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Healthcare: ‘Insurance’ Now Just Means Redistribution – Analysis

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By Gary Galles*

Americans have been fighting over health insurance reform for ages. For example, 25 years ago, in 1992, over 200 congressional health care bills were introduced.

Unfortunately, while the rhetoric has focused on insurance, such as how many would supposedly gain or lose insurance if some change was implemented, that has not been the real issue. Income redistribution has. As Henry Aaron estimated that year, implementing a comprehensive national health insurance system would redistribute more income than any single national policy then in existence.

*What Is Insurance?*

How do we know insurance is not the real issue? Because claimed “reforms” violate so many principles of insurance.

Insurance is about reducing risk in the face of uncertain events. But insuring things that would happen for certain, say annual checkups, offers no risk reduction — it offers no benefits to weigh against the added costs of insurance administration that must be borne — yet such coverage is frequently mandated.

Similarly, small health care risks are cheaper to provide for from modest levels of savings, rather than bearing insurance administration costs. If one’s own resources were involved, absent government interventions, they would not be insured at all. Only when others are forced to bear much of the cost would people want insurance to cover such things.

Administrative costs are not the only issue, either. The benefits from risk-reduction through insurance would also have to outweigh the cost of the health care. This is made especially difficult by the fact that the insurance itself induces over-consumption of health care services.

However, when most health care costs are borne by third parties rather than individuals themselves, there are many margins at which those individuals will want better care (e.g., better and more specialized doctors and hospitals, more costly newer drugs, tests and treatment utilizing the latest technology, etc.), as well as more care. Since that added care need only be worth what an individual pays, net of insurance coverage, much of it is worth far less than its cost to society, further limiting what people would voluntarily cover based on the principles of insurance.

Those considerations explain why lunch insurance does not exist. You will almost certainly eat lunch, which also involves relatively small expenses, so there would be little risk reduction. And if someone else would pay most of your bill, you would order far more expensive lunches than otherwise, raising the premiums that you must be charged to pay for it. The benefits don’t justify the costs, again unless others are forced to pick up a substantial part of the tab.

Also, insurance is about risk reduction that people value more than the premium they must pay for it. Thus, voluntary market insurance would not mandate coverage of things people had virtually no risk of experiencing. Teetotalers would not willingly insure for alcoholism treatment. Those sure they would never use drugs would not insist on addiction treatment. Yet government “reforms” are full of such mandates. And a quarter-century ago, before many current mandates were in place, it was already estimated that up to one-quarter of the uninsured population traced back to such cost-increasing government-imposed coverage regulations.

The price controls reform proposals incorporate are also about income redistribution, rather than health insurance. Say that my age makes my actuarial risk six times that of my students. If, as Obamacare required, I could not be charged more than three times what they were, that does not reflect actual risks. Obamacare regulations simply force the young to subsidize the old. That rip-off of the young also explains why Obamacare threatened them with a penalty to force them to accept that bad “insurance” deal.

The mandate that insurance cover pre-existing conditions shows even more clearly that “reforms” were not really about insurance. Rather than pooling those with similar circumstances and risks, allowing the law of large numbers to reduce people’s exposure, it forces others to subsidize those who are already sick, while misdirecting their blame from government requirements to insurance companies who must charge others more to pay for them. Those sorts of after-the-fact possibilities are not offered in fire, automobile or life insurance. Similarly, casinos don’t let you bet once the roulette ball has stopped or the dice are still. Only government mandates can create such windfalls through health insurance.

In addition, if health insurance reform truly aimed to benefit all Americans — rather than benefiting some by the intentional pick-pocketing of others — it would not have been “marketed” with so many lies, damned lies and statistics (See my article “Comparing Obamacare scams.”). Honesty would have sufficed if reform did what was being promised.

The health insurance debate has been so contentious in part because it has allowed massive income redistribution to be misrepresented as about overcoming market failures in health insurance. It helped sell Obamacare dishonestly and now portrays reducing massive theft from government targets as imposing heartless harm on others. Such misrepresentation may be able to produce misinformed political support, but it cannot generate policies that advance Americans’ general welfare.

**Gary M. Galles* is a professor of economics at Pepperdine University. His books include Apostle of Peace (2013) Faulty Premises, Faulty Policies (2014) and Lines of Liberty (2016).

This article was published at the MISES Institute Reported by Eurasia Review 2 hours ago.

IntelliSoft Group Introduces New Hybrid Product that Combines Software and CVO Services at America’s Health Insurance Plans’ Institute & Expo 2017

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The new product, IntelliSolution, combines all the functionality of the credentialing, provider enrollment and contract management software along with the vast services offered by the CVO division, IntelliCVO. It’s ideal for organizations that want to outsource all, or a portion of, the credentialing and/or provider enrollment process to a CVO while still maintaining control of the database through software user licenses.

Nashua, NH (PRWEB) June 06, 2017

IntelliSoft Group, LLC, a leading provider of healthcare credentialing, provider enrollment and contract management software products as well as credentials verification organization (CVO) services, will introduce its latest product offering, IntelliSolution, at America’s Health Insurance Plans’ (AHIP) Institute & Expo 2017 in Austin, TX.

This hybrid product combines all the functionality of the credentialing, provider enrollment and contract management software along with the vast services offered by the CVO division, IntelliCVO. It’s ideal for organizations that want to outsource all, or a portion of, the credentialing and/or provider enrollment process to a CVO while still maintaining control of the database through software user licenses.        

