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Reproductive Justice is Fundamentally an Economic Justice Issue

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If you've ever had to request time off of work for a doctor's appointment and lost pay for that day, or remain one of the millions without health insurance because you can't afford it, or don't earn enough to pay for an annual pap smear that could be life-saving, then you deeply understand why reproductive healthcare is inherently an economic justice issue. Reproductive justice recognizes that women, particularly women of color and poor women, face intersecting oppressions based on race, ethnicity, cultural identity, class and gender identity that disproportionately burden them in most areas of their lives. These interfacing oppressions are often most visible in the economic lives of women of color, such as the struggle to find a living wage job in conditions free from discrimination and violence, securing dignified housing or accessing affordable healthcare.

The inability of women to access adequate, affordable, and culturally and linguistically appropriate health care is fundamentally an economic justice issue for low-wage workers. Latinas have one of the highest poverty rates of women in the workforce at 12.1%, in large part due to low-wage jobs. Those jobs are often hourly, where workers are not paid for time off requested, including for healthcare visits. And for a community where as of a few years ago Latinas earn half of what white men make, any additional costs in accessing reproductive healthcare automatically become unduly burdensome.

Cutting critical funding to organizations or government-subsidized healthcare facilities that provide critical reproductive healthcare services in communities of color, immigrant communities or impoverished areas inherently targets the women of those communities who may not have the resources to access healthcare elsewhere. It also directly impacts their ability to remain in the work force. For example, women who are able to determine the number and spacing of their children can better access educational and employment opportunities without unanticipated additional expenses or the stress of an unplanned pregnancy. Restrictions on access to birth control, which disproportionately burden low-income women and women of color, directly impact women's economic security and that of their families.

To see up close the devastating impact of cuts to services and draconian policies that severely limit access to reproductive healthcare, we only have to look at the realities of many Latinas along the Texas-Mexico border in the Rio Grande Valley, one of the poorest areas in the country. Latinas, regardless of immigration status, have suffered through the closures of family planning clinics over the past several years in communities where they previously received free or low-cost contraception and well-women exams, which can lead to the detection of serious illnesses like cancer. As a result of these closings, women have foregone getting mammograms, pap smears and birth control.

The result has been catastrophic. In addition to the serious health consequences as a result of being unable to detect illness or delaying healthcare treatment for persistent or terminal conditions, affordable reproductive healthcare as a preventive measure is no longer a viable option. Many of the Latinas along the border live in extreme poverty, without access to reliable transportation. It is also an area that is heavily policed by law enforcement and immigration officials, which can have a deterrent effect for immigrant women seeking services.

The disappearance of affordable women's healthcare clinics also means women must now take more time off of work to travel further distances for care, pay more for healthcare services, secure childcare for longer periods of time (and pay more for those extended periods) and pay for increased transportation costs. Since Latinas already earn the lowest median weekly income of all women, any time away from work is costly to them and their families. The accumulation of the financial burdens in accessing what was once local, affordable and quality reproductive healthcare has permanently put such services out of reach for thousands of women.

However, regardless of whether a pregnancy is planned or not, it can still affect a woman's ability to secure a job or remain at her place of work. Women of color and low-wage workers are more likely to hold jobs where pregnancy discrimination is more pervasive than in other sectors, affecting their ability to continue earning an income at a critical time in their lives. If a low-wage woman worker lives in a state with minimal or unpaid paid family leave protections, or works in an industry with unpaid sick leave policies (typical of most low-income industries), she is forced again to choose between her family's economic well-being and her health or that of her family. Policies like those proposed in New York state are currently trying to address the gap between federal protections for unpaid family leave and the reality of most working families who cannot afford to take three months off with no salary and a new addition to their family.

The ability of women of color and immigrant women to lead healthy reproductive lives is an integral part of the right to self-determination in all aspects of their lives and inherently impacts their economic security and independence. Policies that support the full range of reproductive choice and enable women, particularly low-wage women workers, to exercise those choices without risking their employment or benefits should be supported by all sectors - not because it's good "business," but because they respect, protect and help fulfill women's fundamental human rights.

Natasha Lycia Ora Bannan
Associate Counsel, LatinoJustice PRLDEF
@lyciaora

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 1 day ago.

Health insurance premiums to rise average of 7.1% in NY

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Health insurance premiums for individuals and families for next year are rising an average of 7.1 percent in New York, the state has announced. Reported by Newsday 21 hours ago.

BCBSNM's 51.6% rate hike request denied by insurance superintendent

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Blue Cross and Blue Shield of New Mexico will likely exit the individual HMO and PPO markets on the New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange in 2016 after the Office of the Superintendent of Insurance formally denied the carrier's requested premium rate increase for 2016. According to Janice Torrez, DVP of external affairs and chief of staff for BCBSNM, without some amount of an increase on premium rates, the insurer is left with little choice but to exit the individual insurance market next year. "Having… Reported by bizjournals 19 hours ago.

Accessing care especially difficult for Latinos on Medi-Cal

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Miriam Uribe enrolled in California's low-income health insurance program last November, and she still hasn't found a primary care doctor 10 months later who could see her. "Once you have (insurance), you actually still don't have it because it's still a struggle to find someone," the 20-year-old college student from Bellflower said. Uribe isn't alone. Even though Latinos make up nearly half of California's 12.5 million Medi-Cal enrollees, a report by the independent California HealthCare Foundation found that 36 percent of the Spanish-speaking Medi-Cal population has been told that a physician won't take them, compared to 7 percent of the overall Medi-Cal population. Reported by SeattlePI.com 1 hour ago.

