next day lipitor

order lipitor online

discount lipitor

cod lipitor

cheap lipitor no rx

lipitor mg

lipitor rx

get lipitor

lipitor buy

buy lipitor

no rx lipitor

order lipitor

india lipitor

lipitor 15 mg

lipitor order

cheap lipitor

lipitor 20 mg

lipitor 75 mg

lipitor 10 mg

lipitor price

lipitor cheap

lipitor no rx

15 mg lipitor

10 mg lipitor

buy lipitor uk

mexico lipitor

lipitor canada

750 mg lipitor

lipitor mexico

buying lipitor

850 mg lipitor

lipitor 2355 mg

5500 mg lipitor

5113 lipitor mg

no script lipitor

lipitor purchase

price of lipitor

discount lipitor

lipitor discount

order lipitor si

mg lipitor death

purchase lipitor

lipitor in canada

lipitor rx dosage

buy lipitor in uk

overnight lipitor

lipitor np script

buying lipitor es

lipitor for cheap

lipitor in mexico

how to buy lipitor

how to get lipitor

cheap real lipitor

lipitor without rx

mail order lipitor

lipitor from india

buy lipitor online

lipitor regular mg

mexico lipitor easy

order cheap lipitor

purchase lipitor es

lipitor from canada

lipitor to purchase

buy lipitor legally

lipitor from mexico

buy generic lipitor

buy lipitor on line

buy lipitor overseas

lipitor prescription

prescription lipitor

cheap lipitor online

lipitor street price

lipitor order online

where to buy lipitor

lipitor online no rx

order lipitor online

buy lipitor pasadena

buy lipitor with cod

lipitor 5 mg picture

order lipitor on line

how can i get lipitor

lipitor 10 mg picture

can you order lipitor

lipitor no script cod

buy lipitor in the uk

pics of lipitor 10 mg

buying lipitor online

buy lipitor es online

i want to buy lipitor

buy lipitor es canada

buy lipitor in mexico

european lipitor no rx

lipitor per pill price

lipitor without rx cod

lipitor no rx required

lipitor purchase no rx

price of a v10 lipitor

lipitor without script

lipitor es from mexico

how do you get lipitor

lipitor name in canada

where is lipitor found

lipitor how to get high

lipitor percocet canada

buy lipitor online free

lipitor prescription nc

where can i buy lipitor

buy lipitor online chat

generic lipitor m362 mg

price of lipitor street

purchase lipitor online

buy lipitor onlin no rx

no prescription lipitor

what mg is lipitor m357

best way to get lipitor

generic lipitor m367 mg

lipitor no prescription

buy lipitor from mexico

pics of lipitor 1000 mg

lipitor purchase online

street price of lipitor

buy lipitor from canada

anyone buy legit lipitor

buy lipitor online no rx

lipitor cheap from india

street price for lipitor

5mg lipitor street price

buy lipitor prescription

buy lipitor online cheap

lipitor non prescription

prescription lipitor dot

order lipitor from india

1000 mg lipitor pictures

lipitor back from mexico

are there 1000 mg lipitor

lipitor wout prescription

lipitor maximum mg dosage

how to get lipitor online

pictures of 10 mg lipitor

lipitor es 10 mg pictures

how to buy lipitor online

will lipitor get you high

where can you get lipitor

anyone buy lipitor online

i get 120 lipitor a month

75mg500 mg liquid lipitor

lipitor prescription photo

buying lipitor from mexico

can you buy lipitor online

lipitor india cheap canada

best excuse to get lipitor

how to buy lipitor on line

how to get high on lipitor

how to get lipitor from er

taking lipitor to get high

lipitor in canada legality

best way to get of lipitor

can you buy lipitor on-line

where to get lipitor safely

lipitor no prescription buy

is 10 mg of lipitor to much

cod no prescription lipitor

buying lipitor online legal

how to order lipitor online

buying lipitor online legal

india viagra cialis lipitor

lipitor india canada mexico

buy lipitor in mexico price

buy lipitor and phentermine

buy lipitor no prescription

how many lipitor to get high

how long to get over lipitor

local pain doctor rx lipitor

dot and prescription lipitor

how to buy lipitor in the uk

where can i purchase lipitor

buy lipitor w o prescription

lipitor without prescription

lipitor without prescription

can you get high off lipitor

lipitor without rx in mexico

lipitor with no prescription

get rid of a lipitor headache

street price lipitor per pill

how to get lipitor prescribed

prescription code for lipitor

lipitor purchase online legal

how does lipitor get you high

cheap lipitor no prescription

buy lipitor online pharmacies

scam to get prescribed lipitor

lipitor without a prescription

lipitor no prescription no fee

is buying lipitor online legal

where can i buy lipitor online

online lipitor no prescription

lipitor no prescription needed

lipitor without rx from mexico

buy lipitor from canada direct

no prescription needed lipitor

lipitor online no prescription


Levitra instead of such famous love-drug Viagra?canadarxgeneric.com

Tag Archive for 'Health Care'