IntelliSolution was created to offer the industry with a fully-customizable product that includes both software and services. Key benefits of the new product give each user the ability to:· Monitor exactly what the CVO is doing with provider files through their own software user licenses.
· Reduce regulatory risk and liability by meeting or exceeding NCQA, Joint Commission, CMS and URAC standards.
· Easily deal with temporary/seasonal workloads by switching from using the software to enlisting the services of the CVO.
· Customize the product to meet the specific needs of each organization.
· Seamlessly exchange information between software and the CVO.
· Provide unlimited users with access to an online portal that connects authorized personnel, including providers, with the database for data entry or read-only access in order to track applications, statuses, privileges and even complete online applications.
· Run standard and customized reports.

“As the healthcare industry continues to evolve, it’s time to think differently in terms of product development and how to satisfy the very specific needs of credentialing and provider enrollment. We are doing just that by integrating our software platform along with the services offered by our CVO division,” said Mitchell Martin, President of IntelliSoft Group. “Since the product is SaaS deployed, it also saves our customers from making significant investments in expensive IT resources and hardware.”

More information on IntelliSolution can be found on the IntelliSoft Group website, http://www.intellisoftgroup.com.

About IntelliSoft Group, LLC
Based in Nashua, NH, IntelliSoft Group, LLC is a leading provider of medical credentialing, provider enrollment, and contract management software in combination with CVO services. The company’s products, IntelliCred, IntelliApp and IntelliContract are used by hundreds of healthcare systems, hospitals, managed care organizations, credentials verification organizations, individual practice associations, and sub-acute healthcare organizations. IntelliSoft Group’s CVO Division, IntelliCVO, offers one of the most innovative credentials verification services available for customers that require a temporary or full-time outsourcing option. Learn more by visiting the IntelliSoft Group website at http://www.intellisoftgroup.com/.

# # # Reported by PRWeb 14 hours ago.

Lee DeLorenzo Named to Barron’s 2017 “Top 100 Women Financial Advisors” for 8th Consecutive Year

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Lee DeLorenzo, CFP®, CPWA®, President of United Asset Strategies, Inc., a wealth management firm based in Garden City, NY, has been named as one of Barron’s 2017 Top 100 Women Financial Advisors in the country for the eighth year in a row.

Garden City, New York (PRWEB) June 06, 2017

Lee DeLorenzo, CFP®, CPWA®, President of United Asset Strategies, Inc., a wealth management firm based in Garden City, NY, has been named as one of Barron’s 2017 Top 100 Women Financial Advisors in the country for the eighth year in a row.

“It’s an absolute honor to be included among the top women financial advisors in the country,” DeLorenzo says. For 37 years, Lee has been a steward to her clients and staff and has always remained fiercely independent, acting as a fiduciary in all that she does. In Lee’s words, “At United Asset Strategies, we always put our clients first. We are committed to exceptional service and prudent, disciplined daily money management.”

Lee began her financial service career in 1979 and since then has turned a family business into one of the most successful advisory companies in the country. Lee’s extensive experience in investment consulting provides the platform for a variety of money management styles and her financial planning background produces a holistic tax-sensitive, personal approach to active money management.

United Asset Strategies develops, implements and monitors sophisticated plans and asset allocation solutions comprised of fixed income and equity strategies, alternative investments and hedges including options trading for wealth management and corporate clients.

Lee is President of United Asset Strategies, Inc., a registered investment advisor, United Wealth Planning, which provides wealth, estate and financial planning services including budgeting and asset protection strategies; United Financial Group, Ltd., an individual and group insurance agency; and United Retirement Consultants, Inc., a full-service pension administration firm. She is a Certified Financial Planner®, Certified Private Wealth Advisor®, Qualified Pension Administrator, and licensed life and health insurance professional. Lee has contributed to Forbes, Fox Business News, the Wall Street Journal, and the Financial Times.

The Barron’s ranking reflects data provided by the nation’s top advisors and incorporates the volume of assets overseen by the advisor and their team, revenues generated for the firm and the quality of the advisors' practice.

For more information about Lee DeLorenzo, CFP®, CPWA® and United Asset Strategies, Inc., please call 516-222-0021, or visit http://www.unitedasset.com. Reported by PRWeb 14 hours ago.

Anthem to Pull Out of Ohio ACA Exchange

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Anthem said it will pull out of the Affordable Care Act health-insurance exchange in Ohio next year, a move that likely will leave 20 counties in the state with no available ACA marketplace plans. Reported by Wall Street Journal 5 hours ago.

Anthem plans to leave Obamacare market in Ohio in 2018

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NEW YORK (Reuters) - Anthem Inc , one of the largest sellers of Obamacare individual health insurance, said it will exit most of the Ohio market next year because of volatility and uncertainty about whether the government will continue to provide subsidies aimed at making the plans affordable. Reported by Reuters 5 hours ago.

The nightmare scenario for Obamacare keeps getting worse

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The nightmare scenario for Obamacare keeps getting worse Anthem announced Tuesday that it will not participate in Affordable Care Act individual health insurance exchanges in Ohio for the 2018 plan year, potentially leaving 20 counties in the state without any Obamacare marketplace plans.

In a statement to Business Insider, Anthem cited "continual changes in federal operations, rules and guidance" as its primary reason for exiting the marketplaces.

The insurer said disruptions in the market due to possible policy changes from the Trump administration and lawmakers on Capitol Hill led to the decision.

From the statement:

"We are pleased that some steps have been taken to address the long term challenges all health plans serving the individual market are facing, such as improving the eligibility requirements that allow consumers to purchase a plan outside of open enrollment and improved risk adjustment. However, the Individual market remains volatile and the lack of certainty of funding for cost sharing reduction subsidies, the restoration of taxes on fully insured coverage and, an increasing lack of overall predictability simply does not provide a sustainable path forward to provide affordable plan choices for consumers."