Sunday Roundup

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This week gave us a night of truly must-see TV. First, 17 Republican candidates squared off in two debates on Fox News. The would-be presidents mostly competed to see who could sound the most bellicose, who hated the government more, who could show more contempt for undocumented immigrants and poor people, and who would repeal Obamacare (and deny 10 million people health insurance) the fastest. We learned military spending needs to be greatly increased, and that we need to start a new ground war with ISIS -- and possibly Iran. We heard little about the economy and nothing about climate change. Though Ronald Reagan was invoked, this was more midnight than morning in America. Then, a few hours later, in an act of supreme scheduling irony, Jon Stewart memorably said goodbye, reminding us that "bullshit is everywhere," and "the best defense against bullshit is vigilance." And also how desperately we'll miss him. #JonVoyage

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 15 hours ago.

As Telehealth Booms, Doctor Video Consults To Double By 2020

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Thanks to expanding health insurance coverage, the number of virtual video consultations between primary health care providers and their patients will double in five years in the U.S., according to a new analysis. A new report from information and analytics firm IHS says video consultations will jump overall to nearly 27 million [...] Reported by Forbes.com 6 hours ago.

Uninsured Rate Down Way More In States That Embraced Obamacare

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WASHINGTON -- The share of Americans without health insurance has dropped sharply since enrollment under the Affordable Care Act began in 2013, according to survey results published by Gallup on Monday. And the law's effects are even more dramatic in states that cooperated with the federal government instead of fighting Obamacare.

Nationwide, the uninsured rate fell from 17.3 percent in 2013 to 11.7 percent through the first half of this year, following two years of sign-ups for private health insurance on the Obamacare exchanges and for expanded Medicaid benefits, the pollsters found. The contrast between Obamacare-friendly states and those hostile to the law is stark. Rhode Island has the lowest uninsured rate, 2.7 percent, while Texas comes in last at 20.8 percent.

States have the option of establishing health insurance marketplaces of their own, such as Covered California and Kentucky's Kynect; to partner with federal authorities, as Delaware, Illinois and others did; or to leave the task entirely to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, which the majority of states did. States also can choose whether to offer Medicaid coverage to more poor adults under the law, which 30 states and the District of Columbia have done. 

The consequences of those choices are clear in the Gallup findings: States that set up exchanges or collaborated with the federal government and also expanded Medicaid saw a much bigger drop in the share of residents without health insurance. 

In the 22 states that had done both things by Dec. 31, the uninsured rate declined by 44 percent, and now is 8.9 percent. In states that did neither, the drop was 28 percent, and the **uninsured rate is currently 13.4 percent. Collectively, the 28 states that are resisting the Affordable Care Act already had higher uninsured rates prior to the law's enactment than the 22 that have accepted it. Seven states now have uninsured rates below 5 percent: Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Vermont, Connecticut, Iowa and Hawaii. Each created its own health insurance exchange and expanded Medicaid. Prior to this year, Massachusetts was the only state with an uninsured rate that low. 

Arkansas, Kentucky, Oregon, Rhode Island and Washington state each saw their uninsured rate go down by 10 percentage points or more, and they all have a state-run exchange or a marketplace jointly managed with the federal government and expanded Medicaid.Indiana and Pennsylvania adopted Medicaid expansions this year, but are not counted with other states that did because the policy wasn't in place at the beginning of 2015. The District of Columbia is excluded from the survey.

The results of this Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index survey are consistent with every public survey released since new Obamacare benefits became available at the beginning of last year, including recent findings by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The Department of Health and Human Services estimates 16 million people who were uninsured in 2013 have coverage this year. About 10 million individuals are enrolled in private plans obtained via the exchanges, and over 11 million more people signed up for Medicaid between 2013 and this January, the department also reported.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 12 hours ago.

Monday's Morning Email: Police Shoot Man On Ferguson Anniversary

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*TOP STORIES*

*To get The Morning Email, HuffPost's daily roundup of the news, in your inbox, sign up here.*

*POLICE: MAN SHOT AFTER OPENING FIRE ON OFFICERS IN FERGUSON* "On the one-year anniversary of Michael Brown's death, police in Ferguson, Missouri, shot a man they say opened fire on them." St. Louis Police Chief Jon Belmar said of the men allegedly exchanging fire with police, “They were criminals; they weren’t protesters. … Protesters are the people out there talking about a way to effect change. We can’t afford to have this kind of violence, not only on a night like this but any point in time if we’re going to move forward in the right direction.” [Ryan Reilly, HuffPost]

*UNINSURED RATE DROPS UNDER OBAMACARE* "The share of Americans without health insurance has dropped sharply since enrollment under the Affordable Care Act began in 2013, according to survey results published by Gallup on Monday. And the law's effects are even more dramatic in states that cooperated with the federal government instead of fighting Obamacare." [Jeffrey Young, HuffPost]

*WHO WILL OVERTAKE TRUMP?* This week's First to Last takes a stab at ranking the actual GOP candidates. In the meantime, Donald Trump has refused to apologize to Megyn Kelly. And if you want to look at something depressing today, check out the number of sexist tweets Kelly got before and after the GOP debate. [Howard Fineman and Lauren Weber, HuffPost]

*FRANK GIFFORD DEAD AT 84* Tributes have poured in for the former Hall of Fame football legend. And here's how he met his wife, Kathie Lee Gifford. [AP]

*YOUR FUTURE GOVERNOR PROBABLY JUST LIVED IT UP IN MAUI* "Last month, a group of state attorneys general flew to Maui for the annual meeting of the Conference of Western Attorneys General. For several days, the top law enforcement officers -- who are often referred to as 'aspiring governors' because of their tendency to run for and win higher elected office -- attended panels and swapped legal expertise on issues facing their states. They also mixed with executives, lawyers and lobbyists at a Waldorf Astoria resort that boasts tropical gardens, a swim-up bar and a grand view of Wailea Beach." [Dana Liebelson, HuffPost]

*EXPERTS BELIEVE HEPATITIS C EPIDEMIC LINKED TO HEROIN USAGE* "Public health agencies and drug treatment centers nationwide are scrambling to battle an explosive increase in cases of hepatitis C, a scourge they believe stems at least in part from a surge in intravenous heroin use." [AP]

