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DOGS THAT BARK

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This report is from Cato Institute--a libertarian org.

Yes you did!

May 7, 2010
Obama's Health Care Promises Already Busted

By Michael Tanner

848_1_.gif

The ink was barely dry on President Obama's signature before the RAND Corporation released a report concluding that not only would the hard-won health care package fail to curb premium increases, but the bill would drive premiums up as much as 17 percent for young people.
This should not have been a surprise: the Congressional Budget Office had already warned that the bill would do almost nothing to reduce future premium hikes. And when New York implemented the same time of insurance reforms in the 1980s, it led to a nearly $500-per-year increase in premiums for young people. But somehow, the media didn't pay much attention.

And of course, back during the health care debate, no presidential speech was complete without a promise that "if you have health insurance today and you like it, you can keep it." But the Congressional Budget Office now says that as many as 10 million workers will lose their current insurance under the bill. Some of those will have to buy new insurance through the government-run exchanges. Millions more will be thrown onto Medicaid

In addition, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Studies reports that half of seniors enrolled in the Medicare Advantage program will lose their coverage under that program and be forced back into traditional Medicare.
And how many times did President Obama criticize the United States</SPAN> for having the highest health care spending in the world? Well, the government's chief actuary released his report on the bill recently, showing that the bill will actually increase health care spending by $311 billion over the next 10 years

At the same time, the actuary warns that promised future spending cuts, particularly those for Medicare, are unlikely to occur.
"The longer-term viability of the Medicare reductions is doubtful," wrote Richard Foster, chief actuary of the Medicare and Medicaid systems. What cuts do occur could have a severe impact on the quality of health care. As many as 15 percent of hospitals and other institutions could be forced out of business, according to the report, "possibly jeopardizing access to care" for millions of Americans.
With spending going up and future savings likely to fall short of promises, we can expect higher deficits and, of course, higher taxes. The most recent estimates suggest that the taxes already in the bill will likely end up costing middle-class workers and small businesses an extra $1,000 per year.
Now the most recent report from the Congressional Budget Office warns that nearly 4 million Americans, nearly three-quarters of them middle-class workers, will be hit with fines for failing to meet the government's mandate. Those penalties will average nearly $1,000 per person in 2016.
All this, and the health care "reform" law is merely a month old.
Perhaps this is why nearly 56 percent of American voters now favor repealing the bill.
This episode provides a lesson, not just for health care reform, but for the Obama administration's policies more generally. When critics of the health care bill raised these concerns during the debate, they were accused of "fear mongering." It was said that they were "opposed to reform," or were in the pockets of the insurance industry.
Now, as the administration presses forward with its other initiatives, including financial regulation and energy taxes, the same modus operandi is in action. Those who raise questions are derided as opposing "reform" and siding with the banks, energy companies, or whoever the enemy of the day is. The bills need to be rushed through. There is no time for real debate.
But maybe, just maybe, the first month of ObamaCare should serve as a lesson: Legislate in haste; repent in leisure.
<SCRIPT type=text/javascript> checkTextResizerCookie('article_body'); </SCRIPT>Michael Tanner is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and coauthor of Healthy Competition: What's Holding Back Health Care and How to Free It.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++

--Just the beginning
 

THE KOD

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Kemah doctor duo gives up $44 million in fraud plea Houston Chronicle 2010-04-27

A husband-wife doctor team from Kemah relinquished more than $44 million in assets while pleading guilty on Monday to health care fraud charges accusing them of prescribing one or more controlled substances to nearly every patient they saw and then coercing many into signing blank forms for narcotics that were never received.
................................................................

Dont you dumb asses get it yet

Stop this and we will not have a health care
money problem.
 

THE KOD

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Three plead guilty to $5.8M Medicare fraud
South Florida Business Journal

Three South Floridians have pleaded guilty to participating in a $5.8 million Medicare fraud scheme.

