Quantcast
Channel: Health Insurance Headlines on One News Page [United States]
Viewing all 22794 articles
Browse latest View live

HHS official: insurance cancellations are just 'invitations' to sign up for ObamaCare

$
0
0
It's not easy to pretend that a failure as immense as ObamaCare is "working," much less living up to its promises, but the hard Left and Administration drones keep trying.  The latest road apple dropped by Health and Human Services, after a wild night of binging on Orwellian doublespeak tacos, asks us to view insurance cancellations as merely polite invitations to sign up for the People's Glorious Health Care Plan.

"I just want to remind you that you weren't losing insurance, you were just using that insurance plan, and were now being invited to go into the health insurance marketplace," chirps an HHS official in a sound bite being circulated by the Republican Part of Virginia, as part of a campaign push against incumbent Democrat Senator Mark Warner:

Maybe I'm just an old-fashioned guy, but I think the defenders of a government program that was working as advertised would not be reduced to gibbering lunacy.  I guess we're supposed to think Obama's famous promise was: "If you like your health care plan, you can keep it.  No one will take it away from you, period.  But we might invite you to buy a different plan on the ObamaCare marketplace instead, and it might not be the kind of offer you can refuse."

Warner is up in the polls by 11 points, so apparently Virginians don't mind being shamelessly lied to.  Everybody else should brace themselves for increasingly tortured rhetoric after the elections are over, and ObamaCare erupts in a shower of long-delayed surprises. Reported by Breitbart 2 hours ago.

The Team at Achieve Clinical Research is Enrolling Qualified Individuals to Take Part in an Osteoarthritis (OA) Clinical Trial in Birmingham, Alabama

$
0
0
Achieve Clinical Research recently opened up a new clinical trial, and they are looking to enroll individuals who are suffering from clinically relevant arthritis pain. Adults who are experiencing osteoarthritis symptoms of the knee could qualify.

Birmingham, AL (PRWEB) October 28, 2014

*To learn more about this osteoarthritis (OA) clinical trial in Birmingham, AL, please check out Achieve Clinical Research on the web (http://www.achieveclinical.com) or contact them directly at (205) 380-6434.

There are plenty of benefits to participating in a clinical trial, including:· Receiving top-quality medical care at no cost.
· Health insurance is not required.
· Participants may be compensated for time and travel expenses.

Osteoarthritis Symptoms

Most people don’t realize that osteoarthritis is one of the most common medical conditions in the world. So many people over the age of 50 are afflicted with this form of arthritis, that it has become synonymous with old age in many ways. Clinical studies have shown that the symptoms of OA can manifest in any of the following joints:· Knees
· Hips
· Neck
· Lower back
· Wrists

Despite what is known about this degenerative disease, a comprehensive cure for osteoarthritis has yet to be discovered. Clinical trials like the ones being conducted in Birmingham are pointing researchers in new and intriguing directions-- they now know just how influential a diet can be on the body.

Why Volunteer for a Clinical Trial?

Most people don’t realize how much of a difference they can make by volunteering for a clinical trial. Each participant helps research teams come take that next important step towards a new discovery and eventually a cure. The OA treatments that change the lives of so many each year would not be possible if it were not for clinical trials like the ones conducted at Achieve in Birmingham, AL.

People who make that decision to volunteer for a clinical study may do it for the short-term benefits, but they should understand that their inclusion will help ensure the success of the entire research process. It is not the right choice for everyone, but it is one that should be considered carefully.

Who Is Eligible to Participate?

This is actually a complex question as it will differ greatly between each clinical trial. What’s important is understanding that this is a crucial aspect of the entire process. Applicants who want to enroll in a clinical study will be screened by the physician (s) who’s overseeing the project. They’ll be questioned about their medical history and about any medication they may be taking. Some forms of medication may not be allowed during a given clinical trial.

Achieve’s Clinical Research Facility

Located in Birmingham, Alabama, this state-of-the-art facility specializes in conducting complex clinical trials for a wide range of medical conditions, including rheumatoid arthritis (RA), pneumonia, diabetic nephropathy and many more. The facility was strategically placed right in the heart of Birmingham’s renowned medical district. Achieve is organized around an experienced investigators and staff, which allows them to adapt to client needs without sacrificing accuracy, integrity, or safety.

Sponsors and CRO’s

Sponsors and clinical research coordinators must constantly overcome difficult odds in the pursuit of the appropriate facility to conduct their study. Achieve is located relatively close to Birmingham’s International Airport. That combined with it’s centralized location within the medical district make it an ideal solution. Utilizing its vast network of physicians, hospitals, outpatient surgical centers and local patient groups, Achieve has developed a highly efficient recruitment model for screening and enrolling quality patients for a variety of inpatient indications. Check out their sponsor portal at (http://www.achieveclinical.com/cro-sponsors/) for more information.

Achieve Clinical Research conducts a wide range of clinical trials in Birmingham, AL. For more information about these research opportunities, please visit their website (http://www.achieveclinical.com/trial/) or contact them directly at (205) 380-6434. Reported by PRWeb 3 hours ago.

Price-gouged Policyholders & Consumer Advocates Decry Menacing Anti-Prop 45 Mailers Showing Gov't "Playing Doctor" with Hospital Gowns, Says Consumer Watchdog Campaign

$
0
0
SANTA MONICA, Calif., Oct. 28, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Consumer Watchdog, Consumer Federation of California, the California Nurses Association and price-gouged policyholders condemned menacing health insurance company mailers against Proposition 45 today as a new Hoover... Reported by PR Newswire 2 hours ago.

Los Angeles Health Director: Obamacare Should Pay for Homeless Housing

$
0
0
Los Angeles Health Director: Obamacare Should Pay for Homeless Housing Los Angeles County Department of Health Services Director Mitch Katz says Obamacare should be used to cover housing costs for the homeless. 

"If I can take care of someone at a lower cost by providing them with housing, why wouldn't the federal government let me?" Katz told The Atlantic. Katz says homelessness spawns illness and should therefore be considered a health-related expense. 

Others, like San Francisco Housing and Urban Health Director Marc Trotz, agree. 

"There's a growing acceptance of the idea that for homeless people, housing is a valuable health service," said Trotz. "That's the health service that's going to help them the most." 

Katz says he wants California to let housing count as a Medi-Cal expense, a move he claims will save the state money. 

Clinton Administration Medicaid and Medicare director Bruce Vladeck says the idea is wrongheaded. 

"Medicaid is supposed to be health insurance, and not every problem somebody has is a health care problem," said Vladeck. 

According to the Los Angeles Times, California spends $17 billion a year on its Medi-Cal program. Reported by Breitbart 1 hour ago.

Home Health Workers Struggle For Better Pay And Health Insurance

$
0
0
Home health care aides often toil for low pay and in jobs without benefits, including health insurance. A million more home health care workers will be needed to meet demand over the next decade. Reported by NPR 45 minutes ago.

Washington Health Alliance: Insurers should be required to release cost data

$
0
0
Figuring out the actual cost of health care can often be likened to pulling teeth. In fact, Washington state earned a grade of "F" last year for its lack of health care cost transparency. Last year, legislative efforts resulted in a statewide database of health care costs. But thanks to lobbying efforts by Premera Blue Cross, one of the state's three largest health insurance companies, health insurance carriers weren't mandated to report to the database. This year, a coalition of health care stakeholders… Reported by bizjournals 29 minutes ago.

