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Archive for August, 2009

Decision to Cover H1N1 Vaccine Administration

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Georgia (BCBSGA) announced today that it will offer coverage for the administration of the H1N1 (swine flu) vaccine when it becomes commercially available to the general public. The vaccine administration will be covered for members whose benefit plans provide coverage for vaccines.

BCBSGA will also continue coverage of seasonal flu vaccine administration for those whose health plans offer vaccine coverage. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has stated that the H1N1 vaccine is not intended to replace the seasonal flu vaccine. Seasonal flu and H1N1 vaccines may be administered on the same day, according to the CDC.

The decision to cover the H1N1 vaccine administration is based on formal recommendations announced this week by the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices. ACIP recommended initial prioritization for those administering the vaccine for five key populations, including:

– pregnant women,

– people who live with or care for children younger than six months of

age,

– health care and emergency services personnel,

– children and young adults from 6 months old to 24 years old, and

– people from 25 through 64 years old if they have chronic medical

conditions that increase their risk of complications from influenza

infection.

ACIP also provided guidance regarding high risk groups to be targeted in the event of a significant shortage of vaccine as well as recommendations for the rest of the general population if the supply of vaccine exceeds the needs of the target groups.

BCBSGA’s immunization policy decisions are based on recommendations issued by ACIP and other nationally recognized organizations. ACIP is composed of 15 experts in fields associated with immunization who provide advice and guidance to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and CDC on the most effective means to prevent vaccine-preventable diseases.

Vaccine administration is covered for members whose benefit plans provide coverage for vaccines. Policyholders should confirm their specific benefits by calling the toll-free telephone number listed on their insurance card.

About Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Georgia:

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Georgia, Inc. and Blue Cross and Blue Shield Healthcare Plan of Georgia, Inc. are independent licensees of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association((R) ). The Blue Cross and Blue Shield names and symbols are registered marks of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association. Additional information about Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Georgia is available at www.bcbsga.com

Indian doctors tenure in Lanka extended

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

The tenure of a group of Indian doctors working among the displaced Tamils in refugee camps has been extended by two months.

Indian doctors, mostly from the army’s medical corp, have been working among refugees since the beginning of March, more than two months the war between the LTTE and the Lankan army was over.

Currently, the doctors run a field hospital in a camp in Vauniya where the largest almost 2.5 lakh of the 2.83 lakh refugees were housed. This was the third extension granted to the field hospital unit

“The field hospital unit has a 60-member medical team comprising surgeons, pediatrician, medical specialist and lady medical officers. The team so far has already treated over 21,000 internally displaced Tamil civilians including cases of gunshot wounds, trauma, head injuries and those related to general surgery and orthopedics at Manikfarms camp at Vavuniya,” the Indian defence ministry said on Sunday.

A 30-member armed forces medical team from India arrived in Colombo on July 23 to relieve the medical personnel already there since March, this year.

Not only Indian doctors, a team of 80 retired Indian soldiers are reaching Sri Lanka to join the ongoing efforts to clear the thousands of anti-personnel mines planted across north and north-eastern Sri Lanka.

According to news agency IANS, while 50 of the latest batch of Indians are attached to the Pune-based Horizon Group, 32 are from Sarvatra Technical Consultants, a company that is based in Gurgaon, Haryana. Sarvatra will send 32 more men.

Sri Lanka is one of the world’s most heavily mined areas. There are no precise estimates about the number of mines the military and the LTTE buried in the island’s north and east over the past quarter century.

From 2003, according to IANS, Horizon and Sarvatra have been funded by Norway in the de-mining operations in the wake of an Oslo-brokered ceasefire. The ceasefire collapsed but the de-mining work has continued.

HEALTH-CARE REFORM: PRIVATE DATA VS. A PUBLIC PLAN

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

The authors of “A Mad Rush to Health Reform” (Outside Shot, July 13 & 20) cite research by the think tank Lewin Group to argue against a public (government) insurance option in health-care reform. Seems to me there is a potential for bias here: The group is owned by private insurer United Healthcare.

Dr. Fred Bannister Director, Coalition for a Health-Secure America, Chetek, Wis.

Nursing home staff trained to help resident with dental care

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

The federal government has promised one staff member from every federally-funded aged care home will be trained to assist residents with dental hygiene by next year.

Ageing Minister Justine Elliot said one staff member at each of 2,830 aged care homes will be trained in dental hygiene as part of a $3 million plan.

