Gov. Rick Scott has a plan for the health care of Florida’s children, seniors, and disabled, and it’s not good.
His plan is nothing less than a corporate takeover of Medicaid, with HMOs managing the care of our state’s most vulnerable.
The Legislature passed Gov. Scott’s plan, but it requires a number of rules to be waived by the Obama Administration (through the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services).
We need your help to protect Florida’s most vulnerable from Gov. Scott.
Florida has already tried privatizing Medicaid, and it didn’t work.
Since 2006, five counties have participated in a pilot program where profit-driven HMOs dictated the care Medicaid recipients received.
A recent study by researchers at Georgetown University showed the program didn’t work, stating:
There is no clear evidence that the managed care pilot programs are
saving money, and if they are whether it is through efficiencies or at the
expense of needed care.
Medicaid covers our poorest citizens, many of whom are children, disabled, or reside in nursing homes. As a public program accountable to taxpayers, it has also controlled costs far better than corporate insurance companies.
The Obama Administration needs to make sure Florida puts people first, not profits.
Write the Obama Administration and tell them Floridians don’t want Gov. Scott's corporate takeover of Medicaid.
Let’s make sure the Obama Administration hears from all of us.
it is conventional GOP wisdom that privatising a government program saves money. In the case of medical care, this is not the case. The privatized Medicare Advantage costs more than standard Medicare.
If privatizing saves money, by all means do it. But do this based on facts from a scientific study, not based on conservative ideology or values that will cost taxpayers more money.
Subscribe to the Rightardia feed: http://feeds.feedburner.com/blogspot/UFPYA
Netcraft rank: 6627 http://toolbar.netcraft.com/site_report?url=http://rightardia.blogspot.com
Rightardia by Rightard Whitey of Rightardia is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at rightardia@gmail.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment