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When a society loses its memory, it descends inevitably into dementia. Mark Steyn

But community organizers, though often charismatic, can also be annoying jerks. Daniel Henninger
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Sunday, October 4, 2009

Compare and constrast: Baucus-care vs. Office of Attending Physician

Baucus-care will hit middle-class families quite hard. From the AP via Don Surber:

Ricardo Alonso Zaldivar of the Associated Press is not rolling over and playing brain-dead on the health insurance reform issue, reporting today: “A family of four headed by a 45-year-old making $63,000 a year is in the middle of the middle class. But that family would pay $7,110 to buy its own health insurance under the plan from the committee chairman, Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont.”

Bu-bu-but I thought they said Obamacare would get a big subsidy.

Zaldivar: “The family would get a tax credit of $3,970 to help pay for a policy worth $11,080. But the balance due — $7,110 — is real money. Maybe it’s less than the rent, but it’s probably more than a car loan payment.”

And that's a conservative estimate which omits some significant costs to the consumer. Read the AP article here. Then compare the Baucus coverage to this little Congressional perquisite, available at low cost to members and entirely separate from the insurance plans available to them. Pretty sweet:
Through interviews with former employees and members of Congress, as well as extensive document searches, ABC News has learned new details about the services offered by the Office of Attending Physician to members of Congress over the past few years, from regular visits by a consulting chiropractor to on-site physical therapy.

"A member walked in and was generally walked right back into a physician’s office. They get good care. They are not rushed. They are examined thoroughly," said Eduardo Balbona, an internist in Jacksonville, Fa., who worked as a staff physician in the OAP from 1993 to 1995.

"You have time to spend to get to know your patients and think about them and really think about how you preserve their health going forward," Balbona said. "We’re not there to put on Band-Aids. We were there to make sure that everything possible that could be done [is done] to preserve that member of Congress."

Services offered by the Office of the Attending Physician include physicals and routine examinations, on-site X-rays and lab work, physical therapy and referrals to medical specialists from military hospitals and private medical practices. According to congressional budget records, the office is staffed by at least four Navy doctors as well as at least a dozen medical and X-ray technicians, nurses and a pharmacist.

Sources said when specialists are needed, they are brought to the Capitol, often at no charge to members of Congress.

"If you had, for example, prostate cancer, you would go to one of the centers of excellence for the country, which would be Johns Hopkins. If you had coronary artery disease, we would engage specialists at the Cleveland Clinic. You would go to the best care in the country. And, for the most part, nobody asked what your insurance was," Balbona said.

In addition to Balbona, several former staff members and private physicians who have consulted at the OAP as recently as last year agreed to talk to ABC News on background. They described a culture centered on meeting the needs and whims of members of Congress, with almost no concern for cost.

Members of Congress do not pay for the individual services they receive at the OAP, nor do they submit claims through their federal employee health insurance policies. Instead, members pay a flat, annual fee of $503 for all the care they receive. The rest of the cost of their care, sources said, is subsidized by taxpayers.
And some of the members don't even pay the fee. Feel the outrage.

Linked by Doug Ross.

Most recent posts here.

1 comments:

Chris M. said...

I can just see an ad: "Give up your employer provided health care and pay thousands a year in premiums, deductibles and copays for sub par care so that your congressman and senator can have unbelievably convenient and amazingly sophisticated health care. Those who choose what is best for us need great sacrifices from us. These thoughtful and caring men and women must need our sacrifices because so few of them can even afford the $500 a year that any honest person would be willing to pay for care worth tens of thousands of dollars. Any decent person would be proud to suffer an earlier and more painful death so that those who lead us no longer have to suffer the calumny of being called a chickensh*t cheapskate for not even having the grace to cough up the five hundred bucks."

Too angry?

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