“Unfortunately, many of the older Australians in aged care homes cannot communicate their discomfort and are unable to look after their own dental health,” she said.

“This plan is about reducing potential pain, malnourishment and discomfort for older Australians.”

The trained staff member will educate other aged care workers to help maintain the teeth of nursing home residents, she said.

Dentalplans Coupon 2009 Tooth Fairy

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Tooth Fairy is affected by the economy, too

Dentalplans.Com

Heather Hofmeister, 651-994-5210

hhofmeister@deltadentalmn.org

http://www.dentalplans.com

The results are in: Delta Dental of Minnesota announced the 2009 Tooth Fairy poll, which shows a decrease in the average gift Minnesota children receive from the Tooth Fairy for a missing tooth. The poll is derived from a survey of Delta Dental of Minnesota members and their families.

In Minnesota, children receive an average of $1.62 per tooth, which is down from last year’s gift of $2.10 – a 23 percent decrease.

“The change in the Tooth Fairy Poll average is consistent with trends exhibited in other more commonplace indices – although I will say the Tooth Fairy’s economic performance beat the stock market,” said Marty Weiland, operations analyst for Delta Dental of Minnesota. “The Dow Jones Industrial Average, for example, decreased 32 percent during the same time period.”

SOMETHING TO CHEW ON

According to the poll, more than half of children’s first dental visits do not occur until age three or later. “An important point to reiterate is that the American Dental Association recommends that a child be seen by a dentist as soon as his or her first tooth erupts, but at least no later than the first birthday,” said Dr. Richard Hastreiter, dental director for Delta Dental of Minnesota.

OPEN WIDE

Approximately 90 percent of parents surveyed state their children receive a dental exam every six months. “The frequency of dental visits should be determined by the child’s dentist, based on an assessment of the child’s unique oral health needs — rather than on a pre-set schedule,” continued Dr. Hastreiter. “This approach ensures that each child receives the most appropriate, timely care.”

SWEET TOOTH

The poll also revealed some positive news. The numbers suggest children are consuming less sugary drinks and/or treats. Parents surveyed indicated their children consume an average of one to two sugar drinks and/or treats per day. “Parents are instrumental in teaching healthy habits to their children at an early age,” said Dr. Hastreiter. “Encourage children to make healthy choices. Teach them to eat a balanced diet and limit in-between meal snacks of foods containing high levels of sugar. This will help promote good dental health as well as overall health.”

BRUSHING UP

The poll shows most Minnesota children are working hard to keep their teeth clean. According to the poll, 86 percent of parents report that their children brush their teeth in the morning, and 94 percent of children brush at night, with only 2.5 percent brush at noon. “Children should brush with a pea-sized amount of fluoride toothpaste after sugary or starchy meals or snacks to help reduce the incidence of tooth decay,” continues Dr. Hastreiter. “Children should also drink fluoridated water after meals to help cleanse the teeth.”

About Dentalplans.com

Dentalplans.com oral health initiatives are part of its non-profit mission to provide educational information and support community programs that help enhance the oral health of all Minnesotans. An independent, non-profit health services company, we take seriously our mission to serve Minnesotans’ oral health needs. Since 1969, we’ve accomplished this mission by providing the best access across the state to oral health care through affordable dental plans.

Delta Dental serves more members from Minnesota-based groups (3.4 million members from 8,400 employer groups) than any other dental benefits provider. Delta Dental of Minnesota is based in Eagan, and has an operations center (customer service, claims processing, and broker and small group sales and account management) on the Iron Range. For more information, visit www.dentalplans.com

Delta Dental is a registered mark of Delta Dental Plans Association. Delta Dental of Minnesota is an independent nonprofit dental services company and is an authorized licensee of the Delta Dental Plans Association of Oak Brook, Illinois.

DENTAL HEALTH MONTH

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Did you know that tooth decay (cavities) is the most common chronic disease found in children? It is five times as common as asthma and seven times as common as hay fever.

Each year, more than 51 million school hours are lost due to dental related problems. According to the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 18 percent of 2- to 4-year-old children have experienced tooth decay, and 16 percent have untreated tooth decay. By age 17, more than seven percent of children have lost at least one permanent tooth due to decay. In Maryland, 31 percent of kindergarten and third grade children have tooth decay. If tooth decay remains untreated, it causes pain and infections that may lead to problems with eating, speaking, playing and learning.