Cynthia Cox, an associate director the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health policy think tank, said the move would leave exchanges in 20 Ohio counties with no insurer. That would affect 13,000 people, or 6% of the marketplace enrollees in Ohio, Cox tweeted.

Counties with no insurers have long been considered a worst-case scenario for Obamacare, the health law championed by President Barack Obama, as there is no back-up provider if another insurer does not step in to fill the void.

Anthem's move follows a cascade of insurer exits in states such as Nebraska, Virginia, Iowa, and more. In other states, insurers requested dramatic increases in the cost of premiums due to the political uncertainty surrounding the law.

Insurers, including Anthem, have singled out Obamacare's so-called cost-sharing reduction (CSR) payments as a source of instability. The payments help to offset the cost for insurers of providing cheaper coverage to low-income Americans. Currently, the executive branch appropriates the money for the critical payments. Insurers fear that the Trump administration may cut off the funds, though they were recently extended for 90 days.

In its statement, Anthem said that if there were changes to the individual market, the company would consider returning to the exchanges.

"As the individual marketplace continues to evolve, Anthem will continue to advocate solutions that will stabilize the market to allow us to return to a more robust presence in the future," said the statement.

Anthem did not specify its participation in other states where it offers marketplace plans. According to Cox, if Anthem exits marketplaces nationwide it would leave 275,000 Americans with no insurer offering a plan in their area.

*SEE ALSO: Insurance companies have made it crystal clear how Trump could send Americans' healthcare costs soaring*

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: WATCH: Putin reacts to Trump firing FBI Director James Comey Reported by Business Insider 4 hours ago.

Anthem to withdraw from Ohio Obamacare exchanges

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Health insurance giant Anthem Inc. on Tuesday announced it will exit the Affordable Care Act health insurance exchange in Ohio next year, the Wall Street Journal reports. The move will leave 20 counties in Ohio with no available ACA marketplace plans. Indianapolis-based Anthem said establishing prices and making other decisions about ACA plans has become "increasingly difficult due to the shrinking individual market as well as continual changes in federal operations, rules and guidance." Anthem's… Reported by bizjournals 4 hours ago.

Anthem plans to leave Obamacare insurance market in Ohio in 2018

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Anthem Inc, one of the largest sellers of Obamacare individual health insurance, will exit most of the Ohio market next year because of volatility and uncertainty about whether the government will continue to provide subsidies aimed at making the plans affordable, it said on Tuesday. Republicans are... Reported by Raw Story 4 hours ago.

Anthem Will Exit Health Insurance Exchange in Ohio

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The decision by the for-profit Blue Cross/Blue Shield to leave the Obamacare markets in 2018 will leave about 13,000 people without an insurer. Reported by NYTimes.com 3 hours ago.

These Health Insurance Stocks Just Hit All-Time Highs: Buy, Sell, or Hold?

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Can Aetna, Humana, and WellCare Health Plans stocks keep the momentum going? Reported by Motley Fool 3 hours ago.

Anthem to Leave Ohio's Obamacare Insurance Market in 2018

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Anthem Inc., which has urged Republican lawmakers to commit to paying government subsidies for the Obamacare individual health insurance system, on Tuesday announced it would exit most of the Ohio market next year. Reported by Newsmax 1 hour ago.

GOP Keeps Pretending It's Powerless To Make Obamacare Work Better

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Republicans are crying crocodile tears over Obamacare problems again. Their concern might be more convincing if they’d stop acting as though there’s nothing they can do about it, or at least stop making things worse.

The latest unmitigated bad news the GOP is using as fodder for its Affordable Care Act repeal campaign is that Anthem, one of the biggest health insurance companies in America and the major player on the exchange marketplaces, is all but pulling out of Ohio. Unless another insurer steps in, that will leave 10,500 consumers in 18 counties potentially with no source of health coverage next year.

Parts of Iowa, Missouri and Nebraska are on a path to being in the same predicament. The Anthem development is especially worrisome, since the company currently covers more than 1 million people in 14 states’ health insurance exchanges.

Yes, people like House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) have characterized the Republican campaign to repeal and “replace” the Affordable Care Act as a “rescue mission” to alleviate the great burden of Obamacare on the American people. But the American Health Care Act ― which the House passed last month and which the Senate GOP is using as the foundation for a new bill ― mostly would just “rescue” 23 million people from having any health insurance at all.

The House-passed legislation is more about un-helping the people Obamacare covered than about helping those who still can’t bear the expense of health insurance and health care. Making insurance unaffordable or unavailable to poor families and people with pre-existing conditions is an unusual way to improve the health care system.

The death of the Obamacare exchanges has been greatly exaggerated, no matter how many times President Donald Trump and other Republicans declare them to have collapsed.

But the gaps in places like Ohio, along with continued problems with affordability ― especially for those who aren’t rich, but earn too much to qualify for the Affordable Care Act’s tax credit subsidies or Medicaid coverage ― plainly illustrate that many of these state marketplaces are in need of care and feeding if they are to flourish. And while more insurers’ balance sheets are showing signs that the Obamacare markets are stabilizing, other companies continue to lose a lot of money.

Instead of undertaking the routine act of managing government programs for the good of the people who use them and the taxpayers who finance them, the Republican Congress has spent the past seven years not only rhetorically tearing down Obamacare, but literally doing so. They’ve had the eager cooperation of Republican officials at the state level and, now, of the Trump administration.

