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Best Car Insurance Discounts for Used Car Owners Featured at Insurer Portal Online

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Some of the best car insurance discounts for owners of used vehicles are now featured for review at the Quotes Pros website at http://quotespros.com/auto-insurance.html.

Los Angeles, CA (PRWEB) August 24, 2014

A used motor vehicle owner in the U.S. could pay more for insurance coverage due partly to vehicle age, according to insurer industry reports. The Quotes Pros company is now helping to showcase the best car insurance discounts for owners of used vehicles this year at http://quotespros.com/auto-insurance.html.

The review system is now setup to provide a way to accurately estimate the annual prices for different coverage formats. The system is now linked with providers that are quoting plans for liability, SR22, full coverage and other popular policies that can be priced easily this year.

"A used motor vehicle owner who has a current insurance policy can still use our finder tool to locate a lower rate from an in-state or out of state agency," said one Quotes Pros source.

The policy database that is now available to review for price changes and other discounts offers a secure way to locate annual costs compared with providing information by telephone to insurers. A consumer will be asked to enter a zip code to begin browsing the new data that is available.

"There are different prices linked to different policies that appear in our database and we're helping consumers to review these costs easily," added the source.

The Quotes Pros company is planning to boost the offerings that the public can access inside of its platform this year due to entry of new insurer partners. Instead of publishing low rates for automobile insurance, special prices are now available to review for health insurance at http://quotespros.com/health-insurance.html.

About QuotesPros.com

The QuotesPros.com company uses a digital tool to help the public to quote vehicle insurance policies for no cost on the Internet. The system for immediate research that is now in place allows the public to locate pricing using only zip code data. The QuotesPros.com company has increased the numbers of providers that any person can review in the company system to showcase life, health, renters, business and other forms of coverage pricing. Reported by PRWeb 22 hours ago.

State Auto Insurance Agencies Now Quoting Plans by Zip Codes at Online Insurance Website

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State auto insurance agency pricing is now being displayed through use of zip codes at the Quotes Pros website at http://quotespros.com/auto-insurance.html.

Jacksonville, FL (PRWEB) August 24, 2014

A new method to find insurance agencies by a zip code is being offered to users of the Quotes Pros website online. Affordable rates from state auto insurance agencies can now be viewed using the open system for car owners at http://quotespros.com/auto-insurance.html.

The quoted plans are offered from agencies that are licensed in all parts of the U.S. to help owners of new or used vehicles find state minimum coverage. Because price data is dependent on the location of a car owner, a zip code is a primary data type used to supply the calculated rates available.

"The presentation of rates data without the entry of license numbers of vehicle crash reports is a new way that we're helping owners of motor vehicles find insurer plans," said one Quotes Pros source.

The state level policies that are available to review using the quotation system this year are not restricted to regular liability plans. Someone with a need to price full coverage, collector, SR22, modified or collector insurance can use the system to find the affordable rates that agencies are providing.

"One of the good parts about our system is that it is public to use although all information is private for a car owner during the process of research," included the source.

The Quotes Pros company has entered into different agreements with providers of rates data in order to promote the levels of pricing that is now displayed. Aside from auto industry coverage plans, different levels of pricing for life and health insurance can be reviewed visiting http://quotespros.com/health-insurance.html.

About QuotesPros.com

The QuotesPros.com company uses all of its provider data to help the public to price different insurance packages this year. The company data that is distributed comes direct from partnerships with insurance agencies in North America. The QuotesPros.com company has a digital system that is easy to review daily to find the special rates and markdowns that insurers are providing on a national basis. Reported by PRWeb 19 hours ago.

Travel Insured Explains 5 Reasons Why You Need Travel Insurance

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Travel Insured International simplifies travel insurance and explains how purchasing a policy can save your vacation.

Glastonbury, CT (PRWEB) August 25, 2014

Whether traveling to a place you have visited before, or to a brand new destination half way across the world, it is important to invest in a travel insurance policy that will protect against unexpected situations that can occur both before and during your travels. It should never be a question about whether or not you can afford a travel insurance policy, but a question of how could you afford to travel without one. A low payment spent on travel insurance could save you and your family thousands of dollars in medical expenses due to unexpected illness or injury while on a trip, lost or stolen baggage, or flight cancellation and delays. Travel Insured, a leading travel insurance provider explains why you need to purchase travel insurance for your next trip.

1.    Travel insurance is your safety net - Travel Insurance allows you to travel with 24/7 protection and support. If you are investing in a trip, it is imperative to invest in coverage for your health, safety, and travel costs. Travel insurance provides you with a safety net, just in case you find yourself in a less than ideal situation.

2. Travel insurance provides medical coverage - Most existing health insurance coverage does not apply while traveling abroad. Travel insurance plans include emergency medical and emergency medical assistance coverage as well as any transportation that may be needed. This protection can provide you with proper medical care and protect you financially if you had to stay in hospital, be evacuated for treatment, or undergo a major medical process.

3. Travel insurance protects your personal belongings - you are inconvenienced by either lost or stolen baggage during your travels, travel insurance coverage can provide you up to the maximum amount stated in the policy for the personal effects lost such as clothing, electronics, and other personal items.

4.Travel insurance helps cover costs if you have to cancel - If your cruise or flight is cancelled for a reason such as a natural disaster, or you need to cancel plans for your own personal reason such as unexpected illness or death of a family member, a travel insurance policy that includes cancellation coverage can reimburse you for any pre-paid, non-refundable deposits that were made for your travel plans.

