Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Your Duck Is Dead -- Health Care Billing

My thanks to Joanne for this:

A woman brought a very limp duck into a veterinary surgeon. As she laid her pet on the table, the vet pulled out his stethoscope and listened to the bird's chest.

After a moment or two, the vet shook his head and sadly said, "I'm sorry, your duck, Cuddles, has passed away."

The distressed woman wailed, "Are you sure?"

"Yes, I am sure. Your duck is dead," replied the vet.

"How can you be so sure?" she protested. "I mean you haven't done any testing on him or anything. He might just be in a coma or something."

The vet rolled his eyes, turned around and left the room. He returned a few minutes later with a Black Labrador Retriever. As the duck's owner looked on in amazement, the dog stood on his hind legs, put his front paws on the examination table and sniffed the duck from top to bottom. He then looked up at the vet with sad eyes and shook his head.

The vet patted the dog on the head and took it out of the room. A few minutes later he returned with a cat. The cat jumped on the table and also delicately sniffed the bird from head to foot. The cat sat back on its haunches, shook its head, meowed softly and strolled out of the room.

The vet looked at the woman and said, "I'm sorry, but as I said, this is most definitely, 100% certifiably, a dead duck."

The vet turned to his computer terminal, hit a few keys and produced a bill, which he handed to the woman.

The duck's owner, still in shock, took the bill. "$150!" she cried, "$150 just to tell me my duck is dead!" 

The vet shrugged, "I'm sorry. If you had just taken my word for it, the bill would have been $20, but with the Lab Report and the Cat Scan, it's now $150."







Tuesday, October 9, 2012

New report compares Obama, Romney health plans

The following is from a website BenefitsPro.com  that helps benefits brokers, HR managers, and retirement advisors get the information they need to keep their finger on the pulse of the ever-changing benefits community. 

I thought it would help those of us who are in countries that have national health care funding  to  understand the differences between the two parties in the US on health care and funding, but it will not help us understand the angst and the issue surrounding health care in the United States


The number of uninsured Americans is estimated to increase in every state and to 72 million nationwide by 2022 if Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney wins the election and has his health care plan enacted, according to a new Commonwealth Fund report released Tuesday.

That compares to 27 million uninsured by the same time if President Barack Obama’s Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is kept in place.
Children and low- and middle-income Americans will be hit particularly hard with the repeal of the PPACA, the report says.
“There are stark differences between what each candidate has proposed for our health care system, and this report shines a light on how Americans might be affected, based on their age, their income, and where they live,” says lead report author Sara Collins. “The report finds that repealing the Affordable Care Act would significantly increase the number of Americans without health insurance, limiting their ability to get the health care they need and exposing them to burdensome medical bills and debt.”
The Romney campaign called the fund’s portrayal of Romney’s proposals inaccurate.
“The Commonwealth study sadly contributes little to the health reform conversation that this country deserves,” Romney spokeswoman Andrea Saul told CNN. “It badly mistakes Gov. Romney's proposals. Worse, it assumes a fantasy world where Obamacare has been a success.  Instead, Americans have seen their insurance premiums increase, small businesses are facing massive tax increases and seniors will have reduced access to Medicare services.”
Commonwealth authors admit that since Romney’s proposals haven’t been specified, “a set of assumptions was made” for the report based on similar proposals advanced in the past.
Romney has said he would repeal the health reform law, but still keep some of the law’s more popular provisions in place.
It’s the second report in just a week that argued Americans would be worse off without the PPACA and under Romney’s health care plan.
report from Washington, D.C.-based consumer advocacy group Families USA last week claimed that families buying non-group health insurance on their own in 2016 would pay nearly twice as much under the health proposals offered by Romney than under Obama’s health reform law.
The Commonwealth Fund, a liberal think tank that supports research on health care issues, compared the candidates’ health care plans by looking at seven key issues: health insurance coverage, insurance affordability, consumer protection, consumer choice, help for small business, improving Medicare, and improving health care quality and slowing spending growth.
The analysis was conducted by economist Jonathan Gruber, who advised the policymakers who wrote the PPACA.
The report claims people in southern and western states would benefit significantly from the PPACA. By 2022, when the law is fully implemented, uninsured rates are estimated to fall by more than 15 percentage points in 11 states. Health reform would also reduce the uninsured rate from to 10 percent to 15 percent in 13 states across the South and West, as well as in New York and the District of Columbia, and to less than 10 percent in the rest of the states, the report claims.
The study also found that Romney’s plan would cost Americans more money. People who choose to buy health insurance on their own would pay 14 percent of their income, compared to only 9 percent under the PPACA, The Commonwealth Fund says.
Cost has been a major point of contention, with both Romney and insurance insiders saying health reform will increase costs. Research from global insurance broker Willis Group Holdings earlier this year confirmed that health costs continue to rise, and that the PPACA is one of the significant reasons for the cost increases. In turn, employers are asking their employees to pay more for coverage.
Health insurers have long questioned the “affordable” part of the PPACA, saying the law doesn’t address the key problem of cost and affordability.
“While the Supreme Court's decision about the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act determined the outcome of one of the most significant judicial cases of the century, no one has yet addressed one of the most pressing issues facing our nation: the rising cost of health care," Digital Insurance President and CEO Adam Bruckman said in June. “Our country still does not have measures in place to control a system that is on an unsustainable cost trajectory. If we are to effect meaningful change, we are obligated to devise methods to curb rising expenses.”
The above was written by  by Kathryn Mayer posted Oct 2, 2012 at the Benefits pro web site which is here:

Monday, October 8, 2012

Happy Canadian Thanksgiving everyone

From my home to yours--Have a happy thanksgiving day with family and friends

Some History as you enjoy this special day.

Many thanksgivings were held following noteworthy events during the 18th century. Refugees fleeing the civil war in the United States brought the custom of an annual thanksgiving festival to Canada.

Early European thanksgivings were held to give thanks for some special fortune.

An early example is the ceremony the explorer Martin Frobisher held in 1578 after he had survived the long journey in his quest to find a northern passage from Europe to Asia.

From 1879, Thanksgiving Day was held every year but the date varied and there was a special theme each year.

The theme was the "Blessings of an abundant harvest" for many years. However, Queen Victoria's golden and diamond jubilees and King Edward VII's coronation formed the theme in later years.

From the end of the First World War until 1930, both Armistice Day and Thanksgiving Day were celebrated on the Monday closest to November 11, the anniversary of the official end of hostilities in World War I.

In 1931, Armistice Day was renamed Remembrance Day and Thanksgiving Day was moved to a Monday in October.

Since 1957, Thanksgiving Day has always been held on the second Monday in October.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Little known facts about death of Penguins

Thanks to  Derwyn for this one.

I never knew this!

Did you ever wonder why there are no dead penguins seen on the ice in Antarctica - where do they go? Well, wonder no more!


It is a fact that the penguin is a very ritualistic bird, which lives an extremely ordered and complex life. The penguin is committed to its family and will mate for life, as well as maintaining a form of compassionate contact with its offspring throughout its life.


If a penguin is found dead on the ice surface, other members of the family and social circle will dig holes in the ice, using their feet, wings and beaks, until the hole is deep enough for the dead bird to be rolled into and buried.









The male penguins then gather in a circle around the fresh grave and sing:


"Freeze a jolly good fellow"


"Freeze a jolly good fellow."


Then, they kick him in the ice hole."


Hey folks sorry if you didn't laugh, but you really didn't believe that I knew anything about penguins, did you?