Here Are The Biggest Campaign Whoppers Of The 2014 Midterms

$
0
0
The following post first appeared on FactCheck.org.
By the time the last polling booth closes on Nov. 4, a staggering amount of money — $4 billion, by one estimate — will have been spent on the midterm elections. What did all that money buy? A lot of false and misleading TV ads.

Once again, we had no shortage of material for our annual Whoppers article. The candidates and their increasingly well-financed allies flooded the airwaves with ads accusing one another of dishonoring veterans, slashing Medicare benefits, threatening Social Security and lining their pockets with ill-gotten gains.

The facts too often did not support the over-the-top rhetoric used by both sides.

There were repeats from years past, including one that made our Whoppers list in 2006, as well as new twists on perennial topics, such as abortion and taxes. One Democrat claimed his opponent “proposed making women criminals for having an abortion,” even though the bill his opponent co-sponsored clearly stated a woman could not be prosecuted in “the death of her unborn child.” A Republican boasted that he “saved” 99 percent of taxpayers from “Obama’s tax increases,” even though he could only credibly claim to have “saved” at most 2 percent.

For these and other examples of this year’s most common and wackiest misstatements, please read on to the Analysis section.

**Analysis**

*Immigration Imagination*

By now, it’s routine for opponents of an immigration overhaul to yell “amnesty” at any supporter of a bill that includes a path to citizenship. There were many examples of that in this campaign cycle, too. But some candidates got more imaginative this year when it came to using the immigration issue as a blunt political weapon.

For example, in the Republican primary in North Carolina’s 7th Congressional District, David Rouzer claimed Woody White is “part of a group that is pushing for amnesty.” Really? The short answer is: No. The long answer is more entertaining: White belongs to a lawyer’s association that advocated for driver’s licenses to be issued to immigrants who are in the country illegally, so they can purchase car insurance. But that’s not amnesty and, even if it was, White doesn’t even share the group’s position on driver’s licenses.

We also wrote about false “amnesty” claims in Republican Senate primaries in Georgia and Mississippi. But Republicans weren’t the only ones to get creative on the issue of “amnesty.”

Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu claimed in a TV ad that she “voted nine times to block amnesty.” She didn’t, of course. No one proposed legislation that would have given blanket legal status to those living in the U.S. illegally, and no votes were taken. Her tortured logic: The immigration system amounts to “de facto amnesty,” so her support for a comprehensive immigration bill that included a path to citizenship amounted to votes to “block amnesty.”

There were some immigration chestnuts, too.

The National Republican Senatorial Committee served up a vintage Whopper (circa 2006) in a TV ad saying Arkansas Sen. Mark Pryor “voted to give Social Security benefits to illegal immigrants.” Nobody proposed paying benefits to those in the country illegally — not until and unless they gain legal status. Pryor voted in 2006 to kill a Republican amendment that would have changed current law to prevent legal immigrants from getting credit toward future Social Security benefits based on taxes paid while working in the U.S. illegally. Ten Republicans, including 2008 presidential nominee John McCain, voted against changing current law, too. We first debunked this claim in October 2006, and later put the claim on our list of the “Whoppers of 2006.”

Dueling ‘Amnesty’ Claims in N.C., April 30

Kingston’s False ‘Amnesty’ Connection, July 17

Twisting Cochran’s Record, May 23

Playing Politics with Immigration, Sept. 17

Headed for the Hall of Shame, Aug. 20

*Questionable Ethics Charges*

Campaigns design attack ads to make voters think the worst of the opposing candidate, and sometimes those attacks are personal.

In Michigan’s 4th Congressional District Republican primary, state Sen. John Moolenaar accused businessman Paul Mitchell of “lining his pockets with Obama’s stimulus.” On the screen, viewers see stacks of bills and the words: “Mitchell took $100,000 from Obama’s stimulus.” The Moolenaar ad cited an unimpeachable source for the claim: recovery.gov, the government website for the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. But there’s a lot less here than meets the eye. Michigan received funding to retrain laid-off workers, some of whom signed up for classes at a medical education center Mitchell once headed. The stimulus money helped pay for the tuition of laid-off workers who were seeking training in careers such as dental assistant and pharmacy technician; it did not go to line Mitchell’s pockets.

In another GOP primary, this one in Pennsylvania’s 9th District, Rep. Bill Shuster accused his tea party-backed challenger, Art Halvorson, of “lining his pockets with taxpayer subsidies.” The ad said: “His farm in Iowa got half a million dollars.” That was not the case at all. Halvorson rents property to farmer Jon Charles Jacobson, who has received $423,019 worth of USDA subsidies over 18 years. Jacobson received those subsidies, not Halvorson. And Jacobson told us he farms 700 acres and only a fraction of the subsidies he received came from farming that was done on Halvorson’s 40-acre property.

In the general election, the conservative Ending Spending Action Fund attacked Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen’s ethics by claiming she profited “from her votes,” and specifically accusing her husband of engaging in “a shady stock deal” and the New Hampshire senator of “a conflict of interest.” As a result of this family conspiracy, the ad says, Shaheen’s “wealth has surged while in public office.” The facts are far less tantalizing. The ad’s claims all stem from her vote for the stimulus – which all Senate Democrats supported – and the fact that her husband had a small financial stake in a company that received a $77,715 stimulus grant. The kicker: The Shaheen family’s estimated net worth had actually declined since she took office in January 2009. And the Shaheen campaign said her husband’s stock option in the company expired, so the family did not earn a dime from the “shady stock deal.”

In the Arkansas gubernatorial race, the Republican Governors Association claimed the Democratic nominee, former Rep. Mike Ross, got a “sweetheart deal” when he sold his family-owned pharmacy to a campaign donor in 2007. The ad cited a news story that was based largely on an independent appraisal of Ross’ pharmacy by Adam Guthrie Jr. The ad quoted Guthrie from a 2009 news story: “You can buy half the town for $420,000.” But Guthrie’s appraisal of the Ross pharmacy was discredited by state regulators, and Guthrie surrendered his license in 2010 rather than face disciplinary action by the Arkansas Appraiser Licensing & Certification Board for his appraisal of the Ross property. Also, the House ethics committee cleared Ross of any wrongdoing, saying the buyer paid fair market value for the pharmacy. The ad ignored all that.

Misleading Michigan GOP Primary Voters, July 31

Scandalous Ad in New Hampshire Race, Aug. 28

Stretching the Facts in Pennsylvania, March 28

Another Arkansas Whopper, Sept. 3

*Senior Scare*

This year, we likened claims designed to scare seniors to ghost stories — both frightening and fanciful. And they were plentiful, too.

In the first nine months of 2014, $50 million had been spent on TV ads that mentioned Medicare, with Democrats outspending Republicans nearly 2 to 1, according to Kantar Media Intelligence’s Campaign Media Analysis Group. That’s about 112,000 spots, and the numbers don’t even include ads about Social Security, the other major senior-scare topic.

In many cases, the claims were the same old scare tactics. In several Senate and House races, Democrats claimed Republicans would “end the Medicare guarantee,” a reference to the candidates’ support for Rep. Paul Ryan’s Medicare plan and a version of the “end Medicare” whopper that has been around since 2011. Ryan’s plan wouldn’t end the guarantee of Medicare, or Medicare benefits, as some ads claimed. Instead, it proposed phasing in a government-subsidy program in which future beneficiaries pick from traditional Medicare or private insurance plans, which must offer the same benefits as traditional Medicare.

