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Friday Alert April 27, 2007
Alliance for Retired Americans
888 16th Street, N.W. - Washington DC, 20006 - (202)
974-8222 - www.retiredamericans.or
Administration Uses Trustees Reports to
Scare Seniors The trust funds for Social
Security and Medicare will last a year longer than previously
estimated, trustees said Monday. The trustees report that
Social Security is solvent through the year 2041, and Medicare
is solvent through 2019. The report triggered a warning
that will require President Bush to submit to
Congress next year proposals for dealing with Medicare's
problems. The Medicare funding warning is triggered any
time two consecutive trustee reports conclude that the amount of
general revenue needed to finance Medicare will top 45% of the
program's outlays, and the trustees first made that
determination last year. While Congress must consider the
proposals, it is not required to act on them. Medicare
advocates at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities say that
the 45% threshold is not a meaningful measure of the health of
Medicare. They argue that Medicare's basic problem is its
large projected cost, not what share of that cost comes from
general revenues rather than payroll taxes. The threshold
also makes it harder to address Medicare's fiscal problems
fairly. "If the Bush administration is so concerned about
rising Medicare costs, why did it threaten to veto a common
sense bill before the Senate earlier this month, S. 3, which
would have lowered the cost of prescription drugs by allowing
Medicare to negotiate bulk discounts with the pharmaceutical
companies?" asked Edward F. Coyle, Executive
Director of the Alliance.
"Medicare for All" Bill
Introduced Senate Health, Education, Labor
and Pensions Committee Chair Edward Kennedy
(D-MA) and House Energy and Commerce Committee Chair
John Dingell (D-MI) on Wednesday introduced
companion bills (S. 1218 and H.R. 2034) that would allow U.S.
residents younger than age 65 to enroll in Medicare, according
to reports this week in CQ HealthBeat and the
Kaiser Daily Health Report. Under the "Medicare
for All" bill, residents would be eligible to enroll in Medicare
or any of the health insurance plans offered through the Federal
Employees Health Benefit Program, or they could continue to
receive coverage under private plans. However, the lawmakers say
that the measure does not yet have enough support for
consideration in either the House or Senate. "The
legislation is based on the premise that Medicare is a
successful program that has saved countless lives, and could
help younger Americans in addition to seniors. That logic
makes a lot of sense," said Ruben Burks,
Secretary-Treasurer of the Alliance. "This is an
intelligent idea."
Bush Backpedals a Bit on Social Security
Privatization President Bush
discussed privatizing Social Security on Tuesday during an
interview on television's The Charlie Rose Show.
The President stated, "I wish we could get it done. I'm
not sure it's going to happen. I tried, as you might
recall, in `95 -- I mean, in 2005 -- and, you know, I just don't
think it's going to -- you know, I'll keep pushing, but I don't
think it's going to happen. It's a little defeatist. I
don't see it happening yet is a better way to put it." In
response, Alliance President George J. Kourpias
commented, "This is good news, but we cannot rest yet.
Alliance members need to keep their guard up, because this
President still believes deeply in privatization, no matter how
risky it is. His comments are more a reflection that the
U.S. Senate and House are now run by political opponents than
they are a willingness to follow the wishes of the American
people." The group Americans United for Change, a
coalition of which the Alliance is a member organization,
supplied the transcript of the President's comments.
Most Doctors Get Money, Gifts from Drug
Industry Representatives In a paper in
PLoS Medicine, an online journal, a Georgetown
University Medical Center official and a former Eli Lilly drug
representative reveal the tactics used by drug reps to
manipulate physicians into selling drugs. A friendly,
outgoing physician is the easiest to influence. Often the
physician's staff is dined and flattered in hopes that they will
act as emissaries for a rep's message. Physicians who prescribe
the rep's drugs are amply rewarded with gifts, such as golf bags
or silk ties. Drug companies purchase data on physicians'
prescribing habits in order to identify doctors who are most
open to influence by drug reps. Another technique that drug reps
use is to give doctors "free" drug samples, which the doctors
can then give to patients. Reps provide samples of the most
promoted, usually most expensive, drugs, and patients given a
sample for part of a course of treatment almost always receive a
prescription of the same drug. A sales force of 100,000
drug reps (one rep per 2.5 targeted physicians) provides the
gifts.
Alliance's Colorado President Gets
Gubernatorial Appointment Governor
Bill Ritter (D) has appointed Colorado Alliance
President Frank Lay to the Colorado Commission
on Aging. The news follows a victory earlier this month
for Colorado Alliance members and their grandchildren with the
passage of HB 1100, a bill to freeze a mill levy in order to
help fund education. The Colorado Alliance had lobbied
hard for the bill with phone calls, letters, e-mails, and a
press conference in support of its ratification.
Are Seniors Healthier Than Their Baby
Boomer Children? As the first wave of baby
boomers edges toward retirement, evidence suggests that they may
be the first generation to enter their golden years in worse
health than their parents, according to last Friday's
Washington Post. Boomers are healthier in some
important ways -- they are much less likely to smoke, for
example -- but large surveys are consistently finding that they
tend to describe themselves as less healthy than their forebears
did at the same age. They are more likely to report
difficulty climbing stairs, getting up from a chair and doing
other routine activities, as well as more chronic problems such
as high cholesterol, blood pressure and diabetes. While
cautioning that the data are just emerging, researchers say that
the findings track with several unhealthy trends, notably the
obesity epidemic. Despite gym memberships, baby boomers
tend to be less physically active than their parents and
grandparents, their daily routines often dominated by desk jobs
and the drive to and from work. Some researchers are
skeptical, saying that U.S. life expectancy has increased
consistently for decades, accompanied by a steady drop in
disability rates. Rising rates of chronic disease may
simply mean that such illnesses are being diagnosed earlier,
translating into longer lives and less disability.
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Alliance for Retired Americans 815 16th
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