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Health Care - The Republican Alternative Health Care Proposal Released today

- Aptly called the Patients' Choice Act, it provides a path to universal coverage by redirecting current subsidies for health insurance to individuals. It also provides a new safety net that guarantees access to insurance for those with pre-existing conditions.... Read full article »
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  • +2 raves DannoJyd November 03, 2009 21:26:21
    DannoJyd
    FTA:
    The nexus of their plan is redirecting the $300 billion annual tax subsidy for employment-based health insurance to individuals in the form of refundable, advanceable tax credits. Families would get $5,700 a year and individuals $2,300 to buy insurance and invest in Health Savings Accounts.

    Low-income Americans would get a supplemental debit card of up to $5,000 to help them purchase insurance and pay out-of-pocket costs. They would have an incentive to spend wisely since up to one-fourth of any unspent money in the accounts could be rolled over to the next year. The combination of the refundable tax credit and debit card gives lower-income Americans a way out of the Medicaid ghetto so they can have the dignity of private insurance. [end]

    While I still would want to read the entire bill it certainly is on a better track then the 0bamaScare bills are. It appears that the republicans are working to get rid of some of the lousy bureaucracy while the democrats are increasing it ten fold.

    Maybe there are a few left in Congress who do listen to their constituents.

    Maybe.
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  • +2 raves
    DannoJyd November 03, 2009 21:26:21
    DannoJyd
    FTA:
    The nexus of their plan is redirecting the $300 billion annual tax subsidy for employment-based health insurance to individuals in the form of refundable, advanceable tax credits. Families would get $5,700 a year and individuals $2,300 to buy insurance and invest in Health Savings Accounts.

    Low-income Americans would get a supplemental debit card of up to $5,000 to help them purchase insurance and pay out-of-pocket costs. They would have an incentive to spend wisely since up to one-fourth of any unspent money in the accounts could be rolled over to the next year. The combination of the refundable tax credit and debit card gives lower-income Americans a way out of the Medicaid ghetto so they can have the dignity of private insurance. [end]

    While I still would want to read the entire bill it certainly is on a better track then the 0bamaScare bills are. It appears that the republicans are working to get rid of some of the lousy bureaucracy while the democrats are increasing it ten fold.

    Maybe there are a few left in Congress who do listen to their constituents.

    Maybe.
  • +2 raves
    EagleEye November 03, 2009 20:35:19
    EagleEye
    Initially sounds right....but I have not read it....much more likely to skim this than the 2000 pg Demo doc
  • +2 raves
    lifelovefreedom November 03, 2009 19:52:57
    lifelovefreedom
    Read the (rough draft) 230 page Proposal here> http://thehill.com/images/sto...

    The nexus of their plan is redirecting the $300 billion annual tax subsidy for employment-based health insurance to individuals in the form of refundable, advanceable tax credits. Families would get $5,700 a year and individuals $2,300 to buy insurance and invest in Health Savings Accounts.

    Low-income Americans would get a supplemental debit card of up to $5,000 to help them purchase insurance and pay out-of-pocket costs. They would have an incentive to spend wisely since up to one-fourth of any unspent money in the accounts could be rolled over to the next year. The combination of the refundable tax credit and debit card gives lower-income Americans a way out of the Medicaid ghetto so they can have the dignity of private insurance.

    The great majority of Americans with job-based health insurance would see little more than a bookkeeping change with the Patients' Choice plan. But implicit in the policy is the acknowledgment that our system of tying health insurance to the workplace is not working for upwards of 45 million uninsured Americans.
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