5. Travel insurance can cover costs if you have to cut your trip short –If you purchase a plan with Interruption For Any Reason, you can receive unused, prepaid, non-refundable trip costs if you must interrupt the trip and head home early.

To learn more, visit http://www.travelinsured.com

About Travel Insured - Travel Insured International is one of the largest privately held travel protection companies in the US, and preferred supplier to over 5,000 travel agents, travel consortiums and wholesalers in the US and abroad. As a former division of the Travelers up until 1994, and originator of travel insurance in the US, you can say that the “travel protection” blood lines run deep. Travel Insured International’s customer centric claims operation has significant expertise in both domestic and international claims administration. Reported by PRWeb 13 hours ago.

Nonprofit Transamerica Center for Health Studies Offers Health Insurance Guide for Veterans

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Nonprofit Transamerica Center for Health Studies Offers Health Insurance Guide for Veterans LOS ANGELES, Aug. 25, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- In an effort to help veterans and their families navigate all of their health care options, the national non-profit Transamerica Center for Health Studies (TCHS) has developed the Veterans Health Coverage Guide that explains the types of... Reported by PR Newswire 11 hours ago.

Schematics Allegedly Reveal M7 Successor Chip 'Phosphorus'

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Apple may be working on a new version of the M7 co-processor for the upcoming iPhone 6, claims GeekBar (Via G 4 Games) in a post on Weibo. In this latest report, a new set of schematics allegedly showcase this new co-processor chip, which internally is labeled "Phosphorus."
GeekBar claims "Phosphorus" will be the successor the M7, collecting motion data as well as processing other health-related information handled by Apple's new HealthKit API. This chip potentially is the power behind Apple's new Health app, which will import data from the iPhone and other third-party devices in order to create an overview of the user's health.

Apple introduced its new Health tracking app and its HealthKit API at WWDC in June. Besides encouraging developers to build health and fitness-related functionality into its device, Apple also may be talking to hospitals, health institutions and insurance companies in order to expand its HealthKit initiative beyond the user's device. In one scenario, data from the Health app could be shared with a health insurance companies in order to lower a healthy subscriber's monthly premium.*Recent Mac and iOS Blog Stories*
• Buyer's Guide: Discounts on MacBook Air, Mac Pro, Apple Accessories, and More
• Apple Blocking 'Secret' in Brazilian App Store After Court Ruling
• Apple Adding Samsung as RAM Supplier for iPhone 6
• GT Advanced Reportedly Producing Between 1.3 and 2.2 Million Sapphire Displays for 5.5-Inch iPhone 6
• Apple Updates iWork for iOS/Mac With Bug Fixes and Stability Improvements
• iCloud Services Currently Down for Some Users [Update: Fixed]
• Apple Halts In-Store Pickup Option for Apple TV in Online Store, Still Available for Shipping
• Walmart Dropping Price of iPhone 5c to $0.97, iPhone 5s to $79 for 90-Day Period Reported by MacRumours.com 10 hours ago.

Obamacare's Death of a Thousand Rate Hikes

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As long as Obamacare's many mandates, taxes, regulations, and subsidies are in place, health insurance premiums will continue to rise. Reported by Forbes.com 10 hours ago.

One in Four Millennials Lacks Health Insurance

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SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 25, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- Approximately one in four Americans between the ages of 18 and 29 lacks health insurance (24%), according to a new insuranceQuotes.com report. Despite the Affordable Care Act's mandate that all Americans have health insurance, the report... Reported by PR Newswire 10 hours ago.

Obamacare Now Covers Gender Reassignment Surgeries

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Obamacare Now Covers Gender Reassignment Surgeries Transgender Americans seeking gender reassignment surgeries are finding relief through Obamacare, The Daily Beast reported on Monday.

Federal laws banning health insurance discrimination against transgender people, combined with Obamacare's ban on denying coverage for those with pre-existing conditions, have paved a path for transgender patients who wish to make the transition from one gender to another. 

"The federal anti-discrimination regulations have yet to be written, but California insurance regulators have said that companies must treat transgender patients the same as other patients," reports The Daily Beast. "For example, if plans cover hormones for post-menopausal women, they must also cover them for transgender women. Medicare, the program for the elderly and disabled, lifted its ban on covering sex reassignment surgery earlier this year."

What gets covered varies from Obamacare policy to policy. But Transgender Law Center program administrator Anand Kalra says, "The law and policy are on a transgender person's side for the first time."

Nationally, Obamacare is more unpopular than ever. The latest Kaiser Health poll finds that an all-time low of just 37% of Americans now support President Barack Obama's signature legislative achievement.

Over the next ten years, Obamacare will cost U.S. taxpayers $2.6 trillion. Reported by Breitbart 9 hours ago.

Medicaid reimbursements may affect cancer screening rates among beneficiaries

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In states with higher Medicaid payments for office visits, Medicaid beneficiaries were more likely to be screened for breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer, a recent study shows. Although Medicaid is a joint state-federal government health insurance program, each state sets the policies for its own Medicaid program within requirements set by the federal government. Reported by Science Daily 2 hours ago.

California Army Veteran Marco Hernandez Working To Prove To VA He Is Not Dead

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California Army Veteran Marco Hernandez Working To Prove To VA He Is Not Dead California Army Veteran Marco Hernandez Working To Prove To VA He Is Not Dead
California Army Veteran Marco Hernandez Working To Prove To VA He Is Not Dead
Headlines
Nation
Has Been Optimized

After returning from service in Iraq, a California man has been on a two-year campaign to prove to the Department of Veterans Affairs that he is not dead.

