Saturday, January 14, 2006

Getting Better All The Time

Washington Post (01.14.06):
"Two weeks into the new Medicare prescription drug program, many of the nation's sickest and poorest elderly and disabled people are being turned away or overcharged at pharmacies, prompting more than a dozen states to declare health emergencies and pay for their life-saving medicines. Computer glitches, overloaded telephone lines and poorly trained pharmacists are being blamed for mix-ups that have resulted in the worst of unintended consequences: As many as 6.4 million low-income seniors, who until Dec. 31 received their medications free, suddenly find themselves navigating an insurance maze of large deductibles, co-payments and outright denial of coverage." The States Step In As Medicare Falters
"Yesterday, Ohio and Wisconsin announced that they will cover the drug costs of low-income seniors who would otherwise go without, joining every state in New England as well as California, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Arkansas, New Jersey, North Dakota, South Dakota and New Jersey." Not to mention Alabama, Oklahoma, Texas and Oregon. Thanks again, guys. Great job.

2 Comments:

Blogger Peter Schwarz said...

They didn't happen to call their plan the "No Old Person Left Behind Act," did they?

9:42 AM  
Blogger knobboy said...

Naw I think it's called "Grab Everything and Run".

3:01 PM  

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