Congress cut money for health insurance companies, exacerbating their financial situations as they adapted to a new market in which they had to actually cover sick people. Congress ignored President Barack Obama’s proposals to make the markets better and the coverage more affordable. State officials deliberately hampered federal enrollment efforts. Republican officials in 19 states rejected the Affordable Care Act’s Medicaid expansion, which drove up costs for people with private coverage by adding more sick people to the insurance pool.

To be clear, Congress could’ve chosen a different path after Obama signed the Affordable Care Act in 2010, and still could do so now.

Trump has been threatening since before even being sworn in that he would withhold money owed health insurance companies that cover poor households because, in his mind, this will scare Democrats into participating in the repeal of the Affordable Care Act. Congress could eliminate this threat by guaranteeing in new legislation that insurers will get their money.

Another positive step would be restoring a funding stream, which Congress stripped in 2015, to backstop health insurance companies that suffered higher-than-expected costs.

Perhaps ironically, the American Health Care Act actually includes money intended to help states steady their insurance markets, just not enough to actually achieve that aim. And it comes with hundreds of billions in cuts to health care programs, and those millions of people who’d become uninsured and have to bear the full cost of all their medical care, or simply go without and get sicker.

Alaska and Minnesota already have enacted programs to help insurers with the sickest, costliest patients by establishing funds to reimburse them for extraordinary expenses from those patients, which is supposed to bring down premiums for the rest of their customers.

The Trump administration actually encouraged this, and published a separate regulation tightening the rules around health insurance enrollment at the behest of the insurance industry. Those steps undercut the White House refrain that Obamacare is unfixable and support the notion that tweaking the law can make it work better, albeit not perfectly.

Instead of taking more positive steps like these, Congress has done nothing and the Trump administration has carried on otherwise actively undermining the health insurance exchanges.

One of Trump’s first acts as president was to issue an executive order instructing federal agencies to relax Affordable Care Act regulations, leading insurers to fret that means the IRS won’t enforce the law’s individual mandate, which they see is important to nudging low-cost healthy consumers into the market. Another of Trump’s first acts was to cancel advertising for the end of this year’s enrollment period, which suppressed signups at a crucial time.

What’s more, Trump’s coy game-playing over the money owed insurers is a primary cause of the bad news from Ohio and elsewhere.

Insurers in states including North Carolina and Pennsylvania are seeking massive rate increases for next year ― above what they otherwise would’ve been ― citing uncertainty about whether Trump will pay the money. Insurers in other states will follow unless the president stops threatening to stiff them, or if Congress simply appropriated the funding to which they’re entitled under the Affordable Care Act.

This uncertainty is the biggest danger to the functioning of the health insurance system right now. Trump hasn’t even committed to making these payments for this month, let alone in the future.

Any efforts lawmakers did undertake this year to shore up the health insurance market for millions of American consumers isn’t necessarily even incompatible with eventually repealing the law. There will be a time between 2018 and whenever a GOP health care bill took effect when people will still need to use the current system ― if there is one for them to use where they live.

Trump and Congress are running out of time. Health insurance companies face looming deadlines in the coming weeks to declare their intentions for next year. And if more of them bail on the exchanges or raise rates by an average of 19 percentage points above what they otherwise would’ve raised them because the party in power mismanaged the program, polls show the public will blame the GOP.Politics hurt too much? Sign up for HuffPost Hill, a humorous evening roundup featuring scoops
from HuffPost’s reporting team and juicy miscellanea from around the web.

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

Senate Republicans Are Closer Than Ever To Repealing Obamacare

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WASHINGTON ― Republican senators appear closer to ultimately passing a bill that would repeal the Affordable Care Act and replace it with legislation that would dramatically reduce health insurance coverage for low-income people, only in a less severe fashion than the House measure.

Senators still lack an actual bill, and the compromises needed to pass the Senate could imperil the legislation in the House, which will also have to back it. But Tuesday was a pivotal day for discussions in the upper chamber ― and seemingly a positive one ― as Republicans try to build a 50-vote coalition to repeal Obamacare.

“We’re getting close to having a proposal to whip and to take to the floor,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) told reporters, after nearly three hours of closed-door meetings.

McConnell is working with hardly any margin for error. He can afford to lose only two of his 52 Republicans ― with Vice President Mike Pence then breaking the tie ― and it seems highly unlikely that conservative Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) or moderate Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) will vote for the legislation. That means the majority leader must pressure, cajole or even deploy state-specific giveaways that could risk the support of other senators in order to keep the rest of his caucus in line.

But even facing those challenges, there was rare optimism among Senate Republicans on Tuesday. “This is what I was hoping to have the leadership be able to share with us, and I feel very good about the fact that we’re moving in the right direction,” Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) said, albeit adding that members still had “a long way to go.”

As for why they were increasingly optimistic, GOP senators wouldn’t offer very many details and McConnell suggested that some key issues linger. But the broad outline discussed among members points to a slower phaseout of Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion than the House bill entails and a shifting of tax credits from younger people to older people. Unlike the House version, the Senate bill may not allow insurers to set higher prices for people with pre-existing conditions than for healthy people.

That legislative vision appeared to sway some on-the-fence members who could prove critical to cobbling together 50 GOP votes. Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), who had been outspoken in his opposition to the House-passed bill, signaled that he was comfortable with the broad strokes of the Senate legislation, though he warned that he hadn’t seen the final text.Cassidy said the protections for people with pre-existing conditions were a big factor for him, as well as the slower rollback of the Medicaid expansion, which has helped states like his insure more people almost entirely on the federal government’s dime.