U.S. Army veteran Marco Hernandez served two tours in Iraq. When he returned he found himself caring for his elderly father. When his dad died in 2011, he called to notify the VA so the agency could suspend his father’s health insurance payments. 

Not long after that call he realized there was a problem.

“I pulled my credit report, and I was laughing when I saw it because it said, 'items affecting your credit: deceased, deceased, deceased,’” Hernandez told NBC-Los Angeles.

Although the agency managed to get his father’s payments stopped, somewhere in the vast bureaucracy, amidst the paperwork, Hernandez was also listed as having died.

“I called the VA to report that he was dead, and someone at the VA did all the paperwork correctly," Hernandez said. "Unfortunately, somebody made a mistake and about three weeks after my father passed away. My relatives received some paperwork saying I was the one who passed away.”

As a result, he said, his bank account has been frozen and credit cards cancelled. He claims the ordeal has also caused him to miss out on receiving thousands of dollars worth of his own benefits from the VA. His numerous phone calls have done little to resolve the problem.

“Every time I try to do something people come up with different things that I'm supposed to be doing,” Hernandez said.

Unfortunately for veterans, stories like Hernandez’s are all too common. The department has been rocked by negative reports recently, including the vast wait-listing scandal that forced the May 30 resignation of VA Secretary Eric Shinseki. He was replaced by Sloan Gibson who is serving as secretary of the department on a temporary basis, according to The Washington Post.

Following the scandal, news agencies began reporting various bureaucratic failings of the department. In June, an Alabama news station, WSFA, reported an 85-year-old Korean War Veteran, was awarded $100,000 in benefits. The veteran, Willie McCall, reportedly battled the VA for 56 years to receive the benefits that numerous doctors’ diagnoses said he was entitled to.

Hernandez, with any luck, won’t have to wait so long to have his benefits reactivated. A VA spokesperson told the local news it was working with the veteran to resolve the situation.

Sources: NBC-Los Angeles, The Washington Post, WSFA

Photo Source: Wikipedia

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OV in Depth:  Reported by Opposing Views 9 hours ago.

Allred Insurance to Broaden Healthcare Coverage Options for Clients

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Don Allred Insurance is planning to expand its partnership base and broaden the number of healthcare coverage options available to its clients.

Burlington, NC (PRWEB) August 25, 2014

Don Allred Insurance, an independent agency that has been helping North Carolina residents procure the best homeowners, auto, life, and health insurance policies for more than 30 years, is planning to expand its partnership base and broaden the number of healthcare coverage options available to its clients. Details of the new partnerships, including names of carriers and types of policies offered, will be released in September.

“We’ve been an exclusive agency for Blue Cross Blue Shield of NC for the past six years,” says Allred Insurance spokesman Scott Allred. “And while we’ve enjoyed that relationship and were able to use it to the benefit of our clients, recent changes in the national healthcare law makes it advisable for us to move in a new direction.”

By partnering with a larger number of health insurance carriers, Allred will be able to offer current and prospective clients a much more diversified menu of coverage options. This is a strategy that the agency has already implemented with great success in its homeowners and auto insurance business lines. Allred is counting on this past experience to make the upcoming transition as seamless as possible.

“We’ve gone through the process before and know how to handle the changes,” Mr. Allred explains. “We expect the new rollout to be a smooth one for everyone involved, and are excited to begin offering our clients a wider range of affordable insurance plans.”

More information about Allred Insurance, including details about its partner companies and its full line of insurance products, can be found on the agency’s official website at http://www.allredinsurance.com. Reported by PRWeb 9 hours ago.

1 in 4 millennials lacks health insurance

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Adults under 30 are the least likely to have any type of insurance. Nearly 1 in 4 is not covered by a health insurance policy, a new survey finds. Reported by WTOP 3 hours ago.

1 in 4 millenials lacks health insurance

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Adults under 30 are the least likely to have any type of insurance. Nearly 1 in 4 is not covered by a health insurance policy, a new survey finds. Reported by WTOP 4 hours ago.

1 in 4 millenials has health insurance

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Adults under 30 are the least likely to have any type of insurance, with only 1 in 4 covered by a health insurance policy, a new survey finds. Reported by WTOP 8 hours ago.

Obamacare Continues to Destroy Jobs

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Obamacare Continues to Destroy Jobs Three new Federal Reserve surveys reveal Obamacare continues to force employers to slash jobs and hours in response to the unpopular healthcare overhaul, reports The Wall Street Journal. 

Last Thursday, the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia reported findings from its Obamacare business survey, revealing that 18.2% of employers are cutting jobs and employees as a result of Obamacare. Moreover, 18% said they have also had to shift more of their workers to part time. 

The New York Federal Reserve study found similar findings, with 21% of New York manufacturers and 16.9% of service businesses reporting reductions in the number of workers they employ due to Obamacare.

Lastly, the Atlanta Federal Reserve's study found that 34% of businesses that do not cover health insurance plan to hire fewer full-time workers due to Obamacare's tax penalty for companies with more than 50 workers.

According to the Investor's Business Daily Obamacare scorecard, 429 employers have already slashed tens of thousands of workers' hours and jobs as a result of Obamacare. Reported by Breitbart 7 hours ago.

Why Health Care Costs So Much: Both Parties Suck at Teat of Medical-Industrial Complex

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As one of an estimated 78 million baby boomers in this country, I was delighted to hear that Medicare's Hospital Trust Fund won't run out of money until 2030 -- 13 years later than projected in 2009, the year before Congress passed the Affordable Care Act.

