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Pharma Bro Emails Reveal Just How Greedy Drug Companies Can Be

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"$1bn here we come."

That was the triumphant message sent by then-Turing Pharmaceuticals CEO Martin Shkreli, the infamous "Pharma Bro" who jacked up the price of a life-saving drug by 5,000 percent last year, when it became clear his firm could acquire the rights to the medicine. The email went to Turing's presumably pleased board of directors last May.

To anyone who's followed this story since The New York Times shined a spotlight on Turing and intensified the national debate about prescription drug pricing last fall, the Shkreli email and other documents made public by the Democrats on the House Government Reform and Oversight Committee Tuesday do little more than confirm the basic facts. Turing raised the price of Daraprim, which treats a deadly parasitic infection called toxoplasmosis that afflicts HIV/AIDS patients, because it could. The company reaped a windfall, followed by a massive backlash that forced out Shkreli without providing any relief to patients.

But this kind of drug pricing strategy isn't limited to one rogue executive or company. Though rarely quite so blatant, it's woven throughout the pharmaceutical industry.

Other documents released Tuesday reveal similar moves by Valeant Pharmaceuticals. The Valeant documents show that it purchased two heart medications, Isuprel and Nitropress, in early 2015 and subsequently hiked the prices by 525 percent and 212 percent, respectively. In just one year, the company racked up $351 million in profits from those two drugs alone.  

Rep. Elijah Cummings (Md.), ranking Democrat on the House oversight committee, made public excerpts from some 250,000 pages of documents that Turing and Valeant had provided to the panel.


5,000 paying bottles at the new price is $375,000,000 -- almost all of it is profit.
Martin Shkreli, then CEO of Turing Pharmaceuticals
"I think it will be huge. We raised the price from $1,700 per bottle to $75,000. ... So 5,000 paying bottles at the new price is $375,000,000 -- almost all of it is profit and I think we will get 3 years of that or more. Should be a very handsome investment for all of us. Let's all cross our fingers that the estimates are accurate," Shkreli wrote in one email.

Shkreli, current Turing executives and the head of Valeant are scheduled to testify before the House committee Thursday as part of Congress' investigation into drug pricing. But the panel likely won't get much satisfaction from the former CEO, who appears under subpoena. Shkreli plans to invoke his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination and refuse to answer questions. That's not stopping him, however, from mouthing off to reporters and on Twitter, or from attempting to pick a fight with a prominent hip-hop artist.

Shkreli also faces criminal charges stemming from alleged securities fraud. The Huffington Post asked Shkreli's defense attorney, Benjamin Brafman of Brafman & Associates in New York, to comment on the House Democrats' report.

Braff replied by email only to confirm that he represented Shkreli and to say this about the criminal case (emphasis his): "THE CHARGES ARE VERY DEFENSIBLE, AND WE ARE CONFIDENT THAT HE WILL BE FULLY EXONERATED. IT IS CLEAR THAT MR. SHKRELI NEVER INTENDED TO VIOLATE THE LAW, NOR DID HE EVER INTEND TO DEFRAUD ANYONE."

Turing trades in medicines for uncommon illnesses. Valeant is similarly focused on "orphan drugs," which have a very small user base and are generally treatments for rare diseases and disorders, the House Democrats' report notes.

The documents suggest that Valeant's primary concern in raising prices was not the effect on patients' health, but the possibility of negative publicity. "Valeant's upcoming price increase on three drugs … has the potential to insert Valeant into the ongoing dialogue about orphan drugs, and therefore needs to be managed carefully," one document reads.
Divorced from Shkreli's notably outlandish and provocative behavior, these and other comments from Turing and Valeant executives might simply sound like businesses evaluating a market and setting a profit-maximizing price. But they underscore how the market for medicines works differently from many other parts of the economy.

Like Valeant's orphan drugs, Daraprim had no direct competitor when Turing acquired it. Because so few patients need the drug, there was little incentive for anyone else to make it, although another company has since entered the market. Because toxoplasmosis is so dangerous to HIV/AIDs patients, they and their health insurance providers couldn't simply say no when the price skyrocketed.

Shkreli and Turing knew this, of course. "Drugs are typically non-discretionary and consumers are relatively price-insensitive. ... Typically there's an inverse correlation between prevalence of a disease and the annual cost of treatment. ... Exclusivity (closed distribution) creates a barrier and pricing power," reads one slide from a Turing presentation.

While the Daraprim profiteering is egregious, pharmaceutical companies large and small have been increasing prices for all manner of medicines in recent years, including for the generic drugs that are supposed to be the cheapest, as a Bloomberg News report illustrates. Shkreli even pointed to other companies' behavior as a justification for Turing's actions last year.

Turing continues to maintain that its motive in raising Daraprim's price was to produce additional income to advance the science of toxoplasmosis treatment. "The revenues generated from the price increase fund both research and development and patient access programs," it wrote in a lengthy statement to HuffPost.

There is little evidence in the documents released by House Democrats, however, that company executives were concerned with anything other than boosting profits and quelling the public outrage that followed.

Shkreli reneged on a public vow to reduce the price last year. Turing's internal strategy emphasized hiding the cost from patients and avoiding fights with HIV/AIDs advocates and customers like hospitals, the new documents show.

Moreover, pharmaceutical companies often deflect concerns about high costs by touting their patient access (or assistance) programs, which provide free or low-cost medicines to uninsured people or cover the co-payments for those with insurance.

Valeant employed this strategy when patients complained about prices, giving the neediest customers drugs at a very low cost. "Kind of hard to paint us as greedy if we have removed financial barriers for patients," one marketing executive wrote.
Trying to silence critics by lowering prices for some desperate people avoids the real debate about high pharmaceutical costs, which are paid by insurers and government programs even when drug makers subsidize certain patients. Americans in particular get hit hard by drug companies' profit-driven behavior. 

The structure of the global pharmaceutical market is not balanced, according to Mahmud Hassan, director of Rutgers Business School's pharmaceutical management program. The U.S. is the world's only major market, he said, where pharmaceutical prices are unregulated. As a result, U.S. patients, health insurers and the government typically pay more for prescription medicines than their counterparts in countries with national health programs.

There is a tradeoff: The high prices paid by Americans help fund pharmaceutical companies' development of new drugs -- which they then sell around the world.

"The U.S. is subsidizing the entire world for those expensive drugs," said Hassan.

*Also on HuffPost:*

-- 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.

Colorado health exchange reports record enrollment in private plans

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Colorado's health insurance exchange reported Tuesday that a record number of residents have signed up for commercial coverage. Reported by Denver Post 59 minutes ago.

Who Would Speak For You?

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Hillary Clinton is banking on the hope that you are stupid. Bernie Sanders knows you aren't.

So ask yourself:
*Who would speak for you?
*Have you ever had to juggle expenses to pay down your medical bills? Did you have to walk away from your family home during the foreclosure crisis?*Who would speak for you?
*Do you wonder if you'll have enough money for groceries until the next payday, even though you work full time? Do you worry that your teenage son or daughter will be a victim of police brutality or racial profiling? Are you a long time environmental activist hoping to see your country finally make a major investment in clean energy and break from outdated technologies that destroy our waterways and mountaintops?*Who would speak for you?
*Are you chronically ill or self-employed and unable to manage the cost of healthcare premiums, prescription drugs, co-pays and annual deductibles that increasingly eat away at your income? Has the cost of healthcare ever kept you from seeing a doctor or specialist? Mandatory health insurance coverage is not the same as equal healthcare benefits for all.*Who would speak for you?
*Are you a young college grad unable to find a decent paying job that values your education and intelligence? Are you struggling to pay down your massive student debt balance? Are you a two income family working harder and longer only to realize less and less financial stability as each year passes? Do you wonder how you will ever be able to afford to send your children to college?*Who would speak for you?
*You've heard the claim that Clinton is a champion of women and all Americans. But how could her fighting spirit not push for a $15 minimum wage for all American workers, including the millions of hardworking American women, many of whom are not being paid what men in the same positions doing the same jobs are?

