World Medical Tourism & Global Healthcare Congress

Posted on 1 May 2012 in Uncategorized by admin

Frank Lasee is one of Wisconsin’s leading public policy voices, especially in the areas of healthcare and insurance. He has successfully worked in both the government and private sectors.

Frank’s 20 plus years of experience, include working in health insurance, business sales and real estate development as well as drafting healthcare and business development legislation.

Frank has in-depth knowledge of the U.S. medical delivery system, insurance law, medical tourism, and the ever-changing health insurance industry.

As a result of his longtime involvement with these issues, Frank aims to inform the public and provide solutions to today’s growing tension between private and public sector interests and various industry issues.

Frank’s wide scope of experience has given him a deep understanding of self-motivation, motivating others, managing people, positively handling adversity, creating win-win relationships, and maximizing personal and organizational potential.

Early in his career, Frank successfully sold business long distance services and fully integrated manufacturing computer systems. He has worked in management for a large health insurance company with over a billion dollars in revenues and with an international heavy equipment manufacturer. Frank currently serves in the Wisconsin State Senate.

Frank is happily married to Amy Joy Lasee, a public speaker in her own right. Together they are raising six wonderful daughters, ranging in age from 7 to 16.

Frank graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. Frank is an avid lifelong learner and is passionate about public speaking, public policy, instructing, informing, and mentoring.

http://www.medicaltourismcongress.com/en/bio/frank-lasee_498.html

Medical Tourism Resource Online

5th WMT&GHC and Benefit from Great Savings

Posted on 31 December 2011 in Uncategorized by admin

5th WORLD MEDICAL TOURISM & GLOBAL HEALTHCARE CONGRESS

~ On The Beach Ft. Lauderdale/Miami ~

The must attend conference for anyone with an interest in medical tourism.

Learn More

Mark your calendar for 5th World Medical Tourism & Global Healthcare Congress 2012 On the Beach Fort Lauderdale/Miami, the biggest international medical tourism event for healthcare providers, insurance companies, medical tourism facilitators, government, airlines, hospitality companies and other stakeholders in the medical tourism industry.

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The Fastest Way to Increase Your Knowledge and Implement Best Practices in your Business

You will get access to dozens of hours of educational sessions including keynote presentations, discussion panels, workshops and much more. Learn directly from the expert speakers in the industry presenting the most relevant topics geared to help you identify ways to increase the ROI to your organization.

Explore Our Educational Tracks, featuring topics such as international accreditation process and requirements, country successful medical tourism case studies, best practices for successful medical tourism marketing, comparison of care cost in different countries, insurance options for those in Medical Tourism business among other relevant and current topics.

Who Attends?

Full Integration With The Employer Healthcare & Benefits Congress

1,000+ more attendees from the U.S. & international health insurance industry.
Medical Tourism Congress attendees will have for the first time access to pre-schedule networking meetings with senior U.S. healthcare and insurance leaders attending the Employer Healthcare & Benefits Congress.
Medical Tourism Congress attendees have access to up to 50 sessions focused on the U.S. insurance and employer healthcare market.

REGISTRATION IS OPEN NOW – PAY ONLY $1,200

(Only until February 1st 2012!)

Visit www.medicaltourismcongress.com at any time to get the latest information on the 5th World Medical Tourism & Global Healthcare Congress.

The Medical Tourism Association Team

MMedsolution Medical Tourism Resource On-line

http://mmedsolution.com/

http://mmedsolution.com/

New US Health Care System

Posted on 3 August 2010 in Uncategorized by admin

U.S. health insurers are not worth the long-term investment risk in the wake of the new healthcare reform law, according to brokerage Edward Jones.

Edward Jones downgraded the ratings on the stocks of the three health insurers it covers — UnitedHealth Group Inc, WellPoint Inc and Aetna Inc — to “sell” from “hold” late on Friday. Those companies are the three largest U.S. health insurers.

As of the end of the month, the brokerage will no longer cover the companies.

“We are concerned that market structure changes, profit limitations and rebates, and ever-present political/regulatory pressures will negatively impact future profit growth and more than offset the anticipated influx of newly insured members,” Edward Jones analyst Aaron Vaughn wrote in a report.

The brokerage, whose clients are long-term individual investors, recommends instead looking at other healthcare stocks, such as pharmaceutical companies, Vaughn said.

The recommendation represents one of the most negative calls against investing in the health insurance industry since the new law passed earlier this year.

The law paves the way for more than 30 million uninsured Americans to receive coverage over the next several years, while imposing new regulations and fees on health insurance companies.

While 2010 looks like a strong year for the health insurers, the new reforms that kick in beginning next year and continue to 2014 and beyond cause massive uncertainty, Vaughn said in an interview.

“It’s going to be a dramatically different environment from today and no one can really say what that environment is going to be,” he said.

