Showing posts with label continue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label continue. Show all posts

Sunday, July 1, 2012

NY health plans continue as US court OKs Obama law

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — With state health officials advancing plans to help provide uninsured New Yorkers with health coverage under President Barack Obama's health care overhaul, Thursday's U.S. Supreme Court ruling upholding most of the law was being celebrated at places like a network of neighborhood medical clinics in New York City.

"It's really not melodramatic to say that lives are going to be profoundly affected for the better," said Dr. Daniel Baxter, top medical officer for the William F. Ryan Community Health Network. "This means that children are going to be able to get their immunizations, women are going to be able to get appropriate cancer screening, people with diabetes are going to be treated."

In April, Gov. Andrew Cuomo issued an executive order to establish a statewide exchange starting in 2014, a marketplace where individuals and small businesses could tap into as much as $2.6 billion in federal tax credits and subsidies under the overhaul law. It is meant to insure every American, mainly those who don't have employer health plans or don't qualify for Medicaid. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the overhaul's main provisions Thursday.

Cuomo on Thursday praised the ruling and Obama's leadership for measures that will provide access to health care for more than a million New Yorkers. His administration will keep moving forward with implementing the exchange, which also will lower coverage costs for businesses, he said.

Outside the Capitol, two dozen advocates from Health Care For All New York rallied. Organizer Bob Cohen called the promised coverage "basic economic security" people need to survive in a tough economy.

Right now, between 20 to 30 percent of the Ryan Network's patients are uninsured, Baxter said. Not all are poor. In these lean economic times, Baxter said he has seen a growing number of patients who have lost their private health insurance when they lost good-paying jobs.

The uninsured still get care, he said, but many patients often forgo treatment or precautionary measures rather than risk getting a big bill. One uninsured patient skipped a recommended X-ray a year ago because she didn't have insurance. As a result, Baxter said, it took an extra year for doctors to discover that she had cancer.

The law will also be a financial boon for places like the Ryan Network. Baxter said the health centers have long received some government reimbursement for treating the uninsured, but he said it has never been close to covering costs. "Had the law been overturned, many community health centers would find their viability in jeopardy," he said.

In Buffalo, Liz and Tim Evans have health insurance now through Liz's employer, Medaille College, but have gone without it for periods of years while employed part-time. At nearly $1,000 a month, it was too expensive. "I didn't really know how I felt about (the law) until the ruling. I was relieved and pleased it was upheld," Liz Evans said.

"I'm glad my daughter is going to be covered until she's 26," said Evans, a college librarian whose daughter is 12. "We've been in the position before of having pre-existing conditions and having to wait for coverage so I'm glad that's gone."

Evans has a thyroid condition, and her husband, a laid-off carpenter, has diabetes.

State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said his office stands ready to enforce the law to ensure New Yorkers benefit from its protections, calling the court's decision a "historic victory" for millions of Americans.

"This law will continue to provide a spectrum of key consumer protections including keeping young adults on their parents' plans, ending pre-existing condition restrictions and increasing consumer information about health care choices," he said.

Under Cuomo's order, issued after legislation to establish the exchange stalled in the Republican-controlled state Senate, health officials plan to show by January that the state is ready to participate in the federal program. The goal is to have the exchange operating on Jan. 1, 2014, Health Department spokesman Peter Constantakes said.

New York has about 11 million residents who are insured, mainly through employer health plans, and 5 million low-income residents enrolled in Medicaid. Census data from last year showed nearly 2.9 million New York residents, or about 15 percent, without insurance, although the state estimate is 2.7 million — mainly working poor who don't have employer-sponsored coverage and Medicaid-eligible residents who haven't registered.

The Business Council of New York State said employers already struggle with high coverage costs, taxes and surcharges, and the Supreme Court's ruling does nothing to "bend the cost curve." The group said it will work to assure the exchange has full participation by insurers, agents, brokers, chambers of commerce and employers in all stages of development for "as robust a health insurance market and health care delivery system as possible."

An assortment of tax increases, health industry fees and Medicare cuts are supposed to pay for the changes. Starting in 2014, almost everyone will be required to be insured, with some exceptions, or pay a yearly fine. That would be $695 per person up to $2,085 per household, or 2.5 percent of household income, whichever is greater.

"We disagree with the Supreme Court's decision to affirm a massive tax increase that people cannot afford right now," said Scott Reif, spokesman for the Senate Republican Conference.

____

Associated Press writer Carolyn Thompson in Buffalo contributed to this report.


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Friday, April 6, 2012

Health-Care Hearings Continue at Supreme Court

FBNs Peter Barnes on the continued inquiries into the presidents health-care plan.

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Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Romanian deputy health minister reappointed; protests continue

Romanian police walk past a fire lit by protesters in the center of Bucharest on January 15, 2012.Romanian police walk past a fire lit by protesters in the center of Bucharest on January 15, 2012.Raed Arafat withdraws his resignation after meeting, speaking with officialsProtests continue across Romania on Monday, with thousands taking to the streetsDemonstrators are protesting against government austerity measures

Bucharest, Romania (CNN) -- Romania's deputy health minister, whose resignation last week triggered ongoing protests across the nation, was reappointed to his post on Tuesday after meeting with the prime minister.

Raed Arafat said Tuesday he had withdrawn his resignation, adding that President Traian Basescu called him over the weekend to discuss the matter.

Protests broke out last Thursday after Arafat, an opponent of health care changes proposed by the government, resigned. Arafat gained popularity after creating what many Romanians see as an efficient medical emergency system.

Facing public pressure, Basescu decided to scrap the changes Friday, saying he made the decision after realizing that a majority of those in the medical system opposed the measure.

Critics had argued that the proposal favored the private health care system by allowing it access to government funds while the state-funded system lacks financial aid.

Arafat said Tuesday he withdrew his resignation because the changes were scrapped. He said he will now focus on creating a new health care bill that does not compromise the nation's health care system, especially the emergency system.

Protests, however, continued on Monday, as thousands took to the streets nationwide to demonstrate against government austerity measures, calling for Basescu's resignation and early elections.

However, officials said there was no violence on Monday. Protests took place under the supervision of thousands of police, and there were arrests for disturbing the peace and criminal acts, officials said. On Sunday, authorities used tear gas on demonstrators.

The demonstrations are the most serious since Basescu's election in 2004. Banks, shops and bus stations in the capital have been vandalized, said Bucharest Mayor Sorin Oprescu.

The protesters blocked traffic over the weekend, waving flags with the centers ripped out to symbolize the 1989 revolution. Others carried signs reading "Liberty" and "Down with President Basescu."

A special parliamentary session is expected this week on the events.

Opposition leaders said Monday a new series of protests is planned. The group disagrees with the government's response to the citizen demonstrations, said Crin Antonescu, liberal opposition leader.

"The National Liberal Party asks the prime minister and his cabinet to resign immediately because they couldn't manage the violent protests held over the last couple of days in Bucharest," Antonescu said Monday.

Government officials have called on opposition leaders to meet with them in the next few days.

The protests also follow several unpopular measures taken by the government over the past two years. After receiving a loan of 20 billion euros from the International Monetary Fund and the European Union in 2009, the government cut salaries in the public sector by 25% a year later to enforce austerity measures recommended by the IMF.

Prime Minister Emil Boc invited trade unions and employers to meet Tuesday on the labor code, but the labor unions refused to participate. After meeting with employers, Boc said the government is focused on creating new jobs for Romanians and providing financial support to those wishing to start businesses.

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