As Julie Kashen, senior policy advisor of the Make it Work campaign fighting for working women's rights, recently wrote:"...since two-thirds of the people who would benefit from an increase in the minimum wage are women, higher minimum wages would help close the gender gap in pay."

*Who would speak for you?
*The cold hard reality is nowhere more plain to see than in the numbers: Sanders has a personal net worth of $330,506. Clinton's is ‍‍‍$21.5 million. To take a page from Bill Clinton, that looks like good old fashioned "arithmetic" to me. Clinton is the candidate of the privileged class and a type of feminism that isn't concerned with poor women.*Who would speak for you?
*Clinton's message has reinvented itself time and again to fit the seemingly most advantageous political path. Sanders has been saying the same goddamn thing for the past 30 plus years and has the voting record and career campaign finance record to prove it.

With the sales and royalties of her multiple published books alone, Clinton could still currently earn a handsome salary. Instead, she chose to accept enormous sums of money from the very corporations she claims she will rail against if elected. Clinton Foundation donors include those who have specifically benefited from offshore tax havens. It takes a special kind of delusion to turn a blind eye to this duality.

What's wrong with being rich, some ask? Everything, if it keeps you from understanding the anger of the very people whose lives are being destroyed by the greed of a few. The top richest possess a gilded future and the laws and rules of taxation governing this future look extremely different those than those that apply to the ordinary American, whose wealth lies not in trusts and shadow companies and capital gains or offshore, but instead in ordinary checking and savings accounts.

Lobbyists who have pushed for the Keystone Pipeline, and accepted money from Lehman Brothers, are, as you read this, currently heading Clinton's 2016 campaign.
Her top campaign finance bundlers have worked for the fossil fuel industry.

By saying she is going after the same lobbyists who run her campaign and the moneyed elite that donate to both her campaign and her family's Clinton Foundation, it's clear Clinton's recent adoption of populist language on the eve of the Iowa caucuses amounts to nothing more than posturing for votes.

Last week as voters in Iowa listened to Sanders explain his proposals, Clinton was scheduled to fly to the East Coast to attend a finance industry fundraiser for her campaign. It has now been postponed until mid February. But for the few privileged enough to drop anywhere from $2,700 individually or raise $27,000 for the one dinner, my guess is that the subject matter of these two events will be drastically different.

She is banking on this, and hoping you won't notice at all.*Who would speak for you?
*Pundits wonder why Clinton's brand of politics is no longer resonating with younger voters? Here's my guess: They're hungry for more and will no longer be satisfied with mere crumbs tossed their way. As Gen X parents screwed by the system installed in large part by Clinton's husband now raise their own children and young adults, they have instilled much of their anti-establishment skepticism upon them.

Not content to be merely placated by brand loyalty and reality television, a massive number of younger voters are looking for the alternative to a status quo that has left them and their parents future out to dry.

It's time to end legalized tax evasion in America. If hoarding extreme wealth could be defined as a mental disorder, isn't it time that we wrest control of this country from the grip of the unhinged 1 percent?

In early 1972, a book called "A Populist Manifesto" The Making of A New Majority was published. Authored by Jack Newfield and Jeff Greenfield, this book outlined a progressive populist "political alignment" among the many political interests of the day (civil rights, the ecology movement, women's rights, low and moderate income citizens being short-changed by the mutating liberal agenda of the day moving away from the social democrat ideals of Roosevelt and Johnson). The book's preface begins with 3 facts, the first of which states:
"Wealth and power are unequally and unfairly distributed in America today."
That was 44 years ago. Enough is enough. Our time is now. Our candidate is Bernie Sanders.

Intersectionality is at the heart of the Sanders Campaign and the reason his campaign messages resonate with such a wide cross section of Americans. We see through Clinton, the candidate who fiercely opposed gay marriage, supported the Iraq War, called the TPP the "gold standard", received funds from the private prison industry, opposes the Glass-Steagall act, advocated for fracking, and profited from promoting the Keystone Pipeline.

We the people of the United States of America deserve more and we are not stupid.*Who would speak for 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 22 hours ago.

Could it soon be illegal for doctors to believe in male and female?

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Washington D.C., Feb 3, 2016 / 03:44 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A current proposal by a federal agency has raised concerns that doctors may be punished for believing that there are only two genders, rooted in biological sex.

The proposed rule, issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, says that it is aimed at banning discrimination against transgender individuals under the Obama administration’s Affordable Care Act. 

Section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act cites decades-old federal laws that prohibit any individual from being denied benefits or discriminated against in any health program or federally funded activity on the basis of race, color, nationality, sex, disability and age. 

However, the Office of Civil Rights is now interpreting “sex” to include “gender identity” and “sex stereotypes.”

The consequences of this change could be wide-reaching. 

The proposed regulation defines “sex stereotypes,” in part as “expectations that gender can only be constructed within two distinct opposite and disconnected forms (masculinity and femininity), and that gender cannot be constructed outside of this gender construct (individuals who identify as neither, both, or as a combination of male and female genders).”

Gender identity is defined as “an individual's internal sense of gender, which may be different from an individual’s sex assigned at birth.”

As a result, doctors and medical institutions could be penalized – or even forced out of business – if they are not willing to perform or facilitate sex reassignment surgeries and other “gender transition” treatments for individuals who identify as transsexual. 

Critics of the suggested regulation say that it is a radical proposal that could result in severe penalties for doctors who cannot in good conscience comply.

Jonathan Scruggs, legal counsel with Alliance Defending Freedom, called the proposed regulation an “unparalleled overreach by bureaucrats who want to advance a specific agenda.”

“Everyone knows that under Title IX, sex means biological sex,” he told CNA. “HHS has exceeded its authority and is going against the intent of Congress.”

“The government should not be in the business of trying to redefine sex,” Scruggs said. “HHS is supposed to apply the law faithfully, not go beyond the terms of the law.”

Roger Severino, director of the De Vos Center for Religion and Civil Society at The Heritage Foundation, questioned the impact that the rule could have on religious liberty and rights of conscience.

“(W)hat about an individual’s moral convictions and religious freedom?” he asked. “Will they be respected and preserved?” 

Apart from religious beliefs, many doctors oppose sex reassignment surgeries for medical reasons. Statistics show that individuals who have these surgeries can face serious psychological consequences and are at a significantly higher risk of suicide.  

Once a pioneer in sex reassignment surgery, Johns Hopkins University has since ended the practice, finding that it was actually damaging to those who undergo it.  

If finalized, the proposed regulation would be binding on all health insurers that offer plans under the Affordable Care Act, including those participating in health insurance exchange plans. 

The regulation would also apply to approximately 133,000 health care facilities, all state Medicaid programs, all private insurers that receive federal funding, as well as almost all physicians in the United States who accept some form of federal reimbursement.

Failure to comply could result in a loss of government funding and other legal penalties. 

“The authority for the government to revoke funds for health facilities and doctors that do not comply is vast,” said Severino. “So many health facilities and doctors would be run out of business because their business model is based on government funding.” 

“They would be hit very hard,” he stressed. “Practically all of them would suffer millions of dollars in losses if their funding was cut.” 

Doctors who refuse to conduct gender reassignment treatments and surgery because of their religious beliefs, personal convictions, or for other medical reasons could risk losing their job. 

