| | | |
| | |
|
|
Thousands Scramble To Get Medical Procedures Before ObamaCare Starts
Timothy Martin writing for the Wall Street Journal reported today that
thousands of patients are lining up for medical procedures and
specialist visits before ObamaCare starts
on Wednesday. Many insurers offering plans under the law are slimming
down their networks of doctors and hospitals in a bid to lower the cost
of policies, which begin coverage
Wednesday.
According to the report, nearly 70% of new plans under the health law
offer relatively narrow networks compared with many current plans,
according to a recent McKinsey & Co.
report.
"For exchange plans, it's about affordability and getting to a lower
price point," said Juan Davila, an executive vice president at Blue
Shield of California, which dropped
about 40% of its physicians who didn't agree to lower rates for the new
plans. In particular, insurers now using the Obamacare system have begun
to exclude major academic
institutions from their coverage, as these compete with cheaper
community hospitals ostensibly providing the same service.
To prevent patients from spending more of their money on better care,
the insurance plans simply eliminate the competition from coverage plans
to the benefit of community
hospitals. Many plans also require referrals to visit specialists, which
would require someone already familiar with a long-time specialist to
find a general practitioner to
direct them to the doctor they wanted to see in the first place.
The recognition by some consumers that their new plans won't always
cover the facilities or doctors they want is triggering the boomlet in
last-minute procedures, say health-
care providers. Those without this ability to rush due to their current
good health will have a "rude awakening," said James Conroy, chief
health care officer of the
Association of American Medical Colleges. He warned that these people
will likely be surprised at their limited new insurance when they
finally need to rely on Obamacare for
medical help. To read the entire report from the Wall Street Journal
please click
here.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Olympic Security Fear
At least 16 people died in a suicide bombing in southern Russia
yesterday which fit a pattern of recent terror attacks and increased the
focus on already-heavy security for the Sochi Olympics in six weeks,
U.S. officials say. The bomb used was packed with "identical" shrapnel
to that in a bombing at a railway station in Volgograd, indicating they
may have been made in the same place and supporting suspicions the
bombings were linked, investigators said.
President Putin, who has staked his prestige on February's
Sochi Games and dismissed threats from Chechen and other Islamist
militants in the nearby North Caucasus, ordered tighter security
nationwide after the morning rush-hour blast. The violence raises fears
of a concerted campaign before the Olympics, which start on February 7
around Sochi, a resort on the Black Sea, 450 miles southwest of
Volgograd. In a video posted online in July, the Chechen leader of
insurgents who want to carve an Islamic state out of the swathe of
mainly Muslim provinces south of Volgograd, urged militants to use
"maximum force" to prevent the Games from going ahead.
Today's "Hot Topic" On The Hannity Forums:
Wait - I thought if you liked your doctor, you could keep him/her... - wonderingrover
If so, then why are the people in the article below scramming to get
tests and procedures done this year while they can still see their
current doctors? I know - they must not have heard that you can keep
your current doctor. Oh, but wait, the article states that some networks
are more restrictive under the Exchange plans:
>> TV Tonight (Hannity FoxNews at 10pm ET):
Will 2014 be marred with more scandals for the administration? We'll
take a look back at the year's troubles. Plus why members of Congress
are pushing back against the explosive New York Times Benghazi attack
report. And Ainsley Earhardt is back with her final Building Homes for
Heroes story. |
|
|
|
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment