Being broke equals ‘wide rear syndrome’

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Fortunately, the food industry has learned to manufacture cheap foods that can keep the masses fed. Unfortunately, those foods are full of sugar, salt, fat, fillers and chemicals … and those things aren’t good for us to consume.

Which leads to how being broke equals “wide rear syndrome”: With less money, people have to skimp some where, so they often skimp on food. C-ya organics. C-ya healthy meals. Bring on the Velveeta.

As the unemployment rate passes 10 percent and consumers find themselves increasingly strapped, they turn to cheap but effective means to fill their families’ tummies. And those who have jobs are working longer hours, forgoing exercise and searching for foods that are not only economical but convenient.

As a result, more consumers are turning to processed foods – either already prepared, frozen or canned and typically filled with fat-generating calories, refined grains and sugars. That’s making more Americans chubbier and prone to obesity-related illnesses such as diabetes in what has been dubbed “recession fat.”

“Eating healthy has been one of the big casualties of this economic downturn,” says Harry Balzer, chief industry analyst at the NPD Group and author of the research company’s annual Eating Patterns in America report. “Last year, consumers cut back on eating ‘better-for-you’ and organic foods.”

The culprit is cost. About 70 percent of respondents to a recent Technomic Inc. survey said healthier foods are increasingly difficult to afford.

Read the rest of this Charlotte Observer / Market Watch article here.

Further reading: Fat Pride community pushes back on health debate

Here’s some tips for how to eat healthy on a budget:

CIGNA reverses course after public pressure

Friday, September 25th, 2009

Last week, we posted a blog item called “CIGNA wants woman dead.” This is a new blog post related to that one. From MoveOn.org:

Last week, you were one of over 100,000 MoveOn members who stood with Dawn Smith to demand that CIGNA cover the treatment for her brain tumor.

CIGNA had been denying Dawn’s requests for two years, but when she went public, with the help of MoveOn members across the country, CIGNA reversed course. They took the first step toward resolving Dawn’s case — agreeing to pay for the test she needs to determine her treatment plan. By reversing their denials, CIGNA made it clear that they didn’t think their decision would stand up to public scrutiny.

But they didn’t offer any explanation for all the previous denials. And they didn’t guarantee that they’ll approve the next step in Dawn’s treatment. And for all we know, they’re still doing this same thing to thousands of other people whose stories haven’t caught national attention.

That’s why Dawn is insisting that CIGNA explain the policies that led them to deny her care for so long. And — for herself and all the others who are suffering — she’s demanding proof that they’re changing those policies so this never happens again. (more…)

McCain’s in town to talk health care

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

If this is the first you’re hearing about it, you’re not invited to attend. Sorry. But, you can follow the senator’s tweets. Hooray!

I like how McCain calls the invitation-only meeting a “town hall.” The only other people invited to attend are employees of Carolinas Medical Center. What, are they scared of citizens of the Q.C.? The largest and most diverse — and largely Democratic — population in the state?

And, really, this is less about health care than it is about North Carolina Sen. Richard Burr getting some face time with two-time presidential loser, Sen. John McCain.

Here’s hoping a few brave doctors share some of their patient’s insurance horror stories with the crowd.

Hospital staff and invited guests are expected to make up the crowd this morning when Republican U.S. Sens. Richard Burr, John McCain and Mitch McConnell host a health care forum at Carolinas Medical Center.

The three senators will tour the Levine Children’s Hospital near uptown Charlotte at 8:30a.m. and meet with employees, doctors and patients until 10. The event is nominally open but will take place in an auditorium that can seat only about 250 people.

“We have tremendous interest from our employees,” said hospital spokeswoman Gail Rosenburg. “We are such dominant players in this whole issue of reform that we’re pleased to be able to have this event for our employees.”

More from Charlotte.com.