“If a hospital is threatened with the loss of millions of funds, you would expect them to fire any person who does not comply,” said Severino. “Hospitals will not want to be sued, so the easy way out is to fire anyone who disagrees with the mandate and jeopardizes their funding.”  

“But therein lies the conflict,” he continued. “This mandate threatens religious liberty because it forces individuals to choose between violating their conscience or risk losing government benefits or their job.”  

Legal experts believe that legal challenges against the proposed regulation could be successful in the courts. 

 “It is unconstitutional for religious doctors and health facilities to be forced to violate their beliefs,” said Scruggs. “No federal court has ever said that sex includes gender identity or sexual orientation.”

“Individuals who refuse to comply with this mandate will have recourse under the First Amendment and under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act,” he added. 

This is not the first time that the Affordable Care Act has stirred up controversy surrounding religious freedom.

In recent years, hundreds of plaintiffs have filed lawsuits against the federal contraception mandate, which was issued under the Affordable Care Act and requires employers to offer health insurance plans covering contraception, sterilization and some drugs that can cause early abortions.

The Supreme Court ruled against that mandate as it applies to closely-held for-profit companies in 2014. Another case involving numerous non-profits that object to the mandate on religious grounds will be heard by the court this year.

“The Obama administration is hostile to religious freedom,” said Severino. “We have seen this with Hobby Lobby and the Little Sisters of the Poor.”

“Now the administration is trying to advance a specific gender ideology that redefines what it means to be a man or a woman,” he said. “This gender ideology will result in discriminating against people who believe that a person’s biology is something to be respected rather than something that should be treated as a disease.”Photo credit: Guschenkova via www.shutterstock.com Reported by CNA 15 hours ago.

Here are 20 incredible perks companies like Airbnb, Facebook, and Google offer their employees

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Here are 20 incredible perks companies like Airbnb, Facebook, and Google offer their employees Most of us spend a majority of our waking hours at work — so it's only natural that we want to enjoy our time in the office as much as we possibly can. And perks help ... a lot.

According to career site Glassdoor, more than half (57%) of all workers say perks and benefits are among the top things they consider when deciding whether to accept a job, and almost 80% of employees say they would prefer new benefits – like health insurance or paid time off — over a pay raise.

That's why some employers are raising the bar and going beyond free food, on-site gyms, and 401(k)s to attract new talent. Companies like Airbnb and Facebook are offering unique and surprising perks like travel stipends and "Baby Cash," according to Glassdoor's new list of the Top 20 Employee Benefits and Perks. 

"Benefits and perks matter because they're an added piece of the total compensation puzzle," says Scott Dobroski, Glassdoor's career trends analyst. "Job seekers should understand what benefits and perks an employer may be offering, and do their research ahead of time to find companies that offer benefits that matter most to them."

Glassdoor's list is based on the hundreds of thousands of benefits reviews shared on Glassdoor by employees.

Through research and surveys, Glassdoor has found that benefits and perks impact recruiting efforts "in that they certainly help get prospective talent interested in a company and through the door," Dobroski explains. "However, once people are hired, our research shows culture and values, career opportunities and senior leadership, not perks, are the leading factors that impact employee satisfaction, which directly affects a company's talent retention rates."

Here are 20 of the most incredible perks companies are offering right now:

*SEE ALSO: Here's how to respond to weird interview questions you may hear from major companies like Google and Apple*

-Netflix: Year-long paid parental leave-

Netflix offers one paid year of maternity and paternity leave to new parents. The company also allows parents to return part-time or full-time and take time off as needed throughout the year.

*Overall benefits rating:* 3.7 / 5-REI: 'Yay Days'-

REI encourages its employees to get outside by offering two paid days off each year, called "Yay Days," to enjoy their favorite outside activity.

*Overall benefits rating:* 4.0 / 5

 -Salesforce: PTO for volunteering and money for donation-

Salesforce employees receive six days of paid volunteer time off a year, as well as $1,000 a year to donate to a charity of their choice.

*Overall benefits rating:* 4.5 / 5
See the rest of the story at Business Insider Reported by Business Insider 13 hours ago.

Hillary, Embrace Your Inner Bernie

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I have been staying studiously neutral in this primary election, and it is a strange feeling. In the first part of my career, I lived in Iowa and dove in deep and early to presidential primaries. I had a great time, learned a huge amount, met some of the best lifelong friends I have ever had, and made enough of a mark that I eventually landed a great job in the Clinton White House as a very young man, so those primary fights were important to me.

This year, though, I have chosen to stay out for a couple of simple reasons: first, I feel like the more important fight is in the fall against the Koch brothers, Wall Street, and the billionaires who want to take over our democracy, and given my friendships on both sides of the Bernie/Hillary divide, I might be able to play a modest role to bring everyone together for that battle in November; and second, I feel like the Elizabeth Warren strategy of staying neutral and exerting maximum leverage to push both the candidates and the media to talk about the most important economic issues is working, and activists like me can play a good role in supporting Elizabeth's strategy. After all, once you endorse a candidate, you may have a seat at the table to try to persuade them of the merits of an issue or a strategy, but you can't hold them accountable or be critical in any significant way.

I am comfortable with that decision, but it sure feels strange, and I can't resist the urge to give some advice from time to time to both sides. Today, the day after my old home state definitively showed how closely divided Democrats are in this choice, my advice is going to be to my old boss Hillary: the way you win this primary, and the general election afterward, is to be bold and embrace your inner Bernie.

Hillary's messaging has been better this time around than it was in the 2008 race, where her pollster Mark Penn convinced her that 2008 was not a change election and that voters were not looking for someone new and different. It was a bad decision and she paid the price. This time around, she is running with a somewhat more populist and progressive message, which is good as far as it goes. She's decided that mobilizing the progressive coalition that elected Obama twice is more likely to be successful given changing demographics than winning with the old Clinton coalition that included lots more conservative white voters and states Democrats are unlikely to win anytime soon like Tennessee, Kentucky, West Virginia, and Louisiana. All of this is great, but she needs to fully embrace the strategy.

Here's the problem: this frame that her campaign unfortunately helped to create of Hillary's long hard slog incrementalism vs Bernie's big, bold solutions does not work in this political moment, just as it didn't work in 2008. And that is why her campaign- far better funded, far more endorsements, far more political pros, running against a democratic socialist who wasn't even a registered Democrat until last year- ground to a tie in Iowa and is behind in New Hampshire.

Take this article from Sam Stein in Huffpo, which Sam interviewed me for and used a quote which would horrify my mother because I swore in it. Sam leads the article with Hillary's mocking quote about Obama from 2008: "The skies will open, the light will come down, celestial choirs will be singing and everyone will know we should do the right thing and the world will be perfect," she said. "I have no illusions about how hard this is going to be", and Sam's article suggests that the same message is coming through this year. I fear he is right.

Being the nose to the grindstone, long hard slog, small steady progress candidate could- and did, for her husband- work in a time like the mid-1990s, when the economy was bubbling along pretty good, wages were going up, and the tech boom was making people feel more optimistic about the future. That is not the time we are living in, though. When you look at wages and other economic indicators for working families since the tech bubble burst around the turn of the century, it is not a pretty picture. The financial collapse, the damage it did to most folks' assets and wages, and the strong sense from voters that billionaires on Wall Street got bailed out and then made out like bandits has left an intensely sour and cynical taste in most voters' mouths. And the dysfunction in government since the Republicans took over the House in 2010 had made things even worse. People want big, deep, fundamental change. They don't want the establishment calling the shots, or business as usual. And so we see the rise of the extremist anti-establishment right in Trump and Cruz on the Republican side, and the surprisingly strong appeal of Bernie Sanders on the Democratic side.