Fortunately, with good oral health care habits, tooth decay can be prevented. Taking care of your children’s teeth – including baby teeth – from the very start is the key.

“A child should visit the dentist when his or her first tooth appears, or by his or her first birthday,” said Col. Colleen Shull, commander, APG dental Clinic Command. “And, it is important for parents to teach their children good oral [dental] health care habits, including proper brushing and flossing techniques, eating nutritious foods and regular visits to the dentist.”

Steps such as these will help ensure that children will have a healthy mouth, as well as body.

Please note that parents should supervise brushing until children are seven to eight years old.

Since children learn oral health care from their parents, it is important that parents serve as role model and practice good oral health care habits.

Encourage children to “brush twice daily for two minutes for a healthy mouth and visit the dentist regularly,” Shull said.For more information about US Fed News contract awards please contact: Sarabjit Jagirdar, US Fed News, Email:- htsyndication@hindustantimes.com.

Dental Health Care

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Dental patients who have been alarmed or confused by recent news reports about how osteoporosis medications might affect their oral health now have a brochure to help them separate fact from fiction. The American Dental Association (ADA) collaborated with the National Osteoporosis Foundation to create the brochure, “Osteoporosis Medications and Your Dental Health,” which will be available in dental offices this month.

The brochure explains that some patients who have taken bisphosphonates, a common class of drugs taken by those with osteoporosis or low-bone density, have developed bisphosphonate-associated osteonecrosis of the jaw. Osteonecrosis of the jaw is a rare but serious condition that can cause severe damage to the jawbone. This condition is diagnosed in patients who have an area of exposed bone in the jaw that persists for more than eight weeks, who have no history of radiation therapy to the head and neck and who are taking, or have taken, a bisphosphonate medication.

The chance of developing osteonecrosis of the jaw for patients who take bisphosphonates is unknown; however researchers agree that the chance appears to be very small. In fact, 94 percent of people diagnosed with osteonecrosis of the jaw are cancer patients who are or have received repeated high doses of bisphosphonates intravenously. The remaining 6 percent diagnosed with osteonecrosis of the jaw took oral bisphosphonates.

“Patients who take bisphosphonates for osteoporosis are encouraged to talk to their dentist so that their dentist can show them good oral hygiene practices as well as monitor their oral health,” says Matthew Messina, D.D.S., ADA Consumer Advisor and a general dentist based in Ohio. “Patients should not stop taking their osteoporosis medications without speaking with their physicians.”

According to the ADA, the benefits of osteoporosis medications greatly outweigh the risks of developing osteonecrosis of the jaw.

Osteoporosis is a serious condition that causes 2 million bone fractures a year, according to the National Osteoporosis Foundation. Half of women and 20 percent of men older than 50 will break a bone due to osteoporosis. Bisphosphonates are commonly prescribed to prevent broken bones. Common bisphosphonate medications include alendronate (Fosamax(R)), ibandronate (Boniva(R)), risedonate (Actone(R)) and zoledronic acid (Reclast(R)).

The “Osteoporosis Medications and Your Dental Health” brochures will be available in dental offices or for purchase by dentists on the ADA’s Web site at www.ada.org. For more information about osteonecrosis of the jaw, please visit the ADA’s Web site at http://www.ada.org/prof/resources/topics/osteonecrosis.asp or the National Osteoporosis Foundation’s Web site at www.nof.org.

About the American Dental Association

Celebrating its 150th anniversary, the not-for-profit ADA is the nation’s largest dental association, representing more than 157,000 dentist members. The premier source of oral health information, the ADA has advocated for the public’s health and promoted the art and science of dentistry since 1859. The ADA’s state-of-the-art research facilities develop and test dental products and materials that have advanced the practice of dentistry and made the patient experience more positive. The ADA Seal of Acceptance long has been a valuable and respected guide to consumer dental care products. The monthly Journal of the American Dental Association (JADA) is the best-read scientific journal in dentistry. For more information about the ADA, visit the Association’s Web site at www.ada.org

Dental Health for All(TM) Program Works With Customers and Retailers to Provide Access to Oral Health Care

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Millions of Americans live without dental insurance and as challenging economic times continue the services provided by non-profit dental clinics become increasingly important. With the support of customers and retailers, Tom’s of Maine Dental Health for AllTM program is helping these clinics provide families the dental care they need with an estimated 134,000 additional patient visits since its inception (see also Dental Health for All).