While it's uncertain how much of that good news can be attributed to the health care law, some of the provisions aimed at slowing Medicare spending, such as requiring Medicare to reduce payments to hospitals with high readmission rates, are likely helping.

But the Hospital Trust Fund accounts for only about half of total Medicare spending. Most of the rest goes to cover physician fees, prescription drugs and to provide incentives for health insurance companies to participate in the Medicare Advantage program and administer the Medicare drug program.

The Affordable Care Act could have done much more than it does to curb spending in those areas. Because it doesn't is a testament to the power and influence of the lobbyists who represent doctors, pharmaceutical companies and health insurers.

Some lawmakers, including Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., and Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., wanted to include language in the law that would have allowed Medicare to negotiate prices with drug companies. That's something that has long been a policy priority for patient and consumer advocates. But drug companies and their lobbyists are far more powerful and have far more money to spend to influence elections than any patient advocacy group could ever hope to have.

Late last month, two of the advocacy groups -- the Medicare Rights Center and Social Security Works -- released a report suggesting that Congress could save taxpayers $141 billion over 10 years just by reauthorizing a program that was eliminated at the behest of drug makers when lawmakers enacted the Medicare prescription drug benefit (Part D) in 2003.

The groups noted that while the prescription drug benefit helped Medicare beneficiaries afford their medications, "the law also severely limited the government's ability to control Medicare drug prices."

Prior to passage of the Medicare Modernization Act in 2003, which created Part D, the federal government benefited from discounts on prescription medicines for people covered by both Medicare and Medicaid. According to the advocacy groups, elimination of that program "resulted in windfall profits for pharmaceutical manufacturers." They cited an analysis showing that drug companies' profits soared by 34 percent to $76.3 billion in the first year of the Part D program.

The groups also recommended that Congress allow Medicare to create its own drug insurance plan that could directly negotiate drug prices in the same way as another big government agency -- the Department of Veterans Affairs -- has long been able to do.

Medicare could also reduce spending by billions of dollars if it wrested some control from the American Medical Association, which for more than two decades has largely determined how much doctors get paid by Medicare for the services they provide.

As reported in POLITICO Magazine last week, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services gave the AMA/Specialty Society Relative Value Scale Update Committee (RUC for short) the responsibility to determine the relative value of the "time, effort and skill that goes into performing a procedure."

Over the course of several years, the committee's recommendations to CMS have led to the major income disparity that now exists between primary care physicians and specialists, who are paid more because the work they do is deemed by the committee to have greater relative value. This not only has created the severe shortage of primary care physicians in the United States, but it has also contributed to soaring health care costs, especially for Medicare.

Congress has also allowed health insurers to enrich themselves, in both lawful and unlawful ways, since the creation of the Medicare Advantage program in 1997.

Under this program, Medicare pays privately run health plans a set monthly rate for each patient. As the Center for Public Integrity reported in a series of investigative reports this past June, about 16 million Americans have enrolled in these private plans at a cost to taxpayers of more than $160 billion. In addition to paying the private plans a bonus to participate in the program, the CPI investigation uncovered as much as $70 billion of improper payments to Medicare Advantage plans from 2008 through last year.

Will Congress act to save taxpayers billions of dollars -- and protect the solvency of the Medicare programs -- by taking on the AMA, the drugmakers and the insurers? Don't hold your breath.

As Waxman said following the release of the report calling for Congress to allow Medicare to demand rebates and negotiate prices with drug companies, it's unlikely that lawmakers will take any action any time soon.

"Republicans, but even a lot of Democrats, are looking to the drug companies for campaign support," he said.

He could have included insurance companies and physicians and host of other special interests on that list. Reported by Huffington Post 7 hours ago.

Obamacare Still 'Red Meat' For GOP Candidates But Focus Of Attacks Shift

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JUPITER, Fla. – Beverly Hires, a former nurse running for Congress here in one of the nation’s rare competitive House races, ticks off her problems with the federal health care law: higher premiums, cancelled policies and employers cutting full-time jobs.

“The Affordable Care Act is not making insurance more affordable,” she said in an interview, citing many of the same criticisms as her five GOP opponents in the Aug. 26 primary, who are vying for the chance to oust first-term Democrat Rep. Patrick Murphy. 

Hires’ messaging on Obamacare in this South Florida district targeted by the GOP tracks a pattern around the country as Republican candidates follow a focus-group tested script recommended by pollsters*.*

“The messages that work best are succinct, clear statements about the effects of Obamacare on consumers directly,” by increasing costs, taxes and taking away jobs, said Whit Ayres, president of North Star Opinion Research, a Republican polling group that’s surveyed likely voters to determine the best way to attack Obamacare.

Heading into* *the first congressional election since millions of Americans gained coverage under the health law, many Republican candidates are taking a more nuanced approach to how they criticize the law.  Rather than just calling for repeal, they are following Ayres’ recommendations to focus on arguments about how the law is hurting consumers, government budgets or the economy.

And while political ads on television are still common, the number of new ads about the law has declined since spring when the administration rebounded from the troubled launch of healthcare.gov, said Elizabeth Wilner, senior vice president for Kantar Media Intelligence in New York, a nonpartisan group that tracks political advertising.

“Obamacare is no longer front and center in the way it was earlier this year and late last year,” she said. “It remains an issue, but it’s no longer the only one.”

She cited other frequently mentioned topics such as government spending and the economy.

*‘Playing To The Base’*

While most GOP candidates continue talking about the health care law to rally the base, attacking it is no longer seen as winning over new voters since most people have made up their minds about it, say political analysts. 