What Hillary needs to do in my humble and unsolicited opinion is to beat Bernie by embracing Bernie. Not so much him personally- I get they are in a contest. But Bernie's boldness and big ideas. Attacking Medicare For All as too big an idea and saying we just need to tweak Obamacare is at best a mixed idea when most Democratic primary voters love Medicare and dislike insurance companies, but it also adds to the impression of Hillary being small and incremental and Bernie thinking big and bold. Attacking the Bernie/Elizabeth Warren proposal to break up the biggest banks isn't just unpopular with most Democratic voters, it makes Hillary look like she doesn't want to change the status quo when it comes to that most despised of special interests, Wall Street. And talking in general about how Bernie's proposals won't make it through a Republican Congress as far right as this one immediately triggers a BS alert amongst most Democratic primary voters because let's face it, nothing a Democrat would propose could pass this republican Congress.

Winning this election requires Hillary to propose policy ideas that are- and that sound like they are- big, bold, strong, tough, exciting. Think about how different this race would have been, for example, If she had embraced just one of the major Wall Street reforms that Elizabeth Warren has been pushing such as breaking up the biggest banks. It would have sent a big signal that she is serious about wanting to shake things up, to be a game changer. More importantly it would have completely undercut Bernie's single most powerful argument, that she is too close to Wall Street. Because voters of all stripes are really, really tired of business as usual, taking strong stands on big policy ideas like this is exactly what Hillary needs to do.

Because she is who she is, Hillary will always have trouble convincing people she isn't part and parcel of an establishment they don't trust. It gets worse, though, a lot worse, when she emphasizes that she only wants small changes and criticizes Bernie for wanting big ones. That doesn't mean she has to adopt all of his policy proposals, but she needs to reframe and re-energize her campaign by pushing her own big, bold ideas.

If she does that, she not only strengthens her hand in the primary fight, but she strengthens herself in the general election as well. It isn't just Democrats who are spitting in the eye of the establishment in case anyone hasn't noticed, and the classic swing voters are looking for a big shake-up in what they perceive as a corrupt system. Beyond that, though, is what I would call the Steve Phillips argument: as Steve argues so eloquently in his new book, the numbers don't lie. Democrats have a governing progressive majority if they inspire, engage, mobilize, and turn their base out to vote.

There are a lot of Bernie supporters who are convinced that Hillary will never take on the powers that be or propose bold new ideas. I know that Hillary is capable of being bold and taking risks, though. I was there the day, early in Bill Clinton's first term, when the DC insiders in the administration told her to take health care reform off the table because there were too many powerful special interests opposing it, and Hillary responded by saying "we can't back off from this issue because there are children dying every day from a lack of health care. It is up us to stop it, and the time is now" she concluded as her voice rose, banging her fist on the table. And even when the broader health care reform bill failed, she kept working away, and eventually she and Teddy Kennedy delivered the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP). I know she has it in her to dream big dreams and fight the powers that be. If she wants to win this race, she just needs to do it more often.

Hillary, embrace your inner Bernie.

-- 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 13 hours ago.

AgencyBloc, a Life & Health Insurance Agency Management System, Brings Real-Time Analytics to Its Dashboard

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Studies show analytics and visual graphs are the foundation of any successful business wishing to make quicker, more informed business decisions

Cedar Falls, Iowa (PRWEB) February 03, 2016

AgencyBloc, an agency management system/CRM built specifically for life and health insurance agencies, has released a valuable enhancement to their SaaS platform for insurance agencies. The enhancement brings clarity to an agency’s book of business through real-time analytics and graphs, which allows an agency to make informed business decisions.

As insurance agencies face increased competition, the ability to make informed business decisions at a rapid pace has become vitally important.

Blue Hill Research says, “At the highest levels of decision-making, we must make challenging leaps of understanding in the face of nuance and uncertainty. We often rely on data and analysis in tandem with our intuition to guide our process. Making analysis more digestible to the human mind through data visualization is an important element in complementing our decision-making.”

Jennifer Warne, Product Manager at AgencyBloc agrees, "When asked to rank upcoming product features, our clients told us that being able to analyze data visually was key. Giving insurance agencies the tools they need to outsell their competition, retain important business, and make quick, salient business decisions is very important to us. For this reason, AgencyBloc adjusted our product roadmap to bring visual analytics to our client community sooner rather than later."

Although agencies have historically run reports, created manual graphs via Excel spreadsheets or searched for third-party vendors to visualize their data, these options are time-consuming and often expensive. AgencyBloc sought to overcome these obstacles, by providing visualizations driven by real-time data at no additional cost.

The goal of AgencyBloc’s Dashboard Analytics is to provide the information agency owners need to answer the following questions:

*How productive is the agency?
*Where does most of the agency's business come from?
*Which carriers does the agency have most of its business with?
*Which products sell well, which don’t?
*Where are the cross-sell opportunities?
*Who are the agency's top performing agents?

Agency owners can monitor the various parts of their business and identify opportunities in the following ways:

*Activities/To-do’s: Measure productivity by tracking the status and completion activities.
*Groups: Monitor where group business comes from, top lead sources, and understand the group sales cycle.
*Individuals: Manage the efficiency of the sales cycle with graphs showing Individual status and type (client, prospect, ex-client, etc.).
*Policies: Identify cross-sell opportunities and see what coverage types hold the most business.
*Carriers: Discover how much business is invested in each carrier.
*Commissions: Identify top revenue performing agents and uncover missing commissions.

AgencyBloc’s clients have already seen how analytics have improved their business. Mike C., VP of Vesta Voluntary Specialists, “Charts and graphs are great communication tools which help visualize our processes and growth, as well as deficiencies in areas which need improvement.”

AgencyBloc strives to help life and health insurance agencies grow their business by organizing and automating their operations using a combination of an industry-specific CRM, commissions processing, and integrated marketing automation.

To learn more about AgencyBloc’s Dashboard Analytics feature, sign up for a 1-on-1 demo or start a free trial.

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About AgencyBloc: AgencyBloc is an agency management system with commissions processing capabilities built specifically for life and health insurance agencies. For more information, contact AgencyBloc at 866-338-7075 or info(at)agencybloc(dot)com. Reported by PRWeb 12 hours ago.

Don't Repeal Health-Related Taxes

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Permanent repeal of three health-related taxes, which last year's budget deal postponed or suspended, would cost the federal government more than $250 billion over the next decade, new Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates show -- and almost certainly much more in decades to follow.   The three health-related taxes are the excise tax on high-cost health plans (the so-called "Cadillac" tax), the medical device tax, and the tax on health insurers.  With these taxes now postponed or suspended, policymakers could well start to treat them like other temporary tax provisions that they routinely extend -- effectively making the delays permanent. More specifically, CBO estimates that permanently cancelling these provisions would reduce revenues by $256 billion over the next decade.  Extrapolating beyond that first decade, we estimate that the revenue loss would swell to roughly $850 billion in the second decade, largely due to the Cadillac tax.  Over the next two decades combined, repealing the three taxes would add $1.4 trillion to the debt, including associated debt service costs.  As a result, the ratio of federal debt to gross domestic product (i.e., the debt-to-GDP ratio) would be roughly 1.0 percentage point higher in 2026 and 3.4 percentage points higher in 2036 (see chart).