The Tom’s of Maine Dental Health for AllTM program was created to bring together people who want to help ensure underserved communities have access to oral health care. Since 2004 over 70 nonprofit clinics have received support. Individuals help by participating in the Dental Health for AllTM partnership, donating directly to clinics through the Dental Health for AllTM fund, and recommending dental clinics to receive support. This year $95,000 in donations will be made to six non-profit dental clinics across the country in recognition of their commitment and passion to making a real difference in the lives of the people in their communities. Each deserving clinic will use the funds to help increase patient capacity and improve or expand patient services.

Petaluma Health Center (Petaluma, CA), which serves 1,000 patients regardless of economic, insurance or cultural barriers, will use the award towards a new clinic location that will provide care to an additional 1,300 families in the first year.

Children’s Dental Health Clinic (Long Beach, CA) has treated more than 10,000 underserved children in the past year and will use its monies to help purchase a dental operatory unit that will benefit up to 33,000 visitors annually.

Inner City Health Care (Denver, CO) serves medically uninsured and low-income families, of which 97 percent live below the poverty line. Its funding will expand healthcare and education efforts aimed at bringing 1,700 patients to the clinic for screenings and services.

Visiting Nurse Association of Fox Valley (Aurora, IL) helps nearly 800 patients, of which 85 percent struggle below the poverty level. Its donation will support a new dental office expansion project designed to increase patient care by 50 percent.

Community Healthcare Network (New York, NY), which delivers accessible dental care to diverse populations in underserved communities, will purchase digital imaging equipment to help offer quality care to nearly 25 percent more patients.

Dental Health Clinic at Pacific University (Forest Grove, OR) provides dental care to 3,000 patients, of which 80 percent lack sufficient insurance coverage. It will use the donation to help fund a mobile dental clinic that brings oral health services to nearly 100 patients each academic year.

“There are millions of American families without dental insurance so they forgo proper dental care; it’s a situation that’s not getting any better in this economy,” said Kerry Maguire, D.D.S., M.S.P.H. and Tom’s Director of Professional of Advocacy. “By joining forces with our customers, we collectively took a few small steps to help improve the Dental Health available to thousands of children and adults. Everyone who purchased a Tom’s of Maine product in January helped contribute to this annual effort.”

To learn more about the program and how to nominate a non-profit clinic Dental Health for AllTM program n your area next year, visit www.tomsofmaine.com.

Doing Nothing?

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

THE FIRST THING to note about the financial crisis is that the federal government never had any business intervening in the personal decision of whether you want to own a home. There is no rational economic argument, or any argument I know of, that says the market of buying and selling homes is imperfect in some way, requiring government action. Construction firms have plenty of incentive to build homes and sell them. People who have the wherewithal have plenty of incentive to buy homes if they so choose. For the government to intrude hito homeownership was an off-budget, nontransparent, backdoor attempt at redistributing income. And when the policy became a way of transferring income to people who couldn’t afford those homes, it was doomed to failure.

This provision of risky debt to low-income homeowners was exacerbated by a second misguided federal policy: the longstanding practice of bailing out private risk taking. Although this has gone on for decades in the U.S. and other countries, the Federal Reserve played a special role during the tenure of former chief Alan Greenspan.The Fed’s implicit and almost explicit policy before the housing crash was to say to the financial markets: “Don’t worry about the fact that there’s a bubble. We’ll lower interest rates and keep them low enough to prevent a collapse in asset prices.” This logic, broadly applied, was commonly called the Greenspan Put. The Federal Reserve was basically selling the market an option for getting out comparatively unscathed when things turned bad. The result has been a widely held assumption that market actors would not have to bear the full losses from their own risky behavior.

When people try to pin the blame for the financial crisis on the introduction of derivatives, or the increase in securitization, or the failure of ratings agencies, it’s important to remember diat the magnitude of borii boom and bust was increased exponentially because of the notion in the back of everyone’s mind diat if tilings went badly, the government would bail us out. And in fact, diat is what the federal government has done. But before critiquing dus series of interventions, perhaps we should ask what the alternative was. Lots of people talk as if there was no option other dian bailing out financial institutions. But you always have a choice. You may not like the other choices, but you always have a choice. We could have, for example, done nothing.

Unfair in the Short Term, Inappropriate In the Long Term

By doing nodiing, I mean we could have done nothing new. Existing policies were available, which means bankruptcy or, in the case of banks, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation receivership. Some sort of orderly, temporary control of a failing institution for the purpose of either selling off the assets and liquidating them, or, preferably, zeroing out the equity holders, giving the creditors a haircut and making them the new equity holders. Similarly, a bankruptcy or receivership proceeding might sell the institution to some player in the private sector willing to own it for some price.

