Stopped Caring About Health Care Reform? Maybe There’s a Cure…

The health of the health care system will affect you as professionals and as citizens for a long time to come. But if you’re not political activists on the left or the right, there’s a good chance that, like many busy people, you’ve grown pretty sick of the daily news on the topic. Why? Here’s an excerpt from an excellent post on what’s missing from the news and why this means that so-called up-to-the-minute news can hide the real story as often as it can reveal it:

At the scale of news, almost every story looks complicated. Health reform is an impossible-to-follow morass of Congressional committees, policy proposals, industry talking points, and think tank reports. Pull back the lens a bit, however, and you see a fairly straightforward story whose basic contours haven’t changed all that much since 1994. […]

Why is the Media Silent on Internationally Tested Single-Payer Option?

Here’s an excerpt from a recent article on the single-payer option for health care reform that appeared in the Online Journal:

As a civilized nation, we would never tolerate a system where police or fire services were treated as optional for some residents. To understand how utterly absurd our private health care system is, imagine life in America if we treated police and fire services the way we now treat most health care services.

Photo courtesy of California Nurses Association.

In fact, we posted back in May about nurses who got arrested protesting the tabling of the single-payer option by a Senate Finance Committee. But since then, the media has been largely silent on the single-payer option, despite the fact that some version of it serves as the foundation of the health care system in most other prosperous industrialized nations. These nations are neither socialist nor communist, but their citizens have higher average life expectancies than our own. In these places, health care is viewed as an essential service rather than something each and every person may or may not be able to afford at any given time—depending on such variables as work status, marital status, health status, income level, genetic makeup, luck, place of residence, and so on.

Does it really make sense that no one is even talking about this option? Compare this silence to the amount of coverage devoted to false claims about “death panels” in the media in recent weeks. Is this imbalance in coverage serving the interests of the […]

Interesting Times: On “Death Panels” and the Health Policy Debate

This New York Times article is worth a look.

Reporters Jim Rutenberg and Jackie Calmes trace how the “death panel” rumors that are currently dominating the national debate over health care reform have grown—one might say metastasized—over time, and it names the people responsible for propagating these falsehoods.

As our readers know, at AJN we usually avoid taking sides in partisan political fights. We focus on issues that are important to nurses and their patients, and when we publish articles that concern health care policymaking, we try to present the facts as objectively as possible. […]

Nurse Bloggers Not Afraid to Tackle Health Care Reform

“Nurse Ratched” is a blogger who recently took the initiative and got an interview with former Vermont governor Howard Dean about health care reform. It’s great to see nurses who are helping take citizen journalism to the next level. 

And here’s a very sensible, open-minded post at Florence dot com about the health care system in Canada and whether it’s as frightening and awful as it’s made out to be.  (Hint: she thinks it isn’t. And yes, we just mentioned this blogger in our last post. We’ll stop now!)

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Death by Misinformation: What Health Care Reform Is Up Against

At a recent town hall meeting, a man stood up and told Representative Bob Inglis to “keep your government hands off my Medicare.” The congressman, a Republican from South Carolina, tried to explain that Medicare is already a government program — but the voter, Mr. Inglis said, “wasn’t having any of it.”

(Read the whole column by Paul Krugman in the NY Times.)

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