Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Posts Tagged ‘Karen Keiser’

WA Senate health committee holds work session on national healthcare reform

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009


The Washington State Senate Health & Long-Term Care Committee held a work session on national healthcare reforms and the consequences for the state.

Watch video of the work session courtesy of TVW.




State Representative Ericksen continuing healthcare town halls into fall

Friday, September 25th, 2009

20090204-173558-pic-20589356_t220On Tuesday, September 29th, Representative Doug Ericksen will host a healthcare town hall in Bellevue.

“As the national health care debate continues, we want to provide solutions that would address our state’s problems. Our plan focuses on fixing what is broken, and leaving what works in place,” Ericksen said. “We want to provide solutions to the people of Washington.”

Ericksen is the ranking Republican member of the House Health Care & Wellness Committee, chaired by Democratic Representative Eileen Cody.

Ericksen has hosted three other town halls so far this summer. By the end of each town hall he hopes the people will hear his plan and want to buy it.

In an interview with healthcareWA, Ericksen said, “I have 35 votes in the House, and it takes 50 to pass something. It’s going to take the people of Washington rising up.”

(more…)




State Senator Karen Keiser responds to President Obama’s healthcare address

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

State Senator Karen Keiser
State Senator Karen Keiser, chair of the Senate Health & Long-Term Care Committee, hosted a series of four healthcare town halls last month with Representative Eileen Cody. You can read about those here and here.

This afternoon Senator Keiser responded to last night’s healthcare address by President Barack Obama and the effects of healthcare reform on Washington State.

The health reform goals outlined in the President’s speech, ─slowing health care costs, covering the insured and providing families with more security and stability─ are goals we have worked for years to achieve at the state level. Those are Washington state values. It’s clear we have a strong federal partner to help us solve this critical issue.

The National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) supports the public health insurance option, while over 850 individual states legislators from all fifty states with the Progressive States Network have called for any federal reform bill to include a public health insurance option, strong affordability protections, and shared employer responsibility for health care costs.

More than 876,000 Washingtonians have no coverage and many others are underinsured. They are just one illness or accident away from financial ruin. We need reform now, not yelling and screaming. Going forward, we need to tone down the rhetoric and focus on the issue at hand ─fixing our broken health care system.

States will be responsible for implementing any plan Congress passes and the President signs, so we will have a lot of work to do during the 2010-2011 sessions.

We’ve been working on health reform for years in our state with good success. Having the backing and support of the federal government will help us reduce waste, fraud and abuse in the industry and provide our citizens with the coverage they need and deserve.

I was glad to see bogus claims such as death panels debunked. The President set a new tone with the speech. As chair of the Senate Health & Long-Term Care Committee, I hope that spirit of cooperation will be evident at upcoming health reform hearings in both chambers of the state legislature.




Washington legislators hold second healthcare town hall

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009




On Tuesday night in Bellevue, Senator Karen Keiser (D-Kent), chair of the Senate Health & Long-Term Care Committee, and Representative Eileen Cody (D-Burien), chair of the House Health Care & Wellness Committee, held their second in a series of four healthcare town halls.

Of the first two events in the series, Senator Keiser said she believes, “These are marvelous. Democracy in action.”

Thus far the town halls have gone smoothly and have been largely disruption free. That is in stark contrast to what people have seen from national news sources. “People have a lot of concerns,” said Senator Keiser. “It’s a wonderful development, they’ve been misrepresented.”

This town hall attracted several more members of the political world, including Senator Rodney Tom (D-Bellevue), Representative Ross Hunter (D-Bellevue), Steve Hill, Administrator of the Health Care Authority, and former State Representative Max Vekich, who is currently running to be a Seattle Port Commissioner.

Senator Keiser and Representative Cody emphasized the need for a transition to evidence based methods in healthcare policy, which will help reduce healthcare costs. Keiser cited the $55 million in savings in 2008 on prescription drugs when the drugs were compared by patient outcomes and the effectiveness of the drugs rather than their cost.

Washington legislators are now working with Congressman Jay Inslee to adapt some of that language for H.R. 3200, the healthcare reform bill from the House of Representatives.

Federal healthcare reforms would include consumer protections that prevent rescission, the practice of taking insurance away from consumers after they have become ill, extending health benefits of younger adults that are on their parents’ health plan to the age of 26, ending gender discrimination, and ending cost-sharing for preventative care, such as expensive colonoscopies.