Maria Volero Marrero, 48; Lawrence Edward Humes, 57; and Keith Earnest Humes, 53, are alleged to have recruited beneficiaries to provide their Medicare numbers and signatures to submit false claims in an HIV/AIDS infusion scam.

Marrero admitted she owned Tendercare Medical Center and that she paid kickbacks to the Humeses to recruit the patients. Medicare paid out $2.7 million in claims.

The three are scheduled to be sentenced in July in Miami federal court.

The case was brought as part of the Medicare Fraud Strike Force initiative, which has obtained indictments of more than 550 individuals who collectively have falsely billed the Medicare program for more than $1.1 billion
.............................................................

DTB black gumby

why dont you post some charts and graphs on the fraud that has been going on for 20 years crippling the American taxpayer and stealing our money.

oh you dont really care about that aspect of this huh ?

didnt think so

get a rope and you will be fine
 
Last edited:

THE KOD

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This report is from Cato Institute--a libertarian org.

In addition, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Studies reports that half of seniors enrolled in the Medicare Advantage program will lose their coverage under that program and be forced back into traditional Medicare.
next 10 years[/B]

At the same time, the actuary warns that promised future spending cuts, particularly those for Medicare, are unlikely to occur.
"The longer-term viability of the Medicare reductions is doubtful," wrote Richard Foster, chief actuary of the Medicare and Medicaid systems. What cuts do occur could have a severe impact on the quality of health care. As many as 15 percent of hospitals and other institutions could be forced out of business, according to the report, "possibly jeopardizing access to care" for millions of Americans.
With spending going up and future savings likely to fall short of promises, we can expect higher deficits and, of course, higher taxes. The most recent estimates suggest that the taxes already in the bill will likely end up costing middle-class workers and small businesses an extra $1,000 per year.
Perhaps this is why nearly 56 percent of American voters now favor repealing the bill.

...............................................................


Repeal the health care bill :142smilie

you know it

I know it

there is no way in holy hell that you neocons will ever be in a situation to repeal this bill :142smilie


dumb asses

work with it. Stop the fraud and everything will be ok.

morans
 

THE KOD

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Pfizer To Pay Ky. $5.4M For Medicaid Fraud

Last Update: 9/02/2009 1:11 pm

FRANKFORT, Ky. ? Attorney General Jack Conway announced Wednesday that Kentucky has joined with other states and the federal government in reaching an historic agreement with Pfizer Inc.

The agreement settles civil and criminal allegations that the pharmaceutical giant and its subsidiaries paid kickbacks and engaged in off-labeling marketing campaigns that improperly promoted numerous drugs that Pfizer manufactures. This is the largest settlement in history in a healthcare fraud matter.

Pfizer will pay the states and the federal government a total of $1 billion in civil damages and penalties to compensate Medicaid, Medicare, and various federal healthcare programs for harm suffered as a result of its conduct.

In addition, a Pfizer subsidiary, Pharmacia & Upjohn Company, Inc., has agreed to plead guilty to a felony violation of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDCA) and to pay a criminal fine and forfeiture of $1.3 billion.

The criminal component of the resolution centers on the illegal marketing and promotion of Bextra, an anti-inflammatory drug that Pfizer pulled from the market in 2005. Because of the illegal promotion, Pharmacia & Upjohn Company, Inc. has agreed to plead guilty to a felony violation of the FDCA for misbranding the drug with the intent to defraud or mislead.

Kentucky?s total state and federal recovery for Kentucky?s Medicaid Program is $16 million. Kentucky?s state share of Medicaid restitution and additional recoveries is almost $4.8 million.

The government entities alleged that Pfizer, the largest pharmaceutical manufacturer in the world, engaged in a pattern of unlawful marketing activity to promote multiple drugs for certain uses which the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had not approved.

While it is not illegal for a physician to prescribe a drug for an unapproved use, federal law prohibits a manufacturer from promoting a drug for uses not approved by the FDA.

