Holiday Wish-List to President-Elect Obama: Quality Health Care for all Americans

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Fri Dec 19, 2008 6:07pm EST

Holiday Wish-List to President-Elect Obama: Quality Health Care for all
Americans

LOS ANGELES, Dec. 19 /PRNewswire/ -- The following is being issued by T.
L. Kittle, CEO and founder of the Blue Diamond Foundation:
    What would help most Americans achieve optimum health care?
    Since many people living in the United States don't have access to quality
health care, this is a wish-list to President-Elect Obama of actions that can
be taken in order to ensure quality health care for everyone in the New Year.
    As many of those who are ill understand, having health insurance does not
necessarily mean having access to good health care--the current business
practices that the insurance companies are allowed to utilize often make the
insurance company itself an obstacle to quality medical care.
    So this is my Holiday Wish-List...not in any order of importance, but the
list nevertheless.
    * Physicians should not need to get approvals from insurance companies for
their orders. If lawyers don't need to ask permission, why do physicians? Not
only does the approval process create unnecessary waste, it harms lives in the
delays.
    * Eliminate pre-existing conditions.
    * Reduce co-pays and deductibles to rates that are more affordable.  Most
people don't realize how little their insurance actually covers until they
become ill.
    * Create a 'patient directs' physician protection law. Because there are
so many diseases that have false negatives on test results, not to mention
diseases there aren't even names for, the current system makes it very
difficult for physicians to help these patients--they're either afraid
insurance won't cover the services or they're afraid of getting sued later in
the medical malpractice system. There needs to be a waiver that patients can
sign that says, "This is my body, and while standards of care indicate xyz, I
would like this medical action and in discussion with my physician I accept
responsibility for negative consequences." While physicians know more about
medicine, patients know more about their bodies.  Many people are suffering
unnecessarily simply because their physician's hands are tied.
    * Pay physicians for the work they do--on par with attorneys. If
physicians get a difficult case, very few want to take it because they aren't
being compensated for time on the job. Make it mandatory for insurance
companies to provide compensation for x number of hours of research per
patient and y number of phone calls per patient per calendar year. (10 hours
of research, 25 phone calls?) Many people who are suffering horribly with an
unusual case have a difficult time finding a physician simply because
physicians can't afford to take on a lot of difficult cases.
    * Work with major corporations to develop a new paradigm for health care.
Many corporations are struggling to make profits, yet still want to provide
quality health care for their employees.  Develop a new national system,
giving corporations the option to pay into a well thought-out health care plan
that provides quality care at affordable rates, outside of the current private
system model.
    * Stop hospitals from charging more to those without insurance than the
insurance company rates.  Many people are losing their homes for amounts that
the insurance companies would pay $5,000.
    This current connection between "health insurance" somehow means "good
health care" is simply misleading, and very far from the truth in some cases.
Developing a new health insurance system, in collaboration with private
corporations and public interest groups, with government accountability, will
help make affordable health care available to everyone.
    As evident by the millions without health insurance and those with health
insurance yet being denied much needed medical care, there needs to be created
an entirely new paradigm in order to make available quality health care.
Clearly, the evidence that the current system is malfunctioning is
overwhelming.
    Health for one is healthy for all--it's time for this nation to take a
stand by implementing a new approach.
    If the major corporations would come together with the government and
public interest groups to develop a new paradigm, the people of the United
States might actually be able to access quality medical care when they need
it, as they need it, without hassle or delay--something most people in this
country have never experienced.
T. L. Kittle is the founder and CEO of the Blue Diamond Foundation,
established to assist those who need access to quality medical care.
    For more information about the Blue Diamond Foundation:
http://www.bluediamondfoundation.org

    For more information about T. L. Kittle:
http://www.powerfulpatient.org/archive/2008/08x_pitfalls_in_diagnosis.php


    Contact:  T. L. Kittle
              323-843-4200
              tlkittle@bluediamondfoundation.org


SOURCE  T. L. Kittle

T. L. Kittle, +1-323-843-4200, tlkittle@bluediamondfoundation.org
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