Washington, DC-- Today, the members of Better Health Care Together (www.betterhealthcaretogether.org) sent a letter to President-Elect Obama urging him to immediately convene a national health summit of all stakeholders to address the health system crisis within the context of larger economic reform.“Addressing the needs of our nation’s health care system is essential to the country’s long-term economic strength and prosperity,” the ten CEOs and Presidents who joined in signing the BHCT letter. |
Broadband-based Applications Can Improve Care for Chronic DiseaseThe United States could cut $197 billion from its health care bill over the next 25 years by widespread use of remote monitoring to track the vital signs of patients with chronic diseases such as congestive heart failure and diabetes, according to a new study released today by economist Robert Litan. |
Releases Report Demonstrating Urgent Need to Act Quickly Nashville, TN – The number of uninsured Americans will climb by 7 million and the costs businesses pay for health care will rise by 55 percent by 2012 if current trends persist, according to a report released today by Better Health Care Together. The report titled, “Health-Cost Crossroads: Why American Businesses Urgently Need Health System Reform,” included a Spotlight on Tennessee addressing the unique health care challenges facing |
Better Health Care Together hosted a luncheon celebrating the publication of former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle’s book, Critical: What We Can Do about the Health Care Crisis. >> read more |
Washington, DC– Today, Elizabeth Edwards, Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress Action Fund and E.J. Holland, Jr, Senior Vice President of Human Resources and Communications, Embarq Corporation, testified before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Energy & Commerce Subcommittee on Health’s hearing entitled “America’s Need for Health Reform.” Both organizations are founding members of Better Health Care Together (www.betterhealthcaretogether.org), a coalition dedicated to achieving a new health care system by 2012. >> read more |
Click here to watch the video of our June 25th forum at the National Press club. The forum focused on financing options to reduce health care costs and improve access. You can download the full study discussed at the forum here. |
Experts Consider Financing Options for Health System Change at Better Health Care Together Forum Today Washington, DC (June 25) – Health reform is an imperative and financing changes could be the catalyst needed, according to non-partisan and bi-partisan policy experts along with business and union leaders at a Better Health Care Together forum today. |
Panel on “Trends in Employer Sponsored Health Coverage” at the “Prepare for Launch: Health Reform Summit 2008” Washington, DC – Today, Craig Barrett, CEO of Intel Corporation and Andy Stern, President of the Service Employees Union International (SEIU), two members of Better Health Care Together (www.betterhealthcaretogether.org), testified at the Senate Committee on Finance’s event, “Prepare for Launch: Health Reform Summit 2008: Trends in Employer Sponsored Health Coverage.” Craig Barrett, Chairman of Intel Corporation, laid out a comprehensive approach to tackle the health care challenge from the perspective of a major employer. His testimony detailed his thoughts on modernizing communication in healthcare, changing the reimbursement model, the importance of wellness & prevention, and Dossia – the innovative non-profit organization initiated by a consortium of large US employers for the purpose of creating a national system to deliver lifelong, personal, private, and portable health records for their employees. Barrett also talked about the need for health IT solutions as well as the need for home based healthcare solutions. Stern said, “In 2009, Congress has a clear choice to make. You must decide to make fixing health care a top priority and an urgent priority. The effort must be bipartisan, with the kind of leadership that was demonstrated in the “No Child Left Behind” law. It must be incorporated into your budget and chosen over expiring tax cuts for the wealthy. You must resist the pressure to legislate every detail. |
PLEASE JOIN US: Financing Health Care Forum Wednesday, June 25, 2008 Forum sponsored by: Better Health Care Together This forum will focus on financing options to reduce health care costs and improve access. A paper on financing options will be presented and discussed by the current and former directors of the Congressional Budget Office and health policy experts from business, labor, and think tanks. There is no charge for this event. MARK McCLELLAN, Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform CHRIS JENNINGS, Jennings Policy Strategies Paper Presented by: JEANNE LAMBREW, Center for American Progress JOSEPH ANTOS, American Enterprise Institute MEENA SESHAMANI, Johns Hopkins University Panelists: PETER R. ORSZAG, Ph.D., Director, Congressional Budget Office ROBERT D. REISCHAUER, Ph.D., President, the Urban Institute STUART M. BUTLER, Ph.D., Vice President, Domestic and Economic Policy Studies, The Heritage Foundation ELLEN BLACKLER, Executive Director, Public Policy, AT&T Services Inc. LOUISE NOVOTNY, Research Director, Communications Workers of America |
Obama offers a plan that seeks to transform the way chronic diseases are managed to reduce costs, requires insurance coverage for children and opens up the private health plans used by federal employees to those who can’t get coverage elsewhere. McCain’s plan is equally ambitious but veers in a decidedly different direction. His long-term goal is to decouple health insurance and the job market. He won’t ban employer-based coverage, but he wants to give people tax breaks to purchase their own health insurance, which would follow them from job to job or provide coverage to those who stay at home. The emergence of health care as a major presidential campaign talking point marks a striking comeback for an issue deemed politically radioactive for more than a decade. It’s a second act won in part by the rising cost of care; the aging — and diminishing health — of our society; and a heckuva lot of hard work and ground grading by scores of people, some of whom stood against each other during the last big health care debate. In recent years, more than a half-dozen deep-pocketed, big-name coalitions have been formed to push health care back onto the national agenda in Congress and in the White House. Among them are:
The work of these organizations is supplemented by many other more specialized groups, ranging from the Campaign for Children’s Health Care to the American Cancer Society and the American Heart Association to hospital and physician organizations. |


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