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Trump Proposes An Obamacare Replacement That Looks Nothing Like What Republicans Are Talking About

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President-elect Donald Trump says he’s putting the finishing touches on his plan to replace Obamacare.

It sounds absolutely terrific, like the best health plan ever!

It also sounds wildly out of step with what Republicans in Congress, or even some of Trump’s own advisers, have said they would like to do.

Trump’s comments, which he made in an interview with The Washington Post that appeared Sunday, could mean he’s gone rogue and decided that, at least on health care policy, he has more in common with Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) than House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.).

Or they could mean that, in reaction to public anxiety and recent protests over the possibility of more than 20 million people losing insurance, Trump is already misleading people about what he and his Republicans are planning to do.

Or Trump’s statements could mean that he has no idea what he’s talking about.

Speaking to the Post’s Robert Costa, Trump said his new health care plan would mean “insurance for everybody” with “much lower deductibles.”

Also, Trump said, he will call for the government to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies directly, forcing them to lower their prices.

“They’re politically protected but not anymore,” Trump said of the drug industry.

Trump didn’t offer more details about what he has in mind, or give a precise date for when his plan would be ready for the public to see. But, he said, “It’s very much formulated down to the final strokes. We haven’t put it in quite yet but we’re going to be doing it soon.”

Trump added that he would probably wait until his nominee for secretary of health and human services, Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.), has gone through the confirmation process and taken office. The Senate Finance Committee, which has jurisdiction over Price’s appointment, has not yet scheduled a hearing.

Making sense of Trump’s comments on policy is never easy, and in this case the comments are more confusing than usual.

Providing everybody with health insurance and protecting them from excessive medical costs has been a longtime goal of the Democratic Party, going back to the 1940s. Those efforts eventually led to the Affordable Care Act, which has brought the number of Americans without coverage to a record low, improving access to health care and reducing financial insecurity.

Obamacare has its trade-offs. The coverage that many consumers have obtained through the program includes high deductibles or other forms of out-of-pocket spending, fueling the political backlash against it. Primarily that’s because the law’s new requirements on insurance, such as guaranteeing coverage of pre-existing conditions, made insurance more expensive ― and the law’s financial assistance phases out with higher incomes.

It’s a problem that even many of the law’s supporters have said they want to fix. Both Obama and 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton proposed offering consumers more assistance with out-of-pocket costs and using government leverage to bring down drug prices.

Sanders, meanwhile, has been a longtime advocate for single-payer health insurance ― that is, having the government provide everybody with insurance directly. The plan he introduced during his 2016 presidential bid would have entailed much more government spending and European-style price controls throughout the health care industry.

Republicans, who have more or less been fighting expansions of government health insurance for as long as Democrats have been proposing them, take a very different view of things. In the nearly seven years since Obamacare has become law, Republicans have talked about replacing it with a number of different approaches, and among the most detailed is the legislation that Price introduced to the House.

But none of the plans Republicans have discussed would come close to covering everybody with lower out-of-pocket spending, simply because doing so would require the kind of approach Democrats have in mind ― much more federal spending and much more regulation of prices.

A fundamental goal of every conservative plan in circulation, at think tanks and on Capitol Hill, is to reduce federal spending and regulation, in most cases dramatically.


If an ACA replacement spends less federal $, there will be fewer insured, fewer benefits, or less access for pre-existing conditions. #math

— Larry Levitt (@larry_levitt) January 14, 2017


And in the past, when there’s been serious discussion of direct government negotiation with pharmaceutical companies over drug prices, Republicans (and Democrats with ties to the drug industry) have fought such efforts, often arguing that they would stifle innovation and reduce access to life-saving medications.

Trump’s remarks about going after the drug industry raise the possibility that he’s not perfectly in sync with the rest of his party on that issue. And comments he’s made previously, like telling CBS’ “60 Minutes” that “everybody has got to be covered,” suggest he thinks universal coverage is important ― or, at least, more important than Republicans typically think.

If Trump were serious about these things, Democrats would likely embrace him. On MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” Monday, Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) said: “On the prescription drug issue, Bernie Sanders and [Sen.] Elizabeth Warren [D-Mass.] and I have been working on this issue for years and we have not been able to get any traction. When I read yesterday that the president-elect wanted to begin to deal with this issue, I said ‘Hallelujah.’”

But it’s not at all clear whether Trump’s comments should be taken at face value.

During the campaign, Trump didn’t commit to many specifics on health care. But when he finally issued a policy proposal, it consisted entirely of boilerplate Republican ideas, such as turning Medicaid over to the states.

That’s one reason to think that his talk of covering everybody may actually just be another way of supporting “universal access,” a euphemism that Republicans have long used to describe plans that would leave fewer people with health insurance.

Whatever Trump is thinking, a reckoning seems inevitable. Republicans have promised repeatedly not just to repeal the health care law but to replace it ― and now even members of their own party, including Trump himself, have stated they should show their replacement plan before voting on repeal.

But once that replacement plan is available, independent experts, including those at the Congressional Budget Office, will be able to measure its effects. And at that point, Republicans will have to defend their plans ― and chances are they’ll look very different from the plan Trump is describing right now.

-- 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.