“What we’ve been told so far, states would have the ability, a lot more power than they do under Obamacare, to shape their future, and I think we’ve gotta return the power to the states,” Cassidy said, seemingly referring to a proposal to set per-capita limits on Medicaid, which would push states to put tougher restrictions on who’s eligible for that program.

Asked if the phaseout of the Medicaid expansion was still a concern of his, Cassidy said it was. “I think there’s obviously more to be done, but the phaseout is further down the road and states have a chance to adapt,” he said.

The remaining hurdles for Senate GOP leadership center mainly around the future of the Medicaid expansion, which Republicans generally believe is unsustainable. Negotiators have moved away from the House bill, which the Congressional Budget Office said would save $834 billion over 10 years by cutting back Medicaid. The Senate bill would presumably save less with a longer phaseout, yet the program that gives low-income people health insurance would still suffer a painful decrease ― and largely in the name of giving tax cuts to the wealthy.

Still, Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) said the Senate’s approach would strike a better compromise than the House did, by giving states the ability to come up with their own new restrictions on Medicaid.

“I don’t want to pull the rug out from under anyone,” Johnson said, “but let’s not leave the rug out there for a couple more years to have more people stand on the rug.”

Another, less problematic sticking point involves the Obamacare taxes, which the House bill would almost entirely eliminate. Senators are exploring keeping some of those taxes in place, but that could be problematic for conservative members. Rand Paul, for one, has cited any failure to fully wipe out Obamacare as a reason to vote no on a replacement bill. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) told reporters on Tuesday that he thought Paul was “irretrievably gone” on health care, although Paul’s office later quipped that Graham had not yet applied for the open press assistant job in Paul’s office.

Even if Paul is not lost yet, other conservatives like Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Mike Lee (R-Utah) are question marks. Both could balk at the more modest Medicaid cuts and the maintenance of certain taxes; they’ve already been cagey about where they currently stand on the bill. Cruz entertained reporters Tuesday with a long explanation about why he supports privatization of the Federal Aviation Administration and then, once a reporter asked about health care, walked away.

Other potential swing votes include Sens. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), whose state greatly benefits from the Medicaid expansion, and Dean Heller (R-Nev.), who is up for a tough re-election contest in 2018. But if McConnell can somehow keep them in line, along with Cruz and Lee, he’ll likely have the votes to pass the bill.With the prospect of that growing stronger on Tuesday, Democrats were left with their own predicament: whether to begin negotiating with GOP moderates on a separate bill in order to stave off a conservative, Republicans-only approach. For now, Democratic leadership said they would stay away from any negotiations until Republicans dropped their insistence on a full repeal of Obamacare.

“There is no appetite as long as they’re working towards repeal,” said one senior Senate Democratic aide. But there is great appetite as soon as they abandon it.

Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) did say that he had discussed health care with Cassidy, who has pushed his own bill. But such discussions had been broadly topical and not specific to any legislation, an aide said.

Even if health care legislation passed the Senate with only Republican votes, its ultimate passage would not be secured. At that point, House lawmakers, particularly House conservatives, would have to decide whether they could support a bill that does not let insurers charge people with pre-existing conditions more and thereby lower premiums for other people. The House Freedom Caucus was adamant that an Obamacare replacement had to give insurers that flexibility. Still, a more moderate bill from the Senate could win over some of the House moderates who voted against their own chamber’s bill.

Faced with a Senate bill, the House would have several options: It could simply vote yes on the legislation. It could amend the bill and send it back to the Senate. Or the two chambers could set up a conference committee and try to resolve their differences that way.

In any case, there are a number of steps to go before any Obamacare replacement reaches President Donald Trump’s desk. But given the willingness of House Republicans last month to support a bill that many of them didn’t like, no one should be certain that Republicans won’t compromise on their principles again.

Mike McAuliff, Laura Barron-Lopez and Jennifer Bendery contributed to this report.

-- 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.

Anthem Exit From Ohio ACA Exchange Ups Ante for GOP

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Anthem said it will pull out of the health-insurance exchange in Ohio next year, leaving a second region of the country poised to have no marketplace options under the Affordable Care Act and increasing pressure on Republicans as they seek to replace it. Reported by Wall Street Journal 18 hours ago.

Anthem pulling out of Ohio health care exchange

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Anthem, the largest health insurance provider in Ohio, is pulling out of the state health insurance exchange next year — leaving 20 of the state's 88 counties without an insurer. Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield Ohio said it is withdrawing from the individual market in 2018, cutting its individual plan offerings in Ohio to one off-exchange medical plan in Pike County. The decision doesn't impact members on Anthem’s grandfathered individual plans, purchased before March 23, 2010, or individual plans… Reported by bizjournals 12 hours ago.

Frontrunning: June 7

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· Islamic State Claims Rare Attack on Iran Parliament, Major Shrine (BBG)
· UAE turns screw on Qatar, threatens sympathizers with jail (Reuters)
· U.S. Oil Exports Double, Reshaping Vast Global Markets (WSJ)
· Trump’s Closest Allies Warn President It’s Time to Stop Tweeting (BBG)
· Trump Taps Former Assistant Attorney General Christopher Wray as New FBI Chief (WSJ)
· Poll: Pound Could Plunge to $1.20 on Friday (BBG)
· Hartford’s Finances Spotlight Property-Tax Quandary (WSJ)
· Militants in Philippines had planned to set up an Islamist enclave (Reuters)
· Two SIM Cards and Better Selfies: How China’s Smartphones Are Taking On Apple (WSJ)
· High-Profile Officials to Set Stage for Comey’s Senate Testimony (WSJ)
· Trump Jokes Jared Kushner Is 'More Famous Than Me' (BBG)
· ECB Critic Holds His Tongue as Race Nears for Bank’s Top Job (WSJ)
· White House Won’t Say How Much Confidence Trump Has in Sessions (WSJ)
· Electric Car Sales Are Surging, IEA Reports (BBG)
· London Investigation Focuses on Terrorists’ Wider Links (WSJ)
· Jeff Sessions Bans Settlement Practice Used by Obama Justice Department (WSJ)
· Police Recover Body From the Thames (WSJ)
· Gold Makes Run Toward $1,300 as Risk Flares (BBG)
· This Tycoon Lost $14 Billion in Just Two Years (BBG)

