It’s no secret that institutions of all stripes focus their communications on certain messages day to day.
We thought it would all be a little more open and transparent if we went ahead and published what our focus will be for the day, along with any related articles, documents, or reports.
Supporting article: “Health bill foes solicit funds for economic study,” Washington Post, 11/16/09
Supporting report: “Health Care Reform: Creating a Sustainable Health Care Marketplace,” Business Roundtable, November 2009 (pdf)
Talking Points: Reform Opponents’ Pre-Determined “Study”
o You may recall that last month, the insurance lobby offered an “analysis” that even the company who produced it said was skewed because that’s what the insurance companies paid for.
o And just days after that report, another insurance company produced a similarly flawed study.
Talking Points: Controlling Costs for Families, Small Businesses, and the Government
o Changing the way we handle hospitalizations, to prevent mistakes and to prevent unnecessary readmissions.
o Creating incentives in the payment system to reward quality of care rather than just the quantity of procedures.
o Giving physicians incentives to collaborate in the coordination of patient care.
o Investing in research into what works and what doesn’t in health care.
o Reducing hospital-acquired infections and other avoidable health-center acquired conditions through rigorous reporting and transparency.
o Putting prevention first, rewarding care that focuses on wellness and treating the whole patient in an integrated and coordinated delivery system.
o Tackling the insurance bureaucracy, streamlining the payment system to save time and money that is now spent processing claims and navigating through the byzantine insurance system.
o Establishing a health insurance exchange with a public insurance option, where individuals and small businesses can buy lower-cost insurance that will spur competition and put downward pressure on costs.
o A fee on insurance companies offering high-premium plans — which would create a strong incentive for more efficient plans that would help reduce the growth of premiums.
o Establishing a Medicare commission — which would develop and submit proposals to Congress aimed at extending the solvency of Medicare, slowing Medicare cost growth, and improving the quality of care delivered to Medicare beneficiaries.
Topics: economic study, Economy, health bill, health care, Health Care, health care reform, Insurance Companies, Reform Opponents, sustainable health marketplace, U.S., United States, White House
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