Trump Promises Health Insurance for All

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Trump Promises Health Insurance for All President-elect Donald Trump says his plan to replace the nation’s health care law will include “insurance for everybody.”

Trump made the comment in an interview with the Washington Post published on Sunday.

The president-elect says: “We’re going to have insurance … Reported by Epoch Times 13 hours ago.

Repealing The ACA Could Be A Nightmare For Mental Health Care

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Senate Republicans are already working to repeal the Affordable Care Act ― a move that could be devastating for those with mental illness.

Eliminating the ACA would strip health insurance from an estimated 20 million Americans, including coverage for services that help some of the one in five Americans with a mental health condition.

Most health plans sold through Obamacare were required to offer coverage for behavioral disorders, including therapy, medication and preventative measures like depression screenings. Additionally, the ACA prohibited insurance companies from denying coverage for those with preexisting conditions like mental illness.


If Republicans repeal the #ACA, Americans suffering from mental illness will lose access to mental health coverage. https://t.co/nBYkD7vd47 pic.twitter.com/67ajgaMwpo

— The White House (@WhiteHouse) January 12, 2017


In an open letter to congress earlier this month, American Psychiatric Association president Maria Oquendo and CEO Saul Levin addressed how greater health care access through programs like Obamacare made a difference for those with psychological conditions.

“Individuals with ... mental health issues previously struggled to obtain insurance coverage to help them access care,” they wrote. “Current law changed that by requiring coverage of necessary services to treat mental illness. Consequently, it has become less burdensome for Americans to access appropriate and evidence-based mental health care, thus improving their chance for healthier and more productive lives while reducing the stigma around mental illness.”

The ACA made measurable progress on mental health treatment

Insurance makes treatment for mental health more easily accessible. And in the case of Obamacare, it seems to be working: The uninsured rate for people with a serious psychological health issue fell from 28.1 percent to 19.5 percent between 2012, when the ACA was enacted, and 2015, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The percentage of American adults with a major mental health issue who needed care but couldn’t afford it declined in the same period.

This seemed to play out anecdotally, too. Earlier this month, Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) asked people to share their ACA stories and how the law helped them. Many replied that Obamacare assisted with getting the mental health care they needed, whether it was through mandated coverage for their pre-existing condition or just lower premiums:


@keithellison Premiums for my family of 3 were halved. Finally can afford mental health cov. for depression/anxiety/PTSD.

— Jeff (@Jeff_in_BK) January 6, 2017



@keithellison mental health and habilitation are mandated, which helps my autistic son who can now always qualify w/preexisting conditions.

— Becca (@BekaBooMN) January 5, 2017



@keithellison I rely on the ACA for the medication that manages my mental illness.

— A l l y (@allyauriemma) January 5, 2017


The ACA also sent an important message in terms of stigma. Professional care, whether it’s through therapy, medication or both, is the only way to manage behavioral disorders. Yet research shows the damaging, false stereotypes surrounding mental health often stand in the way of people seeking treatment. 

To require all insurance companies to cover or compensate for that care, in some way, is to state that mental health is a key component to a person’s holistic well-being.

“The brain and body are connected,” Sagar Parikh, associate director of the University of Michigan Comprehensive Depression Center, previously told The Huffington Post. “The bottom line is that treating mental health problems not only reduces individual pain but it actually has an impact on physical health.”

What’s next?

Of course, no piece of legislation is perfect. Many argued that Obamacare aimed to create parity between mental and physical health when it came to insurance, but it sometimes came up short in practice. A report conducted by the National Alliance on Mental Illness also found that those with insurance, either through Obamacare or their employer, still had a difficult time finding mental health providers who were covered under their plan. Many also reported challenges with obtaining medication.

It’s difficult to predict what changes insurance companies will make to mental health offerings if the ACA is abolished. It’s possible that other bills, like the newly enacted 21st Century Cures Act, may help in some way by funding grants to increase the number of psychologists and psychiatrists across the country. 

So far, though, Republicans don’t have a concrete replacement plan for Obamacare. 

“As Congress considers significant reforms to health insurance coverage this year, it is critical that any such reforms do not undo the gains which have been made over the past several years for individuals with mental illness, and that any such reforms only further enhance coverage and access to lifesaving evidence-based care,” Oquendo and Levin wrote in their letter to Congress.

One thing is for sure: A mental illness should be treated just like any other illness ― and that includes adequate coverage.

-- 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.

After a feud with a civil rights leader, Donald Trump meets with Martin Luther King III

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Trump meets with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s son Jan. 16, 2017, 12:20 p.m. This is our look at President-elect Donald Trump's transition and the outgoing Obama administration: After quarreling with a civil rights leader, Trump meets with Martin Luther King III Trump says he wants health insurance... Reported by L.A. Times 8 hours ago.

Trump national security appointee quits after allegations of repeated plagiarism

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Trump meets with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s son Jan. 16, 2017, 12:20 p.m. This is our look at President-elect Donald Trump's transition and the outgoing Obama administration: After quarreling with a civil rights leader, Trump meets with Martin Luther King III Trump says he wants health insurance... Reported by L.A. Times 8 hours ago.

MLB Player Mansplained Birth Control To Jessica Chastain, Twitter Had None Of It

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Matt Garza, a Major League Baseball pitcher for the Milwaukee Brewers, recently took it upon himself to weigh in on women’s health care.