 

*Overnight Media Digest*

WSJ

- Anthem Inc said it will pull out of the health-insurance exchange in Ohio next year, leaving a second region of the country poised to have no marketplace options under the Affordable Care Act and increasing pressure on Republicans as they seek to replace it. on.wsj.com/2rzwAhk

- Uber Technologies Inc has fired more than 20 workers as a result of an investigation into claims it has an aggressive, male-dominated workplace that permits sexual harassment and sexism, according to an employee who attended a company-wide meeting. on.wsj.com/2rzrbGN

- Macy's Inc met with investors to lay out its strategy, but ended up triggering a new panic over the beleaguered retail sector. on.wsj.com/2rzpRnl

- Amazon.com Inc launched the latest salvo in an e-commerce battle with Wal-Mart Stores Inc by targeting its stronghold: lower-income consumers. on.wsj.com/2rzCQp7

- General Motors Co shareholders signaled continued patience with Chief Executive Mary Barra's attempts to boost a languishing share price, rejecting hedge-fund manager David Einhorn's proposal to split the company's stock into two classes. on.wsj.com/2rzpdpU

- Several state officials and auto makers are pillorying Volkswagen AG's plan to sell battery juice to Americans driving electric cars, contending the project more resembles an unfair government-backed windfall than penance for cheating on emissions tests. on.wsj.com/2rzBBX1

 

FT

- Vivendi SA inked a purchase agreement with Groupe Bolloré for its 60 percent stake in Havas SA at 9.25 euros a share. Vivendi intends to make an offer for the remaining stake in Havas, once the deal is finalised.

- Burberry Group Plc had its sharpest sales fall in six weeks. Cost savings are protecting Burberry’s short-term earnings but “luxury stocks work on sales momentum, not cost containment”, argued HSBC, which downgraded the stock to “reduce.”

- Pinterest enhanced its valuation more than 10 percent to $12.3 billion in a new funding round. It closed $150 million of funding from existing investors who include Silicon Valley venture capitalists Andreessen Horowitz and SV Angel, and Wall Street investors Goldman Sachs and Wellington Management.

- Uber Technologies Inc fired more than 20 employees after an investigation into sexual harassment claims.

 

NYT

- Uber Technologies Inc has fired 20 employees over harassment, discrimination and inappropriate behavior, as the ride-hailing company tries to contain the fallout from a series of toxic revelations about its workplace. nyti.ms/2rzmGMq

- Fresh woes for Wells Fargo & Co and a victory for two of its whistle-blowers occurred late Tuesday when the Justice Department filed a friend-of-the-court brief in a lawsuit brought against the bank by two former employees, who were fired after they tried to report misdeeds they had observed to their supervisors. nyti.ms/2rzPGUv

- Pinterest, the digital scrapbook company, has raised $150 million in a funding that raises its valuation to $12.3 billion. The funding makes Pinterest, which is based in San Francisco, one of the few privately held start-ups valued at more than $10 billion to raise money this year. nyti.ms/2rzCy1P

- Anthem Inc, one of the nation's largest insurers, said it would stop offering policies in the Ohio marketplace next year. nyti.ms/2rzpHwq

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Marijuana financier Cannabis Wheaton Income Corp hired a new investment dealer on Tuesday to raise C$50 million ($37 million) for the company, resurrecting a much-watched deal that features the company's lawyer and former bankers as significant personal shareholders. (tgam.ca/2rL4VIG)

** Guelph, Ontario-based Canadian Solar Inc is facing the threat of American trade action against its Asian manufacturing operations as the global solar-energy industry struggles with tough competition and plummeting costs. (tgam.ca/2rUcQph)

** Royal Dutch Shell Plc has largely exited the oil sands but remains committed to the country through other operations, including shale development in Alberta and British Columbia – where a C$1 billion investment was made in 2016 and another C$1 billion is coming this year – the multinational energy firm's Canadian president says. (tgam.ca/2s3kUVm)

NATIONAL POST

** Lawyers and doctors of Michael DeGroote, one of Canada's wealthiest businessmen and most generous philanthropists, say he is mentally unfit and no longer capable of representing himself in court. (bit.ly/2qZKkTI)

** Petrochemical producers are calling for more custom-tailored incentive policies to drive investment in Canadian megaprojects, as projected demand for plastics and chemicals derived from oil and gas continues to rise. (bit.ly/2r4FUq4)

** Shell Canada Ltd will soon announce a project to turn vegetable products into diesel fuel in Alberta, as part of the company's transition to produce less oil and more energy from natural gas, renewables and chemicals. (bit.ly/2sScmND)

 

Britain

The Times

Fred Goodwin has escaped having to defend himself in court over Royal Bank of Scotland 12 billion pounds ($15.49 billion) rights issue after a group of shareholders abandoned a lawsuit against the bank and former directors. bit.ly/2sBupZ0

Tesco Plc has been criticised over the 142,000 pounds it paid to the supermarket's chief executive in relocation costs. bit.ly/2sBbdKV