*PAKISTAN CHILD SEX ABUSE RING INVESTIGATED* At least 280 children were abused by a gang of 15 men, who filmed their actions and used the footage to blackmail the victims' parents. [NYT]

*FAMILY OF EIGHT KILLED IN HOUSTON HOME* Two adults and six children were shot in the head, allegedly by an ex-boyfriend of the mother. [AP]

*WHAT’S BREWING*

*MEET THE GIRL WHO KILLED HALF A MILLION FLIES FOR TORONTO* Yes, you read that correctly. [The Star]

*'FANTASTIC FOUR' A 'FANTASTIC FLOP'* Made for over $150 million, the film has only brought in a little over $26 million. We still love you, Miles Teller. [Reuters]

*T-SWIFT RESPONDED TO A FAN THAT NEEDED HER* She wrote to a fan who was having a tough go, "I hate that you're feeling that way and it's so hard not to dwell on our fears and doubts, because we want spoilers for how it's going to turn out. … But in reality, we just have to go through life not knowing what's next." She also brought Fetty Wrap on stage, because why not. [HuffPost]

*'EMPIRE' CLEANS UP AT TELEVISION CRITICS ASSOCIATION AWARDS* And who can blame them when you have a character like Cookie Lyon?! [Variety]

*EVERYTHING IS RIGHT IN THE WORLD* Bill Murray will be in the latest "Ghostbusters." [The Hollywood Reporter]

*WHY YOU GET CARSICK* And all your buddies are doing just fine, not that you're at all bitter about it. [Vox]

*WHEN SOCIAL ENGINEERING HELPS YOU STEAL MILLIONS* "Part theater and part science, social engineering is the method by which hackers, for lack of a better term, exploit vulnerabilities in human psychology; for Jonah, it was a key to getting anything he wanted, from televisions and laptops to smartphones and expensive wines." [The Daily Dot]

*For more from The Huffington Post, download our app for iOS or Android.*

*WHAT'S WORKING*

*WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE MUSEUM MIGHT BECOME NATIONAL PARK* "Women who fought to earn their right to vote set the stage for a century of enfranchisement advocacy in the United States. The 14 Democratic women in the U.S. Senate introduced a bill on Thursday to designate the nation's foremost museum of women's suffrage as a national park." [HuffPost]

*ON THE BLOG*

*WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT CHEMOTHERAPY* "Chemo can cause all sorts of aversions. The most common being that you won't be able to stand anything you consume during chemo. I don't know if it's just the association with it being 'chemo food' or if there is some scientific explanation. So do not, I repeat, do not bring your favorite candies or snacks with you to the infusion room." [HuffPost]

*BEFORE YOU GO*

~ James Holmes, the Aurora movie shooter, was sentenced to life in prison over the weekend.

~ Photographing the beauty that is the Hoover Dam.

~ Find out more about that thing we call karma on HuffPost's "All Together" podcast.

~ America's sleep habits for the first half of the year are not where they should be.

~ "Bachelorette" fans, rejoice: Andi Dorfman is writing a tell-all book about breakups, roses, and God knows what else.

~ The widely used ad-blocking software that could kill digital media.

~ Benedict Cumberbatch would really like you to stop filming his performances of "Hamlet," thank you very much.

~ Searching for emeralds in Colombia.

~ It seems rather concerning that it can be this easy to digitally declare someone dead.

~ The 30 least religious states in the United States.

~ Could dogs be the next frontline of cancer detection?

~ The mental health aftereffects of nuclear radiation.

~ Could Nicki Minaj be pregnant with Meek Mill's baby? Or is she just really trolling Drake?

~ Kim Kardashian would choose this as the Instagram to celebrate reaching 42 million followers.

~ Yep, the icecaps are shrinking so much that National Geographic had to alter its atlas.

~ And the speech Junior Seau's daughter wanted to give at her father's induction to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

*Send tips/quips/quotes/stories/photos/events/scoops to Lauren Weber at lauren.weber@huffingtonpost.com. Follow us on Twitter @LaurenWeberHP. And like what you're reading? Sign up here to get The Morning Email delivered to you.*

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 7 hours ago.

Report: Health insurers see strong 2Q earnings

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The major health insurance companies have been reporting second quarter earnings lately, and the results have mostly been positive. This blog on Forbes.com discusses what those positive results indicate. Specifically, the writer says, the earnings news shows that health plans have been able to pass increases in medical costs on to their members, which challenges the notion that new regulations on profits actually benefit consumers. Of course, one of the health insurance industry's major players,… Reported by bizjournals 5 hours ago.

This Is What Marriage Equality Looks Like--For Your Finances

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Dear Readers,

When it comes to money, marriage changes things--a lot. From owning property to retirement planning to estate planning to filing taxes, the rules are different--and largely more favorable. And now that the Supreme Court has paved the way for same-sex couples to marry, millions of additional Americans will now be able to receive the advantages heterosexual couples have enjoyed for years.

The thing is, though, that like so much else in personal finance, you have to understand the rules in order to get the maximum benefit. In some cases a couple may get hit with a higher income tax bill (the infamous 'marriage penalty'), but from a personal finance perspective, the positives of marriage far outweigh the negatives. Here's a quick overview.

*Take advantage of spousal and survivor Social Security benefits*
One of the most significant advantages of marriage is that* it makes you eligible for both spousal and survivor benefits from Social Security*. The most basic benefit is that as a married couple, you will each be eligible to collect either a Social Security benefit based on your own work record, or up to 50 percent of your spouse's benefit, whichever is greater (and you can also switch between the two). In addition, as a widow or widower, each of you will be eligible to collect up to 100 percent of the other's benefit. And should you divorce, you may still be eligible for benefits as an ex-spouse.