On Jan. 12, actress Jessica Chastain tweeted her disappointment in the Senate’s recent vote to gut the Affordable Care Act, which could force millions of women to pay for birth control out of pocket.

“[DEL: # :DEL]BirthControl is no longer covered by health insurance,” Chastain tweeted. “Congrats USA, you’re doing your part to keep women out of the work force.”


#BirthControl is no longer covered by health insurance. Congrats USA, you're doing your part to keep women out of the work force. #smfh

— Jessica Chastain (@jes_chastain) January 13, 2017



If you are not ready to provide for a family, if you want to finish school, if you want to build a career, protect yourself. #IUD @PPact

— Jessica Chastain (@jes_chastain) January 13, 2017


A little over an hour later, Garza, who from what we can tell does not know Chastain personally, responded to Chastain’s tweet.

“It’s called abstinence, a word that has been forgotten amongst this generation,” the 33-year-old tweeted. “It’s the best contraceptive... #juatsaying [sic].” 


It's called abstinence, a word that has been forgotten amongst this generation... it's the best contraceptive... #juatsaying https://t.co/OgKg1qQmln

— Matt garza (@Gdeuceswild) January 13, 2017


Although abstinence is indeed a contraceptive method, it is one of the least popular, with the most popular method being the birth control pill, according to the Guttmacher Institute. Research has shown that when funding is cut for women’s health services, sex education and contraceptives, people don’t abstain from having sex ― they simply have less safe sex. 

As many pointed out on Twitter, Garza, a man, is perhaps not the best spokesperson for what women should do with their bodies. Twitter users quickly joined in the conversation in Garza’s mentions:


.@Gdeuceswild Yeahhh. How many ppl do you know who are abstinent? Don't lecture women about abstinence...especially when you had a kid at 18

— Nick Bolton (@NickBolton13) January 13, 2017



@iFlopSets @Gdeuceswild @jes_chastain so glad you know what is good and bad for girls PLEASE TELL ME MORE pic.twitter.com/lju49p4nTS

— Stangle's Kid (@lisasaurstomp) January 13, 2017



@Gdeuceswild I lost a child w serious birth defects. Genetic counselor told us high risk of it happening again. My hub & I end intimacy?!

— Amie (@amiehartnett) January 13, 2017



@iFlopSets @lisasaurstomp @Gdeuceswild @jes_chastain awesome advice from a guy that doesn't have a uterus!

— Rad Wolf MacAwesome (@RadMacawesome) January 13, 2017



@DJPaMCMa @PleiadesNebulae @mslauren2930 @Gdeuceswild Matt has had sex precisely six times pic.twitter.com/NDqHvBxTkV

— Haver (@HaverOfOpinions) January 13, 2017



@NickBolton13 @Gdeuceswild He also forgets the fact not every woman wants kids, so we're are supposed to be practice abstinence FOR EVER?

— Brittny Pierre (@sleep2dream) January 13, 2017



@amiehartnett Tons of men literally have no idea how their wives prevent pregnancy, I suspect

— Susan Calvin (@FakeSusanCalvin) January 13, 2017


The next day, Chastain tweeted that she will be attending the Women’s March on Washington on Saturday, Jan. 21.

“I am marching to protect the disenfranchised,” the actress tweeted. “I stand with you for reproductive choice, wage equality, and freedom from sexual violence.”


I am marching to protect the disenfranchised. I stand with you for reproductive choice, wage equality, and freedom from sexual violence. https://t.co/yMXPPlIl4j

— Jessica Chastain (@jes_chastain) January 13, 2017

-- 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.

President Obama's Best Pop-Culture Moments

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As Barack Obama rides out his final week as president, we’re remembering him as America’s signature pop-culture president.

Oh sure, television got John F. Kennedy elected in 1960, Ronald Reagan began his career as a movie star, and Bill Clinton amplified his cool factor by playing saxophone on “The Arsenio Hall Show” in 1992. The Obamas, however, are the first presidential family to treat popular culture as a clear extension of politics, and not in the Trumpian reality-TV way.

From Oprah Winfrey’s victory-sealing endorsement to frequent late-night appearances and an affinity for Broadway’s “Hamilton,” Obama’s relationship to pop culture was no mere political maneuver ― he’s kept a keen awareness of the role entertainment plays in history and a verifiable appreciation for the arts.