Other Democratic ads, such as one from Alison Lundergan Grimes attacking Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell in the Kentucky Senate race, recycled the outdated claim that Republicans supporting Ryan’s plan would increase Medicare costs by $6,000 per beneficiary. That’s based on a Congressional Budget Office analysis of Ryan’s 2011 plan. Ryan’s subsequent proposals were more generous in terms of the growth of subsidies, and his current proposal is actually modeled on a plan that CBO says would lower seniors’ premiums and costs by 6 percent on average. The CBO also now says its 2011 report was a “rough analysis” based on assumptions that have proven invalid. Other Democratic claims exaggerated the impact Ryan’s plan would have on seniors’ prescription drug costs.

Republicans, meanwhile, continued to push the old, misleading claim that the Affordable Care Act would cut Medicare by $716 billion. That’s a reduction in the future growth of spending over 10 years, not a slashing of the current budget. The National Republican Congressional Committee led the charge on this talking point, making the claim in ads in several House races. Most of the reduction in Medicare spending is in the growth of future payments to hospitals, a move that extends the life of the Medicare trust fund.

On Social Security, an ad from Sen. Landrieu in Louisiana claimed that her Republican challenger, Rep. Bill Cassidy, voted to cut Social Security benefits “to pay for a millionaire’s tax cut.” No, he didn’t. That’s a reference to a Republican Study Committee budget resolution that called for using a different method of calculating cost-of-living increases and raising the retirement age. The “savings” from the cost-cutting measures would prolong the life of the Social Security trust funds — not pay for tax cuts. President Obama proposed the same change in cost-of-living calculations and correctly said it would “improve Social Security solvency.”

Political ads designed to scare seniors to garner their votes usually include images of elderly men and women, even though the claims being made pertain to proposed changes that wouldn’t affect seniors today. In the Arkansas Senate race, for example, an ad from Crossroads GPS attacking Pryor showed an image of a senior man while saying the Democratic incumbent “suggested raising the retirement age” for Social Security. He did — but for those who are now teenagers, not the man pictured.

Midterm Medicare Mudslinging, Oct. 3

More Senior Scare in Arkansas, Aug. 22

Social Security Scare in Louisiana, Aug. 7

Medicare Ghost Stories, July 9

Old Medicare Claims in Arkansas Senate Race, Feb. 21

*Coal-Fired Whoppers*

The whoppers in Kentucky and West Virginia were often fueled by America’s No. 1 energy source, coal.

The House Majority PAC, a super PAC dedicated to returning the Democrats to power in the House, got things started early — way back in March — with a TV ad in West Virginia’s 3rd District that falsely claimed Republican Evan Jenkins “vowed to repeal black lung benefits.” Jenkins vowed to repeal the Affordable Care Act, not end black lung benefits. A repeal of the ACA would make it more difficult for some miners and surviving spouses to prove eligibility for the Federal Black Lung Benefits Program. But that would not repeal the benefits, which were created under a separate law.

Six months later, Rep. Nick Rahall doubled down on the black lung benefits claim. His campaign ran an ad saying Jenkins pledged to “take away” black lung benefits. “When I hear Evan Jenkins say that he’s gonna take away our black lung benefits, it just bothers me to no end,” a coal miner said in the ad. Jenkins said no such thing. To the contrary, Jenkins says he is “firmly opposed to any cuts to the Federal Black Lung Benefit Program.” Rahall’s campaign was putting words in Jenkins’ mouth.

In the Kentucky Senate race, Grimes accused McConnell and his wife of “personally” taking “$600,000 from anti-coal groups.” Viewers wouldn’t know this from the ad, but Grimes was primarily talking about money from Wells Fargo. Yes, the bank. Elaine Chao, McConnell’s wife and a former secretary of labor, sits on the Wells Fargo board of directors — for which she has been paid $684,000 over the last three years. It’s true that Wells Fargo — five years before Chao joined the board — decided not to extend credit to mountaintop removal projects or to coal companies that receive a majority of their coal production from mountaintop removal. But it’s also true that the bank still lends billions to coal companies. In fact, the environmental Sierra Club gave it a “D” rating this year for its involvement in financing coal-fired power plants in 2013.

Not to be outdone, the McConnell campaign claimed to show “shocking” video evidence from Grimes’ “own staff” that proves “Grimes is lying” about her support for coal. Spoiler alert: There is no smoking gun. None of those featured in the ad is a paid staffer with the Grimes campaign, and all of them are expressing their personal opinions — not revealing campaign strategy. The Grimes supporters were surreptitiously videotaped by conservative activist James O’Keefe’s Project Veritas Action Fund as they were meeting with undercover actors who posed as liberals concerned about Grimes’ coal-friendly statements. The McConnell ad says “Grimes is lying,” but ignores the possibility that the supporters shown in the video are just telling the undercover actors what they think the actors want to hear.

Bogus Attack in Coal Mine Country, March 19

Doubling Down in West Virginia, Sept. 16

Kentucky Coal Connections, Oct. 7

No Proof of ‘Lying,’ Oct. 15

*Obamacare*

What list of campaign whoppers would be complete without claims about Obamacare? In this election, we saw efforts to paint Republicans as supporters of the Affordable Care Act, even though they weren’t. And, as in past elections, we saw conservatives offering misleading attacks on the law.

In the most interesting twist, the Democratic Senate Majority PAC ran an ad that could have been mistaken for a product of the Koch brothers from the way it disparaged Obamacare. The TV spot claimed that Cassidy, the Republican running for the Senate in Louisiana, sponsored a bill while in the state Legislature to create “government-run health care” in Louisiana. Cassidy did nothing of the sort. His 2007 bill, which never made it out of committee, called for setting up a state insurance exchange to serve as a clearinghouse for insurers and potential customers. The ad also claimed Cassidy argued for “automatic Obamacare registration,” but he actually called for repealing the ACA and enrolling the uninsured in a scaled-back GOP alternative.

In Georgia’s 1st Congressional District, Bob Johnson and Buddy Carter – who were rivals for the GOP nomination – ran deceptive ads in which each portrayed the other as a closet fan of Obamacare. A Johnson TV ad quoted Carter as saying Obamacare is “not so bad.” Carter said that “some of the things that have happened so far are not so bad,” but he immediately added that “the worst part is yet to come.” Carter, meanwhile, blasted Johnson for “membership in and endorsement from groups that support Obamacare.” Dr. Bob Johnson is a member of the American Medical Association, but he disagrees with the AMA on this issue. Needless to say, both have called for repeal of the law.

The Koch-backed Americans for Prosperity made canceled insurance policies a theme of its ads, with one series of TV spots against Democratic senators claiming, “Millions of people have lost their health insurance.” Insurance companies did discontinue policies that had covered millions who bought the plans directly, rather than through an employer. Those plans didn’t meet the minimum benefit standards of the law. But those policyholders didn’t lose the ability to have insurance. In most cases, insurers offered them an alternative plan, and in other cases, individuals could buy coverage on state or federal marketplaces, many with the help of federal subsidies. In fact, there is evidence that far more have gained coverage than had their policies canceled.

Other Republican ads claimed that premiums or health costs were “skyrocketing” under the ACA. That’s misleading. Employer-sponsored premiums, where most Americans have coverage, have been growing at historically low rates in the past few years, as have overall health care costs. Premiums for those who buy their own private insurance will go up or down, in some cases significantly, depending on individual circumstances: For instance, those with health conditions would likely pay less than they did when their health status was a pricing factor, and the reverse is likely the case for healthy individuals.

