Anyone else listen/watch yesterday?
I was impressed. I thought both sides did a good job of actually talking about the issue. Solutions differ (of course) but for once, I thought the politicians were doing a fairly decent job of being serious.
That said, I thought the immediate media coverage was shameful, inaccurate and clearly written before the summit took place. The coverage this morning has been more thoughtful and accurate.
My thoughts: I'm happy that the medical malpractice issue seems to have jumped out as a piece of common ground that both sides can get behind. That might actually happen. Yeah for all of us on this site. The differences in approach to solving a problem that both sides agree exist seem to be
1) Do this in small bits or as a comprehensive bill?
2) Increase competition via decreased regulation for across state line sales of insurance OR creation of a health insurance exchange that has federally based regulation (instead of state) but includes products from all states?
3) Attempt to increase coverage by 3 million or 30 million?
4) Use Catastrophic/HSA plans vs. Preventative-paid/traditional insurance products?
More, I'm sure. Anyone want to discuss? (Seriously? I'm not up for a BS partisan word/personality/culturewars fight on here - or in Congress.)
I was impressed. I thought both sides did a good job of actually talking about the issue. Solutions differ (of course) but for once, I thought the politicians were doing a fairly decent job of being serious.
That said, I thought the immediate media coverage was shameful, inaccurate and clearly written before the summit took place. The coverage this morning has been more thoughtful and accurate.
My thoughts: I'm happy that the medical malpractice issue seems to have jumped out as a piece of common ground that both sides can get behind. That might actually happen. Yeah for all of us on this site. The differences in approach to solving a problem that both sides agree exist seem to be
1) Do this in small bits or as a comprehensive bill?
2) Increase competition via decreased regulation for across state line sales of insurance OR creation of a health insurance exchange that has federally based regulation (instead of state) but includes products from all states?
3) Attempt to increase coverage by 3 million or 30 million?
4) Use Catastrophic/HSA plans vs. Preventative-paid/traditional insurance products?
More, I'm sure. Anyone want to discuss? (Seriously? I'm not up for a BS partisan word/personality/culturewars fight on here - or in Congress.)
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