With that, we’ve compiled a list of Obama’s signature pop-culture moments (or at least the ones with audiovisual evidence). Watch our supercut above, then browse the individual items below for an overview of the past eight years, gone too soon.
*Nov. 3, 2007: *Obama appears in a “Saturday Night Live” cold open in which he attends the Clintons’ Halloween party.
*Dec. 8, 2007:* Michelle Obama welcomes “first lady of television” Oprah Winfrey at an Iowa campaign rally, about seven months after Winfrey first endorsed Barack Obama. Economists later concluded that Winfrey’s support won Obama 1 million votes in the primaries and caucuses. 
*April 17, 2008: *Responding to negative campaign ads, Obama alludes to Jay Z’s “Dirt Off Your Shoulder.” 
*Jan. 20, 2009: *At an inaugural ball, the Obamas share their first dance as the first couple while Beyoncé sings Etta James’ “At Last.”
*March 19, 2009: *Obama becomes the first sitting president to appear on a late-night talk show. 
*Dec. 6, 2009: *Obama calls Bruce Springsteen “one cool rockin’ daddy” while feting the singer at the Kennedy Center Honors. “I’m the president, but he’s The Boss,” Obama says.
*Dec. 12, 2010: *Obama and his family sing “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing” alongside Mariah Carey, Ellen DeGeneres, Matthew Morrison, Maxwell, Annie Lennox, Andrea Bocelli and Miranda Cosgrove during TNT’s annual “Christmas in Washington” special.
*Jan. 16, 2012: *Obama wishes Betty White a happy 90th birthday. 
*Jan. 19, 2012: *During a fundraiser at the Apollo Theater, Obama sings a few charming bars of Al Green’s “Let’s Stay Together.”
*April 24, 2012: *Obama slow-jams the news on “The Tonight Show” for the first time, encouraging Americans to sign up for health insurance. 
*Oct. 19, 2012: *“We talk about the same things I talk about with all my friends,” Obama says of his rapport with Beyoncé and Jay Z. One of those so-called normal conversation topics includes making sure Jay Z is helping out with Blue Ivy around the house.*Dec. 29, 2013: *The New York Times publishes a detailed account of Obama’s viewing habits. His favorite television shows are “Boardwalk Empire,” “Breaking Bad,” “Downton Abbey,” “Game of Thrones,” “Homeland,” “House of Cards,” “Mad Men” and “The Wire.” (He’d previously told TV Guide he also watches “Modern Family” and “Parks and Recreation.”)*Jan. 28, 2014: *In his State of the Union address, Obama says, “Today, women make up about half our workforce. But they still make 77 cents for every dollar a man earns. That is wrong, and in 2014, it’s an embarrassment. A woman deserves equal pay for equal work. ... It’s time to do away with workplace policies that belong in a ‘Mad Men’ episode.”
*March 11, 2014:* Obama becomes the first politician to appearing on Zach Galifianakis’ “Between Two Ferns,” where he encourages Americans to sign up for health insurance. (Hillary Clinton appeared on the web series during her 2016 campaign.)
*March 12, 2015: *Obama reads Mean Tweets.
*April 1, 2015: *Obama impersonates Kevin Spacey’s fictional “House of Cards” president in an April Fools’ Day video. 
*April 25, 2015: *Obama invites Keegan-Michael Key’s Luther the Anger Translator to interpret part of his speech at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner. 
*June 22, 2015: *Obama appears on the podcast “WTF with Marc Maron,” where he says Sasha and Malia find him “completely boring.”
*Dec. 17, 2015: *Obama survives the Alaskan wilderness on “Running Wild with Bear Grylls.”
*Dec. 30, 2015: *Obama appears on Jerry Seinfeld’s “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.”
*Jan. 15, 2016: *Obama says he’d pick Kendrick Lamar over Drake in a rap battle, naming “To Pimp a Butterfly” his favorite album of 2015.
*March 14, 2016: *The Obamas invite the cast of “Hamilton” to the White House to perform the opening number from the smash Broadway musical. (In 2009, Lin-Manuel Miranda performed a rough version of the song at the White House Poetry Jam. No one had heard it before. Miranda said it was from a “hip-hop concert album” he was working on.) 
*March 15, 2016: *Obama invites Miranda to the Rose Garden for a freestyle rap about the government. 
*April 30, 2016: *Obama concludes his final White House Correspondents’ Dinner with the words “Obama out” and a mic drop. 
*June 9, 2016: *Obama meets longtime supporter Madonna, who was the musical guest on his last appearance on “The Tonight Show.”


For Once I 'm Speechless...........President Obama @jimmyfallon

A photo posted by Madonna (@madonna) on Jun 8, 2016 at 4:01pm PDT



*Aug. 11, 2016: *Obama releases a summer playlist.
*Oct. 31, 2016: *Michelle and Barack dance to Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” at a Halloween celebration. 
*Jan. 10, 2017: *In his farewell address to the nation, Obama borrows a quote from To Kill a Mockingbird hero Atticus Finch to remind America of the importance of empathy. -- 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.

Study: Sharp Spike in Obesity-Linked Diagnosis Among Kids, Teens

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Kids and teens have gotten heavier over the last decade, noted by a sharp rise in health insurance claims over the last five years filed on behalf of young people who have high blood pressure, Type 2 diabetes, sleep apnea and other conditions associated with older adults, a new study finds. Reported by Newsmax 2 hours ago.

Health Care M&A Deal Volume in 2016 Beats 2015, According to HealthCareMandA.com

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Health care merger and acquisition activity grew by a slight 1% in 2016, to 1,536 transactions, setting a new record for health care M&A deal volume.

Norwalk, CT (PRWEB) January 16, 2017

Health care merger and acquisition activity grew by a slight 1% in 2016, to 1,536 transactions, setting a new record for health care M&A deal volume. In 2015, which held the previous record, 1,523 deals were announced across 13 health care sectors. Spending in 2016 reached $255.7 billion, down 36% compared with 2015’s $400.3 billion.