‘Cassidycare?’ Come On! July 11

Who Supports Obamacare in Georgia Race? July 16

Obamacare Ad Onslaught, April 11

*Dishonoring Veterans*

Democrats and Republicans tried to capitalize on public anger over the VA hospitals scandal by wrongly accusing their opponents of neglecting veterans by voting to cut their benefits or skipping important hearings on veterans-related issues to raise campaign cash.

Back in June, the House Majority PAC accused California Republican Doug Ose of voting “to slash veterans benefits by $15 billion” in 2003, but actually he voted for a nonbinding budget resolution that proposed a 5.4 percent increase in new spending authority for veterans benefits and services for fiscal year 2004. Democrats claimed the bill contained a $15 billion cut because the House Republicans’ budget proposed a smaller increase in spending authority for veterans benefits than President Bush’s budget. Bush had called for a 6.6 percent increase compared with the 5.4 percent contained in the House measure.

After that, the Senate Majority PAC and Patriot Majority USA aired an identical TV ad making the inaccurate claim that Cassidy, the Louisiana Republican, “voted for a plan that would cut veterans benefits.” The ad was referring to a February 2012 vote related to the Baseline Reform Act of 2012, a Republican-sponsored bill that would have changed the budget process in a way that may or may not have resulted in budget cuts. Under the bill, baseline budget projections would not be adjusted for inflation. But the bill alone would not have resulted in automatic cuts to veterans benefits. Congress would still need to decide how much to spend above or below the baseline. As the Congressional Budget Office said in an analysis of the bill: “Any impact on the budget would depend on the extent of future legislative actions.”

Those ads aired before former Republican Rep. Bobby Schilling ran a TV spot featuring four Army and Navy veterans scolding Democratic Rep. Cheri Bustos for $6 billion in cuts to “veterans benefits” that never happened. What Bustos initially voted for last December was a bipartisan budget to avert another government shutdown that also reduced future cost-of-living adjustments to the pensions of working-age military retirees by cutting spending by an estimated $6.2 billion over 10 years, beginning in fiscal year 2016. But the pension cut quickly drew fire from military and veterans groups, and members of the Senate and the House, including Bustos, voted weeks later to repeal the cut and restore the old cost-of-living formula for all who had signed up for military service prior to 2014.

And Concerned Veterans for America got in on the deception with an ad that falsely claimed Iowa Rep. Bruce Braley “skipped an important VA reform hearing to attend three fundraisers.” In fact, none of the three fundraisers that Braley attended was scheduled at the same time as the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee hearing that he missed that day. The Braley campaign has said that the congressman missed the VA committee hearing because he was attending a House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing that was taking place at roughly the same time. The official transcript shows Braley was present for the oversight hearing. But it is not known for how long, and his campaign wouldn’t say.

Moldy Baloney About Vets’ Benefits, June 5

Democratic Assault on Cassidy’s Record, Sept. 3

No Cuts for Military Vets, Sept. 18

Braley’s VA Hearing Attendance Under Attack, Aug. 1

*Misleading Ads About Taxes*

Nothing, the saying goes, is as certain as death and taxes. To that we might add “and misleading political ads about taxes.” As usual, 2014 campaigns have been filled with bloated boasts about tax cuts and off-base accusations that an opponent has raised taxes.

The bipartisan deal reached on New Year’s Day in 2013 to avoid the so-called fiscal cliff provided plenty of ad fodder for both sides. Known as the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012, the compromise agreement permanently extended Bush-era income tax cuts for everyone except for individuals making more than $400,000 and couples making more than $450,000 a year.

That led to a grossly misleading boast by McConnell, the Senate minority leader from Kentucky, who voted for the bipartisan deal. McConnell claimed he “[s]aved 99% of Kentuckians from Obama’s Tax Increases.” But Obama’s plan would have extended the Bush-era tax cuts for those earning up to $250,000 for families ($200,000 for individuals). In other words, McConnell can only credibly claim to have “saved” individuals with taxable income of between $200,000 and $400,000 and couples who earn between $250,000 and $450,000. That’s about 1 percent to 2 percent of Americans.

Interestingly, that same fiscal cliff vote was used as the basis for an ad from McConnell’s opponent, Grimes, who claimed McConnell “even voted to end the payroll tax credit.” It’s true that a temporary payroll tax holiday was allowed to expire in the fiscal cliff deal. But no one really pushed for extending the payroll tax holiday, not even Democrats who had proposed it two years earlier as a form of temporary recession relief. All but three Senate Democrats voted for the fiscal cliff bill, and the expiration of the payroll tax holiday was even supported by the likes of Obama’s treasury secretary, Timothy Geithner, and Nancy Pelosi, the top Democrat in the House. The fiscal cliff deal McConnell voted for was praised by Obama, who even thanked McConnell by name for supporting it.

On more than one occasion, Republicans and their allies labeled vulnerable Democratic senators champions of a carbon tax without evidence. One particularly egregious example: A Crossroads GPS ad said Colorado Sen. Mark Udall “voted to enact a carbon tax.” He did not. The ad refers to a vote on a failed amendment to a nonbinding budget resolution. The amendment would have required any possible future carbon tax to be revenue neutral, with the tax proceeds being returned to the American people. We saw similar bogus attacks on Sens. Kay Hagan of North Carolina and Mark Begich of Alaska.

In a Republican-on-Republican attack, Paul DeMarco, a candidate in Alabama’s 6th Congressional District Republican runoff, butchered a quote from his opponent, Gary Palmer, on taxes. The ad left the false impression that Palmer supported a $1.2 billion tax hike. It took a quote from an op-ed Palmer wrote opposing the tax increase, but cut it off in mid-sentence. The ad quoted Palmer as saying, “I would be willing to support a tax increase …,” even though the rest of that sentence read “… but only on the condition that we first set in place some meaningful accountability measures. Unfortunately, the proposal before the people of Alabama falls well short of the mark.”

And, in what ended up being the most shocking upset of the political year so far, Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia lost his primary to upstart Republican David Brat, despite Cantor repeatedly portraying Brat as a “liberal college professor” who advised then-Democratic Gov. Tim Kaine on a massive tax hike plan. Cantor distorted Brat’s role on the Joint Advisory Board of Economists, a large board of unpaid technical experts that was narrowly tasked with providing professional economic forecasts. Advice on tax policy was not part of the job description.

McConnell’s Bloated Tax Boast, April 23

Grimes Ad Misses the Mark on McConnell, Oct. 23

Cantor Mislabels Opponent, May 5

Cantor Mislabels Opponent, The Sequel, May 28

Editing Out the Facts in Alabama, June 25

More Carbon Tax Distortions, July 24

AFP Distorts Begich’s Carbon Tax Stance, Feb. 28

*Wait … There’s More!*

The liberal Senate Majority PAC claimed in a TV ad to “connect the dots” on Rep. Tom Cotton’s career. Cotton was “paid handsomely working for insurance companies” before joining Congress, the ad said, and he has paid them back in Congress by supporting the industry’s agenda. There is one problem with this theory: Cotton didn’t work for any insurance companies. His only established connection to the industry involved consulting work for the Federal Housing Administration.

Conversely, Cotton made the curious claim that President Obama “hijacked the farm bill, turned it into a food stamp bill.” That was his defense for being the only member of the Arkansas delegation to vote against the bill. But food stamp funding has been part of farm bills going back to 1973.

