Citizens Against Government Waste

  • ABOUT
    • MISSION/HISTORY
    • DIRECTORS/STAFF
    • SUPPORT
    • JOBS
    • INTERNSHIPS
    • CONTACT US
    • FINANCIAL INFORMATION
  • WASTEWATCHER
  • MEDIA
    • COMMENTARY
    • PRESS RELEASES
    • VIDEOS
  • ISSUES
    • CONGRESSIONAL PIG BOOK
      • EARMARK DATABASE
      • PRIME CUTS
      • ISSUE BRIEFS
      • AGENCY COMMENTS
    • GENERAL WASTE
      • AGRICULTURE REFORM
      • POSTAL SERVICE
      • TAXES
      • TRANSPORTATION
    • DEFENSE
      • AVIATION & SPACE
      • F-35 JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER
      • PROCUREMENT
    • HEALTH AND SCIENCE
      • PRICE CONTROLS
      • GOVERNMENT RUN HEALTHCARE
      • 340B DRUG DISCOUNT PROGRAM
      • PHARMACY BENEFIT MANAGERS
      • TOBACCO HARM REDUCTION
    • INNOVATION & TECHNOLOGY POLICY CENTER
      • ANTITRUST
      • ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
      • BIOPHARMACEUTICALS
      • INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
      • PRIVACY
      • TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION
      • TELECOMMUNICATIONS
    • STATE ISSUES
  • ITPC
    • ANTITRUST
    • ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
    • BIOPHARMACEUTICALS
    • INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
    • PRIVACY
    • TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION
    • TELECOMMUNICATIONS
  • CCAGW

Healthcare

  • Home
  • Healthcare
  • Page 63
Healthcare, PBM, PBMs, Pharmacy Benefits Manager

Healthcare: Everyone Gets a Deal and Taxpayers Get the Tab

October 1, 2009 staff Comments Off on Healthcare: Everyone Gets a Deal and Taxpayers Get the Tab

No one questions that the nation’s healthcare system is troubled and needs to be fixed.  Typically, Congress would propose legislation to fix the heart of the problem and then cut whatever side deals are needed to pass the legislation. 

The Obama administration and congressional majority campaigned on a theme of changing the way Washington worked.  Most voters assumed that meant negotiations on major legislation would be open and transparent.  Unfortunately, there is less transparency than ever as final House and Senate healthcare bills are being crafted behind closed doors.

Healthcare, PBM, PBMs, Pharmacy Benefits Manager, Taxes

Budget Gimmicks Hide the True Costs of Obamacare –

September 1, 2009 staff Comments Off on Budget Gimmicks Hide the True Costs of Obamacare –

There is a lot of discussion of how much the Obama healthcare plan will cost the federal government.  The House bill, if passed, will spend more than $1 trillion over 10 years and the Senate bill would spend more than $800 billion over 10 years.  This spending will be paid for with a lot of […]

Defense, Healthcare, PBM, PBMs, Pharmacy Benefits Manager

The Devil is in the Details of the Healthcare Bills, Or Not

August 1, 2009 Leslie Paige Comments Off on The Devil is in the Details of the Healthcare Bills, Or Not

President Obama and congressional Democrats have been playing defense on healthcare reform throughout the month of August as congressional town hall meetings across the country have erupted in anger and frustration.  A favorite theme in the President’s and his allies’ speeches is that Americans have been manipulated and exploited by opponents of his healthcare initiatives, jack-booted obstructionists who are peddling falsehoods about what is actually in the bills.

Education, General Waste, Healthcare, Obamacare, Pharmaceuticals, Taxes

Salvage the Good from the Healthcare Debacle

August 1, 2009 Thomas Schatz Comments Off on Salvage the Good from the Healthcare Debacle

The healthcare reform juggernaut, arguably the most radical attempt to remake the economy and the nation’s healthcare infrastructure in history, was supposed to have flown through Congress before the August recess with nary a peep.  Instead, as Americans have gotten wind of its alarming provisions and exorbitant costs, the plan appears to be fizzling fast in the summer heat.

Healthcare, Biosimilars, General Waste, Pharmaceuticals

A “Generic” Call for Change

June 1, 2009 Thomas Schatz Comments Off on A “Generic” Call for Change

As Congress braces for the largest reform of healthcare in the nation’s history, lost in the debate has been an issue critical to federal and state healthcare budgets, as well as the ability of consumers to afford lifesaving drugs.  The issue is whether Congress should grant generic makers of the next generation of medications called “biologics” the same regulatory approval treatment it did for chemical drugs under the 1984 Hatch-Waxman Act.

General Waste, Healthcare, Taxes

Healthcare Reform: A Pricey Prescription

June 1, 2009 staff Comments Off on Healthcare Reform: A Pricey Prescription

President Obama promised this would be the year of health care reform, but many are bracing for what this “reform” could really mean.  After much anticipation, Democrats have started to unveil their healthcare reform plans, revealing new policy proposals that would, among other things, expand Medicaid, impose individual and employer mandates, enlarge the almost bankrupt Medicare program, create a new government-run healthcare plan, and cost at least $1 trillion over 10 years.  The overall result will inevitably be higher taxes, less patient choice, and ultimately, rationing of care.

Healthcare, Budget, General Waste, Medicare, Social Security

Medicare/Social Security Insolvency

May 1, 2009 Sean Kennedy Comments Off on Medicare/Social Security Insolvency

While the Obama Administration ratchets up support for government-run healthcare, which would be a new entitlement program, the government trustees who monitor the nation’s two largest entitlement programs, Medicare and Social Security, have reported that they are both less than a decade away from insolvency. 

Healthcare, Entitlements, General Waste

Massive Expansion of SCHIP

January 1, 2009 staff Comments Off on Massive Expansion of SCHIP

Congress is poised to pass a massive expansion of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP).  Originally, SCHIP was designed to help low-income families who earn too much to qualify for Medicaid gain access to health insurance for their children.  However, under the bill currently being considered (H.R. 2), SCHIP’s income eligibility level would rise from the current 200 percent to at least 300 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL), or about $63,000 for a family of four.  In addition, some states don’t count certain types of income or have an approved waiver in order to boost eligibility for the program. 

Healthcare, General Waste, RACs

RAC-king Up Medicare Savings

November 1, 2008 Leslie Paige Comments Off on RAC-king Up Medicare Savings

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) released its most recent analysis of improper payments in the Medicare program on November 17, 2008.  The good news is that vigorous cost recovery programs have helped whittle the percentage of improper payments in the Medicare fee-for-service program from 3.9 percent in FY 2007 to 3.6 percent this year. 

Entitlements, General Waste, Healthcare, Improper Payments, Medicaid, Taxes

Medicare Fraud: Not a New Story

September 1, 2008 Elizabeth Wright Comments Off on Medicare Fraud: Not a New Story

Just before the August congressional break, Citizens Against Government Waste testified before a forum on Medicare fraud that was chaired by Sens. Mel Martinez (R-Fla.) and John Cornyn (R-Texas).  Sen. Martinez introduced S. 3164, the Seniors and Taxpayers Obligation Protection Act (STOP) of 2008, a bill that does several things to address the continuing problem of out-of-control fraud in the Medicare program.

Posts pagination

Previous 1 … 62 63 64 65 Next

Search

© KeyDesign Themes. All rights reserved.