Monday, August 13, 2007

Beyond Winning: A Team With a Message About Health

Team Type 1I came across a really interesting article in the Wall Street Journal today about Team Type 1, a cycling team made up of Type I diabetics. The story was truly inspirational, these guys are amazing. Go Team Type 1!


The team is comprised of inspirational cyclists, all people with Type 1(Juvenile) Diabetes. Last year, they won the 3,052 mile Race Across America (RAAM) in the eight-person corporate category. Their blood sugar is monitored by FreeStyle Lite. They will be putting Apidra in OmniPod wireless Insulin pumps, using AMYLIN products and all ride on Specialized Bikes.

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Friday, May 26, 2006

A Year is Too Long; contact Sen. Majority Leader Frist for a Vote on H.R.810

Thousands of you took action when we contacted you last week about the "unhappy anniversary" of the passage of H.R.810, the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act, in the House of Representatives. Thank you, as always, for the tremendous effort!

Tomorrow is May 24th, making it one full year since the House passed this important legislation with a strong bi-partisan showing. Unfortunately, the Senate still has not acted. If you have not contacted your Senators, please do so now.

And now we're going right to the top. After you have contacted your own Senators, we are asking you to contact Senate Majority Leader Frist (R-TN) to urge him to not waste another day in bringing H.R. 810 to the floor for vote. Senator Frist voiced his support of H.R.810 last July. It's past time for the Senator to demonstrate that support. Tell him to schedule a vote for H.R.810 -- for life-saving research -- today.

Mark your calendar for the Conquer Diabetes Call-In, June 8th 2006!

A phone call to Senator Frist would have the most impact. Call the Senator in Washington, DC at 202-224-3344. Thank him for his support of H.R.810 last July and ask when this important research bill will get a vote in the full Senate. After you make contact, shoot us an email at makingnoise@diabetes.org and let us know how it went!



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Friday, May 12, 2006

Senate Bill 1955 Defeated

S.1955 didn't have enough votes for cloture* so it effectively died last night in the Senate. Our most sincere congratulations and thanks to for your efforts to defeat this bill. This is a tremendous victory for the Association and, more importantly, for all people affected by diabetes.

* Failure to get cloture -- Failing to get 2/3 of the Senate to agree that the bill is still viable for further consideration.

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Thursday, May 11, 2006

Small-business health insurance bill voted down

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) - A divisive bill that would have allowed health insurers to preempt state-mandated benefits in order to extend coverage to small businesses was defeated by the U.S. Senate late Thursday.

The Senate voted 55-43 to stop considering the Health Insurance Marketplace Modernization and Affordability Act of 2006, or S. 1955, which was introduced last year by Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., and co-sponsored by Ben Nelson, D-Neb., and Conrad Burns, R-Mont.

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American Diabetes Association Urges Senate to Protect Diabetes Coverage; Reject Fundamentally Flawed S.1955

Proposed Legislation Still Jeopardizes Lifesaving Coverage Protections for Millions With Diabetes

ALEXANDRIA, Va., May 11 /PRNewswire/ -- Over the past several months, tens of thousands of Americans with diabetes have contacted their United States senators to express their concerns about a federal small business health bill that ultimately would jeopardize state regulations that guarantee coverage for diabetes supplies, medication and education. Today, the American Diabetes Association reiterated its strong opposition to the "Health Insurance Marketplace Modernization Act" (S.1955), as the bill before the U.S. Senate still fails to protect the health coverage that millions of Americans rely upon to manage the disease and prevent its serious and costly complications. Forty-six states and the District of Columbia require insurers to provide coverage for diabetes supplies, medication, equipment and education, but S. 1955 would undermine those basic protections. The U.S. Senate is expected to have a procedural cloture vote on S.1955 sometime Thursday, and the Association urges the Senate to vote against cloture.

"The American Diabetes Association believes that the proposed approach is fundamentally flawed and must be opposed in all forms in order to protect your constituents with diabetes," said Lawrence T. Smith, Chair of the Board of the American Diabetes Association. "The Association stands ready to work with Congress on future attempts to expand affordable, adequate and accessible health insurance to small businesses and other Americans who are uninsured and underinsured. But this bill is not the answer."

Earlier this week, Senators heard from Nicole Pedone, an Ohio native, who developed type 1 diabetes at age 10 and subsequently lost her eyesight in 1998 because she did not have adequate health insurance. Pedone told Senators that because she didn't have the means to control her diabetes when she initially developed the disease, today her health care costs are covered by Medicaid and Medicare, meaning taxpayers are picking up her health costs.

Currently, Ohio is one of four states that does not require insurers and small businesses to cover many of the essential tools needed to manage the disease and stay healthy. Pedone warned that individuals in the 46 states that do have coverage requirements would face a nightmare similar to her situation if coverage protections were lost under S.1955.

Despite attempts to change the bill to increase its likelihood of passage, the bill still would allow plans sold in the state-regulated insurance market to circumvent state benefit protections. In addition, the rating structure will still have a significant impact on Americans with diabetes and other chronic diseases, as they will see a spike in insurance premiums.

"Your constituents with diabetes each benefit from dozens of state laws -- which range from the mechanical aspects of insurance regulation and administration to laws mandating coverage for life-sustaining insulin. Any pre-emption or weakening of these state laws is a major threat to the well- being and lives of people with diabetes and should not be acceptable to the U.S. Senate," Smith said. "Accordingly, we ask Senators to stand with us in full opposition to S. 1955, no matter which cosmetic changes may be proposed on the Floor."