Sen. John Walsh, before quitting the race over plagiarism charges, claimed Republican Rep. Steve Daines “proposed making women criminals for having an abortion.” The ad cites the Life at Conception Act, which Daines co-sponsored. But that bill clearly states that “nothing in this Act shall be construed to authorize the prosecution of any woman for the death of her unborn child.”

In the Georgia Senate race, Republican David Perdue cited a campaign strategy memo from Michelle Nunn’s advisers to make the audacious claim that “her foundation gave money to organizations linked to terrorists.” She “admits” it! It’s right there in the campaign memo! Except it’s not. The memo doesn’t “admit” anything. It was meant to prepare “responses to potential Republican attacks,” as it said. It didn’t say those attacks would be accurate. And there’s no evidence that the foundation — Points of Light, the volunteer group founded by former Republican President George H.W. Bush — gave money to any group linked to terrorists.

Most attack ads appear in competitive races, but long-shot Democratic challenger Jim Mowrer in Iowa’s 4th Congressional District ran a TV ad that claimed Rep. Steve King voted to “raise his own pay by $20,000 a year and take perks like free health care for life.” Mowrer is doubly wrong. The $20,000 figure is about how much congressional salaries automatically have increased for cost-of-living adjustments since 2002, when King was first elected. King did not vote to raise his pay — let alone “by $20,000 a year.” He also didn’t vote for “free health care for life.” King voted for a House budget resolution that urged the repeal of the Affordable Care Act. But if that happened, members of Congress would return to the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program, which is not free.

Disconnecting the Dots in Arkansas, April 11

Hijacking History in Arkansas, Sept. 24

Abortion Attack Goes Too Far in Montana, May 22

Perdue Distorts Nunn Campaign Memo, Sept. 12

Double Whopper Against King, Oct. 10

Editor’s note: Did we miss one of your favorite whoppers? Let us know which one. Tweet us at @factcheckdotorg.

– by Eugene Kiely, Lori Robertson, D’Angelo Gore and Robert Farley Reported by Huffington Post 21 minutes ago.

Yes on 45: La Opinion Adds Endorsement of Prop 45 to Long List of Small Newspapers Standing Up for the Little Guy, Says Consumer Watchdog Campaign

$
0
0
SANTA MONICA, Calif., Oct. 28, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Spanish language newspaper La Opinion endorsed Prop 45 over the weekend joining more than a dozen other newspapers supporting Yes on 45 on behalf of six million individuals and small businesses that health insurance companies... Reported by PR Newswire 24 minutes ago.

Healthcare overhaul ramps up business at WellPoint

$
0
0
WellPoint Inc. raised its 2014 earnings forecast again and trumped third-quarter expectations as the overhaul of the healthcare system adds millions of people to the nation's health insurance rolls, and at a lower cost than was expected at the nation's second-largest health insurer. Reported by L.A. Times 21 hours ago.

Small businesses can enroll in Obamacare statewide

$
0
0
Small businesses throughout Washington -- those with 50 or fewer employees -- can now shop for and enroll in health insurance plans through the state's insurance exchange. Reported by Seattle Times 18 hours ago.

Study: Majority of Likely Voters Oppose Mandatory Health Coverage

$
0
0
Americans no longer believe that the government needs to make sure everyone has health insurance, a guiding principle of Obamacare — and the sentiment is even more pronounced among likely voters, a study of numerous surveys on the issue taken between 2010 and last month show. Reported by Newsmax 17 hours ago.

Care Wisconsin Rapidly Implements Casenet TruCare to Support Its New Medicaid Supplemental Security Income Business

$
0
0
Experience, Proven Process and Out-of-the-box Content Enables On-time and On-budget Delivery of Enterprise Care Management Solution for Managing Complex Populations in Wisconsin

Bedford, MA (PRWEB) October 30, 2014

Casenet, LLC, a leading provider of extensible care management solutions, today announced that Care Wisconsin selected and implemented the Casenet® TruCare care management platform to better manage its Medicaid Supplemental Security Income (SSI) managed care program. TruCare® was selected for its unique workflows, out-of-the box content and streamlined implementation methodology that is adaptable to customer requirements, staffing, budgets and time constraints.

In late 2013, Dane County in Wisconsin did not have a managed care program for its high touch population: those with Medicaid SSI, a health insurance program for individuals with a disability who qualify for Federal SSI. Care Wisconsin received approval from the Wisconsin Department of Health Services to offer the program in Dane County, and also in Columbia, Dodge, Jefferson, Ozaukee, Rock, Sauk, and Waukesha counties. Providing this service required Care Wisconsin to acquire innovative technology to enable their integrated care teams to manage their members and to support their business growth.

Care Wisconsin went through a detailed evaluation process and selected Casenet because it has experience with other organizations with similar work and size profiles and a proven track record of delivering solutions that meet client needs. Care Wisconsin also had a tight budgetary and delivery timeframe and needed a partner to get the project completed on time and within budget. Due to the nature of the contract, Care Wisconsin’s implementation date was not negotiable because it had a State mandated go-live date which resulted in less than six months to implement TruCare, once it was selected as the Care Wisconsin’s care management solution.

“The TruCare implementation exceeded my expectations,” stated Ken Eimers, chief operating officer at Care Wisconsin. “We set a really aggressive go-live date. The implementation was very well run and was completed on time and on budget. TruCare integrated easily with the Care Wisconsin environment.

“Typically you expect a couple of issues with a new system implementation, especially when you are starting up a new business at the same time. But with the Casenet team in charge, we did not experience any significant issues. The Casenet team put a lot of emphasis on training and knowledge transfer which enabled our team to get up and running quickly and eliminated any of the guesswork that normally occurs with a project of this magnitude.”

The collaborative and train-the-trainer approach of Casenet implementations enabled the staff at Care Wisconsin to be up and running quickly and effectively while staying focused on their members. “Our staff was really pleased that we achieved our go-live date in such a collaborative manner. And they were especially impressed with the professionalism of the Casenet team who provided excellent documentation, training and workflow input,” states Ruth Christensen, health plan services director at Care Wisconsin.

TruCare comes pre-packaged with over 40 assessments, 35 care plans, 50 correspondence templates, and 140 key metric templates. The prepackaged clinical content can be used out-of-the box, or as a starting point to deploy custom content. In order to rapidly implement TruCare, Care Wisconsin took advantage of the TruCare out-of-the-box care plans, assessments and workflows. “Enhancing workflows was one of the goals for the project. The workflows that are built into TruCare have been very beneficial to our team because they enable them to work effectively and focus more on our members instead of the software itself. TruCare is flexible enough to allow us to completely customize our environment, and we could have done that,” says Ken. “But that would have slowed down the implementation. Our end goal was to meet the state-mandated timelines and our members’ needs right away. We did this with TruCare’s out-of-the-box workflows and content. Going forward, TruCare enables us to customize our system as our members and processes evolve.”

Ken shared, “It was very urgent for us to go live when we did both to meet the state’s deadline and so our team could deliver the best possible care. Casenet more than met my expectations for the implementation schedule and kept us on budget which was another important goal.” Care Wisconsin expects to be expanding to other counties over time, and Ken explained, “Care Wisconsin feels very comfortable with Casenet, and our ability to expand our programs further with TruCare.”

With a single platform for utilization, case and disease management, TruCare delivers unmatched flexibility to implement, coordinate and manage clinical, wellness and quality programs and enable providers, care managers, families and members to better coordinate. TruCare will not only increase the efficiency of Care Wisconsin’s internal care team members but will also meet their evolving business requirements for seamless care team coordination, data integration and member satisfaction.

