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  • Despite late efforts by fiscal conservatives to delay -- or derail -- it, the Medicare prescription drug benefit train has left the station.
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  • Beauty and enthusiasm fill the prescription for many drug companies. As an ambitious college student, Cassie Napier had all the right moves -- flips, tumbles, an America's sweetheart smile -- to prepare for her job after graduation. She became a drug saleswoman.
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  • SEMINAR ON NEW MEDICARE PRESCRIPTION DRUG PLAN FOR SENIORS will be conducted at First Baptist Church Gantt. The plan will be fully explained, but no recommendations can be made by the representative.
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  • Medicare Prescription Drug Coverage. Speaker Sara Levine to discuss what you need to know about this coverage. 10-11 a.m. FREE. Main Library, 401 S. Capitol Ave., Lansing. (517) 367-6363.
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  • West Virginia's acting pharmaceutical advocate plans to meet with state agencies to get a clear picture of how they buy prescription drugs, the rates they pay and what populations are covered.
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  • Dec 15, 2005 11:24 a.m.
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  • By Michele Jasny Gerhard V.M.D. Duchess is a Labrador retriever cross who began developing degenerative joint disease at the tender age of three.
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  • Ludhiana, December 14 The Punjab State Information Commission (PSIC) has summoned the Commissioner of the Ludhiana Municipal Corporation for not disclosing information sought by a local resident under the Right to Information Act (RTI).
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  • Call us at (620) 365-2111 with news and picture tips,and for advertising and subscription matters. Call (620) 365-5861 for printing orders. Fax (620) 365-6289.
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  • Two thugs gunned down a hero cop when they capped a night of drunken partying at a Bronx strip club by breaking into the apartment of a dead man in a sick search for drugs, officials revealed yesterday.
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Somewhat a bleak picture of drug companies?

The head of the Medicare Rights Center called the new prescription drug plan "open season on America's seniors ." He painted a bleak picture of drug companies spending millions to woo seniors to this or that plan and sowing widespread confusion in the process. The worst-case scenario? Older Americans being so confused they don't get the medicines on which their health or, in some cases, life depends. Today, some Dems on the Hill are proposing a way to rescue seniors from this predicament.

Today's press release from the Institute for America's Future describes a new plan being pushed by Rep. Jan Schakowsky and Sen. Durbin. Key excerpts below from the IAF press release touting the Schakowsky et al. plan: Two years ago, as President Bush's prescription drug bill was being pushed through the Congress, labor and progressive activists made a strong, clear case against it.

First, we said the bill was a mammoth giveaway to the drug industry because it mandated the federal government to spend billions of dollars on prescription drugs while actually prohibiting drug companies from competing to offer the lowest prices. This allows drug companies to charge whatever they want, fueling inflation in drug prices and in the health care system beyond seniors. The estimated cost of the program has soared after its passage, mainly due to drug prices.

We warned that the new law subsidized HMOs to displace and undermine Medicare - a strategy already discredited in the failed "Medicare+Choice" program that saw HMOs rush into providing Medicare coverage only to abandon those plans when they couldn't make enough profit. HMO-like PDP and PPO private drug providers would have no incentive to keep prices down.

And finally, we warned that the Bush drug plan would drive seniors crazy by offering plans so confusing - and drug formularies so constantly changing - that even doctors would not be able to make sense of them. We knew seniors would have a very hard time figuring out how to sign up for the new program, deciding what plan to choose, and - given the various holes in coverage - figuring out whether they would even benefit.

Those Democrats (and the AARP) who supported the Bush drug legislation argued that despite its flaws, the plan was one step on the road to the progressive goal of adding a comprehensive drug benefit to Medicare. They argued the legislation could always be fixed or improved later.

Well, as the new legislation goes into effect and seniors and their families begin to struggle its complexities - and as health care inflation, driven by drug prices, continues to skyrocket - it is time for a new progressive-labor-senior coalition to lead once again. Our message: politicians must agree to change the law to create a simple, efficient drug plan under Medicare - one that will stand up to big PhRMA and get drug prices under control.

Over the next year we can expect two big simultaneous movements:

  • Seniors and families will be increasingly frustrated and outraged as they grapple with the complexity of the Bush drug plan and its confusing benefit and delivery structure. There will be huge opportunities for organizing - if we have an alternative plan - one that seniors and progressives can push and Democratic candidates will embrace.
  • The drug industry will spend millions on TV spots - with the help of phony senior groups thanking Members of Congress and President Bush for providing a wonderful new prescription drug benefit. If they want to take credit for what most seniors will experience as a confusing and frustrating mess, let us use the flood of advertising - and the fact that the drug industry is paying for it - to dramatize the fact that Republicans passed their drug plan to help the HMOs and the drug industry, not seniors. But to pull this off, we must embrace an alternative that offers both simplicity and lower prices.

The Durbin-Berry-Schakowsky bill offers us this clear alternative that we can rally behind and make into a winning issue. This bill, the Medicare Prescription Drug Savings and Choice Act of 2005 (H.R.752/S 345), would:

  • Establish a standard drug-coverage plan administered by Medicare.
  • Mandate negotiated prices for prescription drugs.

By creating at least one standard drug-coverage plan administered by Medicare nationwide, this Democratic alternative would provide a simple option for those confused with the complexities of the plethora of competing private plans. With a recent Kaiser report finding more then 60% of seniors to not understand the program, a standard Medicare plan will help alleviate the current confusion with prescription drug benefit.

Negotiating group-purchasing agreements with the drug companies can lower costs to both users and to taxpayers. According to the CBO, the Veterans Administration and Department of Defense have saved an average of 41% and 42% of the wholesale costs of drugs though price negotiation. These saving could be used to help plug the "doughnut hole" and still save taxpayer money.

Only by uniting to support a simpler and cheaper alternative for beneficiaries can we tap the average senior's increasing frustration with the needlessly complicated and expensive Republican plan. We hope that your organization will join us and the 57 current Democratic cosponsors in supporting the Medicare Prescription Drug Savings and Choice Act of 2005.

Reforming Bush's disastrous Medicare plan isn't a very sexy topic right now on Capitol Hill. And a well-meaning effort by Sen. Wyden and others recently failed. But considering the positive role that a well-functioning Medicare program plays in the lives of millions of Americans, it's hard to think of a worthier task.

Source: RefillPill.com Editors' Choice