In addition to the improper off-label marketing of these drugs, Pfizer is alleged to have made illegal payments to healthcare professionals to induce them to promote and prescribe Bextra, Geodon, Lyrica, Zyvox, Aricept, Celebrex, Lipitor, Norvasc, Relpax, Viagra, Zithromax, Zoloft and Zyrtec. These payments allegedly took many forms - including entertainment, cash, travel and meals.
:scared :scared

Federal law prohibits payment of anything of value in exchange for the prescribing of a product paid for by a federal health care program.

As a condition of the settlement, Pfizer will enter into a Corporate Integrity Agreement with the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Inspector General, which will closely monitor the company?s future marketing and sales practices.

This settlement is based on nine qui tam cases that were filed in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania and the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky by private individuals who filed actions under state and federal false claims statutes.

The total state and federal recovery for Kentucky?s Medicaid Program is $16,032,502.49. The State of Kentucky?s share of Medicaid restitution and additional recoveries is $4,766,567.95.

A National Association of Medicaid Fraud Control Units team participated in the investigation and conducted the settlement negotiations with Pfizer on behalf of the settling states.
................................................................

right in you're own hic town you got stolen from

in the billions.

Get the crook doctors, get the crook drug companys, get the crook insuranace companys

and you wont be crying about health care.

dumb ass neocon right wing back sliders
 

Trench

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DTB black gumby

why dont you post some charts and graphs on the fraud that has been going on for 20 years crippling the American taxpayer and stealing our money.

oh you dont really care about that aspect of this huh ?

didnt think so

get a rope and you will be fine
DTGumby is MJ's resident lobbyist (mouthpeice) for the insurance industry Scotty. Why would he want to expose waste, fraud, abuse and corruption in the healthcare/insurance industry and bite the hand that feeds him? :shrug:
 

THE KOD

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Scott, who is against convicting FRAUD, i'm sure not, doesn't matter if there's an R or a D after the name, a crook is a crook.


JMHO.
..................................................................

I know but DTB concentrates on how much it is going to go up

the same scare tactics the Rep use over and over.

There are ways we can make the new health care plan work very well and bring down costs.

The first step is rooting out these fawking crooks.

And there are many many more out there that have been doing this for years and laughing their asses off at us dumb taxpaying Americans.
 

THE KOD

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I would like to hear DTB black gumbys assessment of medicare and health care fraud

:shrug:

he usually will not answer

I think he would say he likes fraud as long as his taxes dont go up
 

THE KOD

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April Jobs report: Best gain in four years
By Chris Isidore, senior writerMay 7, 2010: 2:45 PM ET



NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- In another sign that the recovery in the U.S. economy is taking hold, employers added significantly more jobs to payrolls in April, according to a government report released Friday.

There was a gain of 290,000 jobs in the month, up from a revised 230,000 jobs added in March. It was the largest number of jobs added to the labor force since March 2006.

The results were much better than expected. Economists surveyed by Briefing.com had forecast a gain of 187,000 jobs.

Facebook Digg Twitter Buzz Up! Email Print Comment on this story

After nearly two years of job losses, the economy has now added jobs in five of the last six months. With upward revisions for both March and February, there has been a gain of 573,000 jobs since the start of the year.

"It clearly shows that this economic recovery can no longer be seen as a jobless one," said Bart van Ark, chief economist of The Conference Board, a leading business research firm. "Companies apparently are finding they can't squeeze out any more output without adding workers."

The report also includes a separate survey of households that it uses to estimate the unemployment rate, which increased to 9.9%. Economists had forecast the rate would hold steady at 9.7%.

The rise in the unemployment rate is actually a sign of improving perception of labor market conditions. The increase was due to an uptick in job seekers who had previously been discouraged and dropped out of the job market. There was a jump of 805,000 workers returning to the labor force in April alone.

"When you think about the force it takes to get 800,000 beaten-down people off the couch and back on the street looking for work, that's pretty significant," said Lakshman Achuthan, managing director of Economic Cycle Research Institute.