By enabling dynamic, multidisciplinary care teams to better coordinate, collaborate and communicate, TruCare decreases the time to intervention and increases efficiency. This results in improved member engagement and outcomes as well as reduced cost. “Using TruCare we have the ability to keep track of all the relevant information for our members in one place,” said Ruth. “This is extremely helpful. TruCare tasks drive our workflow which is a significant advantage over other options. Good workflows increase our efficiency because we no longer have the potential of multiple people doing the same member outreach or doing repeat calls. This creates a much more friendly care experience for our members.”

Finally when asked about the impact TruCare had on the Care Wisconsin members, Ruth stated, “TruCare is an enabler of good care management.”

About Care Wisconsin

Care Wisconsin is a nonprofit care management organization that matches frail seniors and individuals with disabilities to the health and long-term care services they need. Care Wisconsin has been helping members live as independently as possible since 1976. Care Wisconsin manages Family Care and Partnership, two of Wisconsin's public health and long-term care programs and Medicaid SSI. These programs serve more than 6,800 members across 22 counties in Wisconsin. For more information, visit http://www.carewisc.org.

Care Wisconsin Media Contact:
Cathy Lanser, 608-245-3076, lanserc(at)carewisc(dot)org

About Casenet, LLC

Casenet provides a comprehensive suite of extensible, enterprise care management software and services solutions for commercial, Medicaid, Medicare, TPA, provider/ACO and carveout organizations. These solutions enable our customers to improve care coordination and the quality and delivery of care through enhanced case, disease, utilization and home and community-based services management as well as tools for total population management. Casenet supports small to very large enterprise customers that require tremendous scalability, have many lines of business with benefits that are complex and complicated to administer, and require comprehensive configuration for each targeted member population. These solutions enable organizations to meet their unique requirements and adapt quickly to changing market and regulatory dynamics, identify and target populations having unique risk characteristics and deliver specific care management programs for those members — taking the first step toward better individual health and total population health management. For more information, visit http://www.casenetllc.com
.
Casenet Media Contact:
Kelli L. Bravo, 781-357-2706, kbravo(at)casenetllc(dot)com

Learn more about TruCare®

Request a demonstration and find out how TruCare can improve your member health. Reported by PRWeb 13 hours ago.

InsFocus Appoints Robert LaLonde as Senior Account Executive Responsible for US Market Development

$
0
0
InsFocus Systems Ltd., a global Insurance BI specialist, today announced the appointment of Robert LaLonde as Senior Account Executive. LaLonde will be responsible for the company’s business development in the US market.

Petach Tikva, Israel (PRWEB) October 30, 2014

LaLonde joins InsFocus from Insight Decision Solutions, Inc., a business intelligence firm for life and health insurance, where he served as Vice President and Senior Account Executive. Previously, he was Senior Vice President at Applied Quantitative Solutions (AQS), an investment advisory firm that provides risk management and investment optimization software to the insurance industry. Before AQS he held leadership roles with software companies, including SS&C Technologies and PolySystems. He was also a team leader in the Actuarial Insurance practice at KPMG.

LaLonde is a Fellow in the US Society of Actuaries.

“LaLonde brings extensive skills and experience to InsFocus, and will manage the company’s efforts to develop our US market, which we consider as a major growth engine,” said Uri Taiber, InsFocus CEO. “LaLonde’s expertise will help us increase the awareness and understanding of our innovative insurance-specific business intelligence system in this important market.”

“I am very pleased to be joining InsFocus,” said LaLonde. “I joined InsFocus because I was very impressed with their product. I found InsFocus BI System to be very complete, easy to use, and priced to make it affordable for all company sizes, even very small companies. I’ve been in software sales for over 30 years, and InsFocus is very impressive in the applicability of its system, the depth of its analysis, and its responsiveness towards client needs.”

About InsFocus

InsFocus Systems is a global insurance business intelligence specialist, combining extensive insurance industry experience with BI and data warehouse expertise. The company’s flagship product, InsFocus BI, is based on a pre-built insurance data model, and contains numerous pre-built insurance-specific report templates, calculation methods and insurance metrics. InsFocus is a Microsoft™ Certified ISV Partner. For more information visit the company's website at http://www.insfocus.com. Reported by PRWeb 13 hours ago.

Jill Milan and Claire Farwell London Collaborate in Trunk Show Benefit for Sense of Security California

$
0
0
Fashion brands Jill Milan and Claire Farwell London partner to benefit Sense of Security California’s support of women battling breast cancer

SAN FRANCISCO (PRWEB) October 30, 2014

Jill Milan®, a provider of designer Italian handbags, partnered with apparel brand Claire Farwell London in a trunk show benefiting Sense of Security California, a non-profit organization which provides financial assistance for California residents and families financially distressed by treatment for breast, ovarian and other gynecological cancers. Also featured and available for auction were paintings by artist Erin Bobo. A portion of the evening’s fashion and art sales were donated to SOSC.

The event was hosted in the Palo Alto home of Claire Fedder. Veggie Grill of Mountain View and Jacquart Champagne contributed to the event’s catering.

“The support which Sense of Security California provides can make all the difference for women fighting breast and other cancers, and for their families,” said Jill Fraser, Jill Milan founder. “We could not be more pleased to be part of this event.”

“To bring together creative, confident women for one cause and to celebrate life with a glass of champagne, delicious vegan food and fashion – it’s these collaborations that highlight the best of life and remind us of friends, family and all those affected by breast cancer,” said Claire Farwell, founder of Claire Farwell London.

A diagnosis of breast, ovarian and other gynecological cancers can impose heavy financial burdens on patients and their families. Cathy Sisneros Chung formed Sense of Security California in 2010 after her sister Darlene’s battle with breast cancer revealed how expensive a cancer diagnosis can be.

“In July 2000 my sister Darlene learned she had breast cancer; she was 39 years old,” Ms. Chung said. “In September 2001, my husband Steve’s first wife, Susan, was diagnosed with ovarian cancer; she was 42. Susan lost her battle in December 2004 and Darlene in August 2012. Our story is not unique. So many other families face these same agonizing diagnoses with a family member or dear friend.”

Few organizations in California serve non-medical financial needs for patients with breast cancer and almost no organizations focus on ovarian and other gynecological cancers. Of these organizations their focus is primarily limited to emergency funding. Sense of Security California provides comprehensive, sustained financial assistance to meet basic living expense for median- to low-income patients while in treatment.

“We know firsthand how expensive a cancer diagnosis can be,” Ms. Chung said. “If you are lucky enough to have private health insurance you face high co-pays for your medications. Many of the women we serve have to turn to government assistance and are making choices of paying for their medications or feeding their families. Most of the women cannot work during their treatment. It is not surprising what an unbearable burden this can be on many families.”

Donations to Sense of Security California can be made at the organization’s website, http://www.senseofsecurityus.org. SOSC provides its clients with specific non-medical financial assistance while they are in active cancer treatment to cover the costs of transportation, groceries, rent or utilities. SOSC is a 501c(3) non-profit corporation operated entirely by volunteers.