“Opposing Obamacare is a reinforcing issue that helps re-energize their base of voters but it does not move a lot of new voters to them,” said G. Terry Madonna, director of the Center for Politics & Public Affairs at Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, Pa.

Despite a shift in how they talk about the law, there’s no sign GOP candidates are going soft on it, analysts say.

“Remember, this is a midterm with low turnout,” said Larry Sabato, director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia. “Candidates on both sides are playing to their base and hoping for a large boost from them in fundraising and votes. You don't accomplish that by watering down the message.”

Sean Foreman, associate professor of political science at Barry University in Miami, said GOP candidates use Obamacare to portray the administration as inept because of the botched website rollout and some insurers raising prices. “This is red meat on the campaign trail for Republicans,” he said.

Rep. Tom Cotton, a freshman Republican trying to unseat Democrat Sen. Mark Pryor in Arkansas, went on the defense after a Gallup survey found that Arkansas’ uninsured rate had been almost halved this year due to the health law.  

“The thing about Obamacare is it no doubt helped some people,” Cotton said. “But think about all the people it hurt and the ways it hurt them. It caused people to have insurance cancelled. It drove up the cost of their health insurance premiums, or it cost them access to their doctor or imposed new taxes.”

To attack Obamacare, Rep. Cory Gardner, the Republican challenging Colorado Democrat Sen. Mark Udall, began airing ads in August about how his insurer had cancelled his family’s coverage because of the health law. State officials have said more than 90 percent of Coloradans with cancelled plans were allowed to keep them.

*Local Issues Get Top Play In Florida Race*

In the House race to unseat Murphy in Florida’s 18^th congressional district, Obamacare has taken a back seat to mostly local issues including stopping a proposed high speed rail line running from Orlando to Miami and how best to clean the St. Lucie River.

Murphy rarely mentions the law in his appearances in this district running from north of Palm Beach to Fort Pierce. Mitt Romney won 51.5 percent of the vote here in 2012 when Murphy narrowly defeated former Republican Rep. Allen West, a tea party favorite.

Murphy’s latest mailing to voters makes no mention of his vote against repealing the law. On his campaign website, he notes he supports the health law while favoring delay of the mandates requiring most people to have coverage and large employers to offer it.

Carl Domino, a former state lawmaker and front-runner to win the GOP nomination, notes in his first TV ad launched in August that Murphy supports Obamacare. In an interview, Domino said most people tell him they’ve been hurt by the law by having to pay higher premiums or co-pays. “None of the promises made by those who passed the law turned out to be true,” he said.

Domino said he was not familiar with surveys by Gallup and others showing that 8 million to 10 million people have gained coverage this year.

Alan Schlesinger, also running in the GOP primary in the 18^th district, argues the law has done nothing to slow the rise of health costs.  Schlesinger said he was not familiar with studies showing health spending growing at historically low rates.

He said he is not worried about voter backlash from those who would have been gained insurance had Florida expanded Medicaid under the law. “I don’t think the average person knows anything about it,” he said.

 Also running in the GOP primary are Brian Lara, a software developer; Nick Wukoson, a former police officer and owner of a human resources consulting business, and Calvin Turnquest, a former Tequesta village council member.
Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit, nonpartisan health policy research and communication organization not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente. Reported by Huffington Post 7 hours ago.

A Main Street Way to Help Obese People

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"Don't you know things can change
Things'll go your way
If you can hold on for one more day"

-Wilson Phillips

I'm 55 years old and morbidly obese. Studies show that morbid obesity will knock 10 years off my life. Since normal longevity is 20 years, if I can't control my obesity, I'm in life's ninth inning.

I've tried every diet imaginable, several times, and the obvious solution is bariatric or weight loss surgery. I've had three doctors, who are also personal friends, strongly recommend it. I ducked bariatric surgery for 20 years and when I finally embraced it, I spent years finding a way to make it happen.

Now with a company that provides solutions for specialty surgery, BLIS, http://www.bliscompany.com/, based in Lake Oswego, Oregon, surgery may be possible.

BLIS is not my best chance to get weight loss surgery; it is really my only chance.

I own several businesses based in Kentucky and purchase health insurance for a group of less than 25 people. Not only is it impossible for me to purchase health insurance that would pay for bariatric surgery, there is not a plan that covers the COMPLICATIONS of weight loss surgery.If I pay for my own surgery and had a heart attack the day after, my health insurance won't cover it.

If I don't get the surgery and have a heart attack induced by my obesity, the insurer will pay for that.

It doesn't make sense and then it does. One of the big arguments in favor of a single payer system for health insurance is that insurance companies are not truly interested in expensive solutions to long-term problems. Like most publicly traded companies, health insurance companies are focused on the next fiscal quarter, not the next decade. What is best for the consumer may not be best for the immediate profit margin

From a cash flow basis, many health insurance carriers find it more profitable to pay for medicines, sleep apnea equipment, doctor and hospital visits and all the other things associated with obesity than to write a larger, one-time check for weight loss surgery. People can change insurance carriers on a regular basis, and one insurer can write a check to make a person healthy only to have them jump to another company. According to the Obesity Action Coalition, the upfront cost of surgery is paid for in 3.5 years, but many health insurance carriers choose the immediate over the long-term.

Risk management can sometimes be like the decisions that Ed Norton's character made in the movie Fight Club. He decided it was cheaper to let people die than to fix a small automobile problem. What is logical is not always most immediately profitable. Or safe for the consumer.