Health care services made up 61% of 2016’s deal volume, due to ongoing investor interest in post-acute health care sectors such as Long-Term Care and Rehabilitation. The Behavioral Health Care sector also gained more attention. Acquisitions of Physician Medical Groups, both primary care and specialty physicians, were strong, thanks in part to the bipartisan bill, the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA).

The health care technology sectors—Biotechnology, eHealth, Medical Devices and Pharmaceuticals—showed mixed performances compared with the year before. Deals in the eHealth sector rose 23% in 2016, as more and more companies realized the need for strong data analytics and revenue cycle management. Pharmaceutical spending shifted to the Biotechnology sector, as drug companies went shopping for promising drug candidates to fill their pipelines.

“Health care mergers and acquisitions were still riding the tide of low interest rates and higher-than-ever numbers of consumers covered by health insurance under the Affordable Care Act,” said Lisa E. Phillips, editor of HealthCareMandA.com. “The election of Donald Trump came as a surprise to many, but doesn’t seem to have hurt the market, yet. We’ll see if 2017 can deliver the same level of growth.”

“The fourth quarter of 2016 didn’t deliver the same kick as previous fourth quarters,” Phillips noted. Deal volume declined about 2%, to 367 transactions, compared with the third quarter’s 375 transactions. Deal volume was also lower than Q4:15, down 4%. Spending in Q4:16 fell 24%, to $37.3 billion, compared with $48.8 billion in the third quarter, and was 16% lower than the same quarter in 2015, which posted $44.4 billion.

For more information on HealthCareMandA.com or for a membership to any of Irving Levin Associates’ services, please call 800-248-1668. Irving Levin Associates, Inc., established in 1948, is headquartered in Norwalk, Connecticut and is online at http://www.levinassociates.com. This privately held corporation publishes annual and quarterly research reports, monthly and weekly newsletters, and maintains merger and acquisition databases on the health care and senior housing markets. If you would like to receive future releases, please email pressreleases@levinassociates.com. Reported by PRWeb 6 hours ago.

Don't Repeal Me, Please!

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I am luckier than most. After 20 years of having multiple sclerosis I am still relatively healthy. I have a spot on my foot which is mildly numb most of the time and markedly numb when I have an exacerbation. This is damage I got from not treating an exacerbation with steroid therapy. Sometimes when I am dancing I can feel weakness in my legs, but I still dance. I will always dance. Heat and I have a love/hate relationship. I love a sauna in January. That first sweat is such a cleansing feeling. But a prolonged heat wave in summer will sap me like an iPhone battery. I have extreme vertigo whenever I ride a canoe, an amusement ride, or a swing at the playground with my son. These are things I no longer do. They do not effect my quality of life. Life has so much more to offer than amusement rides.

I can go through long periods of remission. Sometimes years. There are times when I am strong. I can haul 50 lb. bales of hay, show a cow who is boss. But when life is stressful, like say after a divorce or economic insecurity, the stress can be too much and I get sick.

It is my pre-existing condition. There have been times when I have not had health insurance. When the divorce papers were signed by the judge I lost the health insurance I had with my husband. I was only working a part time job. My state, Maine, had not expanded medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. I fell into this bubble. One that with just a small bump in income of a couple thousand dollars would qualify me for the ACA.

Sometimes when I feel an exacerbation start I have this feeling in my head that someone else is driving this body. Simple tasks such as shoveling a car out in winter will feel like epic adventures requiring more effort than this body is capable of. Thinking becomes clouded. The only upside I can see is the extreme cleaning my house will have after five days of IV cortico-steroid therapy. Lemonade.

So it was in a March, after a long winter of extreme weather, car troubles, and a steady eye on my bottom line that I could feel the disjointed arrival of an exacerbation. I had no health insurance. A call to my neurologist set up the IV therapy. I arranged to have the medication before I went to work every day. I have a job that does not pay sick time. When I showed up at the registration desk at the hospital they helped me sign up for uncompensated care. The debt from the steroids would have been unmanageable on a 15,000 a year income. So, yes, your tax dollars paid for my medicine. Thank you.

It would be another six months of working multiple jobs before I finally got a raise in pay and enough hours of work to qualify for the ACA. For my family of two that magic number is 18,000 a year. I just squeak by. If I make just a little less than this I can lose my health insurance again because Maine still has a governor who will not expand medicaid. I signed up for a silver plan with a 250.00 deductible. I received a subsidy which means that my monthly payment was 10.00 a month. I have re-enrolled for 2017 and that monthly payment has gone up to 45.00 a month. Still affordable.

But all this may just be moot.

I want to trust that we have leaders that are going to make sure that I can get the care I need without the worry of crushing debt. I want to trust that when, not if, I get sick again I can treat the illness and forestall any damage it may do to my nervous system, so I can keep walking, so I can see.

I know for insurance companies, members of congress, think tanks, and governors my story is just a number. It probably does not make a blip on their radar. When people become numbers to the policy makers the real life consequences must seem abstract. My life is so far removed from the desk that pens these laws. But a repeal without a reasonable replacement seems like poor political decision making to me. I follow the news everyday. I watch a Congress dismantle the very thing that has insured an element of economic security to a life I have worked hard to rebuild after divorce. The glee with which this has happened does not promote much confidence or trust. I want to trust we have leaders. I want to trust. I'm just not sure I can.

-- 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 4 hours ago.