Meadows Regional Medical Center: On the Move!

It may not be of interest to you if you don’t live in Toombs County and the surrounding counties, but when your local hospital decides to build a new facility, it means a lot to a lot of people. In this interview with Alan Kent, CEO and President of Meadows Regional Medical Center, Alan gives us a broad overview of where the hospital is headed in finalizing the plans and building the new facility. We might have a state of the art hospital in two years or so.

Our current hospital is located in a 50+ year-old building with add-ons and modifications. At some point old equipment plants simply become too costly to maintain. That, together with the fact that the current facility is located on an inadequate 22 acre site, is probably the best justification for a new home, but for me, I just like new, state of the art anything. If you build it, they will come!

Meadows has come a long way in the 30 years since I moved to Toombs. It was a sleepy, country hospital that gave birth to babies and took out gallbladders the old fashioned way, cut that sucker out! We had a handful of doctors, mostly GPs like Drs. Merritt and Barfield, that did a little bit of everything. Health insurance wasn’t expensive and a lot of people did not have it. You had to work at Plant Hatch or be a teacher working for the state.

Technology has transformed healthcare, insurance companies have raped it, and government doesn’t know what to do with it. Oh well, we will still have a new hospital.

Keep up the good work Meadows Regional Medical Center!

 
 Alan Kent, CEO, Meadows Regional Medical Center [31:41m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (508)

Voice for the Uninsured!

Do you have health insurance? Do you need health insurance? Does a pre-existing condition prevent you from getting insurance? Can you afford health insurance? These are questions facing many Americans each and every day.

You may have seen the TV ads where doctors say that people who need their services are not coming to see them because they have no insurance. Nice ad. It’s sponsored by the American Medical Association as part of its campaign “Voice for the Uninsured.” The website is full of what they call “Real People, Real Stories.”

In this interview with Dr. Joseph Heyman discusses the issue of the uninsured in America. Dr. Heyman believes that now is the time to solve this problem. Unlike the Clinton effort in 1994, solving the problem is now the focus of a wide variety of business and political interests and the chances of everyone coming together to a successful resolution is better than ever.

If you want to read the whole thing, you can, or check out the overview. Here is a portion:

The AMA proposal to expand health insurance coverage and choice is based on three pillars:

1. Subsidies for those who most need financial assistance obtaining health insurance.

This assistance could take the form of tax credits or vouchers, should be more generous at lower income levels, and should be earmarked for health insurance coverage. It is important to note that the government already gives people financial assistance to buy private health insurance—well over $125 billion each year—with an employee income tax break on job-based insurance that is hidden from public view. This tax break gives more assistance to those in higher tax brackets, and gives no assistance to those without employee health benefits. Shifting some or all of this assistance to tax credits or vouchers for lower-income people would reduce the number of uninsured and improve fairness in the health care system.

2. Choice for individuals and families in what health plan to join.

Today people are effectively locked into the health plans their employers offer, often just one or two plans, which are subject to change from year to year. A change in employment typically means a change in insurance coverage. In contrast, under the AMA plan, people could use tax credits or vouchers to help pay for premiums of any available insurance, whether offered through a job, another arrangement or the open market. As with job-based insurance today, health plans would still have to meet federal guidelines for covered benefits, but people would have greater say in what types of benefits and plan features they value. Coupled with individual choice, tax credits benefit recipients directly, and everyone indirectly, by stimulating the market for health insurance. If enough people have enough purchasing power—and enough say over how that purchasing power is used—insurers will be compelled to offer better, more affordable coverage options.