Also realize that there are a number of strategies that can increase your combined benefit with your spouse; be sure to take your time and weigh your options before either one of you files.

*Think carefully about how you title your property*
Whether you're buying a new home or sharing an existing home, think carefully about how the property is registered. Unless both of your names are on the property, the unnamed partner is vulnerable in case of divorce or death. If you sell your home, a single person only gets a $250,000 capital gains exclusion; a married couple who owns the home jointly can exclude up to $500,000. For estate planning purposes, you may also want to register the title in the name of a revocable living trust (this will protect your assets from the probate process).

Another bright spot is that it is generally much easier for a married couple to qualify for a mortgage.

*Benefit from favorable gift and estate tax provisions*
*You will be able to take advantage of the unlimited estate tax marital deduction.* A married person can leave an unlimited amount of money to their spouse without paying any estate tax. In addition, the surviving spouse can use any unused portion of the deceased spouse's lifetime estate tax exclusion upon his or her death. Under current law, this means that a married couple can pass on up to $10.86 million free of estate tax.

*Revisit your life insurance needs.* In light of potential estate tax savings, wealthy couples should reexamine their need for life insurance. That old policy may no longer be necessary.

*Your gifts to each other won't be subject to gift tax.* Married couples can transfer an unlimited amount of property to each other free of any reporting responsibilities or gift tax. In addition, you'll be able to use "gift splitting" to essentially double the amount that you can jointly give to a third party (in 2015, from $14,000 to $28,000) without having to report your gift to the IRS.

You may want to form a trust. If you are blending two families, you may want to create a QTIP trust. That way a surviving spouse is granted a life interest in the trust property, but upon his or her death, the property passes to heirs selected by the first-to-die spouse.

*Pay attention to income tax implications*
You will be able to choose between filing a joint or separate income tax return. This doesn't mean that your combined tax bill will go down; in fact, you may see it go up--especially if you both earn a substantial and similar amount of money. Some tax credits and deductions will only be available if you file jointly, but it's a good idea to consult with an accountant to see which choice is best overall.

*You won't have to pay tax on a spousal insurance benefit. *When an unmarried person includes a partner on their health insurance plan, that benefit is taxable. For married couples, it's tax-free.

*You will be able to defer distributions from an inherited IRA. *If you inherit an IRA from your spouse, you can basically treat it as your own and postpone taking required minimum distributions until the year you turn 70 ½. This can potentially allow your assets to continue to grow tax-deferred until they are withdrawn.

*Look into new ERISA benefits*
If one of you participates in a qualified retirement plan through your employer, your spouse will be entitled to a number of benefits and protections. For example, your spouse is the automatic sole beneficiary of your retirement assets, and must consent in writing to waive this benefit. A spouse is also entitled to other benefits including health care coverage as well as protection under the family medical leave act.

*Familiarize yourself with military and veteran benefits*
As a military spouse, you may be eligible for a number of benefits including health care and family separation pay. Spouses of deceased veterans are also entitled to benefits such as health care, educational assistance, home loan guarantees and pensions.

*Explore federal employment benefits*
The federal government provides a broad array of benefits to the spouses of its more than 22 million employees, including health, retirement and survivor benefits.

If marriage is on the horizon, congratulations! But before you tie the knot, I highly recommend that you explore the financial implications of marriage as you plan your finances as a couple. That way you'll best be able to enjoy this next chapter of your life!

*For more updates, follow Carrie on LinkedIn and Twitter.*

Looking for answers to your retirement questions? Check out Carrie's new book, "The Charles Schwab Guide to Finances After Fifty: Answers to Your Most Important Money Questions."

This article originally appeared on Schwab.com. You can e-mail Carrie at askcarrie@schwab.com, or click here for additional Ask Carrie columns. This column is no substitute for an individualized recommendation, tax, legal or personalized investment advice. Where specific advice is necessary or appropriate, consult with a qualified tax advisor, CPA, financial planner or investment manager.

COPYRIGHT 2015 CHARLES SCHWAB & CO., INC. (MEMBER SIPC.) (0815-5112)

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 2 hours ago.

BCBSNM's 51.6% rate hike request denied by insurance superintendent

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Blue Cross and Blue Shield of New Mexico will likely exit the individual HMO and PPO markets on the New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange in 2016 after the Office of the Superintendent of Insurance formally denied the carrier's requested premium rate increase for 2016. According to Janice Torrez, DVP of external affairs and chief of staff for BCBSNM, without some amount of an increase on premium rates, the insurer is left with little choice but to exit the individual insurance market next year. "Having… Reported by bizjournals 4 days ago.

Accessing care especially difficult for Latinos on Medi-Cal

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Miriam Uribe enrolled in California's low-income health insurance program last November, and she still hasn't found a primary care doctor 10 months later who could see her. "Once you have (insurance), you actually still don't have it because it's still a struggle to find someone," the 20-year-old college student from Bellflower said. Uribe isn't alone. Even though Latinos make up nearly half of California's 12.5 million Medi-Cal enrollees, a report by the independent California HealthCare Foundation found that 36 percent of the Spanish-speaking Medi-Cal population has been told that a physician won't take them, compared to 7 percent of the overall Medi-Cal population. Reported by SeattlePI.com 3 days ago.

Sunday Roundup

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This week gave us a night of truly must-see TV. First, 17 Republican candidates squared off in two debates on Fox News. The would-be presidents mostly competed to see who could sound the most bellicose, who hated the government more, who could show more contempt for undocumented immigrants and poor people, and who would repeal Obamacare (and deny 10 million people health insurance) the fastest. We learned military spending needs to be greatly increased, and that we need to start a new ground war with ISIS -- and possibly Iran. We heard little about the economy and nothing about climate change. Though Ronald Reagan was invoked, this was more midnight than morning in America. Then, a few hours later, in an act of supreme scheduling irony, Jon Stewart memorably said goodbye, reminding us that "bullshit is everywhere," and "the best defense against bullshit is vigilance." And also how desperately we'll miss him. #JonVoyage

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 3 days ago.