The Guardian

Lawyers representing Noel Edmonds have hit out at Lloyds Banking Group's proposed compensation scheme for victims of a fraud at the bank's HBOS Reading arm. bit.ly/2sBrsre

Burberry Group Plc is to hand Christopher Bailey shares worth 10.5 million pounds next month when day-to-day management of the luxury goods retailer switches to a newly recruited chief executive. bit.ly/2sBbFZD

The Telegraph

Vodafone Group Plc will crack down on fake news and extremist material online, challenging Google and Facebook Inc to cut off the flow of money to "abusive and damaging" outlets. bit.ly/2sBLIco

Shareholders have rejected the appointment of Genel Energy's new non-executive director and staged a rebellion against a number of other resolutions at its annual general meeting. bit.ly/2sBtQhT

Sky News

Apax Partners, which was a joint owner of New Look before selling it in 2015, and BC Partners, whose former investments include Phones 4U, tabled indicative offers for Shop Direct last week. bit.ly/2sBzmBe

Greater Manchester Police say they have uncovered "significant evidence" in a car linked to Manchester bomber Salman Abedi. bit.ly/2sBtO9D

The Independent

An overwhelming majority of people agree with Jeremy Corbyn that British involvement in foreign wars has put the public at greater risk of terrorism. ind.pn/2sBqf3p

 

 

  Reported by Zero Hedge 10 hours ago.

N.J. bill for Medicaid would soar by $810M under Trump Obamacare repeal

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An estimated 374,000 New Jerseyans would lose health insurance unless the state made up the Medicaid cuts. Reported by NJ.com 8 hours ago.

Why Access To Planned Parenthood Is Vital And Must Be Protected

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In 2007, Amanda Ream ― from Coatesville, Pennsylvania ― was uninsured, recently diagnosed with a chronic, painful bladder issue, and in graduate school at Widener University in Chester when she turned to Planned Parenthood for her health care. She could not get health insurance because of her “pre-existing condition” and could not afford to pay for her basic health care, like family planning and cancer screenings. She turned to Planned Parenthood for high-quality, affordable, compassionate health care. When I met with Amanda, at the Planned Parenthood Upper Darby Health Center, she told me Planned Parenthood had been an important part of her reproductive health care for the entirety of her adult life. She told me that Planned Parenthood kept her healthy and allowed her to control her reproductive future. Patients like Amanda don’t go to Planned Parenthood to make a political statement—they go for affordable and quality health care that they need.

I am a pro-life Democrat. I believe we must do everything we can to reduce the number of unintended pregnancies and abortions in this country, including increasing access to contraception and helping pregnant women before and after birth by supporting Medicaid, WIC and other critical programs. Just like other providers, including hospitals, Planned Parenthood is reimbursed for services and federal funds that are not used to pay for abortion. Thanks in no small part to Planned Parenthood’s efforts to expand access to contraception, we have reached a historic 30-year low for unintended pregnancies and 40-year low in the teen pregnancy rate This has led to a record low number of abortions. This progress is directly attributable to the increase in access to, and use of, contraception. That’s a pro-life record to be proud of. Since contraception became legal in the United States a half-century ago, it has been nothing short of revolutionary for women and society. The inclusion of contraception as a preventive service in the Affordable Care Act increased access — at no out-of-pocket costs to the patient — to the full range of FDA-approved contraception. This has led to more than 55 million women with access to contraception without copayments, which has saved them an estimated $1.4 billion in the first year alone. And there is still room to expand on this success. Recent studies have made clear that increasing access to the full range of contraceptive methods, as is provided at Planned Parenthood health centers, could reduce unintended pregnancy by 64 percent and reduce abortions by 67 percent nationally.

The fact is, Planned Parenthood prevents unintended pregnancies and reduces abortions. Blocking access to care at Planned Parenthood could have the exact opposite effect. By increasing access to all forms of contraception and high-quality contraceptive counseling, Planned Parenthood enables women to choose the methods that work best for their bodies and lifestyles.

This is particularly important in my home state of Pennsylvania. We need more health care not less. In Pennsylvania, Planned Parenthood plays an indispensable role in serving family planning patients that rely on the safety net. Right now, over 90,000 Pennsylvanians depend on the 32 Planned Parenthood health centers state-wide for care, including cancer screenings, contraception, STD testing and treatment, and well woman exams. Fifteen Planned Parenthood health centers in Pennsylvania are located in medically underserved areas or healthcare provider shortage areas.

Yet all this progress is at risk. The president and many Republicans in Congress have made it a top priority to “defund” Planned Parenthood and roll back women’s access to family planning care and contraception. The real-life effects of these policies are devastating. In the absence of family planning services provided at safety net health centers, like Planned Parenthood, the rates of unintended pregnancies, unplanned birth and abortion for all women in Pennsylvania could be 56 percent higher and the teen pregnancy rate could be 60 percent higher. And the idea that other providers could just absorb Planned Parenthood’s patients has been contradicted by those providers and by the experts ― in fact the American Public Health Association called the idea ludicrous. By increasing access to care at Planned Parenthood and focusing on family planning, we can build on the progress we’ve made and continue to lower the rate of unintended pregnancies and abortion and provide basic health care for women who cannot obtain much care any other way.

-- 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 5 hours ago.

Can Wonder Woman Inspire Single Women To Use All Their Power?

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We’re living in a moment when women are reclaiming their power.  From the Women’s March that activated millions of women around the country to take to the streets in protest of a president and policies that will set them back, to more women committing to run for office at an unprecedented rate, we’re seeing the signs of women flexing their strength and demanding better treatment.  And no better symbol of the return of feminine muscle than the blockbuster Wonder Woman finally making it to the big screen after more than a half century.