With that method, taxpayer funds are generally unneeded, or at least needed to a much smaller extent dian with the bailout approach. In weighing bankruptcy vs. bailouts, it’s useful to look at the problem from three perspectives: in terms of income distribution, long-run efficiency, and short-term efficiency.

From the distributional perspective, the choice is a no-brainer. Bailouts took money from the taxpayers and gave it to banks diat willingly, knowingly, and repeatedly took huge amounts of risk, hoping they’d get bailed out by everyone else. It dearly was an unfair transfer of Binds. Under bankruptcy, on the other hand, the people who take most or even all of the loss are the equity holders and creditors of these institutions. This is appropriate, because these are the stakeholders who win on the upside when there’s money to be made. Distributionally, we clearly did the wrong thing.

From the perspective of long-run efficiency, the question is also relatively straightforward. By the end of 2005, it should have been apparent that the U.S. economy was fundamentally misaligned. We had significandy overinvested in housing and significandy underinvested in factories, plants, and equipment. In effect, we needed a recession: a period to readjust the balance between the different types of capital.

More broadly, failure is an essential aspect of free markets. Failure shows capitalism is working, because it means resources are moving from bad uses to good uses.

There are other long-term problems wirii the bailout approach. Bailouts create moral hazards going forward, meaning market players will be more inclined to take excessive risks. Bailouts encourage inappropriate goals, such as propping up insolvent banks. Bailouts give the government ownership stakes in these institutions, which means diat politics, not economics, is going to decide where these firms invest in the future. And bailouts set the wrong precedent for other industries.

The Only Plausible Argument

There is therefore only one reasonable argument for choosing bailouts over bankruptcy. Bailouts might make sense if bankruptcy imposed an externality- an unwelcome spillover effect. The argument for that goes as follows: When a given bank fails, it loses intermediation capital, or the ability to make loans. Any given bank knows a particular sector of the economy, a particular region of the country, or a particular kind of loan market. So if diat bank fails, that specialized knowledge gets destroyed; therefore, at least in the short term, no one can easily make that kind of loan.

If that happened to one bank, you’d say it was no big deal; there are plenty of banks that have lots of knowledge. But if one large bank fails and defaults on obligations to lots of other banks, forcing some of them to fail, you might worry that contagion could lead to a lot of intermediation capital disappearing in a short period of time.

That story sounds somewhat plausible. But it has two key weaknesses, one theoretical and one empirical.

The theoretical weakness is diat if a bank fails but its assets and its employees are bought by another bank, there is no reason for the intermediation capital to disappear. It just gets transferred to someone else. If you think that the good ideas for making productive loans are in the brains of the people of the failed bank, those people are probably going to go work at some other financial institution- a hedge fund, an insurance company, another bank. So you’re not necessarily going to lose all the intermediation capital as a result of the failure. Indeed, the failed bank’s employees may be put to work in more productive ways.

The empirical problem with the claim that bank failures destroy intermediation capital is that there isn’t strong evidence to support it. Some evidence does show a correlation between bank failures and declines in output. But since declines in output should lead to bank failures, we don’t know which is causing which.Thus, there isn’t much quantitative data showing that bank failures lead to a large excess loss, over and above what you would expect when a negative shock hits the economy.

Because housing prices have declined, some people and institutions are worse off. Maybe if s the first bank in the chain that takes most of the hit. Or maybe the first bank passes some of the hit along because of its counter-party claims to some other bank. But that hit has to be taken. And in the U.S., it was a big hit indeed- plausibly several trilUon dollars in housing wealth. The size of that loss doesn’t demonstrate a spillover effect; it just shows that somebody has to experience the loss that the economy has already taken.

Twisted Incentives

The problem isn’t only that the bailout wasn’t necessary in the first place.The bailout may have made the credit situation worse. When banks hear that the Treasury Department is dangling hundreds of bilUons of dollars out there to purchase their toxic assets, what are they going to do? SeU their assets for 20 cents on the doUar, or hold onto them in the hope that the government will eventuaUy buy them for 80 cents on the doUar?

The moment Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson got in front of the cameras last faU and announced that we were on the brink of catastrophe, WaU Street was bound to freeze, because bankers wanted to figure out how much money was available and how they could get some. Let’s not realize any losses we don’t have to reaHze, they figured, because Treasury’s going to bail us out.