As Telehealth Booms, Doctor Video Consults To Double By 2020

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Thanks to expanding health insurance coverage, the number of virtual video consultations between primary health care providers and their patients will double in five years in the U.S., according to a new analysis. A new report from information and analytics firm IHS says video consultations will jump overall to nearly 27 million [...] Reported by Forbes.com 2 days ago.

Canada’s Single-Payer Health Insurance System

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Canada’s Single-Payer Health Insurance System Reported by ajc.com 1 day ago.

Two years into Obamacare, only one state still has more than 20% uninsured

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When the Affordable Care Act took effect in October 2013, there were 14 states in which more than 1 in 5 adults lacked health insurance; today only Texas remains, according to data released Monday. Reported by L.A. Times 23 hours ago.

HUFFPOST HILL - Incredibly Sexist Guys Nab Spotlight

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Donald Trump's presidential campaign has made Erick Erickson look momentarily reasonable, and for the first time we're concerned that Trump's lead in the polls might not be durable. The New York Times compared Bernie Sanders to Howard Dean circa 2004, because Sanders is going to go to Washington to take back the White House, YEAAARRGGHHH. And some states' attorneys general ate roasted pig with Monsanto and Comcast execs at a corporate-funded shindig in Hawaii, because nothing says "good government" like politicians and lobbyists literally gorging themselves on pork. This is HUFFPOST HILL for Monday, August 10th, 2015:

*SANDERS NABS NURSES NOD* - Blue scrubs for Bernie, Dave Jamieson reports: "A national labor union of registered nurses provided another big boost to the presidential campaign of Bernie Sanders on Monday, becoming *the first major union to endorse the Vermont senator's White House bid*. National Nurses United, which represents 185,000 nurses, most of them women, hosted a brunch with Sanders on Monday in Oakland, California. The union's leadership announced there that they would formally back the senator and campaign on his behalf as he competes with front-runner Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination… *The NNU endorsement is one of the strongest indications yet of Sanders' appeal to labor unions, which is shaping up to be a problem for the Clinton campaign*. The only other endorsement yet from a major national union broke Clinton's way, from the much larger American Federation of Teachers, which represents 1.6 million workers." [HuffPost]

Melissa Gilbert, childhood star of "Little House on the Prairie," is running for Congress.

*DONALD TRUMP LITERALLY PHONING IT IN* - Michael Calderone: "Presidential candidate Donald Trump dominated the political news cycle over the weekend, after suggesting in a Friday phone interview with CNN that Fox News' Megyn Kelly asked such tough questions during Thursday's GOP debate because she was menstruating. The offensive comment got Trump subsequently disinvited from the RedState conference on Saturday, and made him a hot 2016 topic this past weekend on social media and TV news shows -- with the exception of Fox News, which has been uncharacteristically quiet about the swipe…. Yet, as commentators and candidates filled studios to talk Trump this weekend, *Trump failed to make any in-person appearances. Instead, he did a half-dozen TV interviews by phone*." [HuffPost]

St. Louis County officials have declared a state of emergency because of unrest on the first anniversary of Michael Brown's killing.

*TRUMPMENTUM CONTINUES* - Reid Wilson: "Real estate magnate Donald Trump’s lead over the Republican field grew in the several days after his performance at the first GOP presidential debate, according to a new Morning Consult survey, even after he invited a new round of scorn from fellow candidates over impolitic comments about Fox News host Megyn Kelly. *Trump leads the Republican field with 32 percent of the vote, up 7 percentage points over last week*’s Morning Consult tracking poll. Trump’s nearest GOP rival, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, clocked in at 11 percent." [MorningConsult.com]

Our ranking experts rank Marco Rubio as most likely to outrank Trump when people realize Trump is rank.

*ERICK ERICKSON HAVING A MOMENT* - He's feeling vindicated because jerks have sent him racist, sexist emails over his fight with Trump, Gabriel Arana reports: "The irony, of course, is that the vitriol is no different from that which regularly appears in the comments at RedState. *Erickson also has his own history of making disparaging remarks toward women, having calling Michelle Obama a 'Marxist harpy' and Wendy Davis an 'abortion Barbie.'*" [HuffPost]

*HILLARY CLINTON TARGETING 'PEOPLE WHO CARE ABOUT PUBLIC POLICY' NICHE AUDIENCE* - Rich people should pay more taxes so everyone else can afford college, the Clinton campaign (basically) said. Shahien Nasiripour: "The centerpiece of Clinton's proposal... promises that *students who commit to working at least 10 hours a week can attend college without having to take out loans for tuition*. Families would still have to contribute, but less than under current guidelines. State and federal funding would make up the balance." [HuffPost]

Bernie Sanders and Howard Dean Are Not The Same Person, and the New York Times Is ON IT

*PUTTING THE 'MEAN' IN 'MEANS TEST' AT THE VA* - Jen Bendery: "More than 35,000 combat veterans are being *denied health care enrollment by the Department of Veterans Affairs because of a computer system error*, according to an internal document obtained by The Huffington Post. Scott Davis, a program specialist at the VA's Health Eligibility Center in Atlanta and a past whistleblower on VA mismanagement, provided HuffPost with a recent VA analysis of the number of combat vets, by city, who are listed as 'pending' for health care enrollment because they didn't complete a so-called means test, which assesses their household income. Many vets have to submit a means test to be enrolled, but it's not required for combat vets, who are automatically eligible for five years of free care. The policy is spelled out on the VA's website. The document shows that 35,093 combat vets who applied for health care aren't getting it because the VA system has *erroneously flagged them as needing to submit a means test*." [HuffPost]

