Okay, so a
bunch
of
bloggers
are posting about how funny the
CDC Disease Cards
are, but I have to admit, I think they’re kinda cool. I was really pulling for a
coccidiodes
(Valley fever!) or
histoplasmosis
(mimics TB). I am
so
lame.
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I find myself for the first time ill with a sore throat (pharyngitis) and possible mild cold. My money’s on a
rhinovirus
, but I couldn’t tell you for sure just yet. Even with my newly-found hand-washing behavior, viruses still win. Either way, it’ll still give me a bit of
time to rest and do a little blogging.
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on Let The Self-Diagnosing Being
Saul Friedman is a columnist for
Newsday
, a daily paper for Long Island and New York. He saw my
single-payer animation
, and liked it so much that he turned it into
his weekly column for this week
! The quotes aren’t exact, but they’re not way off. Just to clarify:
How can the United States pay for a similar single-payer system to cover 300 million? “Money would come from employers and employees,” Walker says,
“but most of the money is already in the system — it’s just currently going to HMOs [and other private insurers] instead of to a single
payer.”
Money would come from employers and employees–that is, taxpayers. Did you know that
60% of the health care dollars are paid by government already
? So we already have 60% of the money being collected by government. That other 40%? Most of it is dollars from private employers paying HMOs to insure private
employees. That 40% would be sent to the single-payer instead of a number of different HMOs. It’s not *new* money. It’s just redirected.
As for employees, some funding schemes also have a personal income tax–but usually only for people making more than ~$90,000 a year. A Ohio single-payer group
put together
a proposal that lists how much Ohio residents would pay for single-payer in Ohio
(Word doc).
If you’d like to see the studies citing single-payer as saving a substantial amount of money, look no further than
The California Health Care Options Project
,
The Vermont Single-Payer Study
,
The Maryland Single-Payer Study
,
Massachusetts Health Care Studies
,and
Maine’s Single-Payer Microsimulation
. Just to be clear, these analyses were done by
The Lewin Group
and
Mathematica Consulting
, two economic analyst groups.
Not
single-payer supporters.
I also found a great new site that summarizes state reform policies. Thanks Robert Wood Johnson Foundation for
statecoverage.net
.
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An update on the
Peter Rost story
: Pfizer
sent a team of lawyers to grill him on his political activities and who he’s talked with
. Not only is it scary to see a company investigate someone for their private political beliefs, it shows everyone just how scared Big Pharma is of reimportation.
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