&nbs;&nbs;

There's a particularly strong policy rationale for retaining the excise tax on high-cost plans (while modifying it to address various concerns), as it raises the most revenue of the three taxes in the long run and has the potential to help slow the rate of growth of health care costs. The tax preserves but limits the tax exclusion for employer-sponsored health insurance.  Initially, the excise tax won't affect most workers and health plans, since its thresholds for imposing the tax substantially exceed the value of the typical plan.  Had the tax taken effect in 2018, as health reform envisioned, only 4 percent of people with employer-sponsored coverage would have been enrolled in plans whose projected costs exceeded the tax's threshold for that year, a Treasury Department analysis found.  Moreover, even this figure tends to overstate the tax's effects, since the tax applies only to the portion of plan costs that exceeds the threshold.  The tax would have applied to only 1 percent of plan costs in 2018, Treasury found.  The comparable figures for 2020 -- the tax's new start date -- would be only slightly larger.As noted, in addition to raising needed revenue, the tax will help slow health care costs.  In fact, the excise tax is one of health reform's most important cost-containment measures.  It will discourage firms from buying extremely generous health coverage that promotes excess health care use.  It will "encourage the dissemination of less costly ways to deliver appropriate medical services," CBO has concluded.To be sure, the tax has some flaws, and some changes in it deserve consideration.  For example, as the tax now stands, its thresholds will rise with the Consumer Price Index (CPI).  Since the CPI rises more slowly than health care costs do, the tax will eventually affect too large a share of health plans.  The tax can (and should) be modified to address such concerns.The tax's basic concept is sound, however.  Thus, policymakers should explore reforms in the tax (or an alternative health-related tax mechanism) that retain the tax's revenues and help to slow the growth of health care costs.
This post originally appeared on Off the Charts, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities' blog.

More on this Topic:
Census Data Show Historic Coverage Gains in 2014States Not Expanding Medicaid Falling Further Behind Expansion StatesCBO: Individual Mandate Repeal Would Undo Historic Health Coverage GainsTo Make Marketplaces Work Best, Enroll More People -- Not Fewer

-- 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 9 hours ago.

There Is Only One Issue Worth Voting on in 2016

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**Crossposted at www.braintrustlive.com, where Lila co-hosts the Brain Trust Live podcast and blogs regularly about politics.**

Here's a bold declaration: Despite the rancor accompanying this year's races and last year's congressional session, there is only one issue worth voting on. It's a deceptively simple issue too; massively important, but, oddly, still one a vast majority of Americans agree on.

The issue? Campaign finance reform, and in this year of big ideas and big issues and movements and Twitter trolling, many of us will get a chance to meaningfully vote on it the first time in our lives. For millennials and beyond, Bernie Sanders offers a first opportunity to cast a ballot in favor of a major primary player who hasn't bought into the corporate funding system. Even if you think he's a grump of an elderly socialist with nothing else to officer, it's worth taking that option seriously because, whether you know it or not, your vote on campaign finance reform is ultimately the only one that counts.

We live with some hugely unpopular realities in the U.S., but chances are you don't waste much thought on why, for example Congress can't pass even minor pieces of gun control legislation despite our long history of grizzly mass shootings. You probably also don't spend time pondering why the best we can do in terms of health coverage is a national plan that puts millions of dollars of government money in the hands of for-profit private to insurance companies. You've likely never sat back and thought "why can't we regulate Wall Street so that negligence and greed doesn't periodically put our entire economy at risk?"

You're not lazy, you just already know the answer to all of these questions and the answer is corporate and lobbyist money in the pockets of your representatives, my representatives, strangers' representatives...all the representatives. This money is such a universal part of our electoral system that we don't even ask more of our candidates. Instead, voters are left to determine which candidates are supported by the least worst interests. When we have to think in terms of whether the banking lobby trumps the gun lobby or the health insurance lobby trumps the energy lobby, however, we've already lost. Every two years the Americans that bother to vote in the first place must cast their ballots in favor of policies they don't agree with and don't work in their favor in order to vote at all.

This is frustrating because of the mockery it makes of the democratic system, but it's especially frustrating since, back in June, the New York Times printed a poll showing near unanimous agreement on the need to change our electoral funding system. This isn't an exaggeration -- some people disagreed on the scope of the problem but 0% of them thought that everything was fine as-is. Americans don't reach those levels of unity on any other issue, including the question of comparatively small national importance such as whether snakes and tornadoes are scary.

Unsurprisingly, of course, a majority of those polled by the Times were also pessimistic about anything being done. Candidates can say anything they want about healthcare, education, or "believing in what's best in us," but their ability to deliver on any promises at all is severely hampered by the fact that they can't be as responsive to voters as they are to the money that pays for their publicity. Our lack of campaign finance reform is, in fact, why we can't even get any action on the issue of campaign finance reform.

As we close in on the bulk of the 2016 primaries we've been asked by candidates on both sides of the aisle to think about what we believe our responsibilities are as voters. Some candidates within the establishment are asking us to vote pragmatically considering the system we have. Other candidates, those challengers like Sanders who are experiencing huge and largely unprecedented surges in the polls, are asking us to think beyond the system and vote towards the system we wish we had.

It's understandable that many of us feel compelled to cut our losses and vote for the best version of the compromised system we know, but if we believe our job is to help decide on a pragmatic party strategy instead of representative party policies, then our opinions on the actual issues will never matter as much as those of the donor class and the flow of corporate money will never stop.

If, however, we believe our responsibility is to vote for the policies that actually represent our values, then the fact that our current system prevents us from finding candidates that represent these values should be unacceptable. Every issue that Democratic voters hold dear is impossible to act on meaningfully without campaign finance reform, and every stalemate plaguing the American congress is derived from it. Opportunities to vote in favor of fixing the system are few and far between, but we have an opportunity here. Let's not waste it.

-- 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.

Families USA: Half a million-employed Floridians would benefit from Medicaid expansion

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Florida is one of 19 states in the country that has not expanded Medicaid accessibility as allowed under the Affordable Care Act. A new study from Families USA, a national advocacy group for health care consumers, found that in states which expanded Medicaid, percentage decreases in uninsured employed individuals were significantly higher than in those that didn’t. “Access to health insurance means a healthier and more productive workforce, and that’s good for business,” said Dee Mahan,… Reported by bizjournals 6 hours ago.

Infogix to Manage Cost Sharing Reduction Provision of the Affordable Care Act for SelectHealth

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Infogix will provide SelectHealth a software solution that includes claims re-calculation, shadow accumulator calculation, monthly financial reporting, and an annual CSR report.

Naperville, Ill (PRWEB) February 03, 2016

SelectHealth, a not-for-profit health insurance organization serving clients in Utah and Idaho, has selected Infogix, a leader in helping companies provide end-to-end data analysis across the enterprise, to manage Cost Sharing Reduction (CSR)—a provision of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Infogix will provide a software solution that includes claims re-calculation, shadow accumulator calculation, monthly financial reporting, and an annual CSR report.

The CSR provision introduces a process to subsidize member out-of-pocket costs depending on income for variant plans. SelectHealth reconciles these payments with the actual cost incurred based on their members’ claims experience using the standard methodology.

“Finding an organization that was capable of correctly processing and reporting on CSR claims was imperative during our search for a data analysis partner. We needed a solution to assist us in preparation for an upcoming CMS reconciliation audit,” said Bob Heitman, chief actuary for SelectHealth. “We’re excited to partner with a strong organization like Infogix who we believe will understand and meet our needs.”

“We’re thrilled that SelectHealth has partnered with Infogix on our CSR solution to address the ACA regulation,” said Paul Skordilis, executive vice president at Infogix. “We believe our comprehensive package of automated rules and reports will provide visibility and financial insight to the health plan, long before the final reconciliation and submission process each April.”

To learn more about Infogix, visit http://www.infogix.com.