*DAILY DELANEY DOWNER* - Our national forests -- where the Second Amendment thrives undisturbed in its natural habitat. "Perched around a secluded campfire in the Rocky Mountains, Glenn Martin jerked forward, said, 'Ow,' and died. The wayward bullet that struck him in the national forest has campers and other users calling for changes in recreational shooting policy. Martin, 60, died July 3 in the Pike & San Isabel National Forest, 30 miles southwest of Denver. The 3.1-million-acre forest holds the record for the most gun-related violations reported in the country, a review of federal records by the USA TODAY Media Network shows." [USAToday.com]

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*BERNIE SANDERS TIRED OF GETTING INTERRUPTED* - Marina Fang: "A day after being interrupted by Black Lives Matters protesters at a campaign event in Seattle, Washington, *Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) released a detailed platform on combating racial inequality*. Sanders' campaign posted the platform on his website on Sunday, and he addressed the issue of racial justice that evening in front of more than 20,000 supporters in Portland, drawing his largest crowd yet along the campaign trail. Nearly 12,000 people attended Saturday’s event in Seattle. *The platform delineates policy proposals pertaining to what Sanders calls 'the four central types of violence waged against black and brown Americans: physical, political, legal and economic.'* Sanders proposes a series of police reforms, including the demilitarization of police forces, a federal program giving police body cameras, and increasing police transparency and accountability. He also calls for an end to mandatory minimum sentences for non-violent offenses and bemoans the disproportionate rate at which blacks are targeted by police." [HuffPost]

*SOMETIMES REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS TALK TO EACH OTHER: MIKE LEE EDITION* - A story about strange bedfellows? What'll politics reporters think of next! Jennifer Steinhauer: "As lawmakers rapidly confront a deadline over spending that threatens another government shutdown next month, *Mr. Lee faces a stark choice*: Will he continue defying Republican leaders who are trying to demonstrate their ability to govern, or will he instead focus on building a legacy of serious libertarian-leaning policy, with the help of Democrats?" [New York Times]

*ADORABLE BACKBENCH LAWMAKERS ACTUALLY BELIEVE COLLEAGUES WILL LISTEN TO THEIR IDEAS* - The self-styled "centrist" New Democrat Coalition wants to something something bipartisanship something something. Lauren French: "*Moderates are tired* of being overshadowed in a party where liberals have long dominated the agenda, even as Democrats slipped further into the House minority after the 2014 midterm elections." [Politico]

*CHINA STEALING OUR HACKING JOBS* - Robert Windrem: "China's cyber spies have accessed the private emails of 'many' top Obama administration officials, according to a senior U.S. intelligence official and a top secret document obtained by NBC News, and have been doing so since at least April 2010. The email grab -- first codenamed 'Dancing Panda' by U.S. officials, and then 'Legion Amethyst' -- was detected in April 2010, according to a top secret NSA briefing from 2014." [NBCNews.com]

*PERCENTAGE OF AMERICANS LIVING WITHOUT LIBERTY (OR CANCER) ON THE RISE. THANKS, OBAMA!* - The Affordable Care Act is proving that if you help get poor people health insurance, they will have health insurance, and if you refuse to do that, they won't. Jeffrey Young: "*Nationwide, the uninsured rate fell from 17.3 percent in 2013 to 11.7 percent through the first half of this year*, following two years of sign-ups for private health insurance on the Obamacare exchanges and for expanded Medicaid benefits, the pollsters found. The contrast between Obamacare-friendly states and those hostile to the law is stark. Rhode Island has the lowest uninsured rate, 2.7 percent, while Texas comes in last at 20.8 percent." [HuffPost]

*BECAUSE YOU'VE READ THIS FAR* - Here is a story about a bear that steals grape sodas from hardworking Americans.

*MAHALO, MONEYED INTERESTS!* - A whole mess of top prosecutors had a lovely time in Hawaii partying with corporate bigwigs and other fatcat types at the Conference of Western Attorneys General. Dana Liebelson: "*At the opening night Grand Luau, shirtless men carried in a skinned pig that had been roasted for hours in an underground oven called an imu. Performers in traditional regalia danced the hula.* CWAG members could then retire to scenic rooms they -- but not private-sector attendees -- could stay in for a discounted rate of $279 a night. The cheapest room at the hotel usually goes for about twice that amount. The Waldorf treated its guests -- not all of the AGs stayed there -- to a tropical lei, Hawaiian punch and complimentary yoga." [HuffPost]

*COMFORT FOOD* by @MattDRamos

- Check out these 43 joyriding dogs.

- Man vs. Marmot.

- I would not get into the ring with this cat.

*TWITTERAMA*

@HeerJeet:You know who else flummoxed respectable opinion by continuing to do well in the polls despite his outrageous rhetoric?

@MilesKahn: Actually, I think True Detective was a decent show and maybe we should save our ire for the fact that we may elect a reality star president.

@MEPFuller:So workers have found an "unknown" material in the walls of the House chamber.

Like the Salem girls eating mold, this could explain a lot.

@PlentyLadylike (Sen. Claire McCaskill): As promised, here's proof I made good on my promise to my daughters & shot gunned beer when Akin won primary.

*Got something to add? Send tips/quotes/stories/photos/events/fundraisers/job movement/juicy miscellanea to Eliot Nelson (eliot@huffingtonpost.com) or Arthur Delaney (arthur@huffingtonpost.com). Follow us on Twitter @HuffPostHill (twitter.com/HuffPostHill). Sign up here: http://huff.to/an2k2e*

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 22 hours ago.

Should You Be Happy At Work?

