Why American Healthcare Costs So Much

A simple example of how uninsured people in emergency rooms is not a rational way to run anything:

I am a physician in a pediatric emergency department.  Every day, I can easily count about $10,000 that are wasted in our department because of overtesting, overtreatment, and bureaucratic regulations.  The ER pregnancy test is a wonderful example. 

Pretty much every day, a teenage girl comes to the emergency department because of abdominal pain (or because they just want to see if they are pregnant).  Because the pain might mean something serious if the patient is pregnant, a pregnancy test is necessary. In my town, a pregnancy test can be bought at the dollar store (yes, for a dollar), but in the emergency department, we have to collect a urine sample and send it to our lab for the test to be done. The test in our lab is essentially the same as the $1 pregnancy test, but government regulations (the CLIA laws) prevent us from performing the test in the department unless we go through a lot of paperwork, training, and government review to make sure we are performing the test reliably and then undergo random quality assurance checks and yearly reviews.

The test takes about 5 minutes, but because it has to wait behind all the other tests the lab is performing, the average turnaround time for the emergency department is about 1 1/2 hours.  This of course clogs the department, contributes to longer waiting times for others waiting to be seen, and increases costs enormously.  Of course for many of our patients, the ER visit is "free," so it saves them a dollar.  It is tempting to ask patients to go out and buy a pregnancy test and report the results to us, but of course the risk involved is too great, not to mention the downside of dissatisfied patients.

This is but one small example of the type of thing that occurs thousands of times every day in emergency departments across the country, costing unfathomable amounts of money and huge amounts of time and frustration to both physicians and patients.

More On The Blackwater Charges

It gets creepier, especially when you consider the confluence of far-right evangelicalism and American military power, controlled by Cheney and Rove. More here and here. Remember that Eric Prince's father co-founded the Christianist Family Research Center. They were looking for a Christianist-Islamist war, and Cheney and Bush gave them the theater. But the allegations have not been proven yet and should be treated with skepticism for the time being.

Astroturfing Is Still Activism

Ambers pushes back against liberal bloggers complaining about top-down GOP activism:

It is easy and comfortable to assume that because you've discovered the presence of Astroturf activism, there is no there there, or there is nothing that sustains or nourishes the Astroturfing. The point is not to question whether conservatives are artificially magnifying their voices — yes of course they are, predictably and not in secret — it's that real anxiety and real enthusiasm provide a catalyst for the Astroturfing to work — and the Astroturfing provides a catalyst for the anxiety and enthusiasm to manifest.

And he stands by his comparison of the campaign against  health-care reform to the effort to preserve Social Security four years ago:

Democrats were able to defeat President Bush on Social Security because they found a way to capitalize on inherent skepticism about forcing that cherished institution to change. Make no mistake, the effort to defeat Social Security reform won because of a mix of organic anxiety, inorganic organizing, focus grouped-messaging and wealthy people and interests writing large checks. Today, we're at a similar juncture, except for the fact that the wealthy, organized/organic/inorganic protesters are on the other side of an issue. Democrats may have used different tactics — protesting outside of places as opposed to inside of them — but that's not terribly germane. […] Even if you think that the Dems have the right policy on both issues, the strategic analogy is, I think, valid.

It’s On Now, Ctd

A reader writes:

You hit the nail on the head with this one – my brother and I pretty well disagree on everything political, and had been going back and forth rather heatedly on the healthcare debate. However, once I presented the issue as a reform of health insurance industry practices, we found ourselves, rather to our mutual amazement, agreeing on something for the first time in years.

Frame on …

Retract It, Gibbs, And Apologize

oxfordgirl: Shame: White House called Ahmadinejad the “elected leader” of Iran when asked whether Obama recognized the Iranian ‘president’

AnnCurry: WH spokesman Robert Gibbs has unleashed a twitter-storm

2hamed: بخوانید: Ahmadinejad is not my elected president!: Ahmadinejad is not my elected president! احتما..

madyar: Reading: “White House calls Ahmadinejad elected leader of Iran / OBAMA,we will never forget :((

lettersoftheliv: White House calls A’jad “Elected Leader of Iran….” “Yes We Can” becomes “But No, YOU CAN’T…..”

FreedomF8er: Shame on Mr. Gibbs 4 calling Ahmadijejad the “elected” President. Much blood has bn shed 2 show otherwise

StopAhmadi: It wasn’t an election. It was a one-way road to continous dictatorship. American ppl should question their president..

The Coup Deepens

Robert Mackey writes that Ahmadinejad has seized control of the intelligence ministry:

According to a report published on the English-language Web site of Iran’s Parliament on Saturday, after Mr. Ahmadinejad fired the previous minister, Gholam-Hussein Mohseni-Ejei, he appointed himself “caretaker minister.” Even if he does not intend to hold on to the position, Mr. Ahmadinejad is in direct control of the intelligence ministry at a sensitive moment, as the regime attempts to convict leading members of the opposition that it has charged with conspiring to overthrow the government on behalf of foreign powers. The report notes that a conservative legislator called the move illegal.