There’s a new book out: Money-Driven Medicine, by Maggie Mahar. In it she looks behind the curtain and explains to her readers that insurance isn’t about them, it’s about money and power — for those who already have money and power, of course.

“We’re now treating medicine as if it were an industrial product.”

In related news, Obama’s Organizing for America group will be in town on Thursday.

N.C.’s health care townhall disrupted in Rocky Mount

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

We’ve been watching the wave of rowdy hecklers at meetings across the nation, it was only a matter of time before they hit our state.

They obviously got the memo about being disruptive. Too bad they didn’t get the memo that they’ve been bought and paid for by Washington lobbyists bent on keeping hardworking Americans under Big Business’ thumb.

Amid heckling and boos Tuesday night, North Carolina held its first congressional health-care forum since the issue has become a national flash point.

Congressman G. K. Butterfield was continually interrupted by jeers as he voiced support for President Barack Obama’s health-care plan that seems to have increasingly polarized the country in recent days. Tuesday’s two-hour forum in a steamy Rocky Mount middle school gymnasium was marked by frequent sharp exchanges.

“Read it!” shouted one man, speaking of the House health-care reform.

“How do you know I haven’t read it?” Butterfield shot back.

He was pummeled with questions about whether the health- care legislation would benefit illegal immigrants, about whether he would give up his own congressional health insurance plan, whether he would vote for something unconstitutional, and whether it would allow abortion.

Butterfield, a career judge, maintained his composure.

Read the rest of this Raleigh News and Observer article here.

Watch Rachel Maddow explain who is behind the order to disrupt town hall meetings:

Connecting the health care dots

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Ever wondered about the insurance premium food chain?

Guess whose the little fish? You. You are the shrimp. The crap on the ground that’s cheap to gather, batter and fry.

Do the math:

Uncle Joe works for the insurance company. He gives great gifts and has a nice house, and everything that comes with it. He throws great parties at his lake house every Labor Day.

The company he works for owns the three tallest buildings in the state.

Every Christmas, Uncle Joe and his whole family get to go on a cruise — all expenses paid! I got to go once. The limo was killa. It followed us wherever we went.

Meanwhile, your insurance rate goes up every year. Uncle Joe says you should call another department, his doesn’t have anything to do with your bill.

Why is it a surprise that insurance companies pull legislative strings, spending millions per day to keep things as is? They’ve got a good thing goin’.

Watch PBS’ Bill Moyers interview industry insider, Wendell Potter:

Full disclosure: The author of this post is a former insurance agent who once enjoyed trips, limo rides and bonuses paid for by insurance companies. That was before she connected the dots.

62 percent of personal bankruptcies linked to medical costs

Monday, July 20th, 2009

It’s impossible to deny that the U.S. economy is unhealthy.

When people with private insurance are forced to file bankruptcy because they can’t afford their medical bills, we’ve got a major societal problem.

The bad news: The problem’s now decades old and only getting worse.

Medical problems caused 62% of all personal bankruptcies filed in the U.S. in 2007, according to a study by Harvard researchers. And in a finding that surprised even the researchers, 78% of those filers had medical insurance at the start of their illness, including 60.3% who had private coverage, not Medicare or Medicaid.

Medically related bankruptcies have been rising steadily for decades. In 1981, only 8% of families filing for bankruptcy cited a serious medical problem as the reason, while a 2001 study of bankruptcies in five states by the same researchers found that illness or medical bills contributed to 50% of all filings. This newest, nationwide study, conducted before the start of the current recession by Drs. David Himmelstein and Steffie Woolhandler of Harvard Medical School, Elizabeth Warren of Harvard Law School, and Deborah Thorne, a sociology professor at Ohio University, found that the filers were for the most part solidly middle class before medical disaster hit. Two-thirds owned their home and three-fifths had gone to college.

Read more from Business Week.