As a licensed life and health insurance consultant, I've spent five years and hundreds of hours looking for bariatric coverage. There are 974 pages in the Affordable Care Act. I've read them all, looking for a provision that would help me. No luck. No insurance carrier in Kentucky will offer small businesses a chance to buy a plan that will cover bariatric surgery or its complications.

I've been outraged by the unfairness. If I lose all my money and go on Medicaid, I can get the surgery for free. If I stay healthy until age 65 and go on Medicare, I can get surgery for free. If I was elected to the Kentucky legislature or to Congress, my insurance would pay for the surgery and its complications. Most government entities offer their employees insurance that covers the surgery and its complications.
If I worked on Wall Street or for a "too big to fail" bank, I'm sure most of them cover it too. Large companies often have weight loss surgery, or at least the complications of weight loss surgery, as part of their coverage.

Bariatric surgery is another example of where Main Street takes a beating. We can't get the same kind of coverage that people who are richer, poorer, or in a different line of work get. Until I heard of BLIS, I never knew of a way to buy any kind of coverage on my own.

Many individuals and small businesses can get coverage for obesity surgery through a health insurance exchange. It all depends on where you live. I live in Kentucky. Kentucky has done a terrific job in implementing the Affordable Care Act, but they joined roughly two dozen other states in not offering obesity surgery as part of their health insurance exchange.

A story on NPR from Kaiser Health News noted the almost direct correlation between the states with highest obesity problems and the states that are not offering obesity surgery through their exchanges.

The worse the obesity problem, the less the politicians want to do anything about it.

I seriously thought about moving to another state. My wife is employed in Louisiana and I could easily move there, but they don't offer obesity coverage either and their ability to implement ACA is light years behind Kentucky. None of the states bordering Kentucky offered the coverage and moving to a state like New York or Maryland takes me too far away from where I do business.

The BLIS insurance coverage works like an extended warranty on an electronic device or collision coverage on a rental car. It's extra protection to allow us to have comfort when making a bold move.

For this middle age, Main Street Kentucky, small businessman, BLIS is the only real option I have.

*My Long Strange Trip to Bariatric Surgery *

"Good and bad, I define these terms
Quite clear, no doubt, somehow
Ah, but I was so much older then
I'm younger than that now"

-Bob Dylan

Lately it occurs to me
What a long, strange trip it's been

-The Grateful Dead

It's hard to believe I am on a relentless quest to have weight loss surgery.

I do many different things under the McNay Consulting umbrella (www.mcnayconsulting.com), but my primary business for 33 years has been helping injury victims with their money and setting them up structured settlements. I frequently do claims consulting and mediation consulting.

I've seen several situations where people died from gastric bypass surgery. I've gotten to know the intimate details of how they died and know their families.

If your primary experience with sky diving is dealing with the families of people who died during jumps, you are less inclined to embrace the idea of parachuting yourself. That's exactly how I felt about weight loss surgery. Not only was I opposed to it, I tried to talk anyone and everyone out of doing it.

All I knew were the horror stories.

Ten years ago, statistics backed up some of my inferential conclusions. CBS News did a story on January 21, 2005 which cited a University of Washington study saying that one in 50 people died within a month of gastric bypass surgery and the figure jumped fivefold if the surgeon was inexperienced.

Rather than betting on a 50 to one chance of coming home in a body bag (or 10 to one chance of dying at the hands of an inexperienced surgeon), it was a simple decision to sign up for Weight Watchers, again and again and again.

I've never had a client (or more precisely, their spouses, children and estate) who died during a Weight Watchers meeting.

You may not drop over in your weight loss meeting, but if morbid obesity knocks 10 years off your life, you are dying slowly and painfully as opposed to dying quickly.

I saw a lot of stories like the one on CBS during that time period. What I missed was the move of the medical community towards fixing the problem. The story quoted Dr. Harvey Sugerman, then President of the American Society for Bariatric Surgery, who noted the development of the "Center of Excellence" programs and strict criteria for surgical facility to be considered a "Center of Excellence."

Being a Center of Excellence is like the "Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval" for weight loss facilities. It separates the players from the pretenders.

A few years ago, one of my trial lawyer friends was discussing weight loss surgery and noted, "They don't seem to be killing as many people as they used to." I thought about his statement and then followed up privately with several star medical malpractice attorneys and found that his statement was basically correct.

When you look at the numbers, weight loss surgery has gotten safer.

A study published in the March 2014 Journal of the American Medical Association (in the journal JAMA Surgery) cited the work of lead researcher Dr. Su-Hsin Chang and others at the Washington University School of Medicine. They concluded that "death rates are, in general, very low."

The study showed that the death rate was between 0.08 percent and 0.31 percent. A dramatic change from 2005.

The team went through 150 studies of weight loss surgery, involving 162,000 patients. Weight loss professionals like to throw around a term called BMI and the average BMI of the group was 46.

A BMI of 46 on a person six foot tall (like I am) would mean a weight of 339 pounds. For those of you who remember William "The Refrigerator" Perry who played for the 1985 Chicago Bears, he was about six foot tall and weighed 330 pounds.

The study showed that their BMI dropped between 12 and 17 points in the five years following surgery.

Translating BMI to layman's terms, that means that if "The Fridge" (or anyone else that size) had weighed in at 330 pounds before weight loss surgery, five years later, he or she would weigh between 250 and 214 pounds.

A weight loss between 80 and 116 pounds.

That dramatically increases the chance to live to a normal age. A huge motivator is the possibility of reversing diabetes. I'm inching into the diabetic category and know that not only is it a killer, it is a horrible and painful killer.