Of course, the bankruptcy approach is itself messy, and there are some legal issues concerning whether existing procedures apply to bank holding companies or just banks. But what the administration should do now is stop giving banks money and start being open to the bankruptcy approach when existing law aUows it. Further, the administration could push Congress harder to expand and clarify the fdic’s receivership authority. As long as regulators keep giving banks money, nothing is going to clean the mess in the financial sector.

The latest government program, the PubUcPrivate Investment Program, is just another handout to the banks. It sets up a system where a smaU amount of private money is combined with a smaU amount of government money and a big loan guaranteed by the government to buy the toxic assets from the bank.

So what are the incentives to private-sector actors? WeU, they’re putting hardly any money in. If it turns out that the toxic assets they bought aren’t worth anything, they haven’t lost much. If the assets are worth a lot, they make some money. Either way, the Treasury Department is guaranteeing everything. Reasonable estimates indicate that these toxic assets are not worth very much, so this is just another way of transferring resources to die banks by buying their toxic assets at inflated prices.

That’s not the only area where the Obama administration has twisted incentives. President Obama’s mortgage plan uses $275 billion in tax funds to help homeowners refinance and lower rates, to subsidize payments from borrowers to lenders, to get lenders to modify loans, and so on. It gives another $200 billion to the government-created home mortgage companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. This is exactly the wrong approach.

The aim is to reduce foreclosures, so the delinquent or nearly delinquent borrowers can stay in their homes.That sounds like a laudable goal, but it ignores a fundamental reality: This money is coming from somebody else. So what the plan is doing is penalizing relatively responsible homeowners or renters- everybody who pays taxesand rewarding those people who should have known, or at least should have had some inkling, that the loans they were being offered were too good to be true. This program creates exactly the wrong incentives for people deciding whether to borrow and whether to be homeowners.

More generally, it continues the policy of promoting homeownership. We got in this situation because the government wanted to promote homeownership. Until we create a situation where people make decisions based on their own resources and have to think about bearing the consequences of the decisions they make, the root cause of the financial crisis will only get worse.

Shrinking the Pie

Add in Obama’s $787 billion stimulus and his $3.6 trillion budget, and a picture emerges of an administration totally unapologetic about its designs to expand the size and scope of government. There is no question that the people advocating this spending want much more government intervention with respect to unions, energy, health care, infrastructure, and other areas. The crisis has given them the opportunity to ram through a bunch of things they’ve been pursuing for a long time.

As a matter of accounting, they are almost certainly understating the budgetary implications of their programs. Their assumptions about economic growth are optimistic relative to those of private forecasters. Furthermore, many of the items in the stimulus package that were supposed to be temporary are not going to be temporary. Thus, my guess is that deficits will be much bigger than the administration predicts.

The stunning thing about Obama’s spending proposals is that there’s almost nothing you could defend from the perspective of efficiency. If s all about redistributionnot redistribution to the poor but redistribution to Democratic interest groups: to unions, to the green lobby, to the health care industry, and so on. At some point these everescalating government interventions will affect the size of the economic píe. If we start looking more like France, with more than 20 percent of GDP controlled by the federal government, output growth and economic freedom will all suffer.

The fundamental problem underlying the financial crisis was government policy. Instead of undertaking enormous new policies, we should try to fix or eliminate bad policies and focus on efficiency rather than redistribution. Doing nothing new and simply working with pre-existing procedures would have been much better than anything we’ve done so far.

More Americans Have Cell Phones Than DentalPlans Coverage

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

Studies link poor oral health with a higher risk for heart disease, stroke, and delivery of premature or low birth-weight babies. Despite these documented risks, 45 percent of the U.S. population is living without dentalplans insurance – nearly twice the rate of people without medical insurance (see also Regence Life and Health).

To help make dentalplans care more accessible to people, Regence Life and Health has introduced two affordable, individual dental plans that reward members for being proactive about their dental health. Under the plans, members who incorporate an annual exam and cleaning into their dental routine are rewarded with an increasing level of dental benefits.

“For people whose employers don’t provide dental coverage, it can be very difficult to find coverage on their own,” said Joe Wilds, chairman and president for Regence Life and Health. “However, Regence’s new individual dentalplans benefits provide a solution for individuals and families seeking affordable and comprehensive coverage – because dental health is too important to leave to chance.”