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Why should you be happy at work? Organizations around the world are heavily investing in employee engagement, health and wellness, and well-being programs. However, I have yet to meet an organization that can justify the ROI of these investments. There are of course some macro studies which show that engagement and happiness yield better productivity, lower, turnover, etc. but these aren't things that companies track individually. Companies are spending millions of dollars on health insurance plans, redesigning their workspaces, new technologies, and the like, but for what? Just to make employees happy? Can your organization say you are 20% more productive as a result of a new workspace? Is turnover going down because of the catered meals that are offered? Reported by Forbes.com 13 hours ago.

Do yourself a favour and get travel insurance – or pay $1,000 for a bout of cystitis

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To Emma, there seemed only two explanations possible: either the NHS had woefully undertreated her in the past, or my American colleagues had been wilfully overdoing it in order to maximise their income

Getting cystitis in summertime New York is no joke. Photo: Getty

Emma came to see me after a holiday in the States. She was in New York when cystitis struck. She’d had it a couple of times during her undergraduate years so she knew what to do. She upped her water intake, went to Walmart for cranberry juice, and when those measures failed she took herself along to the nearest emergency room to get treatment.

That was where any similarity with her UK experiences ceased. Her NHS doctors had managed her previous bouts with a brief chat and a prescription for an antibiotic. Her American physicians appeared a whole lot more concerned. She had a pelvic examination, urine and swab samples sent to the lab, blood tests, and a first dose of antibiotics, administered with a drip. They’d wanted to do a scan, too, but had reluctantly agreed to her deferring this until she was back in Britain. Just as well, really. She’d already racked up over $500 in charges. An ultrasound would have taken her comfortably over the $1,000 mark.

To Emma, there seemed only two explanations possible: either the NHS had woefully undertreated her in the past, or my American colleagues had been wilfully overdoing it in order to maximise their income. The reality lies somewhere in between. UK medical culture takes a low-key, “common things are common” approach to many illnesses, investigating in more detail only when it becomes clear that it is required (which might be after there’s a lack of response to an initial course of treatment). Across the Atlantic, patients are usually worked up exhaustively at the outset, as though each and every one is going to prove to be that rare case with something much more complex underlying it.

There is a consideration of income in this – American doctors are, broadly speaking, paid for their activity, whereas their British counterparts are encouraged to conserve resources. Of equal importance, though, is the medico-legal culture. American society is unforgiving of any apparent delay in definitive diagnosis, so the doctors practise defensively, with the spectre of lawsuits ever hanging over them. In the UK, it is accepted that diagnosis is often a multi-stage process. This is good for most patients, who avoid the considerable harms that can arise from unnecessarily invasive investigations. The flipside is that there may be a time lag in picking up significant pathology.

Being young and on a tight budget, and given the premiums charged for cover in the States, Emma had travelled uninsured – something she was now regretting at leisure. Had she holidayed in Europe, she would have found insurance considerably cheaper. Not only is European medical culture closer to that at home – though I did once have a patient return from Bulgaria clutching three different drugs and a set of CT scans following a simple bout of sinusitis – but British travellers can apply for a European Health Insurance Card (formerly known as the E111), which entitles them to state health care if they’re taken ill in a participating country.

The EHIC doesn’t obviate the need for travel insurance, though. In the UK, the idea of paying to see a doctor is still anathema, but most European countries levy consultation and hospital inpatient charges on their citizens, so state provision often carries significant costs. France and Germany are among the most expensive; Ireland, Portugal, Italy and Greece are virtually free (which must say something about the origins of the eurozone crisis).

Those holidaying in more exotic locations may be exposed to infectious diseases that can be life-threatening. Rather than the first-world problem of overzealous doctors, health-care provision may be sparse and very basic in the destination country. Vaccination, pre-travel advice and information, and adequate insurance to cover medical evacuation, are important preparations. I’ll be in Zambia this summer, hoping none of what I’ve put in place will prove necessary.

If you’re travelling, too, wherever you’re going, I wish you a happy and healthy trip. Reported by New Statesman 9 hours ago.

SKIMM YOUR CANDIDATE: Gov. Bobby Jindal (LA), Republican

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Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) is a two-term governor hoping you'll pick him out of a field of 16 other Republicans in the race for the White House. Get to know your candidate here.

*Note: ALL candidates have been offered the chance to Guest Skimm. Opinions are of the candidate, not theSkimm. To Skimm other candidates go here.*

HOMETOWN:

I was born in Baton Rouge, LA.

FUN FACT:

Our third child was actually born at home....it was literally just my wife and me together on our bathroom floor next to our bedroom. By the time the ambulance got there, he was already born.

TELL US ABOUT YOURSELF.

I was born in Baton Rouge, LA. My parents came there [from India] over 40 years ago. To me, they lived the American dream...the first time they ever got on a plane, they were coming halfway across the world to come to Baton Rouge.

SO WHY SHOULD AMERICA HIRE YOU?

I think America is ready to hire a doer, not a talker. We've got a lot of people that are "talking" who are running for president. We've got a talker in the White House today. I'm the only candidate that has offered detailed plans on health care, on energy, on education, on our foreign policy....Secondly, I've got a track record of proven results. [Louisiana's] actually already cut the size of our budget [by] 26%. ...We've got a top ten state for private sector job creation. Look, if folks are looking for a candidate who's just going to manage the slow decline of our country, I'm not that candidate. If they're looking for somebody who will go to DC and make big changes, I'm the guy to do that. I've already done it in Louisiana, I'll do it in DC.

WHO SHOULD WE CALL FOR A REFERENCE?

I'd call my wife, Supriya. She's my best friend. She's a straight shooter. She'll be honest, but she's also my best friend.

WHAT IS YOUR GREATEST STRENGTH?

I'm not afraid of taking on big, complex programs. When I was elected governor, we were coming out of Katrina. We had had 25 years in a row of out-migration. We've now had seven years in a row of in-migration. We've got more people working there and earning a higher income than we have ever had before. So, I'm not afraid to take on the big complex problems, and I think that's what we need in DC right now...We'll be the next Greece if we don't grow the private sector economy.