“The risk/return for the industry overall is not attractive for individual investors, and that’s who we’re focused on for the long term,” Vaughn said. “We’re worried about mom and dad having this in their portfolio.”

http://www.marklevinshow.com/goout.asp?u=http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6713CA20100802?feedType=RSS&feedName=healthNews&rpc=22&sp=true

This is your new health care system H T Congressman Kevin Brady 300x232 New US Health Care System

New US Health Care System

America’s New Health Care System Revealed

4422795 New US Health Care SystemThis is your new health care system (H/T Congressman Kevin Brady)

A U.S. judge ruled on Monday that the state of Virginia could proceed with its challenge to President Barack Obama’s landmark healthcare law, a setback that will force the White House to defend its reforms in the middle of a tough congressional election campaign.In the opening salvo of the legal fight, U.S. District Judge Henry Hudson refused to dismiss the state’s lawsuit, which argued the requirement that its residents must have health insurance is unconstitutional and conflicts with state law.

Hudson, who noted that his ruling was only an initial step, decided the issue the state raised — whether forcing residents to buy something, namely healthcare, is constitutional — had not been fully tested in court and was ripe for review.

“The congressional enactment under review — the Minimum Essential Coverage Provision — literally forges new ground and extends (the U.S. Constitution’s) Commerce Clause powers beyond its current high watermark,” Hudson said in a 32-page ruling.

The new law is a cornerstone of Obama’s domestic agenda and aims to expand health insurance for millions more Americans while curbing costs. Obama officials have vigorously defended it as constitutional and necessary to stem huge increases in costs for healthcare.

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said the ruling rejecting the Obama administration’s motion to dismiss the case was a procedural step and the healthcare reform law has “full constitutional backing.”

“We remain confident that the case is solid,” she told reporters. Arguments on the merits are set for October 18, two weeks before the November 2 congressional elections.

The fight over the healthcare law is expected to be a major issue in those campaigns as Republicans have advocated repealing the measure and plan to attack Democrats for it.

“This healthcare bill is a monstrosity and will be a big issue in the fall,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell told Reuters in an interview after the ruling. “We would repeal it and replace it were we given enough votes to do that.”

McConnell’s fellow Republicans are expected to pick up many seats in the House of Representatives and possibly in the Senate, although it is unclear whether they would take control of the two chambers.

MISSOURI TRIES TO FORBID PENALTIES

Missouri voters are expected to pass a measure on Tuesday to forbid the federal government from penalizing individuals for refusing to buy health insurance. But it could be symbolic because federal law typically supersedes state laws.

The federal penalty provision does not take effect until 2014 and the Obama administration has pointed to tax credits, subsidies and other mechanisms to help those who cannot afford to buy insurance. Some 46 million people in the United States lack healthcare coverage.

Virginia’s lawsuit, filed shortly after Obama signed the health reforms into law, is one of several arguing that it is an unprecedented seizure of power by the federal government.

“This lawsuit is not about healthcare, it’s about our freedom and about standing up and calling on the federal government to follow the ultimate law of the land — the Constitution,” said Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli.

The state said that penalizing someone for failing to buy health insurance coverage violates the Constitution’s Commerce Clause and Tax Clause that allows the federal government to regulate commerce between the states.

“This portion of the complaint (by Virginia) advances a plausible claim with an arguable legal basis,” wrote Hudson, who was appointed by George W. Bush in 2002.

Virginia also argued that because the Constitution does not allow the government to force a person to purchase something, therefore the federal government also would be powerless to levy a penalty or tax for failing to buy healthcare coverage.

The Obama administration has countered that the government always has the ability to levy taxes and that the Constitution places the federal government’s powers over the states.

It has also said that Virginia does not have legal standing to sue on behalf of its citizens. Instead, Justice Department lawyers say, individuals purportedly affected would have to contest the law themselves in court.

Virginia’s legislature approved its own measure saying its citizens cannot be required to buy health insurance, bolstering its case, the state’s governor Bob McDonnell said. “It warrants a full and thorough hearing in our courts,” he said.

Health insurance companies, which fought hard against the passage of the healthcare law, have moved on to accept it. Wall Street had already factored in the decision.

“Wall Street is not operating under the assumption that the healthcare reform law is stricken or components of it are stricken because of constitutionality concerns,” said Collins Stewart analyst Brian Wright, who covers insurer stocks, adding that the case warrants closer scrutiny by Wall Street.

“We are focused on implementing the new law in a manner that holds down costs and minimizes disruption for the 200 million people our members serve,” said Robert Zirkelbach, a spokesman for the industry’s lobby group, America’s Health Insurance Plans.

Arguments over the Obama administration’s motion to dismiss a lawsuit by 20 other states are set for September in Florida.

