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Displaying results 1 - 25 of 27 for lower overall healthcare. Subscribe to this search

  1. article Cortese/Smoldt: Healthcare needs to focus on keeping people healthy

    Wednesday, January 9, 2013 9:48 am

    Regardless of what you think about the Affordable Care Act (ACA), also called Obama Care, the delivery of healthcare in the U.S. needs a major overhaul. The focus should be on patients and on high value healthcare. That means doing what it takes to get better outcomes, better safety, better service at lower overall costs — a focus on value, not on volume.

    1 image(s)

  • article Too busy to celebrate being an emergency room nurse

    Saturday, October 11, 2003 5:52 am

    Registered nurse Faith Turner talked on a cell phone, delegated work and typed schedules into a database — all at the same time.

  • article End of Cigna contract hurts moms-to-be

    Tuesday, April 29, 2008 8:38 pm

    Pregnancy is stressful enough without having to worry about losing your obstetrician. But that's exactly what's happening with many pregnant women across the East Valley since Cigna HealthCare and Catholic Healthcare West announced the sudden end last week of a two-year contract with the insurer's health care plan.

    2 image(s)

  • article Letter: This isn't really a question of choice

    Sunday, February 12, 2012 12:00 pm

    This week's news-talk programs backed up with rhetoric from most Republican Presidential candidates was abuzz with talk of compulsion versus choice. We're being told "It's a war on religious freedom of choice." Many criticize a decision by HHS requiring that Catholic-sponsored enterprises who provide health care benefits to employees must include in that package contraception and related health care services. It appears that the decision requires these institutions to provide services which contradict church teachings and therefore, infringes on choice and steps over the boundary between church and state. But is it necessarily so?

  • article Study: Arizona death rates shrank when Medicaid coverage grew

    Sunday, July 29, 2012 1:27 pm

    WASHINGTON – Arizona’s 2001 expansion of Medicaid coverage resulted in lower death rates in the state, according to a study of several states that links increased coverage to fewer deaths and overall better health.

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  • article Brown: Obamacare -- Lies, mistruths, falsehoods and fabrications

    Saturday, July 7, 2012 7:10 pm

    Legalization of something does not necessarily make it a good idea. It was once legal to own a slave. Democrats who voted against abolishing slavery in 1864, have been doing their part ever since to enslave Americans to one social program or another. Obamacare is just the latest example.

    2 image(s)

  • article Brown: Obamacare -- Lies, mistruths, falsehoods and fabrications

    Saturday, July 7, 2012 7:10 pm

    Legalization of something does not necessarily make it a good idea. It was once legal to own a slave. Democrats who voted against abolishing slavery in 1864, have been doing their part ever since to enslave Americans to one social program or another. Obamacare is just the latest example.

    2 image(s)

  • article Winter weather stirs up Valley kids' coughs

    Sunday, December 28, 2008 5:16 pm

    The string of winter storms that blasted the Valley in recent weeks is bringing more children into local emergency rooms with respiratory issues.

    3 image(s)

  • article GM posts record loss, offers buyouts to workers

    Wednesday, February 13, 2008 1:58 am

    DETROIT - General Motors Corp. reported a $38.7 billion loss for 2007 on Tuesday, the largest annual loss ever for an automotive company, and said it is making a new round of buyout offers to U.S. hourly workers in hopes of replacing some of them with lower-paid help.

  • article ER is the first choice for many Valley patients

    Tuesday, April 20, 2004 11:14 pm

    A new study is blowing away assumptions that emergency rooms are crowded with people who are uninsured, undocumented and in need of emergency care.

    2 image(s)

  • article National report gives Ariz. poor marks in child well-being

    Thursday, August 2, 2012 6:49 am

    Arizona is not doing well by its children, according to an annual report released last week by the Annie E. Casey Foundation.

    1 image(s) 5 article(s)

  • article Flake: Recommendations for 'Super Committee'

    Thursday, October 20, 2011 9:36 am

    In a strange turn of political events, pro wrestler legend Hulk Hogan announced this week that he would make a great president. While I have doubts about that, Hogan did state that as president he would enact a “flat tax across the board.”