About Jill Milan
Jill Milan is a provider of luxury Italian handbags and fashion accessories. Made of exquisite materials, Jill Milan products are crafted in Italy by artisans who have created handbags and accessories for some of Europe’s best known fashion houses. All Jill Milan products are free of animal-derived materials, and the company contributes to animal-welfare organizations. Jill Milan is the only luxury handbag line entirely free of animal-derived materials which regularly appears on Hollywood’s red carpets. Visit Jill Milan on the Web and follow Jill Milan on Facebook. Jill Milan and the Jill Milan logo are registered trademarks of Jill Milan LLC, and are protected by trademark laws of the United States and other countries. All other product and company names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective companies.

About Claire Farwell London
Luxurious hand-selected fabrics construct an elegant and timeless collection. With an emphasis on femininity and design detail, every piece within the Essentials Collection creates a slimming and flattering silhouette. Claire Farwell London encompasses the essence of modern sophistication– the perfect staples for day to night looks, gorgeous styles for the international jetsetter, and reversable designs that will expand any wardrobe. Timeless pieces for ageless women. Visit Claire Farwell London on the Web and follow Claire Farwell London on Facebook.

About Sense of Security California
Sense of Security California is a California 501c(3) non-profit corporation that provides non-medical financial assistance for California residents who are financially distressed due to being patients in treatment for breast, ovarian and other gynecological cancers. Our work begins with the patient but extends to their family. Through the collaboration with social workers and patient navigators we are reaching the needs of patients and their families whose diagnosis and treatment has become an unbearable burden. Visit SOSC online at http://www.senseofsecurityus.org. Reported by PRWeb 13 hours ago.

8 ways to save big on your medication

$
0
0
*8 ways to save big on your medication*

Chances are you’re paying more than you need to for prescription drugs. But thanks to discounts offered at Costco, CVS, Target, Walgreens, Walmart, and others, hundreds of common generic drugs can be purchased for pennies per pill.

Retailers offer the discounts to draw in customers. The lower-priced pills aren’t part of any health insurance, and using them won’t count toward your deductible. But they can be a huge help, especially if you don’t have insurance or good drug coverage. And sometimes prices could even be cheaper than if you used insurance. Here’s how to get the most from the programs.

-1. Ask for a 90-day Rx-

To offer such low prices, retailers often buy the medications in bulk. You should, too. A three-month supply could cost just $10, compared with $4 for a one month’s supply.

-2. Factor in membership fees-

Though Costco, Target, and Walmart offer savings without enrollment or fees, others don’t: CVS charges $15 per person; Walgreens, $20 for individuals or $35 for a family.

-3. Consider your privacy-

You may be required to sign a form or check a box giving the pharmacy or third parties such as drug manufacturers or insurance companies permission to contact you with other offers and promotions. Ask whether you can join the program or get the discounted price if you don’t check that box, says ­Stephen W. Schondelmeyer, Ph.D., a pharmaceutical economics professor at the University of Minnesota.

*What else you need to know about prescription privacy, and how to find the best pharmacy for you.*

-4. Ask for the lowest price-

That’s what helped our secret shoppers get the best deals when they called more than 200 pharmacies across the U.S. “Also, ask your pharmacist, ‘What would this cost if I didn’t use my insurance?’” Schondelmeyer says. For an independent pharmacy, see whether it will match or beat competitor prices. You might be surprised.

-5. Check back often-

Which drugs are discounted, as well as the doses and prices, are subject to change.

-6. Look for other extras-

CVS, Kmart, and Walgreens offer discounts of between 5 percent and 20 percent on flu shots and similar services. At Target, membership in the Pharmacy Rewards program gets you a 5 percent discount on a day of shopping after the first prescription fill. Every five fills after that earns you an additional 5 percent discount on store purchases. Walmart offers free shipping on many $10, 90-day prescriptions.

*Get free information on the effectiveness, safety, and cost of hundreds of medications from Consumer Reports Best Buy Drugs.*

-7. Know the restrictions-

Program discounts usually cannot be combined with other promotions or even insurance. For example, people who use Medicaid and Medicare aren’t eligible for discounts at Costco. Certain discounts are offered only to those who don’t have drug insurance or are for drugs not covered by insurance.

-8. Practice Rx safety-

Getting a good deal is important, but be sure to have all of your prescriptions filled at a single pharmacy. Your pharmacist can flag any potentially dangerous drug interactions or allergies.

-*It pays to shop around—you could save hundreds of dollars a year.*-

- -

*Generic drug name
*(brand name)

*Citalopram (Celexa)*

20 mg, 1 pill daily, treats depression

*Fluoxetine (Prozac)*

20 mg, 1 pill daily, treats depression

*Lovastatin (Mevacor)*

20 mg, 1 pill daily, treats high cholesterol

*Metformin (Glucophage)*

500 mg, 1 pill twice daily, treats type 2 diabetes

*Paroxetine (Paxil)*

20 mg, 1 pill daily, treats depression and anxiety

 
*Retail price
*30 days

$29 

 

$32

$19 

 

$17

$25

*CVS
*90 days

$11.99

$11.99

$11.99

$11.99

$11.99

*Costco
*30/90 days

$4.99/$6.39

$5.69/$5.69

$4.99/$6.39

$4.99/$6.39

$5.99/$6.99

*Rite Aid
*30/90 days

$9.99/$15.99

$9.99/$15.99

$9.99/$15.99

$9.99/$15.99

$9.99/$15.99

*Target
*30/90 days

$4/$10

$4/$10

$4/$10

$4/$10

$4/$10

*Walgreens
*30/90 days

$10/$20

$5/$10

$5/$10

$5/$10

$10/$20

*Walmart
*30/90 days

$4/$10

N/A

$4/$10

$4/$10

$4/$10

This article also appeared in the December 2014 issue of Consumer Reports magazine. This article and related materials are made possible by a grant from the state Attorney General Consumer and Prescriber Education Grant Program, which is funded by the multistate settlement of consumer-fraud claims regarding the marketing of the prescription drug Neurontin (gabapentin).

*Consumer Reports has no relationship with any advertisers on this website. Copyright © 2006-2014 Consumers Union of U.S.*

*Subscribe now!*
Subscribe to *ConsumerReports.org* for expert Ratings, buying advice and reliability on hundreds of products.
--------------------
Update your feed preferences
   
   
   
   
    Reported by Consumer Reports 8 hours ago.

In Las Vegas, Political Pulls In TV Dollars

$
0
0
Las Vegas is a healthy media market that has seen TV and radio spending grow versus a year ago, and it has gotten very tight with political spending leading into next week’s election. Local TV spending in Las Vegas is up 3% year-to-year, with hot categories including auto, fast food, health insurance, retail, financial and telecom. But recently political has been the main driver. Reported by TVNewsCheck 9 hours ago.

Sandra Fluke's Election Bid Opposed By One Big-Spending Businessman

$
0
0
WASHINGTON -- Bill Bloomfield, the Republican-turned-independent real estate titan, nearly toppled Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) in 2012 after putting more than $7 million of his own money behind his bid. Neither man is on the ballot this year, but that hasn't stopped Bloomfield from pouring another fortune into an electoral race -- this one for the California state Senate.

He has already spent $1.3 million in independent expenditures to boost the candidacy of Ben Allen, a Santa Monica-Malibu school board member and former corporate lawyer with Bryan Cave, who is running in the 26th Senate District against lawyer and activist Sandra Fluke. Bloomfield's spending, most of which has come in the last month, is only slightly less than the $1.8 million raised for each candidate's campaign.

As the most populous and wealthiest state in the union, California is no stranger to big money spending in elections. In 2010, former Hewlett-Packard CEO Meg Whitman put nearly $100 million of her own money in a failed bid for governor. But close followers of campaign fundraising in the state believe that Bloomfield's splurge in support of Allen is unprecedented for a non-candidate in a state legislative race.