The jury is out as to whether the actual surgery will reverse diabetes or if it works on everyone. A March 31 NPR story said that more than one third of people who had gastric bypass surgery met their targets three years later, but also noted that almost three quarters did not have normal blood sugar.

Since only five percent of people who were treated with medicine alone met the standard, surgery is the best hope.

As Tim Robbins' character in The Shawshank Redemption said, "Get busy living or get busy dying." The chance to get busy living has overcome my fear of weight loss surgery.

*Is Weight Loss Surgery a Magical Cure? *

Try to understand
Try, try, try to understand
He's a magic man

-HeartI once saw an interview with Ann Wilson, founder of the group Heart, after she had LAP-BAND surgery in 2002, that because of her high self-esteem, she never really thought of herself as obese, even if the scale said something different.

I understand Ann completely. My self-confidence can be infectious or rub people the wrong way, but I am always the lead singer in the band. I know how to get to the goal line. I've had a wonderful career and am married to a beautiful, intelligent and professionally accomplished woman. I've been on television hundreds of times and never seen any true inference that obesity has held me back.

You can't sell me on the idea that weight loss surgery will make me rich or a sex symbol. I've done just fine on my own.

Being overweight is considered by many to be a stigma in American society. Billions of dollars of advertising convince us that we need to be thinner and the health risks of obesity are very real. As Michael Pollan, Gary Taubes and others have articulately written, we need to wage a full blown battle against fructose and its addictive properties. I reached a point where I was drinking at least six diet soft drinks a day and dropped them cold turkey earlier this year. I felt like a junkie kicking heroin. It took a couple of months before the physical cravings went away. The fructose had become an addiction.

On the larger front, we need to fight for healthier food for everyone. On my personal front, I need to make a move to lose weight now.

I've been incredibly lucky. I've been on blood pressure medicine since age 25 and used a CPAP for my sleep apnea for over 20 years. I've just started inching across the border from pre-diabetic to diabetic. My cholesterol level is something ridiculously low, and I have a great outlook on life. I've been in the hospital twice for short stays unrelated to obesity. Once when I was five and once when I was 50.

Yet, I'm 140 pounds overweight.

Both of my primary doctors are close, longtime friends. So was the doctor I had early on, who volunteered to go to Iraq for military service. I think the reason I have avoided things like heart attack, stroke or having a diabetic limb chopped off is that we have treated each symptom before they led to something more dangerous. I'm sure I would have been dead if I had not treated my blood pressure and sleep apnea at a young age.

My father had a stroke at age 43 and died at age 59. My mother died at age 67. No one in my very extended family has made it as far as I have without a serious illness.

I don't smoke, rarely drink and have reasonably healthy habits for a guy who is morbidly obese. Actually, I have healthy habits for a guy is not morbidly obese. I know what it takes to live a long and healthy life.

I'm a strong believer that a person can achieve anything they set their mind to doing, but losing weight using customary weight loss methods is one area where my theory has not held true.

I seem to be the Amy Winehouse of traditional weight loss. I've been in a medically supervised, university sponsored, rapid weight loss program five different times. I've never lost less than 50 pounds in any of the five appearances and lost as much as 90 pounds (which left me 20 pounds under my ideal body weight). Within two years of each weight loss, I had gained it all back and more. My set point became higher every time for a 25 year period.

I've tried almost every diet program ever invented and even started my own weight loss group. We stayed together for seven years of weekly meetings with yo-yo dieting for all of us. I've had multiple gym memberships, a couple of great personal trainers, did daily Zumba classes and 80 golf lessons in one year. I didn't lose any significant weight playing golf, but I coauthored a best-selling golf book with the PGA professional who taught me.

I befriended a lot of people during my five stints through weight loss programs, and I think every one of them wound up heavier later than when we started. Some have died. Many have now done some kind of weight loss surgery. I've spoken to at least 50 people who've had the surgery and only had one unhappy with the results.

My father was a professional gambler and I have a long background in the financial services industry. I usually view life decisions in terms of odds making.

Going through all the data and information, the odds of me living a longer life after weight loss surgery is better than not having it.

My decision is strictly based on health and longevity.

I will admit that I would love to sit in a coach airline seat or walk into a clothing store and buy something right off the rack. I have to buy two coach seats when I fly or fly first class. I order my clothes online. I'm not going to go through surgery to save a few bucks on airlines and clothing, but it will be a nice benefit.

I don't plan on training for an Ironman race or climbing Mount Fujiyama (which I think is a volcano anyway). My idea of roughing it is staying in a hotel where they don't put a mint on your pillow. My wife won me over on our first date when she said she hated camping. I do too and still will when I am thinner.

I'll play a ton of golf and do other forms of exercise that I enjoy.

I won't be posing nude for Playboy or Cosmo like Carnie Wilson did.

To focus on looks and sex appeal diminishes the basic message: this is all about health. This is all about longevity. I don't want my wife to be a young widow. I have three grandchildren and want to be there in 20 years when they reach adulthood.

I have places to go, people to see and things to do.

I don't want to become a different person. I just want to keep doing what I am doing.

The surgery is a tool to make that happen.

*How the BLIS Insurance Thing Works *

"But she looks in my eyes
And makes me realize
And she says 'Don't worry baby'
Everything will turn out alright"

-Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys

"High risk insurance
The time is right"

-The Ramones

I caught up with Regi Schindler, President and CEO of BLIS, Inc by phone while he is attending the World Congress for the International Federation for the Surgery of Obesity and Metabolic Disorders (IFSO) in Montreal. http://www.ifso.com/world-congress/

Schindler has an extensive background in medical risk management, including several years at the Mayo Clinic, but in 2005 he left the safety net of a corporate career to develop an insurance concept he is passionate about.