About Infogix, Inc.
Infogix helps solve business challenges by analyzing data as it moves through complex business environments to improve the customer experience, corporate profitability and operational efficiency. The Infogix Enterprise Data Platform improves data quality, ensures effective transaction monitoring, provides balancing and reconciliation, identifies and predicts fraud and customer behavior. Infogix provides best-in-class solutions that seamlessly integrate into operations and allow clients to manage highly complex, data intensive business environments. By analyzing, processing and monitoring 100 percent of data in real-time or in batch, Infogix is able to provide proactive and actionable intelligence to manage operational workflows and steps. To learn more visit http://www.infogix.com or @Infogix.

About SelectHealth
SelectHealth is a not-for-profit health insurance organization serving more than 830,000 members in Utah and southern Idaho. As a subsidiary of Intermountain Healthcare, SelectHealth is committed to helping people live the healthiest lives possible. In addition to medical plans, SelectHealth offers dental, vision, pharmacy benefit management, and life and disability coverage to its members. SelectHealth plans are available for Medicare and Medicaid enrollees. SelectHealth is also a carrier for the state’s Children’s Health Insurance Program. For details, visit selecthealth.org. Reported by PRWeb 5 hours ago.

Meet The World Leader Who Stole His Citizens' Gold

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Meet The World Leader Who Stole His Citizens' Gold Submitted by Simon Black via SovereignMan.com,

*Even before his coronation in 1626, King Charles I of England was almost bankrupt.*

His predecessors King James and Queen Elizabeth had run the royal treasury down to almost nothing.

Costly war and military folly had taken its toll. The crown had simply wasted far too much money, and brought in too little.

To make matters worse, King Charles was constantly at odds with parliament.

The English government was completely dysfunctional, with constant bickering, personal attacks, and very little sound decision-making.

Parliament refused to pass the taxes that Charles needed to make ends meet. But at the same time, the King was legally unable to levy his own taxes without parliamentary approval.

*So, faced with financial desperation, he began to look for alternative ways to raise revenue.*

One way was relying on practically ancient, obscure laws to penalize his subjects.

The Distraint of Knighthood, for example, was based on an act from 1278, roughly three and a half centuries before Charles’ coronation.

*The Act gave him the legal authority to fine all men with a minimum level of income who did not present themselves in person at his coronation.*

Charles also commandeered vast amounts of land, restoring the boundaries of the royal forests to where they had been during the time of King Edward I in the 13th century.

He then fined anyone who encroached on the land, and resold much of it to industries that were supportive of his reign.

*King Charles even resorted to begging; in July 1626, he requested that his subjects “lovingly, freely, and voluntarily” give him money.*

When that didn’t work, the King levied a Forced Loan, effectively confiscating people’s funds under the guise of ‘borrowing’ it.

*He raised about £250,000, the equivalent of about $7.5 billion today.*

*Emboldened by his success, Charles eventually seized assets directly, including all the gold on deposit being held at the Royal Mint– money that belonged to the merchants and goldsmiths of England.*

At one point Charles even forced the East India Company to ‘loan’ him their pepper and spice inventory. He subsequently sold the products at a steep loss.

*If any of this sounds familiar, it should.*

Today there is no shortage of nations facing fiscal desperation. Most of Europe. Japan. The United States.

*In the Land of the Free, the government has spent years… decades… engaged in the most wasteful folly*, from multi-trillion dollar wars to a multi-billion dollar website.

US debt just hit $19 trillion a few days ago. And it’s only going higher.

We can already see the government’s financial desperation.

*Over the years, the government has effectively levied a ‘forced loan’ totaling more than $2.6 trillion on the Social Security Trust Fund, whose ultimate beneficiaries are the taxpayers of the United States.*

Bottom line, they’re ‘borrowing’ YOUR money.

Last year the government stole more from Americans through ‘Civil Asset Forfeiture’ than all the thieves in the United States combined.

In December, the US government confiscated $19.3 billion from the Federal Reserve, which, by the way, was already very thinly capitalized.

Even if you want to believe the propaganda, it’s clear that these are not the actions of a healthy, solvent government that embraces liberty.

In fact, the government published over 80,000 pages of laws, bills, regulations, and executive orders last year. Just this morning they published another 308 pages.

It’s impossible for anyone to keep up with all of these rules. And yet each can carry civil and criminal penalties, including a fine now for not having health insurance.

*As Mark Twain used to say, history may not repeat, but it certainly rhymes.*

*Financially insolvent governments of major superpowers do not simply go gentle into that good night.*

They don’t suddenly turn over a new leaf and start embracing economic freedom.

Instead, they get worse. More desperate. More destructive.

Should we honestly believe that they can continue racking up more debt than has ever existed in the history of the world without any consequences?

*This is madness. At some point, fiscal reality always catches up. Maybe not at $19 trillion. Maybe not even at $20 trillion.*

Maybe it takes 3 months. Or 3 years. But somewhere out there is a straw that can break the camel’s back. And that has serious consequences.

Never forget that if something is predictable, then it’s also preventable.

*And facing such obvious trends, it makes all the sense in the world to take some simple, rational steps to put together your own Plan B.* Reported by Zero Hedge 4 hours ago.

Battle of the EpiPen

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Can we talk about the exorbitant cost of EpiPens?

I've probably bored you already.

Let's face it: Another person whining about the high cost of health care in America.

Hell yes I'm complaining! I just had to pay $440 for two EpiPens so my son, um, won't die if he inadvertently eats a tree nut.

According to the FARE (Food, Allergy, Research and Education) website, researchers estimate that up to 15 million Americans have food allergies and that this potentially deadly disease affects 1 in every 13 children (under 18 years of age) in the U.S. That's roughly two in every classroom.

But did you know that State law requires all students with life-threatening health conditions, such as nut allergies, to have medication for each child prior to attending school?

What if you can't afford one?

When I was a kid, I didn't know of one kid that had a nut allergy.

And I'll admit I blamed all of the other preschool "helicopter parents" who were stopping my kid from the freedom of eating his beloved peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for snack.

I became a believer when I handed our three-year-old son, Patrick, a granola bar he'd never tried before (it had tree nuts, not peanuts) which he summarily projectile vomited all over and was immediately covered in hives.

Afterward, my son was diagnosed with a tree nut allergy that required a yearly prescription of EpiPens.

He's now eight.

And, thankfully for the last five years, although it's a condition that could potentially be fatal, we have been fortunate to have an ample supply of EpiPen's.

Like clockwork, once a year we got a 'script from his allergist which we brought through the drive thru pharmacist and in roughly the same amount of time it would take to order a Chai latte we had a to-go sized bag filled with boxes of EpiPen's for a $50 co-pay.

We were swimming in EpiPen's!

Enough to store one in each of our families two vehicles, at our house, at grandma's, at the neighbors.

We were pretty clueless about how lucky we were.

Although one year I do remember driving away with another year's supply of EpiPens and my eight-year-old daughter held up the bag saying, "Wow, Mom, in the corner of the receipt it says, 'your insurance saved you 1200 dollars.'"

My husband had a great job as a computer programmer, and I was thankful that our family, (we have five kids) had access to life saving medicine.

The cost of EpiPen's only became relevant when I received a warning from the school nurse that Patrick's EpiPen was due to expire January 31st and we needed to replace it or he wouldn't be allowed to attend school.

My husband hadn't changed companies but his health insurance options had drastically changed and we had two choices: a high deductible plan and another high deductible plan.

Our "new" high deductible insurance it would cost us $440 out of pocket, (which includes the use of a coupon that the Mylan Company, the makers of the EpiPen, passes off to patients as a 0 dollar co-pay when really it only takes off 100 dollars).

Our stockpile of cheap EpiPen's had lulled us into middle class complacency. And, like a rooster comin' to call: our cache of EpiPen's were useless.

Laying awake the other night, I wondered how we would pay for the EpiPens.

