The numbers don’t lie: Healthcare reform law is helping Californians

January 9, 2011

The numbers don’t lie: Healthcare reform law is helping Californians

Ventura County Star | January 8, 2011 | Representative Lois Capps

In the long-running television series “The West Wing,” President Josiah Bartlett exclaims, “If you want to convince me of something, show me numbers.” Well, I’ve seen the numbers on the historic health insurance reform law passed last year and they show how it’s making a difference in the lives of people across the Central Coast and this country.

That’s why when the new leadership of Congress rushes a bill to the floor this week to repeal the law, I’ll be voting no. Healthcare reform guarantees that tens of millions of Americans currently without coverage will soon get it. According to The Star’s own reporting, 22 percent of adults in Ventura County are uninsured. But the law is especially important for the millions of people already covered because it guarantees affordable insurance will be there when you need it most.

For example, the law has already banned the odious insurance company practice of refusing coverage to children with so-called “pre-existing conditions.” In the next few years that protection will apply to all adults as well. In the meantime, states have set up plans for individuals who have already been turned away by insurance companies. And insurance companies are now banned from imposing lifetime limits to restrict how much healthcare you can receive under their plans.

We all know people who are already benefitting from this new law. But I was particularly moved when I recently read in the paper about the Strong family of Santa Barbara. At 6 months old, Bill and Victoria Strong’s daughter, Gwendolyn, was diagnosed with a rare disease, spinal muscular atrophy. Her care is extremely expensive, and before healthcare reform the Strongs lived in constant fear that Gwendolyn would reach her individual policy’s lifetime limit and become uninsurable because of her pre-existing condition.

Click HERE or on the image below to read more…


Capps Highlights Santa Barbara Family’s Health Care Predicament

January 6, 2011

Capps Highlights Santa Barbara Family’s Health Care Predicament

Noozhawk | January 6, 2011 | By Ashley Schapitl

Rep. Lois Capps, D-Santa Barbara, spoke out Thursday against the Republican move to immediately repeal the newly passed health insurance reform law.

She highlighted the story of how the Strong family of Santa Barbara — daughter Gwendolyn was born healthy but was diagnosed with the terminal disease spinal muscular atrophy at 6 months old — has benefited from the implementation of this law, specifically the elimination of lifetime caps on coverage. A copy of Capps’ remarks is included below.

Click HERE or on the image below to read more or see below for the YouTube video of Capps’ remarks on the House floor…

 


When your health plan goes away

January 6, 2011

When your health plan goes away

What happens when your health care plan stops existing? You hope you’re already enrolled in another one — especially if you’re someone with physical disabilities.

Two recent stories from Minnesotans in MPR’s Public Insight Network show how changing plans can become a crisis for those who depend on them for medical care and services to live independently.

“Individuals experiencing disability, chronic illness … rely on [their health plan], sometimes hour-to-hour, day-to-day. These are critically important life support, safety, and security pieces,” Lance Hegland of Minneapolis told us.

Hegland, 38, has spinal muscular atrophy. He and 1,275 other Twin Cities adults with physical disabilities had to find new insurance plans after UCare decided to close its UCare Complete program, also known as Minnesota Disability Health Options (MnDHO), as of Dec. 31.

Click HERE or on the image below to read more…


Leading disability campaigner opposes care charge price hikes

December 6, 2010

Leading disability campaigner opposes care charge price hikes

Kingston Guardian | December 6, 2010 | By David Lindsell

One of the country’s leading equality and disability campaigners has added her voice to the criticism of Kingston Council’s care charge increases.

Charities have written to the leader of the council criticising the consultation on plans to charge disabled and elderly people more for help dressing, washing and preparing meals.

Baroness Campbell of Surbiton, who was given two years to live when she was born with spinal muscular atrophy, will be a difficult woman to ignore.

Click HERE or on the image below to read more…


Back brace promised for disabled Taunton girl

December 2, 2010

Back brace promised for disabled Taunton girl

thisisthewestcountry.co.uk | December 2, 2010

HEALTH bosses have promised to urgently consider funding a vital back brace for a five-year-old disabled girl from Taunton after the County Gazette took up her case.

Alice Kemp has spinal muscular atrophy and needs a new back brace every time she outgrows her old one.

Click HERE or on the image below to read more…


Cap Lifts, and So Do Spirits | New York Times

September 22, 2010

Cap Lifts, and So Do Spirits

New York Times | September 22, 2010 | By Kevin Sack

As a healthy couple in their mid-20s, Bill and Victoria Strong’s last concern when shopping for health insurance was a cap on lifetime benefits. Then Gwendolyn was born, and six months later was found to have spinal muscular atrophy Type I, a degenerative condition that typically kills its victims before age 2.