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"The New Landscape of Health Care Reform" - Gwen Fischer and Debbie Silverstein, Single-Payer Action Network Ohio (SPAN)
Midtown Brews @ Inisivia.com, February 5, 2009, was the start of a new conversation to identify innovative health care solutions for contemporary challenges. (Click the image above to watch the Live Show.)
Follow up information from the Feb 5, 2009 Midtown Brews:
- Follow up to Midtown Brews on Health Care Reform March 5, 2009 - on Midtown Brews
- Health Care Page Update - on Midtown Brews
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"Health Care" Gwen B. Fischer, Professor Emerita, Psychology Department, Hiram College
Virtually everyone complains about our health care system. According to Physicians for National Health Program: “The U.S. spends twice as much as other industrialized nations on health care, $7,129 per capita. Yet our system performs poorly in comparison and still leaves 47 million without health coverage and millions more inadequately covered.
This is because private insurance bureaucracy and paperwork consume one-third (31 percent) of every health care dollar. Streamlining payment through a single nonprofit payer would save more than $350 billion per year, enough to provide comprehensive, high-quality coverage for all Americans.”
According to the Frontline (PBS) documentary, “In Sick Around the World, FRONTLINE teams up with veteran Washington Post foreign correspondent T.R. Reid to find out how five other capitalist democracies -- the United Kingdom, Japan, Germany, Taiwan and Switzerland -- deliver health care, and what the United States might learn from their successes and their failures.”
In the analysis provided by Frontline, health economist, Professor Karl Lauterbach, “The U.S. has a system [that] does have a poor cost-benefit ratio. I mean, 40 million people lack insurance; another 30 [million] or so are underinsured. The people who are insured do have to worry whether they are able to pay the bills. People become bankrupt because they cannot pay the medical bills, and there are vast differences in the quality of care depending on how much you are prepared and able to pay. I think the system is not working well.”
According to Joseph Stiglitz (NobelPrize winning economist) in an interview on Democracy Now (http://www.democracynow.org/2009/2/25/stieglitz )
..."AMY GOODMAN: And healthcare? He’s called for universal healthcare, but he does not call for single-payer healthcare.
JOSEPH STIGLITZ: I think that there are some fundamental problems in the efficiency of our healthcare system. And what we’ve seen is that the private healthcare insurers do not know how to deliver an efficient way.
AMY GOODMAN: Do you support single-payer healthcare?
JOSEPH STIGLITZ: I think I’ve reluctantly come to the view that it’s the only alternative. You know, we’ve tried a lot of other things. And we’ve been—you know, I was in the Clinton administration, and we debated a lot of alternatives, and I’ve watched things as they’ve emerged and, you know, evolved over the last twelve, sixteen years, and I think there’s a growing consensus that the private market exclusion is not going to work..”
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