But these expressions of political power should not be taken for granted or set in stone just yet.  While the demographics of the American electorate continue to change – with single women being one of the fastest-growing groups in the U.S.  – you would think politicians would be wise to focus on addressing their needs.  But instead of Congress to addressing the pay gap between men and women, they are taking steps to undermine the economic well-being of all women, and unmarried women most particularly.

Right now half of the women in America are either divorced, widowed, separated or never been married.  And their numbers are growing: Between 2004 and 2016, the percentage of unmarried women in the population grew by two percentage points while the percentage of married women dropped by two points.  Unmarried women have very different economic circumstances than married women in the U.S.  One in four is a mother with a child under 18.  They are more likely to be unemployed, live in poverty, make minimum wage or less, and have no health insurance, savings or retirement plans.  But with more than one out of every two women in America divorced, separated, widowed or never married, they are  a potent political force.

This marriage gap is not just economic, but political too.  Marital status has been proven to influence voting participation and preferences.  But instead of recognizing this fundamental change in the lives of the majority of American women and adopting policies to help address the economic realities of single women, the Trump administration and their Republican allies in Congress have proposed healthcare, budget and tax plans that would have devastating impacts on all women, but especially unmarried women.  The painful consequences these plans would have on single women are detailed in a new report just released by the Voter Participation Center.

For example, under the American Health Care Act, millions of Medicaid recipients – the majority of them women – would lose their coverage.  The GOP plan would eliminate maternity and newborn care, zero-out funding for Planned Parenthood services, and end protections for pre-existing conditions, meaning women could face discrimination for “conditions” such as pregnancy and Caesarean sections.  Trump’s budget proposal contains cuts to food stamps, job training, and other programs that would have a greater effect on unmarried women who are more likely to receive lower wages or be unemployed, and more likely to live close to the poverty level.  And analyses of the president’s tax proposals show that the benefits mainly go to higher income taxpayers and not single women who generally do not have high incomes and would receive only modest tax cuts (estimated to be $110 for people making under $24,800).  In fact, sixteen percent of unmarried women had no taxable income at all and thus would receive no benefit from the Trump plan. 

As these plans demonstrate, it’s clear that the Republican Party offers little to no help for single women ― which creates an opening for elected officials  to speak to these women’s lives, to motivate these voters to come to the polls.  A comprehensive plan to address the plight of single women could include support for the Paycheck Fairness Act, raising the minimum wage, paid sick and family medical leave, and protections for women who are pregnant.

Unmarried women can change the outcome of elections, but only if they are heard.  In 2016, even though single women had the numerical edge in terms of eligible voters, they were not registered and did not vote at the levels of married women, who are less progressive in their views.  Right now, close to a third of eligible unmarried women aren’t registered to vote, and more than one in ten of the single women who were registered to vote didn’t in 2016.  Clearly, single women have more power to shape the policy and political debate than they are using.

These voters will have to register, turn out, and become the force that blocks punitive policies, advocates for laws that lift the lives of all Americans and helps our nation deliver on our democratic values of majority rule.  It’s a value that Wonder Woman shares with the world and one that we should not soon forget.

-- 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.

U.S. Army Medicine Civilian Corps Observes June as PTSD Awareness Month

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The Civilian Corps of the U.S. Army Medical Command (MEDCOM) is observing June as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Awareness Month.

Fort Sam Houston, TX (PRWEB) June 07, 2017

The Civilian Corps of the U.S. Army Medical Command (MEDCOM) is observing June as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Awareness Month. About 1 in 10 men and 2 in 10 women who experience trauma will develop PTSD, according to the National Center for PTSD. Many cases of PTSD go untreated.

During this month, the Civilian Corps aims to build awareness amongst behavioral health care professionals about career opportunities to work directly with active duty service members and veterans affected by PTSD. The U.S. Army strives to continually improve its standards of behavioral health care and to reduce the stigma associated with seeking treatment among those whom it serves.

The Civilian Corps is highlighting career opportunities for civilians to work as Psychiatrists and Psychologists or in roles as Psychiatric Technicians, Counselors, and Social Workers.

Civilian Corps career consultants will be attending upcoming behavioral health conferences, including the APNA 15th Annual Clinical Psychopharmacology Institute in Baltimore, MD June 8-11, the APA Convention in Washington, D.C. August 3-6, and the US Psychiatric and Mental Health Congress in New Orleans September 16-18. At these events, representatives will be available to discuss employment with the Civilian Corps.

“By filling behavioral health care positions with qualified candidates, the Civilian Corps can continue in its mission to provide the best quality of care to U.S. Army uniformed service members, the retired service members, their families and other eligible beneficiaries,” says Rosalinda Jenkins., Chief, Recruitment and Retention, Headquarters U.S. Army Medical Command, Civilian Human Resources Division.

U.S. Army Medicine Civilian Corps employees work closely alongside their military counterparts within the United States Army Medical Command (MEDCOM), a division of U.S. Army Medicine.

Civilian Corps employees are not subject to military requirements, such as enlistment or deployment, and receive excellent benefits, including flexible work schedules, competitive salaries, and extensive health insurance coverage options,

To learn more about the Civilian Corps and its mission to hire the best in behavioral health care for the U.S. Army, please visit https://www.civilianmedicaljobs.com/behavioral-health.

Contact: Colin Gerrity
colin(at)agencymabu(dot)com | (443) 330-5497

### Reported by PRWeb 5 hours ago.
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