That’s how much the Washington Post reports that drug companies, health insurance companies and others in the corporate health-care business are spending on lobbying to water down health care reform in Washington, D.C.
I wonder if many uninsured and underinsured patients think that is money well spent. Or the people who have filed for bankruptcy because they couldn’t pay for health care – who are, in fact, most people who file for bankruptcy in the U.S. – do they think these millions are well-spent health-care dollars?
Instead of health care, what is the health-care industry buying with this money – more than $126 million in the first quarter? They’re buying more than 350 former Congress members and former staffers, who sell their influence to advocate on behalf of special interests.
Those in the business of corporate health care have gotten into the habit of calling government programs inefficient, but is spending money like this on lobbying instead of actually delivering care what they call “efficiency”? In truth, the most efficient reform of the health care industry would be a single-payer national health-care system.
Watch Public Citizen’s acting president, Dr. Sidney Wolfe, M.D., on PBS’s Bill Moyer’s Journal to learn more about single-payer.












TC
Prevention, Prevention, Prevention and attack the obesity epidemic. We need a new health care model that really focuses on getting people healthier. Not sure that will fly with agribusiness or pharma.
http://livesmartbook.blogspot.com
July 6, 2009 at 1:58 pm
sammyo41
I applaud President Obama for going after these companies that try and succeed in buying votes from our representatives.
It is coming to the point where we will either have a public insurance to take the big shots down a few notches and I couldn’t be more pleased!
It’s also about time OUR government returns to US!
sammyo41 -
October 3, 2009 at 5:58 pm