Here’s a news report about this very issue — from two years ago:

Momentum shift favors real health care reform

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Never thought I would read the following in a news report: “Democrats are becoming less tolerant of dissent from their supposed allies in the health care industry.” But there it was, in a Los Angeles Times story picked up by Charlotte’s daily paper.

The story was about the strong health care reform legislation approved by the Senate Health Committee yesterday, which would “provide nearly every American with insurance regardless of income or medical condition … create a government program to compete directly with private insurers … [and] place new requirements on many employers to provide coverage.”

Apart from concern over how the bill would impact small businesses (something that can hopefully be worked out to small business owners’ satisfaction), it is very encouraging that the momentum in Congress is on the side of reforming health care delivery in America and making it into a more humane system. Particularly if Congress adopts the House of Representatives’ idea of largely paying for the program with a surtax on wealthy Americans. What it will take to truly revamp health care is, incredibly enough, exactly what has been happening: Democrats telling insurance companies, AKA “the tick that’s sucking America dry,” to take a hike. Kudos to Sen. Kay Hagan of North Carolina, who voted for the bill in committee yesterday.

Hagan supports public option. We think.

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

Yesterday, Sen. Kay Hagan announced her support of the health care reform package proposed by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, of which she is a member. Hagan’s announcement means that, after contradictory statements by the senator triggered a huge grassroots campaign to push her toward support of a public option as part of the health care plan, she has given her supporters what they wanted.

Probably.

There’s still some confusion about Hagan’s position, as her descriptions of the public option plan appear to contradict the actual words of the proposed law. Sigh. Whatever. Sometimes the best you can do with a politician is to get her to vote for your position whether she’s on top of the issue or not. Come what may, Hagan will vote for committee’s health care reform plan, which includes a public option, which is the reason NC progressives contacted her office in droves over the past couple of weeks. Although Hagan is generally more conservative than many of her supporters, she’s also a bright rookie senator who realizes that she’s in Washington due to a huge wave of progressive support. In other words, sometimes this democracy thing — as in, calling your representatives — actually works.

What health care ‘free market’?

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

As a follow-up to my column this week on health insurance companies, which has triggered an, er, healthy online discussion (along with the usual name-calling), here’s an interesting sidelight to the debate in Congress. Just how out of touch are some politicians when it comes to average Americans’ struggles with insurance companies? Some of them, specifically Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama and Sen. Olympia Snowe of Maine, say that the one thing they want to avoid is cutting into health insurance companies’ profits.

Snowe is expected to support health care reform in the end, but Shelby is adamant in opposition, saying that Pres. Obama’s plan for a public option would “destroy the marketplace for health care,” to which most Americans would answer, “*What marketplace?” Since when do Americans enjoy anything resembling a competitive marketplace for health care?

A new report from the reform group Health Care for America Now (HCAN), using AMA data, shows that 94 percent of the country’s insurance markets are “highly concentrated,” according to Dept. of Justice standards. Rather than offering much choice for consumers, the report states, the current health insurance system is “a market failure where a small number of large companies use their concentrated power to control premium levels, benefit packages, and provider payments in the markets they dominate.”

Gee, no wonder premiums have nearly doubled in the last six years, while profits for 10 of the largest health insurance companies shot up over 400 percent. That kind of “marketplace” we can, and should be able to choose to, do without.

Republicans mislead the American public … again

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

From MoveOn.org:

Last week Republicans on Capitol Hill held a strategy summit on how to defeat key parts of the president’s health care plan.

At one point, Republican pollster Frank Luntz declared, You’re not going to get what you want, but you can kill what they’re trying to do.”1

Luntz wrote a confidential memo that laid out the Republican strategy: Pretend to support reform. Mislead Americans about the heart of Obama’s plan, the public health insurance option. Scare enough people to doom real reform.

Since most people don’t know much about the public health care option, these lies could take root if we don’t fight back. Can you send this out to all your friends and neighbors?

5 THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT OBAMA’S PUBLIC HEALTH INSURANCE OPTION (more…)