Western Medicine
SWAZILAND: Dating in a Time of HIV
ZAMBIA: Justice Delayed Becoming Justice Denied
Financial Pressures Must Not Reduce Effectiveness Of Scottish General Practice, Warns GP Leader, Scotland
NHS To Better Help Victims Of Violence, UK
New Health Inequalities Tool Allows Local NHS To Focus Their Resources, UK
7 European Countries Give NoMix Toilets The Thumbs-Up
Joint Role Of Obesity And Alcohol In Increasing The Risk Of Liver Disease
Bacterial Meningitis Outbreak in Oklahoma Claims Two Lives
The Rogers County Health Department and the Oklahoma State Department of Health are investigating an outbreak of six possible cases of bacterial meningitis in a rural Oklahoma elementary school.
Actor Corey Haim Dies at 38 of Pulmonary Congestion
Actor Corey Haim, best known as teen heartthrob in the 1980’s and in movies such as “The Lost Boys” has died at age 38 at his mother’s home in North Hollywood.
Montana governor wants Canadian drugs
HSPH Unveils Comprehensive, Public Online Library Of Firearms Research
The White House Kindly Requests You Do Not Refer to Its Health Care Budget Gimmicks as "Gimmicks"
Peter Orszag, the cutest, coolest, cowboy-boot wearin'est budgeting
badass ever to wrangle spreadsheets for a U.S. administration, is
standing up to those not-so-cool critics who continue to insist
that the health reform package President Obama and Congressional
Democrats have put together is not, in fact, deficit neutral. At
the Office of Management and Budget's blog, which I'm sure you all
read religiously, he writes:
Recently, a lot of attention has been paid to a claim that this deficit reduction is achieved only through a business-as-usual Washington budget gimmick: paying for just a few years of costs with many more years of savings.
This charge, he says, is "false," and he wants everyone suckered by it to "get their facts straight." He then proceeds to explain that, although most of the spending in the first ten years does indeed occur in the last six years, according to the Congressional Budget Office, the bill would actually produce even greater deficit reduction in the second decade—about $1 trillion.
Perhaps I should've added "trickiest" to the list of adjectives describing Orszag, because as far as the CBO figures go, everything in his post is basically right; the problem is that he's conflating two different criticisms, and ignoring the ones that matter.
The issue with backloading spending isn't that it hides deficit spending; it's that it hides the full cost of the bill, thus making it politically viable. When early drafts of health care reform rang up at around $1.6 trillion, Washington underwent a massive freakout; it became clear that passing a bill that kind of price tag was almost certainly impossible. So Obama gave Congress a target of "around $900 billion" for the bill, and one of the ways the lower figure was achieved was by starting the taxes revenue mechanisms immediately but holding off on implementing the benefits. That allowed for the Senate bill's politically convenient $850 billion score while disguising the fact that true cost of a full ten years of the bill's programs is actually more like $1.8 trillion (and that's not counting the trillion-plus in additional costs imposed by an individual mandate).
Meanwhile, Orszag fails to
address the relevant criticisms made by deficit neutrality
skeptics. First is that the bill's supporters double count the
Medicare savings.
According to a December
report by Orszag's trusted arbiter, the CBO, the bill will
either reduce the deficit or extend the solvency of Medicare,
not both. (And for what it's worth, Medicare's chief actuary
agrees.) Yet as recently as March
10—yesterday—Obama was claiming that his health care plan would "help
ensure Medicare’s solvency for an additional decade." Great! But
according to the CBO, that means the bill won't actually cut the
deficit.
The other problem is that, in an effort to elicit a better score for the bill, the "doc fix"—an expensive, unfunded change in the way doctor's Medicare payments are made—was excluded from the bill. So, as scored, the bill assumes that there will be a massive cut in Medicare payments to doctors that almost certainly will not occur.
The liberal argument for this is that the doc fix would have to be passed no matter what, so it shouldn't count towards the health care bill's score. Maybe so, but that's not what House Democrats thought when they drew up their initial draft of the legislation. And Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid was more than willing to hold the fix over doctors' heads in order to ensure that they would support the Democrats' reform legislation.
And what does our good friend the CBO say? Well, if you enact the doc fix in conjunction with Obama's health care overhaul, it adds $89 billion to the deficit over the first ten years.
On the other hand, I do agree with Orszag on one point he makes: When it comes to health care reform, there's a lot of misinformation and misdirection. So before passing judgment on the current bill, we really ought to make sure to get our facts straight.
Knee Replacement Surgery Improves Quality of Life for Seniors
The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons suggests total knee replacement for elders can improve quality of life that goes beyond pain relief.
Quebec to fund in vitro fertility treatments
MD finds his family's rare disorder in genome
Birth control users sue Bayer
Canada ratifies UN treaty for disabled rights
Suspended mastectomy doctor will operate
Home Specimen Collection Boosts Cervical Cancer Screening (CME/CE)
- Remember PCP and KS ?
- Coming of Age in the Era of AIDS
- Forcing pregnant women to take HIV tests
- Delusions in HIV and cancer treatment
- Théories de concurrence de SIDAS : HIV est-il non pertinent ?
- Competing theories of AIDS: Is HIV irrelevant?
- Causes of death among children younger than 4
- Syphilis causes "HIV" viral load spike, and T-cell decrease
- But How Did He Vote on Drunk Driving Legislation?
- Reforming Medicine? - Health Supreme NewsGrabs Thursday, 11 March 2010
- Europe: Herbal Medicine in Distress - Health Supreme NewsGrabs Monday, 8 March 2010
- Will Pharma go down in Supplement War? - Health Supreme NewsGrabs Thursday, 4 March 2010
- Reason Morning Links: Scandals, Weapons, and Countereconomic Food
- Your D.C. Gay Marriage Waiting Period May Now Begin
- What Do You Do With the "God Hates Jews" Kooks?
- Adverse drug reactions - Health Supreme NewsGrabs Friday, 26 February 2010
- US: Supplements Attacked in McCain Bill - Health Supreme NewsGrabs Tuesday, 23 February 2010
- Money from Bill and Melinda Gates will help beat Dengue fever in Australia
- Australian scientists win funds for new research
- South Carolina health coverage, cigarette tax bill stalls in state Senate
- Supporters, opponents of comparative effectiveness research 'gearing up' to clash over planned efforts, New York Times reports
- Survey examines wait times for appointments with specialists in 15 U.S. cities
- Press Release: ‘CDC Analysis Provides New Look at Disproportionate Impact of HIV and Syphilis Among U.S. Gay and Bisexual Men’
- CDC Resources on Male Circumcision and HIV
- National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention Strategic Plan 2010–2015
- NCHHSTP Strategic Plan for 2010-2015
- Effect of Rifampicin on Efavirenz Pharmacokinetics in HIV-Infected Children With Tuberculosis.
- Phenotypic and Functional Characterization of HIV-1-Specific CD4+CD8+ Double-Positive T Cells in Early and Chronic HIV-1 Infection.
- Hepatitis C Virus Coinfection Does Not Influence the CD4 Cell Recovery in HIV-1-Infected Patients With Maximum Virologic Suppression.
- Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Among HIV-Infected Persons.
- A Once-Daily Lopinavir/Ritonavir-Based Regimen Is Noninferior to Twice-Daily Dosing and Results in Similar Safety and Tolerability in Antiretroviral-Naive Subjects Through 48 Weeks.













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