WHAT IS YOUR GREATEST WEAKNESS?

I'm impatient. I've been told my entire life I need to slow down, I speak too quickly.

WHERE DO YOU STAND ON THE FOLLOWING...

*THE ECONOMY.*

I think that we have to accept the truth that you can either grow the private sector economy, or grow the government economy. You can't grow both. We've got to...shrink the federal government so we can grow the private sector economy. Today we are celebrating the fact that we've got a record-low participation rate in the workforce, we've got record high dependence on food stamps. That's backwards!

*HEALTHCARE.*

I think Obamacare was a mistake. It has made healthcare less affordable, not more affordable. We've created a new entitlement program, and we can't afford the ones we've got. It involves less freedom for patients and their doctors. I've actually outlined a plan...it does three things: one, it makes healthcare more affordable. So it gives a standard tax reduction, and allows people to buy health insurance across state lines. For accidental frivolous lawsuits, it creates voluntary purchasing programs, expands access to health savings, medical savings, and wellness accounts....Secondly, [the plan helps] the vulnerable. [It] gives $10 billion dollars a year to the states to help those with pre-existing conditions. And third, [the plan] puts patients and their doctors in control, not the bureaucrats.

*THE IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL.*

I think it's a very bad deal for America, for Israel, for our allies. Just to start with, when the deal was announced, Syria and Assad -- our enemies -- rejoiced and celebrated. Israel and Netanyahu -- our allies -- rejected, criticized, condemned the deal. Initially [the president said] we're going to get rid of their enrichment capacities, and we're going to have anytime, anywhere inspections. Turns out, neither is true. I think a good deal would've said [Iran has] to get rid of all their centrifuges. They have to get rid of all their enriched uranium. [It would allow for] anytime, anywhere inspections [and] no pathway to a plutonium device...[It would also say] they have to release all of their American prisoners, and cut off all their connections to Hamas, Hezbollah, or any other terrorists groups. And then finally, they need to recognize the right of Israel to exist. We're in a position to actually be able to get a good deal. This is a bad deal, and I think Congress should vote it down.

*GUN CONTROL.*

I'm for our Second Amendment rights...At the same time, we've also passed laws in Louisiana, since I've been governor, to strengthen the reporting of mental health cases into the national background check system. So, I fully support that, I think every state should do that...but at the same time I'm not for restricting our second amendment rights for law-abiding citizens.

*WOULD YOU CHANGE ANYTHING ABOUT HOW THE US IS HANDLING THIS WHOLE ISIS THING?*

First, we need to be working with our Kurdish allies, directly arming and training them....Secondly, we need to encourage our Sunni allies. They will do more, their challenge is right now that they don't know that America is committed for the long run....Third, the president submitted an authorization for the use of military force to Congress -- he needs to change two things about it: one, he needs to take out the ban on ground troops, and second, he needs take out the three-year deadline. There's no reason any commander-in-chief should ever tell the enemy what we will or won't do...I don't think that we should ever take an option off the table. We've gotta do what it takes to win...We've gotta have a president who actually, first off can identify the enemy and say our enemy is radical Islamic terrorism. We've got a president who's too politically correct to say that.

*CLIMATE CHANGE.*

In terms of whether human activity impacts the climate, I'm sure it does. In terms of how much or what should be done or the consequence, I'll leave that to the scientists. I'd say a couple of other things, though. One, if we can have affordable energy, we can have a clean environment and we can have a strong economy. They're not mutually exclusive....the second thing I'd say, is it makes no sense for us to take unilateral actions that will hurt our economy, if we're not going to insist that other countries do the same. Especially countries we compete with and trade with.

*IMMIGRATION REFORM.*

I think our immigration policy right now is backwards. The first thing we need to do is secure our border, period. We don't need amnesty. We need to secure the border -- we don't need a 1,000 page bill, we don't need a comprehensive bill. We've got a low wall and a narrow gate -- by a low wall, it's too easy to come to the country illegally and by a narrow gate, it's too hard to come to the country legally. I think one of the dumbest things we do today is educate people and then kick them out of the country to compete against us. I do think that something that gets missed in the immigration debate is assimilation...My parents came to raise their kids here as Americans, they came to be Americans. If they didn't want that, they would've stayed in India. Now, they love India and they're proud of their heritage. So, I've said we need to get away from this African-American, Indian-American...you know, we're all Americans.

*RIGHT TO CHOOSE. YES OR NO?*

I am pro-life.

*THE SUPREME COURT'S RULING ON GAY MARRIAGE. YES OR NO?*

I disagree with the ruling. I believe that marriage continues to be between a man and a woman.

WHAT WOULD YOU ASK THE WHITE HOUSE CHEF TO MAKE FOR YOUR FIRST MEAL AT 1600 PENNSYLVANIA AVE?

Nachos and chocolate chip cookies. I'm a bit of a gym rat, and there are some people that love to work out and then they tell you well if you work out, then you gotta eat healthy. I'm a little bit of the opposite.

HOW MANY TIMES DO YOU HIT SNOOZE IN THE AM?

I actually don't, and after 18 years of marriage my wife and I have figured this out, because we are very different when it comes to this. I'm one of those people that gets up before the alarm goes off, no matter what time it's set. And my wife, not only does she like to hit snooze, she likes to set the clocks ahead of time.

HOW DO YOU TAKE YOUR COFFEE?

I'm not a coffee drinker, it's more Diet Coke.
--------------------
theSKIMM

Gov. Jindal has a deep resume that includes a past House GOP leadership role, and experience in the private sector as a McKinsey consultant. He's got a rep for being a by-the-numbers guy who gets things done. He's also got sinking approval ratings with people at home in Louisiana, many who think he's really just been waiting to run for president for years.

ALL candidates have been invited to Guest Skimm.
To Skimm other candidates go here.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 8 hours ago.
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