Another key theme in the discussion was aligning physician incentives to patient outcomes. Currently, if a patient has the wrong arm amputated and has to go back in to get the other one removed, the hospital would be paid for both operations. Keiser said that under the new system, “Avoidable errors will not be reimbursed.” That would mean only “paying the hospital when you have recovery” she said.

Confronting popular misnomers in the media, Keiser assured the crowd, “There will be no death panels. There has never been a death panel.”

The pair also confronted reimbursement inequities around the country. Keiser said, Washington is 11% under the national average for Medicare reimbursements, and Florida is 13% over the national average. Yet Washington State has better outcomes, said Keiser.

Currently, taxpayers and people with health insurance pay for those who do not have health insurance but utilize medical facilities. “Healthcare is a system of cost shifting,” said Keiser. “We pay one way or the other.”




EVENTS: Healthcare Town Hall Meetings Tonight

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009


Tuesday, August 25th

Representative Adam Smith
9th Congressional District
7:00pm – 8:30pm
Harry Long Stadium
6615 111th St SW
Lakewood, WA

State Senator Karen Keiser
State Representative Eileen Cody

7:00pm – 9:00pm
Temple B’nai Torah
15727 NE 4th St
Bellevue, WA




Healthcare town hall goes smoothly for state legislators

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Senator Karen Keiser and Representative Eileen Cody discuss healthcare reform

Last night over 50 people attended a public discussion on healthcare policy reform with Senator Karen Keiser (D-Kent), chair of the Senate Health & Long-Term Care Committee, and Representative Eileen Cody (D-Burien), chair of the House Health Care & Wellness Committee.

The goal was to discuss the federal healthcare reform bills currently in play and how they would be implemented at the state level.

Unlike town halls hosted by representatives at the federal level, this town hall was far more polite, with fewer outbursts from proponents and opponents.

Senator Keiser said, the current system is in a “death spiral” and we have the option of either letting it go, or fixing it.

As part of a discussion on a public option, Representative Cody said, “Both Senator Keiser and I believe in a public option.” A former nurse for Group Health, the representative later told the crowd she does not believe a Co-op plan will be effective. “I don’t think that [co-ops] will meet the needs as quickly as what we need to do.”

Unlike many federal discussions, there was a fair deal of support for Medicare Advantage plans. “They’re not going to eliminate Medicare Advantage,” said Senator Keiser to a number of cheers.

Lee Marchisio, Governor Chris Gregoire’s Outreach Coordinator, read a statement from the Governor. “[Governor Gregoire] believes we can fix our healthcare system.”

Snohomish County Council Chair Mike Cooper hosted the event, speaking to the crowd first about his recent participation in the healthcare system, as a patient.

Banjo player at healthcare discussion

After the discussion ended, a gentleman played an unplanned sing-along on his banjo. The chorus of the song was, “Insurance man, we’re gonna fire you… on election day.” Many in the audience joined in by singing and clapping with the song.

Tonight the second healthcare meeting in this series will take place in Bellevue, again with Senator Keiser and Representative Cody.

Temple B’nai Torah
15727 NE 4th St
Bellevue, WA
7-9 pm




The Washington Health Partnership plan

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009


The Washington State Legislature passed the Washington Health Partnership plan (WHPP) on April 21st. On May 18th, the WHPP was partially vetoed, but signed into law, by Governor Chris Gregoire.

The WHPP establishes a working group tasked with reaching goals set forth by the Blue Ribbon Commission on Health Care Costs and Access. Click here to read the final report published in January of 2007.

This includes extending coverage to individuals below 200 percent of the federal poverty level in an Apple Health program for adults.

The Apple Health program for kids has at its core a goal of ensuring health coverage for all children by 2010. It streamlines applications for childrens health coverage so parents are aware of their child’s eligibility, including the 75,000 children in Washington that are currently without coverage.

The bill digest describes the goals of the bill as follows:

“Creates the Washington health partnership plan to attain
the following goals:

(1) By 2012, every resident of this state
shall have access to affordable, comprehensive health care
services;
(2) Services shall be provided through the private health
care sector;
(3) The health reform plan shall maintain and improve
choice of health care providers and high quality health care
services in this state; and
(4) The health reform plan shall include cost-containment
strategies that retain and assure affordable coverage for all
Washingtonians.

Requires the department of social and health services to
submit a request to the federal department of health and human
services to expand and revise the medical assistance program
as codified in Title XIX of the federal social security act.”


All of the substantive portions of the bill were passed. Only a section requiring quarterly meetings of an advisory board was vetoed by Governor Gregoire.

The bill went into effect on July 26, 2009.

Read the WHPP here.