Legal analysts say there is a good possibility the matter will reach the U.S. Supreme Court, but most say there is only a slim chance the states would prevail.

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Health Care Fit for Animals – NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF New York Times

Posted on 2 September 2009 in Uncategorized by admin

Health Care Fit for Animals

A most interesting and insightful article and op ed by Nicholas Kristof of the New York Times

Is it accurate and insightful or just slighted propaganda ?
The analogy of the  lines and lines of would be ( or denied ) patients at a Tennessee fair grounds – waiting to be assessed or treated is certainly a stark monument to the tales of American private health care – certainly when one invokes the proof source of the Micheal Moore landmark film Sikko, yet one wonders as well at the rigid and self serving bureaucracies of the medical care systems of such countries with  “socialized “  or state run medical care systems – such as Canada or Britain who would downright deny and forbid these patients to have any alternative health care by any means.  Indeed “private ” operations might well be shut down , or worse their professionals chastised and punished by any of a number of means.

The expression in the former Communist Soviet Unions was “They pretend to pay us …. we pretend to work”  along with the maxim everyone had a job but no one could eat ( properly).   That was except for the Communist party bosses.

Opponents suggest that a “government takeover” of health care will be a milestone on the road to “socialized medicine,” and when he hears those terms, Wendell Potter cringes. He’s embarrassed that opponents are using a playbook that he helped devise.

“Over the years I helped craft this messaging and deliver it,” he noted.

Mr. Potter was an executive in the health insurance industry for nearly 20 years before his conscience got the better of him. He served as head of corporate communications for Humana and then for Cigna.

He flew in corporate jets to industry meetings to plan how to block health reform, he says. He rode in limousines to confabs to concoct messaging to scare the public about reform. But in his heart, he began to have doubts as the business model for insurance evolved in recent years from spreading risk to dumping the risky.

Then in 2007 Mr. Potter attended a premiere of “Sicko,” Michael Moore’s excoriating film about the American health care system. Mr. Potter was taking notes so that he could prepare a propaganda counterblast — but he found himself agreeing with a great deal of the film.

A month later, Mr. Potter was back home in Tennessee, visiting his parents, and dropped in on a three-day charity program at a county fairgrounds to provide medical care for patients who could not afford doctors. Long lines of people were waiting in the rain, and patients were being examined and treated in public in stalls intended for livestock.

“It was a life-changing event to witness that,” he remembered. Increasingly, he found himself despising himself for helping block health reforms. “It sounds hokey, but I would look in the mirror and think, how did I get into this?”

Mr. Potter loved his office, his executive salary, his bonus, his stock options. “How can I walk away from a job that pays me so well?” he wondered. But at the age of 56, he announced his retirement and left Cigna last year.

This year, he went public with his concerns, testifying before a Senate committee investigating the insurance industry.

“I knew that once I did that my life would be different,” he said. “I wouldn’t be getting any more calls from recruiters for the health industry. It was the scariest thing I have done in my life. But it was the right thing to do.”

Mr. Potter says he liked his colleagues and bosses in the insurance industry, and respected them. They are not evil. But he adds that they are removed from the consequences of their decisions, as he was, and are obsessed with sustaining the company’s stock price — which means paying fewer medical bills.

One way to do that is to deny requests for expensive procedures. A second is “rescission” — seizing upon a technicality to cancel the policy of someone who has been paying premiums and finally gets cancer or some other expensive disease. A Congressional investigation into rescission found that three insurers, including Blue Cross of California, used this technique to cancel more than 20,000 policies over five years, saving the companies $300 million in claims.

As The Los Angeles Times has reported, insurers encourage this approach through performance evaluations. One Blue Cross employee earned a perfect evaluation score after dropping thousands of policyholders who faced nearly $10 million in medical expenses.

Mr. Potter notes that a third tactic is for insurers to raise premiums for a small business astronomically after an employee is found to have an illness that will be very expensive to treat. That forces the business to drop coverage for all its employees or go elsewhere.

All this is monstrous, and it negates the entire point of insurance, which is to spread risk.

The insurers are open to one kind of reform — universal coverage through mandates and subsidies, so as to give them more customers and more profits. But they don’t want the reforms that will most help patients, such as a public insurance option, enforced competition and tighter regulation.

Mr. Potter argues that much tougher regulation is essential. He also believes that a robust public option is an essential part of any health reform, to compete with for-profit insurers and keep them honest.

As a nation, we’re at a turning point. Universal health coverage has been proposed for nearly a century in the United States. It was in an early draft of Social Security.

Yet each time, it has been defeated in part by fear-mongering industry lobbyists. That may happen this time as well — unless the Obama administration and Congress defeat these manipulative special interests. What’s un-American isn’t a greater government role in health care but an existing system in which Americans without insurance get health care, if at all, in livestock pens.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/27/opinion/27kristof.html?em=&pagewanted=print