| Mr. President, Here's how you should reform health-care coverage |
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| By Robert Joiner, Beacon staff |
| Posted 4:56 am Tue., 3.9.10 |
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If Patricia Brennan had a chance to talk health-care reform with President Barack Obama Wednesday in St. Charles, her advice would be this: Keep it simple and keep it clean. A political independent and a health-care financial analyst, Brennan was turned off by the Democrats' backroom deals that had less to do with health insurance than with appeasing some lawmakers to win their votes. Brennan's attitude changed when Obama stepped in with a "wonderful" alternative plan, one stripped of the deals, outlined to the public in less than a dozen pages and addressing many of her concerns. Brennan's shifting views reflect the seesaw mood of voters interviewed by the Beacon before Obama's visit to St. Charles. Many, particularly those in the center, are frustrated both by nay-saying Republicans and wheeling-and-dealing Democrats. Others, mainly Republican, continue to oppose the initiative, while still others, largely Democrats, are impatient for change. Inform our coverageThis article contains information gathered with the help of our Public Insight Network. The St. Louis Beacon, in partnership with KETC/Channel 9, is using this journalism tool to help us solicit knowledge and insight from people who become sources through the Network. To learn about the Network and how you can become a source, please click here . Obama's proposal, offered partly to revive the Democrats' lost momentum on health care, includes expanding care and addressing tort reform through alternatives to malpractice litigation. These are two ideas Brennan embraces. "The issues are so complex and you get huge (monetary) verdicts based on emotions," she says. "I'd like to see some sort of system, like bankruptcy court for medical malpractice and allow judges who are specially trained to understand the issues and protect people but not hurt providers." Brennan also likes Obama's promise to review what she says is needless "duplicative bureaucracy" in the insurance industry. She adds that if "the morality of the issue doesn't move people, maybe the economics will. This is just another situation where the true cost of something is hidden." Obama's plan also would prevent insurance companies from denying coverage because of pre-existing conditions. It would be financed by taxing some high-cost employer-sponsored policies and raising the Medicare payroll tax for individuals earning more than $200,000 and couples earning more than $250,000. VoicesObama estimates that his plan would cost $950 billion over a decade, falling between the Senate bill's price tag of $871 billion and the House's $1.05 trillion. All three bills would offer insurance coverage to roughly 31 million uninsured people by 2019. The president's appearance in St. Charles County not only gives him a chance to preach to the choir but to appeal to independent voters. The stakes are high: If Obama loses this political fight, the Republican Party will paint Obama and his fellow Democrats as weak and ineffective after spending a year on the health issue and having nothing to show for it. HEALTH CARE 'NOT A FUNCTION OF GOVERNMENT' David Finck of Washington, Mo., would like to tell Obama to get the federal government out of health care.
Finck says that people should be more self-reliant because "health care is primarily a responsibility of the home." What would that mean for people who cannot afford health care? People should do what they "did before government got so interested in health care," says Finck. "There was a time when people took care of each other. I'm not sure that was all bad for family" to take care of their members. He didn't indicate which party he favored, but he dismissed the Democrats' reform as "a naked grab for power over the most intimate decisions individuals should make for themselves."
Buchanan, a teacher, says she senses not a little hypocrisy in the way some depict health reforms as too costly. She says some opponents are "suddenly looking at the cost" but raised no similar outcry about cost when the issue involved propping up the auto industry, "big bank bailouts," and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Overlooked, too, she argued, is the fact that many middle-class American families are struggling to preserve their health care. "The rising cost of health insurance is taking more and more from our take-home pay each year," she says. "Adding insult to injury, we are expected to pay larger deductions before we receive certain services, especially diagnostic tests." MISSED OPPORTUNITIES Judi Linville, a retired teacher at the University of Missouri at St. Louis, and a Democrat, blames her own party for some of the confusion in the health-care debate. "The Democratic plan has changed so many times I'm not sure what is in it," she says. But she credits the party for trying to address the plight of the uninsured, give doctors higher reimbursement for treating Medicare patients and taking a stand against rising insurance costs. Her concern is that subsidies the party would pay to make health insurance affordable would amount to subsidies for insurance companies.