Broad-based gains: The job picture got a lift from the addition of 66,000 jobs by the U.S. Census Bureau, which is in the process of completing the once-in-a-decade headcount of the U.S. population.

But the gains went far beyond that one-time Census boost, as private sector employers added 231,000 jobs. And the gains were broad based, as nearly two-thirds of industries across the private sector added jobs rather than cutting staff.


0:00 /3:19Job report better than it looks
Manufacturing did exceptionally well, adding 44,000 jobs, the biggest one-month gain in the sector since August 1998. Construction added 14,000 jobs, the second straight month of gains after nearly three years of uninterrupted job losses in that battered sector.

Retailers added 12,400 jobs, and the leisure and hospitality industries added 45,000 jobs on a seasonally adjusted reading, a sign that employers in those sectors see increased consumer demand.

Temporary help services added 26,200 jobs, which economists see as an important sign of future hiring, since employers often take on temporary workers before they add permanent staff. Temp workers have now increased by 330,000 over the last seven months after roughly three straight years of job losses there.

Looking ahead: Still, the gain in jobs this year has barely made a dent in the 8.4 million jobs that were lost in 2008 and 2009. And the 15.3 million unemployed workers are suffering a great deal. A record 46% have been out of work six months or longer.

The so-called underemployment rate, which includes workers who are discouraged and those who are working part-time jobs because they can't find full-time work, rose to 17.1%, the highest level in the 17 years that figure has been calculated.

"This week's job numbers comes as a relief to Americans who found a job," President Obama said in remarks Friday morning. "But it offers obviously little comfort to those who are still out of work."

He pledged to take additional steps to help businesses hire workers.

Republican critics of the administration focused on the unemployment rate rather than gain in payrolls.

"Positive job growth is always welcome news, but this rising and painfully high unemployment rate is a far cry from President Obama's promise that the trillion-dollar 'stimulus' would keep joblessness from rising above 8%," said House Minority Leader John Boehner in a statement.

But the strength in the report raised hopes the economy will continue to add jobs at an even stronger pace going forward.

"I don't think this is the high water mark," said Jack Kleinhenz, economics professor, Case Western Reserve University. "But even with stronger gains ahead, we have a long way to go."

Achuthan said the upswing in both the overall economy and the labor market is particularly important for helping withstand external shocks, such as worries about the Greek government possibly defaulting on debt or large drops in the stock market, as were seen Thursday.

"The jobs report underscores this is a resilience of the recovery," he said. "When the business cycle is in an upswing, it starts to feed on itself, and the economy can withstand a pretty big shock without being tipped into a new downturn."

U.S. stocks started the day higher following the pre-market jobs report, but within the first hour of trading, fell into negative territory once again.
..................................................................

Best if four years. That goes back to President Cheneys era.

CHANGE WE CAN BELIEVE IN !



I know DTB black gumby will disapprove of these figures as he dont want anything good to happen in America until Obama is out.

Maybe a second term is in order here !
 

DOGS THAT BARK

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DTGumby is MJ's resident lobbyist (mouthpeice) for the insurance industry Scotty. Why would he want to expose waste, fraud, abuse and corruption in the healthcare/insurance industry and bite the hand that feeds him? :shrug:

--and you must be one of those age 26 "adults" wanting to stay on your parents tit as dependent--til you can transfer to gov tit. :)
 

RAYMOND

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April Jobs report: Best gain in four years
By Chris Isidore, senior writerMay 7, 2010: 2:45 PM ET



NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- In another sign that the recovery in the U.S. economy is taking hold, employers added significantly more jobs to payrolls in April, according to a government report released Friday.

There was a gain of 290,000 jobs in the month, up from a revised 230,000 jobs added in March. It was the largest number of jobs added to the labor force since March 2006.

The results were much better than expected. Economists surveyed by Briefing.com had forecast a gain of 187,000 jobs.

