2013年12月2日星期一
beats by dr dre pro their employers
Candidates' beats by dr dre pro red
healthcare fixes More than 45 million americans now have no health insurance at
all.Another 25 million have some coverage, but not enough to pay their medical
bills. For the 6 in 10 americans who do have healthcare plans through their
employers, each year finds them paying higher premiums and higher deductibles
even as their coverage shrinks. Their employers, meanwhile, have to cope with
annual premium increases of 10, 20, or 30 percent.Many have to shop around each
year just to find an insurance policy they can afford.Some give up and stop
offering insurance altogether. In short, the american healthcare system is a
mess.And recent polls show that, next to the economy and iraq, healthcare is
foremost on voters' minds. "We're spending twice percapita what other countries
are spending and we're 19th out of 19 for conditions that are amenable to
medical care,"Says karen davis, the president of the commonwealth fund, a
nonprofit, private foundation dedicated to improving the nation's healthcare
system. "Twothirds of american adults have a problem either getting or paying
for medical care. " The presidential candidates' prescriptions to fix the
healthcare system are strikingly different.John mccain would offer tax credits
to help people buy insurance.He'd pay for it by taxing as income the healthcare
benefits that people currently receive from beats by dr dre pro their employers.
Barack obama, on the other hand, would build on the current public/private
system by expanding medicaid and the state children's health insurance
program(Schip).He'd create a national health insurance exchange that the
uninsured and small businesses could buy into.To pay for it, he would roll back
the bush tax cuts for the wealthy. Each plan is expected to have a very
different impact on individuals like mindy hedges, who just lost her insurance,
as well as on businesses like cox sons, which is struggling with beats by dre
studio high premiums. Here's a look at why. A fundamental problem The
nation's healthcare system has evolved into a huge rube goldberglike
contraption.Fix one part of it, and you can cause worse problems in another.At
the core of that complex machine are millions of uninsured americans. When
people don't have insurance, they tend to put off getting care that medical
doctors say is necessary.The result:Those conditions can deteriorate.The
uninsured often end up in the emergency room, where hospitals are required to
treat them, even if the people can't pay.That drives up healthcare costs for
everyone. "The important thing is to ensure that everybody has health
insurance,"Says dr.Henry simmons, president of the national coalition on health
in washington. "Every other country that today has universal coverage provides
it at about onethird to onehalf the cost, every bit as good coverage in some
cases better. "
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