My husband had researched options on line. Surely this was a mistake, how could a once cheap medication now be so expensive?

According to an article on NerdWallet, there is no generic EpiPen available due to the manufacturer's patent. Because of this, Mylan, the maker of the device, is allowed to charge what it wants without direct competition. And what it charges is alarmingly high.

Apparently we could buy one from England for 120, with a minimum purchase of two. Or we could drive to Canada and buy one for a 100 dollars.

Both brainstorming ideas seemed sketchy.

On the one hand, I was being stubborn. It would be difficult, but we could afford it.

I thought of a friend whose son has a nut allergy. I could offer her a couple hundred dollars for a couple doses if she had extra? I would certainly rather give her the money than the Mylan Corporation who manufactures the drug.

I wondered it that was even legal?

The FARE website advised that the economic cost of children's food allergies is nearly $25 billion per year.

The school nurse seemed so relieved when I delivered the EpiPen on February 1st I told her I was writing a piece about the situation.

"I know I shouldn't be saying this, but try to get the story national," she whispered. "This is so hard on families, especially the working class and the medicine is for children! Make sure that you explain to parents to insist on an EpiPen from the pharmacist that expires in a year. So many parents have bought EpiPens from pharmacies that push their old stock and give them prescriptions that expire in six months!"

I can't tell you how many times people say that healthcare for the middle class is in the toilet because of Obamacare.

I grew up poor with a single parent and not having health care or food is something you don't and shouldn't forget.

I wholeheartedly believe in Universal Healthcare for all, even if it messes with our families once "cush" situation.

Like most parents, of course we would and did pay and in the larger scheme of things our son's health trumps all.

But this whole thing feels rotten.

Here's an excerpt from a recent NPR interview: "A slick marketing campaign is part of the reason why. That campaign included lobbying Congress to get EpiPens in schools. Forty-seven states now suggest or mandate that schools have such devices on hand... As the popularity of EpiPens has grown, so has the cost. The wholesale price of the drug has increased by about 400 percent as it has been heavily marketed."

I have a serious problem with drug companies' grossly taking advantage of people, especially children, because they can.

Follow Carolyn Ossorio aka Pippimamma on Twitter: Carolyn Ossorio @Pippi_mamma

-- 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 hours ago.

Bernie Sanders Isn't The Only One Who's Questioned Whether Hillary Clinton Is A Progressive

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In her quest to secure the Democratic presidential nomination, Hillary Clinton has alternately described herself as "a progressive who likes to get things done" and "kind of moderate and center." So Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) touched a nerve this week when he said in New Hampshire that Clinton is only a progressive on "some days." 

"Some days, yes," Sanders told a reporter Tuesday. "Except when she announces that she is a proud moderate. And then I guess she is not a progressive."

"I think, frankly, it is very hard to be a real progressive and to take on the establishment in a way I think has to be taken," he went on, "when you become as dependent, as she has, through her super PAC and in other ways, on Wall Street or drug company money." 

Clinton responded to Sanders Wednesday by saying it was "a low blow" for him to cast doubt on her progressive credentials. She listed various policy efforts she's undertaken, like helping to create the Children's Health Insurance Program and defending Social Security from privatization in the Senate.

"So let's keep it on the issues, because if it's about our records, hey, I'm going to win by a landslide on Tuesday," Clinton said. (The New Hampshire primary is on Tuesday, where Sanders has consistently carried a large lead in the polls.)

Supporters of Clinton came to her defense. Progressive Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), for instance, tweeted that "Hillary is a progressive EVERY day. Bernie is a Democrat 'some days.'"

The spat continued on Twitter, with Sanders tweeting that Clinton couldn't claim to be both "a moderate and a progressive" at the same time. He cited some of Clinton's past policy positions to make his point.


Most progressives I know are firm from day 1 in opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership. They didn't have to think about it a whole lot.

— Bernie Sanders (@BernieSanders) February 3, 2016



Most progressives I know were against the war in Iraq. One of the worst foreign policy blunders in the history of the United States.

— Bernie Sanders (@BernieSanders) February 3, 2016



Some other days... pic.twitter.com/7SjQdgiiQr

— Bernie Sanders (@BernieSanders) February 3, 2016


Clinton replied by suggesting Sanders had plunged the two into an unnecessary debate over semantics, while also calling out the senator for his past votes on gun safety. 


2) Now, if you do want to make it about who's a "real progressive," @BernieSanders, what were you on these days? pic.twitter.com/8Q6hANYPhh

— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) February 3, 2016



4) Hillary's not running to make a point—she's running to make a difference. She'll keep doing that. Please feel free to keep tweeting.

— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) February 3, 2016


The fight over political labels isn't a new one. In June, Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.), a vocal supporter of Clinton, complained that she "very rarely read in any coverage of Bernie that he's a socialist" and suggested that he's "too liberal" and "extreme" to win the nomination. That Sanders is a self-described Democratic socialist didn't pose a problem for him in the Iowa caucus, where he narrowly lost to Clinton Monday, since 43 percent of Democratic caucus-goers in Iowa identify as socialists.

And Clinton has not always been seen as a steadfast liberal even by people close to her. In 2005, for example, Bruce Reed, a longtime aide to former President Bill Clinton, characterized Hillary -- at the time a Democratic senator for New York -- as "quite culturally conservative," and therefore "a natural choice" to define a policy agenda for the Democratic Leadership Council, a centrist group with which she had a leadership role.  

Reed, the president of the DLC and and Bill Clinton's former senior policy adviser -- who wrote the phrase "end welfare as we know it" into one of the former president's speeches -- pushed back on the suggestion that Hillary had "a reputation for being on the liberal end of the party" in a 2005 interview with NPR.  

"Well, I wouldn't say that," Reed said. "I think -- you know, I've known her for 15 years and she's a Clinton Democrat from the get-go. She's always been quite culturally conservative."

"I worked with her on welfare reform," he went on. "She did a number of things in the '90s that didn't get that much attention, like making it easier for adoption and reforming the child welfare system. She's always been a budget hawk. So despite the caricature that conservatives would like to stick on her, I think she is a natural for this."

It's this history that makes some of Sanders' progressive supporters question whether Clinton is really one of their own. Clinton, for her part, has worked to distance herself from the welfare reform, crime and financial deregulation bills of the 1990s that present-day progressives abhor.

Asked Wednesday whether he thinks his 2005 characterization of Clinton is still valid, Reed told The Huffington Post that, to him, Clinton is "exactly what she says she is -- a progressive who gets things done."

"I think that she has spent the last 40 years at the cutting edge of progressive causes and has a lot of progress to show for it," Reed said. "The results matter more than the labels, but by any measure, she's one of the great progressive leaders of our time."

*Also on HuffPost:*

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More Signs Of Fuzzy Math In The Bernie Sanders Health Plan

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There’s new reason to think the numbers in the Bernie Sanders health care plan don’t add up.

On Wednesday, the Center for a Responsible Federal Budget, a nonpartisan Washington think tank, released an analysis of Sanders’ proposal to replace existing health insurance arrangements with a single, government-run plan that would look something like Medicare.

Sanders has said that his plan would pay for itself, partly by making the U.S. health care system more efficient and partly by raising revenue through a series of new taxes. In the end, Sanders has promised, the vast majority of Americans would actually be better off financially, paying less in taxes under his program than they would pay in premiums plus out-of-pocket expenses under the current system.
The center's report disputes that finding. In particular, it says, the taxes that Sanders has sketched out wouldn’t produce as much revenue as Sanders thinks -- creating a shortfall of about $3 trillion over 10 years, or much more if it turns out the program also spends more on insurance benefits than Sanders expects.