Nearly 21 million Americans have diabetes, up from 18.2 million in 2003. If present trends continue, one in three Americans, and one in two minorities, born in 2000 will develop diabetes in their lifetime. The cost of diabetes in the U.S. in 2002 was at least $132 billion; one in ten healthcare dollars is spent on diabetes and its complications.

The American Diabetes Association is the nation's leading voluntary health organization supporting diabetes research, information and advocacy. The Association's advocacy efforts include helping to combat discrimination against people with diabetes; advocating for the increase of federal diabetes research and programs; and improved access to, and quality of, healthcare for people with diabetes. The Association's mission is to prevent and cure diabetes and to improve the lives of all people affected by diabetes. Founded in 1940, the Association provides service to hundreds of communities across the country. For more information please call the American Diabetes Association at 1-800-DIABETES (1-800-342-2383) or visit http://www.diabetes.org. Information from both these sources is available in English and Spanish.

Source: American Diabetes Association

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Senate bill won't solve health insurance crisis

Editor, the Record:

For many Americans, gaining access to affordable, quality health care continues to be a struggle. Nearly 46 million Americans are currently without health insurance, many of them employed by small businesses. This is a crisis that our nation's leaders definitely need to address. Unfortunately, one of the proposals intended to remedy the problem could make it worse by undermining the critical work Pennsylvania state legislatures have done to ensure coverage for life-saving cancer screenings, such as mammograms.

Currently before the U.S. Senate, the "Health Insurance Marketplace, Modernization and Affordability Act of 2006 S. 1955" is a misguided solution to a fundamental and all to familiar problem for many Americans. This legislation would allow all health insurers to bypass state laws intended to serve as basic consumer protections, including guaranteed coverage for mammograms and other vital cancer screenings. As a result, there is no assurance that employees will have access to these life-saving benefits.

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Monday, May 08, 2006

CBO Analysis Bolsters Case Against S.1955

S.1955 would eliminate crucial health care services that millions of Americans have come to depend on, while pricing older Americans and those with complex health needs -- those most in need of protection -- out of the health insurance market. While the goal of the bill is laudable, S.1955 does more harm than good and must be defeated.

American Chiropractic Assoication - Executive Vice President Kevin Corcoran
CBO Findings:
  • S.1955 could result in higher premiums for small businesses with older workers or employees with complex health care needs.
  • S.1955 would lower premiums by only 2 to 3 percent on average.
  • S.1955 would cause 100,000 people who have and depend on health insurance to lose coverage. While CBO believes that a total of approximately 600,000 people (or only 1.3 percent of the 45 million Americans who are uninsured) would gain coverage under the bill, that group would be younger and healthier and have "lower health costs than those who would lose private health insurance under S.1955."
  • Due to the preemption of state guaranteed benefits, such as cancer screenings and treatments, diabetes supplies and education, and chiropractic care, individuals and families would "find it more difficult to find coverage for conditions or services that had previously been mandated under their state laws."
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Don’t undercut efforts to reform healthcare

Small business need help to afford health insurance. But S. 1955 goes in the wrong direction.
  • It would raise premiums for those who most rely on the healthcare system today and make coverage more affordable only for those who need it least.
  • It would take away important benefits people depend on today and leave them uninsured for basic care.
  • And, it would prevent states like Massachusetts from making progress on what should be a national priority: providing affordable health coverage for all.
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Health bill foes line up

A U.S. Senate bill proposed to make health insurance more affordable for small businesses has some strong opposition.

The AARP, the American Cancer Society and the American Diabetes Association are among the organizations fighting the Health Insurance Marketplace Modernization and Affordability Act of 2006.

Supporters say the bill will address skyrocketing health insurance costs and make coverage more affordable for more people.

Opponents say the proposal could make health-care coverage more expensive for sicker and older workers, while eliminating coverage for screenings and treatments for chronic illnesses.

In its current form, the bill allows insurers to sell health policies that bypass state consumer laws requiring coverage for certain screenings and treatments.

That means coverage for such services as cancer screenings and treatments, diabetes supplies, well-child care, maternity care, emergency services and mental health care may not be mandatory.

The bill, S.1955, is expected to be debated and possibly voted on as early as this week.

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Sunday, May 07, 2006

Band-aid bill

WHEN it comes to the nation's health care system, America needs a double bypass surgery-sized reform. But what it's getting is placebo legislation that might actually do more harm than good.

The Healthcare Market Modernization and Affordability Act of 2006, S.1955 moving forward with dismaying speed in the Senate is such a placebo. Its authors promote the bill as a savior to small businesses and self-employed workers, who have been squeezed hard by rising costs for health insurance, by allowing them to pool their resources through professional and trade associations to negotiate better insurance deals.

To be sure, self-employed workers and small businesses surely do need some relief. But this bill, for all its optimism, has some disturbing implications, because the plans would only be regulated by the more lax federal government, and would be impervious to state laws set up to regulate premium and coverage. Businesses with sicker employees, for example, could find prices are even higher under this bill, according to analysis by California's Department of Insurance.

But what's more important about this bill is that despite the fanfare it does nothing to solve the larger problems facing the American health care crisis.

When insured individuals are suddenly finding their policies retroactively cancelled after they get sick, such as a number of Blue Cross patients in California recently alleged, then it doesn't matter how easy it is to get health care.

We need comprehensive reform such as the universal plan passed by Massachusetts lawmakers, which required all residents to have health insurance and set up the infrastructure to make it available.

That's the kind of bold program that senators should be talking about, not some Band-Aid bill that may or may not hurt as many people as it helps.

Full Story

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