    1 image(s)

  • article Health coverage for Arizona children among lowest in nation

    Friday, September 23, 2011 11:00 am

    WASHINGTON – Children were less likely to have health insurance in Arizona than in any state except Texas or Nevada, according to data released Thursday by the Census Bureau.

    It said 12.58 percent of children in the state – roughly one of every eight age 17 and under – was uninsured in 2010, when the numbers were gathered. The national rate was 8 percent.

    A state official said the number of uninsured children in Arizona “tends to be a little bit deceiving” because of the high number of undocumented immigrant children who are ineligible for most coverage.

    But child health advocates in Arizona said the numbers sound about right.

    “If you look at a number of factors in this state … then it’s not a surprise,” said Arizona’s Children Association President Fred Chaffee.

    The recession has been the primary cause of the high rate of uninsured children, said Matt Jewett, director of health policy for the Phoenix-based Children’s Action Alliance.

    Many Arizonans have health insurance through their or a family members’ work, according to Census data. But as parents lose jobs, families lose that health coverage.

    For such families, privately purchased health insurance is often unaffordable, according to a Census report based on the data.

    “As the economy deteriorates … yes, we do have more children that are uninsured,” said Chris Sexton, director of the Apache County Public Health Services District.

    Apache County had the highest percentage of uninsured children in the state, among the counties broken out by the Census. The bureau did not release numbers for the five smallest counties, even though they were included in the overall state figures.

    Arizona does provide KidsCare, a state–federal insurance program for eligible children whose families earned between one and two times the federal poverty limit and have no other options for healthcare, Jewett said. But the state froze enrollment in KidsCare in January 2010.

    Nearly 30,000 children who were on the program have lost coverage since the freeze began and the KidsCare waiting list has ballooned to more than 120,000.

    “If you have people (at) that lower end of the income scale who would be eligible for KidsCare, they may not have the option for private insurance, so they basically have no options,” said Dr. Eve Shapiro, a Tucson pediatrician.

    The Census data, which was gathered throughout 2010, likely does not reflect the full impact of the KidsCare freeze, Jewett said.

    Without insurance, families will wait until an emergency to seek care for their children, Chaffee said.

    “In many instances, their primary–care physician will become the emergency room,” he said.

    But Monica Coury, spokeswoman for the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System, cautioned against reading too much into the Census numbers.

    “Aggregated data is good … but it doesn’t always tell the specific state story,” Coury said. She noted that the rate of uninsured children in Arizona is inflated by the state’s unique demography, which includes many undocumented immigrants.

    “Our number tends to be a little bit deceiving in that regard,” she said.

    Whatever the reasons for the high rate, child health advocates believe the KidsCare freeze to be the wrong decision.

    “The policies they have chosen to balance the budget on the backs of children (are) ridiculous,” Shapiro said. “Because in the long term it’s going to have such far-reaching implications.”

    Chaffee of Arizona’s Children Association agrees.

    “Kids who are sick don’t thrive as well as healthy kids in school,” he said. “There will be some … workforce issues in the intermediate to long term.”

    Max Levy is a reporter for Cronkite News Service

  • article What will employers do when health reforms kick in?

    Sunday, June 26, 2011 11:00 am

    Several studies have snaked across the health policy landscape in recent weeks making assorted predictions about what employers will do after health reforms kick in come 2014.

    One early June report based on a consulting firm's survey of 1,300 firms found that 30 percent expected to stop sponsoring a health plan after the national system of health exchanges is begun.

    That phone survey was denounced by many reform supporters in and out of Congress, who noted it was based on a survey taken after questioners "educated" the respondents on details of the health plan.

    Other earlier surveys that relied on more detailed sampling have reported a much smaller response from employers, and the consulting firm later conceded its work was a survey of attitudes more than a predictive analysis of economic behavior.

    The reform law actually penalizes larger firms that drop health plans for their workers -- if their workers get subsidized coverage from the health exchanges. And the new law also offers some tax incentives for small firms to provide coverage.

    Several other reports issued in mid-June also looked at the employer coverage problem.

    One study from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation noted that only about 61 percent of non-elderly Americans got health care coverage through an employer in 2009, down from 69 percent in 2000, and suggested that many who lost workplace coverage either turned to public insurance programs or had no coverage as the country entered recession.