Many Americans worried about losing health insurance

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Reported by CBS News 3 hours ago.

In Price’s Ga. district, what happens after health repeal

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ROSWELL, Ga. (AP) — Carla Dent is a restaurant owner who steers her employees to federal health insurance exchanges. Eden Purdy helps poor and working-class Georgians navigate the health care marketplace. Bryson Boech is a grocery cashier recently diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, what the insurance industry calls a pre-existing condition. None of the three claims […] Reported by Seattle Times 7 hours ago.

18 Million People Could Lose Insurance In First Year After Partial Obamacare Repeal

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The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office found that, without the federal mandate and subsidies, the number of people who will lose their health insurance could grow to 32 million over 10 years. Reported by NPR 6 hours ago.

Lyft drivers say they are happier, better paid than Uber drivers

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The survey, conducted via email in early January, is among the largest independent polls of drivers. “It’s clear that Uber is the dominant force,” said Harry Campbell, who drives for both services, as well as running The Rideshare Guy. “The obfuscating pay structure and additional hassle of picking up and dropping off multiple riders has been a major pain point for drivers,” the survey said. Average earnings are calculated after taking out the companies’ commissions but before deducting expenses such as gas, insurance and car maintenance. Lyft’s app includes a built-in way for passengers to tip their driver, which probably accounts for the difference. “If a rider gives a $1 tip (on Lyft), those tips go 100 percent to the driver, with no credit card processing fee and no commission,” Campbell said. If it has less market share (in your city), you may have to drive 10 or 20 minutes (to pick up) a passenger. Only a sliver said they care about benefits such as health insurance and unemployment — which are not available to them since Uber and Lyft drivers are classified as independent contractors, rather than employees. [...] a writer and comedian, he submitted a video he shot to Lyft, earning him a trip to Sundance Film Festival a few years ago as a “Lyft creative” — a driver who pursues creative vocations. Looking at demographics, the survey found that about a fifth of drivers on both Uber and Lyft are female, higher than the 12.7 percent national average of women taxi drivers and chauffeurs. Reported by SFGate 6 hours ago.

Medical clinic startup with tech backing opens doors in SF

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If a doctor’s office and a tech startup had a baby, it might look something like Forward, a health startup founded by former Google and Uber executives who are looking to disrupt the health care market. Forward, which opened its doors Tuesday in downtown San Francisco, charges patients a flat fee of $149 a month in exchange for medical services one would typically find at a primary care physician’s office, such as cancer screenings and blood tests. The model cuts out health insurers altogether, and patients pay Forward directly. Forward’s distinguishing feature, its founders say, is that the company’s engineers have built an algorithm that collects and analyzes each patient’s data — like blood pressure, sleep patterns, family history of diseases and genetic sequencing — and uses artificial intelligence to identify potential health problems before they happen. The system alerts doctors to trends and red flags in the patient’s health, which they can then use to discuss treatment plans. Many already have health insurance through their employers and use Forward as a complement to their health benefits. Patients are given medical gowns made by Lululemon, and the office is equipped with touch-screens that pull up medical records, evoking the look and feel of a sleek spa rather than a traditional doctor’s office. Reported by SFGate 5 hours ago.

Twitter roasts MLB player for mansplaining birth control to Jessica Chastain

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If you come at the Queen, you best not miss.

That's the important lesson MLB player Matt Garza learnt when he tried to "educate" actress, activist and all around boss, Jessica Chastain, on birth control.

SEE ALSO: Requests for IUDs are up 900% at Planned Parenthood

It all went down after Chastain tweeted her dismay about changes to U.S. health insurance policy.



#BirthControl is no longer covered by health insurance. Congrats USA, you're doing your part to keep women out of the work force#smfh 😠

— Jessica Chastain (@jes_chastain) January 13, 2017





If you are not ready to provide for a family, if you want to finish school, if you want to build a career, protect yourself#IUD @PPact

— Jessica Chastain (@jes_chastain) January 13, 2017 Read more...



More about Matt Garza, Mansplaining, Mlb, Jessica Chastain, and Birth Control Reported by Mashable 4 hours ago.