"The amount that Bloomfield has put in may be more than any single donor has put into one state Senate race," said Derek Cressman, the former vice president for state operations at Common Cause who made an unsuccessful bid for California secretary of state in this year's primary. "It's an example of the current campaign finance rules that give one individual such an outsized voice."

"It's certainly not every race that you see this," said Dan Newman, executive director of the San Francisco-based campaign finance tracking website MapLight.org.

What is most perplexing is that no one seems to know why Bloomfield, a pro-business independent who also funds school privatization efforts, is spending so much money on a race that will have no bearing on the big issue in California elections this year: whether Democrats can reach a two-thirds supermajority in both chambers of the legislature and completely sideline Republicans. Since both Fluke and Allen are Democrats, the outcome of their contest will not affect the partisan makeup of the Senate.

"The big issue out here is whether the Democrats will retain two-thirds control of the legislature," Cressman said. "So a lot of people are scratching their heads about what Bloomfield's up to."

Bloomfield did not respond to a request for comment on his spending in the race.

The Fluke campaign is, understandably, not pleased with the huge infusion of cash against its candidate.

"This race is just the latest glaring example of why we need to take serious action on campaign finance reform, and the differences between the two candidates on the issue are clear," Lindsay Bubar, general consultant to the Fluke campaign, said in a statement. "Mr. Allen is celebrating a conservative mega-donor's attempt to buy this election for him, and Sandra is standing up and fighting against it."

"We have no control or any communication with him," Allen campaign spokesman Eric Hacopian said of Bloomfield.

Hacopian further sought to deflect the criticism of Bloomfield's spending by noting that Allen has received most of his contributions from Californians while Fluke has raised much of her money from outside the state.

Meanwhile, Bloomfield has told LA Weekly that he was sold on Allen by Los Angeles Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky, whom Allen once interned for. Bloomfield said he decided to spend on the race to "level the playing field," even though the two candidates have raised almost identical amounts for their campaigns.

Bloomfield is also concerned about Fluke's national prominence. "He's running against somebody with extremely high name identification," he told LA Weekly.

Before entering the 26th District race, Fluke became a lightning rod in the public debate over women's health issues when Rush Limbaugh called her a "slut" on his radio program for testifying before Congress in support of requiring employers, including religiously affiliated institutions, to include birth control in their health insurance coverage.

Hacopian made a similar point about Fluke's name recognition. "It's not easy running against a national star," he said. "It's sort of a strange double standard. People essentially want us not to compete with her."

Making Bloomfield's spending on the race even stranger is that there is little daylight between the two candidates when it comes to publicly stated policy differences. Both claim to be progressive Democrats, and they were largely in agreement at a debate in October.

Bloomfield's spending makes more sense when one goes beyond public statements to delve into recent changes in the structure of California elections. Since the implementation of the state's open primary -- in which the top two vote-getters in each race, regardless of party, go on to the general election -- business interests have been busy exploiting the system: They help fund pro-corporate Democrats, sometimes former Republicans, in order to push the state further to the right without directly contesting its deep blue hue.

"At this point, what we are seeing is multinationals and major corporate interests pursuing a Democratic Party strategy as opposed to pursuing a strategy of having Republicans take over," Cressman said.

News site Capital and Main explored that dynamic in an investigative report on the rise of corporate-backed Democrats in the "jungle primary" system. One such lawmaker, state Assemblyman Steve Fox, told Capital and Main, "We’re pulling the party to the center, towards being more business-friendly."

Allen has given no real public sign that he would be a member of the Democrats' growing corporate bloc. He has, however, raised funds from corporate political action committees and Republican donors.

Republican Party heavyweights giving to Allen's campaign include billionaire Jerry Perenchio, the Gap-founding Fisher family, former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan and investor William Oberndorf. Both Perenchio and Oberndorf are donors to Karl Rove's American Crossroads super PAC, while the Fisher family was a major funder of a dark money laundering scheme to push 2012 California ballot initiatives that led to historic fines. Corporate PACs and business trade associations have also given more than $100,000 to Allen's campaign.

Criticism of the candidate's fundraising from PACs is misguided, Hacopian contended, as these contributions are "minuscule compared to what those interests are spending in other fronts." Since California Senate districts are larger than congressional districts and the state is tilted toward one party, it is hard to find a Democrat who hasn't received contributions from Republicans, he added.

Hacopian did suggest that these business donors may be open to Allen because they believe he will at least listen to their arguments.

"Whenever you have a race between two progressive Democrats, people want to see who will hear them out and who will not just be an ideologue," he said. Reported by Huffington Post 8 hours ago.

Obamacare Drives Digital Transformation at Health Insurers

$
0
0
As consumers, we can all rest assured that the Affordable Care Act has put us in the digital transformation driver’s seat, as insurers like Kaiser Permanente must now compete for our health insurance dollar – and that battle must take place in the omnichannel digital world. Reported by Forbes.com 8 hours ago.

Allred Insurance Satellite Office Grand Opening

$
0
0
Don Allred Insurance is excited to announce the Grand Opening of its satellite office in Burlington’s Holly Hill Mall.

Burlington, NC (PRWEB) October 30, 2014

Don Allred Insurance, a leading provider of home, auto, life, commercial, and health insurance plans for North Carolina residents, is excited to announce the Grand Opening of its satellite office in Burlington’s Holly Hill Mall. The new branch has been up and running since October 15, with agents already helping customers through all facets of the insurance selection process from quote comparison to policy purchase.

Allred Insurance spokesman Scott Allred couldn’t be happier with the timing of this Grand Opening.

“Our team worked hard to make sure the scheduled opening went off without a hitch,” he says. “The timing here is extremely important because of the upcoming open enrollment period for 2015 coverage under the national Affordable Care Act. Open enrollment begins on November 15, giving us a whole month to settle in and prepare for the influx of application requests.”

Mr. Allred also revealed a partial lineup of insurance providers his firm has partnered with for the coming year.

“We will be offering Allred clients coverage options from Blue Cross Blue Shield of NC, United Health Care, and Coventry for the 2015 plan year,” he says. “And this list will likely grow as we finalize the details on additional partnerships.”

Regular business hours at the Allred Insurance Holly Hill location, where walk-ins are encouraged and welcome, are 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. from Monday to Friday and 12 p.m. to 3 p.m. on Sundays. It is also possible to meet with agents by appointment outside of posted business hours for one-on-one consultations.

To handle the anticipated surge in walk-in traffic during the ACA open enrollment period, which runs from November 15 to February 15, Allred’s Holly Hill office will extend its business hours to 9 p.m. on weekdays and will provide services on Saturdays for those three months.

For more information about Allred Insurance or to schedule a consultation, please visit http://www.allredinsurance.com. Reported by PRWeb 7 hours ago.

Zacks Industry Outlook Highlights: WellPoint, UnitedHealth Group, Humana, CIGNA and Aetna

$
0
0
CHICAGO, Oct. 30, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, Zacks Equity Research discusses the Health Insurance (part 2), including WellPoint Inc. (NYSE:WLP-Free Report), UnitedHealth Group Inc. (NYSE:UNH-Free Report), Humana Inc. (NYSE:HUM-Free Report), CIGNA Corp. (NYSE:CI-Free... Reported by PR Newswire 6 hours ago.
Viewing all 22794 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images