Obama calls for slowing growth of Medicaid, Medicare to reduce deficit Apr 13
By Jack Torry, Washington Bureau
12:53 AM Sunday, April 24, 2011
WASHINGTON — No matter which sides prevails in the intensely ideological and partisan debate in Washington over the mushrooming costs of Medicare, one thing is certain: The program as we know it is in for big changes.
“Everybody admits doing nothing is not an option,’’ said Michael Tanner, an analyst at the CATO Institute in Washington.
In particular, they contend that health costs continue to rise because of the increase of such diseases as diabetes, caused in large part by preventable conditions such as obesity. They say that until hospitals and physicians become more efficient in preventing and treating the chronically ill, U.S. health care costs will continue to soar. read more
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Ryan, Obama both fail Medicare test
Updated: April 16, 2011 - 9:01 PM
They offer contrasting approaches, but there are flaws in each.
Wisconsin Congressman Paul Ryan deserves credit for putting Medicare's soaring costs front-and-center in the raging debate over the nation's runaway spending.
But his prescription for fixing the federal health program for the elderly -- Ryan's plan would provide subsidies to buy private health insurance -- is too harsh and would shift unaffordable care costs onto seniors
The reality is that Medicare's current costs are an existential threat to the program. The total Medicare bill in 1999 was $212 billion: Ten years later, it had increased to $502 billion as the baby boomers prepared to retire.
Obama's speech offered reassuring but vague rhetoric about Medicare's future. He's right that there are alternatives to Ryan's plan, which paints in stark detail what it means to rein in entitlement programs without a tax increase.
But the president needs to provide details..
Now the president and his party need to do the same. The nation can't afford to wait until after the 2012 election..
ANOTHER CONCERN
"When Roosevelt invented Social Security, it was not designed to lift the old out of poverty. It was designed because the cost of caring for the old was crushing middle-aged families. One of the questions that needs to be asked here about the [Ryan] plan is not how does this affect the old, but rather what are the Gen-Xers and -Yers going to do when Grandpa's medical bills come due? Because they're going to come due.''read more
DR. STEVEN MILES, Minneapolis physician and bioethicist
.
They offer contrasting approaches, but there are flaws in each.
Wisconsin Congressman Paul Ryan deserves credit for putting Medicare's soaring costs front-and-center in the raging debate over the nation's runaway spending.
But his prescription for fixing the federal health program for the elderly -- Ryan's plan would provide subsidies to buy private health insurance -- is too harsh and would shift unaffordable care costs onto seniors
The reality is that Medicare's current costs are an existential threat to the program. The total Medicare bill in 1999 was $212 billion: Ten years later, it had increased to $502 billion as the baby boomers prepared to retire.
Obama's speech offered reassuring but vague rhetoric about Medicare's future. He's right that there are alternatives to Ryan's plan, which paints in stark detail what it means to rein in entitlement programs without a tax increase.
But the president needs to provide details..
Now the president and his party need to do the same. The nation can't afford to wait until after the 2012 election..
ANOTHER CONCERN
"When Roosevelt invented Social Security, it was not designed to lift the old out of poverty. It was designed because the cost of caring for the old was crushing middle-aged families. One of the questions that needs to be asked here about the [Ryan] plan is not how does this affect the old, but rather what are the Gen-Xers and -Yers going to do when Grandpa's medical bills come due? Because they're going to come due.''read more
DR. STEVEN MILES, Minneapolis physician and bioethicist
.
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