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Reasonable as may it sound As it may sound reasonable As reasonable it may sound Reasonable as it may sound
would be readily accepted by the Obama administration. is nothing but wishful thinking and thus is unrealistic. arises from dissatisfaction with Obama’s health-care reform. ignores the essential health-care for old beneficiaries.
Doctors use excessive medical procedures to save patients. The spending on health care is overwhelmingly high. Doctors and hospitals are not rewarded for better health care. Doctors and hospitals use incentives to attract patients.
Is Obama’s health-care policy wishful thinking On whose terms should new medicare plan be formulated Why is Ryan’s medicare plan too radical Why must we end medicare "as we know it"
As for costs, not to worry. "Reducing the waste and inefficiency in Medicare and Medicaid will pay for most of is plan. " Obama said. He pledged to" not sign a plan that adds one dime to our [budget] deficits- either now or in the future. "If you believe Obama, what’s not to like Universal insurance. Continued choice. Lower costs. The problem is that you can’t entirely believe Obama. If he were candid - if we were candid - we’d all acknowledge that the goals of our ideal health - care system collide. Perhaps we can have any two, but not all three. If we want universal insurance and unlimited patient and doctor choice, costs will continually spiral upward, because there will be no reason or no one to stop them. We have a variant of that today -a cost -plus system, with widespread insurance and open -ended reimbursement. Higher costs push up premiums and taxes. That’s one reason health spending has gone from 5 percent of gross domestic product in 1960 to 16 percent in 2007. (Other reasons: new technologies, rising incomes. ) But controlling spending requires limits on patients and doctors. What is the author’s attitude towards Obama’s reform plan on health- care Welcome. Critical. Indifferent. Approving.
As it may sound reasonable Reasonable as it may sound As reasonable it may sound Reasonable as may it sound
reserving deserving observing preserving
adapted congratulated applauded measured
As reasonable it may sound As it may sound reasonable Reasonable as it may sound Reasonable as may it sound
reducing budget in health-care and improving its efficiency. giving doctors and hospitals more power in health-care. reducing the burden of doctors and hospitals in health-care. shocking the medicare beneficiaries into panic and anxieties.
National defense. Scientific research. Better health care for retirees. People’s living standards.
a. If he were candid - if we were candid - we’d all acknowledge that the goals of our ideal health - care system collide. Perhaps we can have any two, but not all three. If we want universal insurance and unlimited patient and doctor choice, costs will continually spiral upward, because there will be no reason or no one to stop them. We have a variant of that today -a cost -plus system, with widespread insurance and open -ended reimbursement. Higher costs push up premiums and taxes. That’s one reason health spending has gone from 5 percent of gross domestic product in 1960 to 16 percent in 2007. (Other reasons: new technologies, rising incomes. ) But controlling spending requires limits on patients and doctors. What is the author’s attitude towards Obama’s reform plan on health- care Welcome. Critical. Indifferent. Approvin
In other words On the other hand On the contrary As a matter of fact
appealing to referring to contributing to adapting to
adapted congratulated applauded measured
As reasonable it may sound As it may sound reasonable Reasonable as it may sound Reasonable as may it sound