Business News Roundup, Jan. 18

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Mark Zuckerberg, saying that it was the first time he had testified in a trial, vehemently denied claims that the virtual reality headset maker acquired by Facebook in 2014 had stolen technology for the Oculus Rift. Facebook’s co-founder and CEO, who has hailed virtual reality as his company’s next big thing, was called to the witness stand Tuesday by ZeniMax Media, which alleges that Oculus VR poached one of its star designers and purloined its intellectual property. ZeniMax has accused the social media giant of completing its acquisition of Oculus in July 2014 with “full awareness” that the “holy grail” know-how behind one of Silicon Valley’s most promising devices was misappropriated. Zuckerberg testified that an email from venture capitalist and longtime Facebook board member Marc Andreessen was the seed of his interest in Oculus. Andreessen wrote that the Oculus headset “blew my brain wide open” and that the key to the company was the hiring of John Carmack, who became Oculus’s chief technology officer in August 2013. ZeniMax claims Carmack was responsible for much of the critical early development of the software and hardware for the virtual-reality headset before he was recruited away. Uber filed a suit seeking to stop implementation of rules that would allow drivers for Uber, Lyft and other ride-hailing services to organize as a union. The nation’s biggest health insurer made most of its money in the fourth quarter by selling things other than health insurance. UnitedHealth Group’s Optum division, which manages prescription drug plans, runs doctor practices and analyzes health care data, generated slightly more of a profit than the company’s traditional business of selling insurance. [...] analysts who follow the company see more growth potential in Optum and its focus on cutting costs and improving health care, topics more Americans are concerned with as medical costs rise faster than wages and inflation every year. “The market opportunity that they are addressing is the entire health care economy,” said Sheryl Skolnick, an analyst for Mizuho Securities USA. General Motors plans to invest $1 billion in U.S. factories and add thousands of new white-collar jobs, measures that have been in the works for years but were announced Tuesday after criticism from President-elect Donald Trump. An estimated 5,000 positions will be created at its auto financing arm and to develop advanced technology, electric and autonomous vehicles and information technology. Trump has demanded that the auto industry build more cars in the U.S. GM said these actions have been in the works since well before the election. The jobs will come from the opening of 59 new, expanded and relocated Walmart and Sam’s Club stores, as well as in e-commerce services that were previously announced. Walmart is opening fewer stores this year, but adding jobs as it offers more positions in online grocery pickup, trainers for its new academies for hourly workers and construction jobs for remodels. Reported by SFGate 3 hours ago.

Cabinet Pick's Constituents Wonder About Life After Obamacare

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Carla Dent is a restaurant owner who steers her employees to federal health insurance exchanges. Eden Purdy helps poor and working-class Georgians navigate the health care marketplace. Bryson Boech is a grocery cashier recently diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, what the insurance industry calls a pre-existing condition. None of the three claims to be intensely political, but all say they are concerned their congressman, Tom Price, will rip up President Barack Obama's 2010 health care... Reported by VOA News 3 hours ago.

News Flash! Obamacare And The Affordable Care Act Are The Same Thing.

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A Huffington Post investigation reveals that the “Affordable Care Act,” it turns out, is exactly the same thing as “Obamacare.” They aren’t two different things. There is only one, believe it or not.

We’ve triple-checked this. Congressional observers who witnessed the passage of the legislation say that the Affordable Care Act was enacted on March 20, 2010, after a lengthy legislative battle. We’ve looked into these claims, and they check out. However, it should be noted that the law’s most fervent supporter also happens to be the man who signed it into law ― President Barack Obama. And, at some point during the hullabaloo that presaged its enactment, the Affordable Care Act also became known as Obamacare.

But here’s the rub: At some point after its enactment, there arose a notion that “the Affordable Care Act” and “Obamacare” were two different things entirely. This has sowed confusion ever since.

You may have even encountered this confusion for yourself.

Has this ever happened to you? It’s a month after the election, and you’re having a conversation with a friend or a loved one, when all of the sudden, they say something like, “Now that the election is over, I’m very excited that they’ll finally repeal Obamacare.”

There’s a pause, and you do something of a double-take, because as far as you could remember, your confidant was actually receiving health care coverage from an Obamacare exchange. Confused, you stutter, “But Damocles!” ― your friend in this scenario is named “Damocles” ― “You get your health insurance through Obamacare.”

“Not at all, Phaedra,” he replies. (For some reason you are named “Phaedra,” just go with it.) “I get my health care through the Affordable Care Act.”

If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone. As the inauguration of President-elect Donald Trump nears, and talk on Capitol Hill turns to how and when the GOP-controlled Congress will repeal the Affordable Care Act, and when and with what they shall replace it, we return to a discussion of branding, and whether what people really don’t like about Obamacare is just the part with “Obama.”


This is amazing. From a Dr's office in Rocky River OH, a suburb of Cleveland: https://t.co/hFH6S2c8g7

— Alec MacGillis (@AlecMacGillis) January 4, 2017



@AlecMacGillis Old white guy in Dr.'s waiting room, sitting next to me:"they said Obamacare would be repealed, not the Affordable Care Act!"

— JKo (@suburbangrouse) January 4, 2017


Maybe you’ve seen memes propagated on Twitter, in which obscure randos express confusion. Maybe you remember that time Jimmy Kimmel took to the streets, exploiting this ignorance for laughs. Or maybe you had to have a long talk with your pal Damocles, reminding him what life might be like with a sword dangling over his head. If so, you’ve come face to face with an interesting conundrum ― people don’t always know that “Obamacare” and the “Affordable Care Act” are the same thing.

Fun fact, though: They are.

The Affordable Care Act’s polling has always been a fraught, frothy matter. The most common thing we’ve learned over the years is that voters tend to respond more negatively to the total package of the law itself, but very positively to its provisions when they are presented separately. This suggests that the lawmakers who passed the bill did a poor job helping their constituents understand how the law’s features work. 

And the White House did itself a number of disservices, first by not being straight with people about how altering the health insurance marketplace was going to cause noticeable consumer disruption (this earned President Barack Obama a “lie of the year” distinction from Politifact), and then by not launching the exchanges with a website that actually ― you know ― worked.

Through it all, of course, the Affordable Care Act was hurt by the fact that a much larger universe of people have opinions about the health care law than actually use it to obtain health care coverage.

