8/21: Older Americans' concerns over health care not irrational
8/21: New York Times: Older Americans' concerns over health care not irrational
Bills in Congress, if passed, would "squeeze savings out of Medicare on the assumption that doctors and hospitals can be more efficient." President Obama has also said Medicare and private insurers could improve care and save money by following advice from a new federal panel of medical experts on “what treatments work best.”
Mr. Obama has repeatedly said, “Nobody is talking about cutting Medicare benefits.” At the same time, he wants to eliminate what he describes as “unwarranted subsidies” and giveaways to private Medicare Advantage plans, which use some of the money to provide extra benefits.
Knowing that Medicare itself faces a financial crisis, many older Americans object to Congress’s tapping the program to help pay for coverage of the uninsured.
This debate will likely continue for some time.
Also in the South:
ALABAMA: Gov. Riley named chairman of Southern Governors' Association
ARKANSAS: Prisoners provide labor for food bank programs
FLORIDA: State leads nation in rate of mortgage problems
GEORGIA: State's only corn ethanol plant faces bankruptcy
KENTUCKY: Jobless rate hits 11% in state
LOUISIANA: State to propose help for hurricane-damaged homes
MISSISSIPPI: Big stimulus grant goes to SmartSynch to help manage energy use at public facilities
NORTH CAROLINA: Labor unions invest in state's Democrats
SOUTH CAROLINA: New deal may end push for planned coal-burning power plant
TENNESSEE: TVA to increase electric rates, borrow billions
VIRGINIA: Creigh Deeds' speech set to brand him as moderate pragmatist
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Labels: coal, ethanol, food bank, governors, health care, jobless, labor, mortgage, TVA


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