Regi helped to create a terrific idea in offering insurance coverage for specialty types of surgery, such as bariatric surgery, plastic surgery and orthopedics that many insurance carriers don't cover. They also provide financing or people who are paying for surgery on their own.

Regi calls BLIS "similar to a new car warranty for post-surgical procedures." I tend to compare it to buying collision coverage at the airport on a rental car. Some of us have auto insurance that covers us when we drive a rental car. Others need short-term protection for a limited experience over a limited period of time.

Schindler calls his program "surgeon-centric" and in a 2012 article in Bariatric Times, he explains his business model in intricate details. I assumed that BLIS would base their pricing on the health of the individual patient. Instead, it is based on the type of procedure and the overall experience BLIS has had with the surgeon doing the procedure.

I have decades of experience in the insurance industry and understand concepts like the "Pool Actual Loss Ratio." When I asked Schindler to sum up by saying, "the better the surgeon, the lower the patient's premium," he tended to agree. Regi has built the company with a laser focus on getting the very best surgeons to participate.

Which makes sense. Like any insurance provider, BLIS wants to keep their claims low and track the individual results and outcomes to make sure that the surgeons in their program are doing their best to stop minor complications from becoming major complications. BLIS seems to focus on quality and dealing with only "A list" (my paraphrase) surgeons.

BLIS and I have parallel goals. They want to increase access to surgery for as many people as possible. I want to increase access for me. Schlinder is passonate in his commitment to making to offering a way to for people to have surgery that could not previously and also that the overall outcome is focused on improving the patient experience.

For a number of insurance underwriting reasons, surgeons in the BLIS program have a number of incentives to look at the bigger picture and focus on minimizing and avoiding complications.

I'm not quite to the "don't worry baby" mindset. Bariatric surgery is serious business. But I am thankful that BLIS is not a traditional health insurance carrier and has a model that seems to put patients over profits.

I will eventually tell you firsthand. I've not been approved for surgery or signed up with BLIS yet but things are moving forward quickly on both fronts and I expect both will happen soon.

As I told Schindler, my frustration is that I did not find BLIS five years ago. In my hundreds of hours of searching, I kept looking for traditional health insurance carriers, rather than thinking outside the box to look for a company like BLIS.

The good thing is that BLIS is well thought of by the surgeons who use their services. Since their universe is extremely small and focused, their name recognition amongst people outside of the surgical world is small.

None of my personal physicians, or physician friends, had ever heard of BLIS. The marketing is directed strictly at the surgical world. Which seems to be working for them. According to their website, which Regi confirmed, the company has offered protection on 11,000 cases since 2006.

I found my way to BLIS by a combination of accident and divine providence.

I'm the majority owner in RRP International Publishing and Digital Media. We are publishing a book by Dr. James Roach at Midway Center for Integrative Medicine http://www.themidwaycenter.com/ that will be released next spring. Dr. Jim is one of my primary physicians and a friend. Dr. Jim took it upon himself to see if he could find a weight loss facility that would work with me. He contacted one of the facilities where Dr. Derek Weiss of Bluegrass Bariatric performs surgery. http://www.bluegrassbariatrics.com/default/about-our-program/our-surgeons

Dr. Weiss is approved by BLIS.

His group and his former partner are the only surgeons in Kentucky approved by BLIS. I also asked BLIS for their surgeons in Louisiana and only four surgeons were on the list. BLIS is focused on an elite group but if you don't know who these elite surgeons are, you don't know the concept exists.

Finding Dr. Weiss was like winning a lottery that I didn't know I was playing.

I've not been approved for surgery or signed up with BLIS yet. Things are moving forward quickly on both fronts and I expect both will happen soon.

Going back to one of my favorite movies, in The Shawshank Redemption Tim Robbins' character Andy Dufresne wrote a letter to his friend Red that said, "Remember Red, hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies."

BLIS and the possibility of weight loss surgery have given me hope.

For a longer and healthy life.

*Don McNay, CLU ChFC, MSFS, CSSC is the founder of McNay Consulting (www.mcnayconsulting.com), a former syndicated business columnist and a best-selling author of several books, including Wealth Without Wall Street http://www.amazon.com/Wealth-Without-Wall-Street-Making-ebook/dp/B005IDKWR0 and Life Lessons from the Lottery: Protecting Your Money in a Scary World. http://www.amazon.com/Life-Lessons-Lottery-Protecting-Money-ebook/dp/B00A5WUOMW He is based in Lexington and Richmond, Kentucky and you can write to him at don@donmcnay.com or call (859) 353-4598.
*

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/gastric-bypass-surgery-gone-bad/

http://archsurg.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1790378

http://www.futurity.org/weight-stays-bariatric-surgery/

http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2014/03/31/297160022/weight-loss-surgery-can-reverse-diabetes-but-cure-is-elusive

http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2013/05/27/186310916/for-many-affordable-care-act-wont-cover-bariatric-surgery

http://www.ifso.com/world-congress/

https://docs.google.com/file/d/0BzulQZBQ9jYSV0RiekF5WllaT1U/edit

http://www.themidwaycenter.com/

http://www.bluegrassbariatrics.com/default/about-our-program/our-surgeons

http://www.consumeraffairs.com/gastric-bypass-bariatric-surgery-and-lap-bands Reported by Huffington Post 6 hours ago.

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