Two Reports: Insure The Uninsured Project :

Insure The Uninsured Project : Recent Reports

Health Care Systems Around the World
(November 2008)

Now I’m embarrassed. I just posted my summaries of the OECD summaries and get this in my inbox. Somebody who knows what they’re doing spent some real time investigating and writing about 10 systems from around the world. I haven’t read it yet, but wanted to get it up here, along with the one below:

The Healthy Americans Act (S. 334)
(October 2008
)”

Cheers,

Health Blog : Changes Brewing on Capitol Hill for Health Insurance

Health Blog : Changes Brewing on Capitol Hill for Health Insurance:

“Next year could see the biggest push in more than a decade to transform how health insurance works in this country. Obama and McCain have both proposed significant changes, and the Democrats just hammered out a platform plank that says the party is “united around a commitment to provide every American access to affordable, comprehensive health care.”

Meanwhile, Congress is busy hatching its own plans.

During the Health Blog’s recent field trip to DC, we spoke with Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat who’s pushing a health reform bill that would make some big changes to the system.

The bill, known as the Healthy Americans Act, would require everyone to buy health insurance. But instead of sending a check to the insurance company, the premium for basic coverage would be tacked onto your federal income tax. You’d choose from health plans offered by private insurers in your state or region. If you wanted to buy a plan
that covered more than the basics, you’d pay extra.

There’s a lot more to it than that (including various taxes and subsidies), but those are the basics. You can read the whole bill for yourself here.”

We’ve noted this before, but it really seems we may be acheiving critical mass/crisis for big change to occur…

Miles Mogulescu: Why Not Single Payer? Part 6: New “Health Care For America Now” Coalition May Reflect Divisions in the Movement for Universal Healthcare – Politics on The Huffington Post

Miles Mogulescu: Why Not Single Payer? Part 6: New “Health Care For America Now” Coalition May Reflect Divisions in the Movement for Universal Healthcare – Politics on The Huffington Post

We all saw sicko, but many of us also saw Frontline’s Sick Around the World program : http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/sickaroundtheworld/

Certainly Single payer can work and might be the best system possible, but I don’t think the Bismarkian systems of Germany, Switzerland and others can be dismissed out of hand. If you go to the frontline website and watch the show, be sure to read the supplementary materials, especially he interview with Uwe Reinhardt. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/sickaroundtheworld/interviews/reinhardt.html

I had not given Bismarkian systems much thought until I heard a representative from the Stark Raving Loonie Party (Sorry, that’s Python – I meant the Fraser Institute of Canada) actually confess that he could see working with reform along the Bismarkian lines:http://cmhmd.blogspot.com/2008/03/single-payer-debate-at-duquesne-u-31008.html

Further, Sen. Ron Wyden and others have introduced a plan along these lines, so HR 676 isn’t the only ball in play at the moment.
Wyden Press release: http://wyden.senate.gov/newsroom/record.cfm?id=297073&
Other commentary: http://www.blueoregon.com/2006/12/progressives_re.html

So I guess I’d say not to discount the Wyden plan out of hand as not being “pure” single payer. because we have examples of this system working as well as single payer can.

Cheers,