Like most analyses that circulate during presidential campaigns, this one is rough. And the Sanders campaign is challenging the report by assailing the credibility of the source -- something it also did last week, when a prominent health care economist released a similarly critical analysis.

But if the findings from this new report are even in the right ballpark, then either the benefits Sanders has promised would have to be smaller, the taxes for the plan would have to be higher, or the program as a whole would create huge new deficits.

One way or another, that would change the calculus of how many people end up better off and how many end up worse off -- maybe dramatically.

*What The New Report Says*

Nobody disputes that the plan Sanders touts would be an expensive proposition. If the proposal became law, the federal government would be paying the medical bills of everybody in America, with zero cost-sharing for most services. According to an independent estimate that the Sanders campaign commissioned, the price tag for providing so many people with such generous coverage would come to something like $13.8 trillion over 10 years.

Such a program would increase total federal spending -- that is, the cost of everything that the government does, from food stamps to defense spending -- by somewhere between one-fourth and one-third.

Sanders has said that a single-payer system can offset some of that new cost by reducing what the U.S. spends on medical care -- partly by eliminating administrative expenses related to billing and partly by forcing the suppliers of treatment and supplies, particularly the makers of prescription drugs, to lower their prices. As proof, he has cited the relative record of single-payer systems abroad, where governments cover everybody while spending less than the U.S. does.

To provide the remaining financing, Sanders would seek new taxes. Some of these levies, like a higher tax rate on large estates, would fall exclusively on the wealthy. Two others, a new 6.2 percent payroll tax on employers and a 2.2 percent “income-related premium,” would apply to all workers. Although the tax increases together would dwarf any increase in recent history, Sanders says the money most people save from the elimination of premiums and (most) out-of-pocket expenses would be even bigger.

But those calculations are flawed, the new report says. A big problem, the center’s analysts explain, is that the Sanders campaign fails to account for the ways wealthy people avoid taxes when rates reach the levels that Sanders has in mind. Altogether, the report says, the plan’s taxes would produce revenue short of the official Sanders projection, to the tune of $3.1 trillion over 10 years -- or about one-third of the program's total official cost.

The report is the second in two weeks to scrutinize the arithmetic of Sanders' health plan. The previous report, from Emory University professor Kenneth Thorpe, suggests that estimates of health care savings in the Sanders plan are even more off the mark. Among the reasons: Such severe reductions in hospital payments would cause closures and shortages that neither the industry nor the public would tolerate.

*What The Sanders Campaign Says*

The Sanders campaign has stood by its original estimates, which University of Massachusetts economist Gerald Friedman produced, by citing a letter of general support from 100 advocates and experts on economics or health care -- as well as a separate analysis from the co-founders of Physicians for a National Health Plan, the nation’s leading advocate for single-payer insurance.

Campaign officials have also questioned the credibility of critics -- noting that Thorpe, who served in the Clinton administration, has in the past done work for health industry clients.

On Wednesday, Warren Gunnels, policy director for the Sanders campaign, responded to the latest report in much the same way -- by citing its ties to Pete Peterson, a Wall Street tycoon known for his advocacy of balanced budgets and concerns over entitlement spending. (Peterson serves on the organization's board of directors; the Peter G. Peterson Foundation provides some of its funding.) “It's disappointing but not surprising that a group funded by Wall Street billionaire Pete Peterson would issue a misleading and inaccurate report attacking Sen. Sanders health care plan,” Gunnels said.

But the center's analysts have a reputation for intellectually sound work. They are relying on the same theories about tax policy that economists at the Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation use. And they are hardly the only respected experts raising questions about the assumptions in the Sanders plan -- and whether those assumptions are realistic.

Most of these students of health policy have praised single-payer systems before, because they realize the model really does produce more coverage at less cost overseas. But they doubt that transplanting that system into the existing American health care infrastructure would deliver similar results -- and they don't think Sanders and his advisers have accounted for that.

*Also on HuffPost:*

-- 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 50 minutes ago.

Obama budget to adjust health insurance 'Cadillac tax': adviser

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama will propose tailoring the controversial "Cadillac tax" on expensive private health insurance plans to reflect regional differences when he releases his 2017 budget plan next week, a senior White House adviser said in an article released on Wednesday. Reported by Reuters 13 minutes ago.

Obama will propose overhaul for medical ‘Cadillac tax’ in upcoming budget: report

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President Barack Obama will propose tailoring the controversial “Cadillac tax” on expensive private health insurance plans to reflect regional differences when he releases his 2017 budget plan next week, a senior White House adviser said in an article released on Wednesday. Obama’s... Reported by Raw Story 6 minutes ago.

Kentucky Tops Coverage Gains as GOP Looks to Remake Medicaid

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A new national survey shows Kentucky and Arkansas lead the nation in the largest drops of the number of people without health insurance Reported by ABCNews.com 16 hours ago.

Kentucky tops coverage gains as GOP looks to remake Medicaid

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FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — As Gov. Matt Bevin prepares to remake Kentucky’s Medicaid program, a new national survey shows what’s at stake: gains in insurance coverage matched only by one other state. Kentucky and Arkansas had the largest drops in the percentage of people without health insurance in the country, according to the Gallup-Healthways survey. […] Reported by Seattle Times 16 hours ago.

New Law Could Spur Movement to Two-Sided Risk, AIS Newsletter Predicts

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The law that ended the Medicare Sustainable Growth Rate formula also could push more value-based providers to accept downside risk acceptance, an industry consultant predicts in the February 2016 issue of AIS’s Value-Based Care News.

Washington, DC (PRWEB) February 04, 2016

A new law could spur many providers to move to two-sided risk, predicts Leavitt Partners LLC Director of Research David Muhlestein in the Februrary 2016 issue of AIS’s Value-Based Care News (VBC). According to VBC, the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) repealed the Medicare Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) formula — which was unpopular with providers — and replaced it with two separate types of incentive payments: the Alternative Payment Model and the Merit-Based Incentive Program.

Physicians who participate in Alternative Payment Models could get a 5% annual bonus from Medicare, according to VBC, but they would have to accept downside risk for at least 25% of their payments. That means that they would have to share in losses if a patient’s care cost more than expected, as well as share in savings if care cost less than expected. The alternative, the Merit-Based Incentive Program, offers bonuses based on quality, use of resources, use of electronic health records and practice improvement, and thus is much more complex.

Muhlestein predicts the bulk of ACOs will make the move into downside risk arrangements in 2019, when the law forces them to choose between the two payment systems.

MACRA was passed last spring, with proposed and final rules due in spring and fall, respectively.

Visit https://aishealth.com/archive/nvbc0216-04 to read the article in its entirety.

About AIS’s Value-Based Care News
AIS’s Value-Based Care News (VBC) delivers timely news, data and strategies related to ACOs, medical homes, bundled payments, coordinated care and global payments. Formerly published as ACO Business News, the newsletter focuses intently on value-based launches, products and results, and innovative arrangements that can help your organization improve the quality of care, lower costs and grow market share. Featuring the pros and cons of various strategies for different types of organizations, VBC is designed to help readers avoid the pitfalls ahead and transform exciting value-based care opportunities into winning business strategies. Visit http://aishealth.com/marketplace/value-based-care-news for more information.

About AIS
Atlantic Information Services, Inc. (AIS) is a publishing and information company that has been serving the health care industry for nearly 30 years. It develops highly targeted news, data and strategic information for managers in hospitals and health systems, health insurance companies, medical group practices, purchasers of health insurance, pharmaceutical companies and other health care organizations. AIS products include print and electronic newsletters, databases, Websites, looseleafs, strategic reports, directories, webinars and virtual conferences. Learn more at http://AISHealth.com. Reported by PRWeb 16 hours ago.
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