Facebook Digg Twitter Buzz Up! Email Print Comment on this story

After nearly two years of job losses, the economy has now added jobs in five of the last six months. With upward revisions for both March and February, there has been a gain of 573,000 jobs since the start of the year.

"It clearly shows that this economic recovery can no longer be seen as a jobless one," said Bart van Ark, chief economist of The Conference Board, a leading business research firm. "Companies apparently are finding they can't squeeze out any more output without adding workers."

The report also includes a separate survey of households that it uses to estimate the unemployment rate, which increased to 9.9%. Economists had forecast the rate would hold steady at 9.7%.

The rise in the unemployment rate is actually a sign of improving perception of labor market conditions. The increase was due to an uptick in job seekers who had previously been discouraged and dropped out of the job market. There was a jump of 805,000 workers returning to the labor force in April alone.

"When you think about the force it takes to get 800,000 beaten-down people off the couch and back on the street looking for work, that's pretty significant," said Lakshman Achuthan, managing director of Economic Cycle Research Institute.

Broad-based gains: The job picture got a lift from the addition of 66,000 jobs by the U.S. Census Bureau, which is in the process of completing the once-in-a-decade headcount of the U.S. population.

But the gains went far beyond that one-time Census boost, as private sector employers added 231,000 jobs. And the gains were broad based, as nearly two-thirds of industries across the private sector added jobs rather than cutting staff.


0:00 /3:19Job report better than it looks
Manufacturing did exceptionally well, adding 44,000 jobs, the biggest one-month gain in the sector since August 1998. Construction added 14,000 jobs, the second straight month of gains after nearly three years of uninterrupted job losses in that battered sector.

Retailers added 12,400 jobs, and the leisure and hospitality industries added 45,000 jobs on a seasonally adjusted reading, a sign that employers in those sectors see increased consumer demand.

Temporary help services added 26,200 jobs, which economists see as an important sign of future hiring, since employers often take on temporary workers before they add permanent staff. Temp workers have now increased by 330,000 over the last seven months after roughly three straight years of job losses there.

Looking ahead: Still, the gain in jobs this year has barely made a dent in the 8.4 million jobs that were lost in 2008 and 2009. And the 15.3 million unemployed workers are suffering a great deal. A record 46% have been out of work six months or longer.

The so-called underemployment rate, which includes workers who are discouraged and those who are working part-time jobs because they can't find full-time work, rose to 17.1%, the highest level in the 17 years that figure has been calculated.

"This week's job numbers comes as a relief to Americans who found a job," President Obama said in remarks Friday morning. "But it offers obviously little comfort to those who are still out of work."

He pledged to take additional steps to help businesses hire workers.

Republican critics of the administration focused on the unemployment rate rather than gain in payrolls.

"Positive job growth is always welcome news, but this rising and painfully high unemployment rate is a far cry from President Obama's promise that the trillion-dollar 'stimulus' would keep joblessness from rising above 8%," said House Minority Leader John Boehner in a statement.

But the strength in the report raised hopes the economy will continue to add jobs at an even stronger pace going forward.

"I don't think this is the high water mark," said Jack Kleinhenz, economics professor, Case Western Reserve University. "But even with stronger gains ahead, we have a long way to go."

Achuthan said the upswing in both the overall economy and the labor market is particularly important for helping withstand external shocks, such as worries about the Greek government possibly defaulting on debt or large drops in the stock market, as were seen Thursday.

"The jobs report underscores this is a resilience of the recovery," he said. "When the business cycle is in an upswing, it starts to feed on itself, and the economy can withstand a pretty big shock without being tipped into a new downturn."

U.S. stocks started the day higher following the pre-market jobs report, but within the first hour of trading, fell into negative territory once again.
..................................................................

Best if four years. That goes back to President Cheneys era.

CHANGE WE CAN BELIEVE IN !



I know DTB black gumby will disapprove of these figures as he dont want anything good to happen in America until Obama is out.

Maybe a second term is in order here !

:00x12
 
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