    And a study from the Urban Institute concluded that the health insurance changes would result in significant savings for firms with fewer than 60 workers, and would likely lead to about a 10 percent increase in the share of firms with 100 or fewer employees offering such coverage.

    But coverage numbers mask another problem with employer-sponsored plans that may not be resolved by the reform plan -- workers are paying a much bigger share of premium increases relative to the overall rise in health costs paid for employer-sponsored plants in the past decade.

    Data released by the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality showed that average annual premium shares for workers rose by as much as 121 percent between 2001 and 2009.

    The worker share of the average annual premium for an employee-plus-one plan rose 121 percent, from $1,070 to $2,363 over the 8 years, while the total cost for the plans rose by 66 percent, from $5,463 to $9,053.

    Workers' share for a family plan rose 100 percent, from $1,741 to $3,474, while the total cost went up 74 percent, from $7,509 to $13,027. And workers with single coverage saw their premium share go up 92 percent, from $498 to $957, while the total cost of the plan went up by 62 percent, from $2,889 to $4,669.

    It's not clear how much the health reform law will be able to do toward holding down costs in employer-sponsored plans. The law sets up a review process for any "unreasonable" annual premium increase - defined excessive, unjustified or unfairly discriminatory, or as more than 10 percent for now, with some lower thresholds allowed state-by-state.

    However, the law gives neither federal health regulators nor state insurance commissioners any specific powers to block any rate increase - only a pulpit that they can use to force insurers to publicly justify an increase.

    If the Centers for Medicaid and Medicaid Services, which is administering the reforms, decides a rate increase is unreasonable, the insurer can withdraw it, reduce it (subject to further review) or move ahead with the "unreasonable" increase while submitting a final justification to regulators. CMS would post the decision on its website.

    Some state insurance commissioners do have powers under state law to block rate increases, but employer-sponsored plans that are "self-insured" or self-funded, or that operate in multiple states under federal rules, may not be subject to this regulation.

  • article National report gives Arizona poor marks in child well-being

    Thursday, July 26, 2012 5:45 am

    Arizona is not doing well by its children, according to an annual report released this week by the Annie E. Casey Foundation.

    1 image(s)

  • article Earmarks, bailout separate U.S. House hopefuls

    Friday, October 10, 2008 7:48 pm

    Democrat Harry Mitchell and Republican David Schweikert sparred over earmarks and the Wall Street bailout package, but they found plenty of areas for agreement during a rare debate between the District 5 congressional candidates Friday.

    2 image(s)

  • article Fast-moving storms could bring Valley more rain

    Wednesday, January 5, 2005 12:38 pm

    January 5, 2005

    2 image(s)

  • article Fast-moving storms could bring Valley more rain

    Wednesday, January 5, 2005 5:13 am

    Mother Nature might just be warming up. Despite two days of steady rain across the East Valley that intensified Tuesday with a tornado warning in Scottsdale, rescue operations in Mesa, hail in Tempe and sleet in Chandler and Gilbert — forecasters said the worst might still be ahead.

    2 image(s)

  • article Health Briefs (7/23)

    Friday, July 23, 2010 12:30 pm

    Do you know the biological age of your arteries?

  • article Health Briefs (7/21)

    Tuesday, July 20, 2010 12:30 pm

    Grills, Guys and Good Health

  • article Health Briefs (7/16)

    Sunday, July 18, 2010 9:30 am

    Team Diabetes offers meetings, training for upcoming marathons

  • article Health Briefs (7/16)

    Friday, July 16, 2010 3:30 pm

    Team Diabetes offers meetings, training for upcoming marathons

  • article Outsourcing medical care

    Monday, November 6, 2006 3:39 am

    NEW DELHI, INDIA - She’s a rodeo barrel-racing champion who runs a 180-acre ranch in Oklahoma when she’s not bouncing across back roads selling farms. Dodie Gilmore is a spry 60-year-old who loves the outdoors, but when she could no longer straddle her faithful horse, River, she knew it was time for a new hip.

    2 image(s)

  • article Health Briefs (7/28)

    Tuesday, July 27, 2010 12:30 pm

    Seminar offered on the aging spine

    5 article(s)

  • article Health Briefs (7/7)

    Thursday, July 8, 2010 9:30 am

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