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Letters to the Editor: Term Limits May 10th, 2005
Letters to the Editor: Government Failure May 10th, 2005
Letters to the Editor: Americans Need a Smarter, Cleaner Energy Policy April 26th, 2005
Letters to the Editor: Accuracy in Reporting Needed April 11th, 2005
Letters to the Editor: Register to Vote March 28th, 2005
Letters to the Editor: Seeking Election March 27th, 2005
Letters to the Editor: Parking Regulations on Route for Cedar Key? March 21st, 2005
Letters to the Editor: Re: Fees Have Rich Aroma February 24th, 2005
Letters to the Editor: A Few Comments to the City Commission February 12th, 2005
Letters to the Editor: Health Clinic a Win-Win Idea December 21st, 2004
Letters to the Editor: Thank You from Clothe A Child Program December 9th, 2004
Letters to the Editor: Thank You and Congratulations November 8th, 2004
Letters to the Editor: Sidewalks??? November 5th, 2004
Letters to the Editor: Introducing Hilltop Alternative School November 5th, 2004
Letters to the Editor: Thank You to All Those Who Participated November 3rd, 2004
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MEDICARE IS THE SOLUTION, NOT THE PROBLEM! | MEDICARE IS THE SOLUTION, NOT THE PROBLEM!Amy Gernhardt July 30 marks the 46th Anniversary of Medicare`s passage, arguably one of the greatest public health treasures of the 20th century. Sadly, with the craze to fix nearly 30 years of deficit spending with the swoop of a pen, this great program is on the chopping block. Republicans and some Democrats seek to cut this "entitlement program" that, according to Representative Paul Ryan ("Ryan urges privatization of Medicare," April 13), is "bankrupting the federal government." I think this analysis fails to shed light on the real issue: administrative waste perpetrated by private health insurance companies. Because of their profit-driven focus, the health insurance industry drives up costs by spending 20% of every healthcare dollar on marketing, CEO`s salaries, etc. Medicare covers 45 million senior Americans and Americans with disabilities, yet its overhead costs are only 3%. Ryan`s plan to privatize Medicare and raise its eligibility age to 67 will only force rates to go up even more because this population of people, who in general have increased healthcare needs, will be thrust into the private market with a flimsy voucher to help pay for health costs. The way to fix our health and financial crises is by increasing and expanding Medicare for all - this will reduce administrative waste, allow the government to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies to lower prescription drug costs, increase the percentage of healthy people in the program, and centralize patients` medical information for improved quality of care. |
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