3. Fair rules of the game that include protections for high-risk patients and greater individual responsibility.

For markets to function properly, it is important to establish fair ground rules. A proliferation of state and federal health insurance market regulations has made it more difficult and expensive for insurers to do business in many markets. The AMA proposes streamlined, more uniform health insurance market regulations. Regulations should permit market experimentation to find the most attractive combinations of plan benefits, cost-sharing and premiums. It is also important that market regulations reward, not penalize, insurers for taking all types of patients. People should have a guarantee that they will not lose coverage or be singled out for premium hikes due to changes in health status. Market regulations intended to protect people who have high health risks typically have backfired, sometimes disastrously, by driving up premiums for younger, healthier people and leading them to drop coverage.

To help high-risk people obtain coverage without paying astronomical premiums, additional targeted government subsidies are needed for high-risk people that would allow insurers to keep premiums down in the regular market. Individuals also need to be encouraged to play fairly by taking responsibility for obtaining health insurance without waiting until illness strikes or medical attention is needed. People who are uninsured despite being able to afford coverage should face tax implications.

Everyone needs to write their Congressman and Senators and tell this to fix this thing!!

 
 Dr. Joseph Heyman, American Medical Association [31:05m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (381)

Fred’s Man in Georgia!

Sen. Chip Rogers (R-21) has just accepted the position as Executive Director of presidential hopeful, Fred Thompson’s Georgia campaign. In this interveiw I try to get Chip to tell us Georgians why Fred is the man.

We cover the issues from the Iraq War (which Chip still likes to call that War on Terror!), to yesterdays defeat of the Democrat’s effort to do something to bring the troops home for a rest, to immigration, to health care and then throw in a few Georgia topics as well.

Red state, red state, red state. I don’t want to give up the fight for the Democrats in ‘08, but Fred is going to be tough to beat in this state–unless he makes a mistake, maybe a big one at that.

At least Chip and I both hope that Fred’s entry into the race will diffuse some of the divisive issues that have monopolized state and federal politics too much since the 2000 race. You know the ones: abortion, gay rights, religion and the like, all issues which this country needs to solve in some manner, once and for all.

 
 Senator Chip Rogers (R-21) [27:54m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (594)

Interview with Amy Menefee, Deputy Editor, Business and Media Institute

When I came across the Business and Media Institute website and saw that it, together with its parent organization, Media Research Center, claimed to be a “media watchdog,” I immediately became defensive. You know: If media needs a watchdog, then what does business need?

So I scheduled an interview with Amy Menefee, a Deputy Editor at BMI who, it turns out, is from Macon, Georgia, where my wife grew up, as well. Now Amy impressed me with a certain degree of forthrightness, but I must admit that I still have reservations about BMI and MRC. If you look at their websites, you will note that they focus on the “bias” of CNN, NBC, CBS and ABC, but FOX is not called to task, at least not nearly as much. They also seem to be an immediate response team for business on everything from high gas prices to the environment to trade. They even think that China is doing us a favor sending us dangerous products!

Amy assured me that BMI and MRC focus on business and economic issues in the media. Of course, they support the free market, but Amy assured me that they don’t bend the facts, and don’t make up the facts. For the time being, I will give Amy the benefit of the doubt, primarily because she told me that BMI supports competition in health care. But, that is another interview. I wanted to interview Amy about the number of uninsured Americans.

If you Google “Americans uninsured health care,” you will find multiple sites that quote the figure of 40+ million as the number of Americans without health insurance. You will also find an article by BMI that says this figure is a lie.

According to Amy, the U. S. Census indicates that 9.5 million of the unisured in American are not even American citizens. They may be illegal aliens (those that respond to the Census) or foreign students or something else.

According to Amy, the Census also indicates that about 8 million uninsured Americans make between $50,000 to $75,000 and almost 9 million more make more than $75,000. Now why would someone making that kind of money not have health insurance? Well, according to Amy, one survey indicates that 60% of these people reported they were in excellent health.

And then there are those who are only temporarily uninsured. They may be between jobs. According to Amy, the Congressional Budget Office reports that 45% of the uninsured are without insurance for only 4 months.

So is the number of unisured 15 million or 45 million? Does it really matter? If it is really as low as 15 million, then it certainly ought to be something we can solve and be fair to working American families.

And even more importantly, what does any of this have to do with the high cost of health care and the millions of dollars in insurance company profits while the average American struggles to pay for the recent hospitalization when our child went into the hospital with a fever, stayed 2 days and the bill was $10,000.

 
 Amy Menefee [27:38m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (598)