're with Walker or Burke, said Democratic state Sen. Tim Cullen. He described it as a "second-tier" issue now, behind others like jobs and the economy.

Act 10 required public workers — including teachers and most state employees — to pay more for their health insurance and pensions. It also took away their ability to collectively bargain over workplace-safety, vacations, seniority rights and a myriad of other issues in union contracts. Bargaining is now limited to general wage increases that do not exceed inflation.

The law deflated the political power of unions such as the Wisconsin Education Association Council, which represents teachers statewide. Since the measure passed, the union has slashed spending, cut staff and looked at merging with another union representing mostly college and university faculty.

Walker and his supporters say Act 10, along with other budget cuts meant to address a $3.6 billion shortfall, turned the state around and put it in position to pass nearly $2 billion in tax cuts during Walker's term.

The governor and Republicans plan to make those tax cuts a central focus of their arguments for re-election this fall. Reported by Huffington Post 20 hours ago.
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