The media hasn’t helped matters much, either. We’ve more or less used the shorthand “Obamacare” since it was coined by the law’s opponents. We didn’t do this because we were making some kind of judgment about the law itself. We did this because we in the media love shortcuts (easier to get “Obamacare” in a tweet than “Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act”) and nicknames (during primary season, we would be lost without our ability to refer to “New Hampshire” as “the Granite State” on second mention).

But for a long time, whenever we spoke about Obamacare, we were using a term that was intended to be a pejorative ― at least until Obama “reclaimed” the name for himself, telling people, “I know people call this law Obamacare and that’s OK. Because I do care.”

Which is all well and good, but it probably doesn’t really help people understand that “Obamacare” is the same thing as “The Affordable Care Act.”

It’s been a longstanding confusion that’s been noticed by pollsters over the years. And when you put the word “Obama” into the mix, it really heats up the passions.

As CNN reported back in 2003:

They’re two different names for one law, but a new poll shows more Americans oppose the president’s signature health care law when it has his name attached than when it’s called the official name.

According to a new CNBC poll that surveyed two different groups, 46% of the group that was asked about “Obamacare” was opposed to the law, while 37% of the group asked about the “Affordable Care Act” was opposed to the law.

At the same time, more people support “Obamacare” (29%) than those who support ACA (22%.) In other words, having “Obama” in the name “raises the positives and the negatives,” as CNBC put it.


The Atlantic’s Olga Khazan has noted how deeply this phenomenon has permeated the discourse around the Affordable Care Act. She says it explains “why some Pennsylvanians told me they want subsidies for health insurance, just not Obamacare subsidies.”

Per Khazan:

It’s a kind of reverse “halo effect,” says Scott Rick, an associate professor of marketing at the University of Michigan. “If you already like someone, anything new they do gets the benefit of the doubt. If you already dislike someone, everything they subsequently touch is tainted. For many conservatives, Obamacare is the fruit of a poisonous tree.”

Some states have found the label so toxic that, in an effort to boost enrollment, they hid it. Kentucky expanded Medicaid under Obamacare, but the state called it “Kentucky Connect” (portmanteau’d to “Kynect”) because, as Obama told Vox recently, “I don’t poll that well in Kentucky.”


He really doesn’t! Back in May 2014, NBC News and Marist conducted a survey in which people were asked their opinion on the Affordable Care Act. Half of the respondents were asked their opinions on “Obamacare,” while the other half were asked about “Kynect” ― the name of the state health care exchange that Kentucky lawmakers built to comply with the Affordable Care Act.

According to the survey, Kynect was much, much more popular among respondents than Obamacare was, no matter how you sliced it. Even Republicans, who expressed their raging disapproval of Obamacare by a gap of 83 percent to 10 percent, only mildly disapproved of Kynect ― to the tune of 32 percent to 16 percent.

That’s pretty amazing, considering “Kynect” and “Obamacare” are the same thing ― and also the same thing as “the Affordable Care Act.”

In fact, if you are covered by any of the following ...

 
· Covered California· Connect For Health Colorado· Access Health CT· DC Health Link· Your Health Idaho· Maryland Health Connection· Health Connector (Massachusetts)· MNsure· New York State Of Health· HealthSource RI· Vermont Health Connect· Washington Healthplanfinder
... then guess what? Those are all Obamacare, too! Plus: They are the Affordable Care Act.

You shouldn’t feel too bad about being confused over this. I mean, the state of Washington named its exchange, “Washington Healthplanfinder.”

Come on, Evergreen State, you’re better than that.

In the end, it’s possible that “The Affordable Care Act” was always going to become more popularly known as “Obamacare.” It was, after all, the Democrats’ first major attempt to reform the health care system since the 1990s, when that effort became known as “Hillarycare” very early in the game. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney’s “Commonwealth Care” is now basically known as “RomneyCare.” And whatever Trump does could very well end up being popularized as “TrumpCare” ― even if all he does is make a few cosmetic tweaks, and assume credit for Obama’s signature law.

But, as Khazan notes, there’s a “cautionary” lesson from all of this: “Health insurance and politicians are two of the country’s least-lovable entities ― it’s probably not wise to combine the two.”

True enough. But just imagine how poorly Obamacare would poll if it had been named, “The We Made A Bunch Of Sweetheart Deals With Insurance Companies And Also A Bunch Of Other Health Industry Interests And Their Lobbyists Act.”~~~~~

Jason Linkins edits “Eat The Press” for The Huffington Post and co-hosts the HuffPost Politics podcast “So, That Happened.” Subscribe here, and listen to the latest episode below.-- 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.

Trevor Noah: Barack Obama Spending Last Days Baby-Proofing America

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Barack Obama’s last week as president is a busy one.

That’s because he’s busy baby-proofing America, according to Trevor Noah.

On Tuesday’s “The Daily Show,” Noah pointed out all the things that Obama is doing to protect America from the coming Trump administration, including banning drilling in the Arctic and Atlantic oceans, reducing the number of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay and attempting to keep 20 million Americans from losing their health insurance.

“It makes sense, because America has essentially elected a giant baby, and, like any good parent, you need to bolt things to the wall,” Noah said. “As much as you chose this little f**k, you know he’s probably going to destroy the place.”

-- 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 23 hours ago.
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