As for her personal situation, Linville (right) of St. Louis County says she wouldn't be surprised if UMSL eventually reduced her health benefits or raised deductibles and out-of-pocket costs because the university, like most others, is facing a "financial squeeze." She is equally disturbed about the lack of guidance to help the public sort out the facts about competing proposals. She says the fight between the two political parties amounts to "a game of whose statistics you want to believe, and how they are publicized." The public would benefit, she says, from more information about consumer protections and cost estimates, especially in the context of net cost after savings. "Sometimes you have to pay something to save money," she says of GOP attacks on the cost of health proposals from Democrats. DEPENDING ON COBRA Nancy Schiller of St. Louis has lost plenty of sleep over health. She's a political independent who takes the middle ground. She opposes a public option but supports closer government scrutiny of insurance companies. Unemployed, she receives health insurance through COBRA, a program that allows workers to keep their group health insurance benefits temporarily after they lose their jobs. When Schiller held an administrative job, she was enrolled in a health plan that provided no comprehensive coverage but offered $750 in yearly benefits for doctor visits, medicine and tests. While the premiums were reasonable, she says, "by the time you take money out of your paycheck for insurance, 401K and flexible spending, you really don't have extra money left to pay the medical costs in addition to what your insurance pays." Besides, she added, the company's plan required her to pay the next $2,500 in medical costs once it spent the initial $750. She worried about being wiped out by a potential serious illness. Meanwhile, she's generally pleased with the temporary COBRA coverage she got following unemployment. In fact, she feels blessed in some ways, but would certainly tell Obama about a friend whose insurance is "going up so much that even with her raise, it was like getting a 20 percent pay cut." That, Schiller argues, is an example of why some changes are needed.
She says the current system is broken and argues that Republicans would make matters worse because "those persons with sufficient income, education and savvy will get the best health care. Those persons who have less income, education and in poor health will get what is left over or nothing at all." She also thinks that any legislation approved by Congress should allow women to pay for abortion coverage in the insurance open market, while restricting federal payment for this procedure. FIX THE ECONOMY On the other hand, voters like Sandy MacLean, a Republican from Clayton, says the public option was one of the worst ideas proposed by Democrats.
Cheryl Hammond, a self-employed computer consultant in St. Louis and a Democrat, agrees, saying "If we don't fix the economy, there will be no money to pay for anyone's health care." She adds that Democrats tend to think people have a right to health care while Republicans seem to think it's a privilege. As a small-business woman, she's concerned that she could be priced out of health insurance. Already, she says she has seen the cost of her coverage rise to $662 a month from $572.
"This is for one person who only has high blood pressure and no other health conditions," she says. Others seem to accept rising cost as inevitable. Mark Burgess, an internet technology consultant in St. Louis, believes most Americans want reforms, but says, "Republicans have been successful at portraying the reform in a negative way." He wants Obama to know that his health insurance is going up by roughly 25 percent this year. "We had already set our deductible to $7,500. Now we'll just grin and bear it." Contact Beacon staff writer Robert Joiner. Funding for health reporting is provided in part by The Missouri Foundation for Health, a philanthropic organization whose vision is to improve the health of the people in the communities it serves.
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Brent Jones | St. Louis Beacon
This Saturday was the debut of a new show by The Improv Shop that will bring out of town improv teams to St. Louis to play for — and with — a local audience. The Road Show brought teams "Everybody Grok" and "Felt" from Chicago.
We talked to Eric Christensen, producer of the Road Show and member of local improv team "Ted Dangerous"; Katie Nunn, member of "Ted Dangerous" and improv coach; and Melanie Penn and Ranjan Khan, members of local teams "Melanj" and "Magic Ratio"; about the St. Louis improv scene and why it's important to welcome teams from other cities to perform here.
Emergency preparation still lagging in St. Louis
This two-part series looks at the region's preparation for a major earthquake, tornado, epidemic illness or other disaster. Read more about St. Louis and disasters.
M.W. Guzy fears his daughters' affection for trash TV might have been genetically inherited, as he finds himself drawn to the anybody-but-Mitt show, playing on a loop on cable "news' channels.
Miguel Dulick recounts a trans-Honduras tour that, again, reminded him of the power and joy of keeping siblings and parents connected.
Ken Schechtman says that publicly traded business will not -- perhaps cannot -- put doing the right thing ahead of legally maximizing profits.
In this week's Beacon Roundtable, Dick Weiss, Jason Rosenbaum, Jo Mannies, Robert Joiner and Dale Singer sit down to talk about the Missouri primary and redistricting, the controversy around…
Editor Margaret Wolf Freivogel says the problems that froze the Beacon's site in the past are being fixed: Thank you for your patience.
Ben Finegold checks out the women's play at the Tradewise Gilbraltar Chess Congress, particularly the chess played by 17-year-old Hou Yifan of China.
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The Missouri Foundation for Health will hold a meeting to highlight its funding strategy for 2012. The meeting is scheduled for 9-11 a.m. on February 1 at the Missouri Foundation for Health's 2nd floor training room in the Grand Central building at Union Station in St. Louis.
Meetings are free and designed for health and community action nonprofits, community service clubs, human service providers and community leaders. RSVPs are encouraged: Contact Maranda Witherspoon at 800-655-5560 or [email protected]. More information.

The St. Louis Beacon rang in 2012 with a concert performance of Gilbert & Sullivan's beloved operetta, "The Mikado," at the Sheldon Concert Hall, and the Higher Education Channel was on hand to record it. Here is a link to the complete perfomance, which we hope you'll enjoy.
The musical direction of "The Mikado" was by Amy Kaiser; Craig Terry was conductor-accompanist. All proceeds from ticket sales benefitted the Beacon.