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Here is an article that will clarify the "unintended consequence" of Obamacare.
If are not for this, its time to let your elected officials know. This week is it.

Health-Care Overhaul IV: This Time It’s Personal
Pelosicare is not good news for diabetics.

By Mona Charen

I labeled it “Health-Care Overhaul IV” for convenience. In fact, a new 2,000-page behemoth seems to emerge more than once a week from the maw of Congress, so it’s becoming impossible to keep track.

Until now, my reasons for opposing this fright mask were entirely dispassionate and flowed from 1) common sense (how are they going to provide more care for less money, and can we afford another huge entitlement when existing ones are going bankrupt?), 2) experience (government entitlements always cost far more than projections and government is far less efficient at providing services than the private sector), and 3) philosophy (the way to reduce prices is to increase competition — not reduce it). But now the proposals being considered will hit my family particularly hard. This time it’s personal.

In order to pay for its new entitlement, the Senate Finance Committee bill (Baucus) proposes to tax medical-device manufacturers $40 billion over the next ten years. To the average person, medical-device manufacturers may not mean much. They produce heart monitors and stents and pacemakers.

They also produce insulin pumps. My 16-year-old son, who has had Type I diabetes (an autoimmune disease distinct from Type II) since the age of nine, depends on a pump to live a reasonably normal life. If he didn’t have an insulin pump — a device the size of a cell phone that delivers insulin through a tube directly under his skin — he would be required to give himself as many as four injections a day, as he did before he got the pump. And his life expectancy would be shorter.

In just the six years since David began using the pump, the technology has improved markedly. Whereas he used to have to insert the catheter (which must be changed every three days) with a two-inch needle, he now uses a much less painful spring-operated inserter. The programming has become more sophisticated as well. The pump can now deliver carefully calibrated doses for high-carb foods like pizza and ice cream — foods that are otherwise parlous for diabetics to enjoy — and the pump is preset with carb counts for many common foods.

Insulin pumps provide better blood-sugar control than other diabetes treatments. But they are far from perfect. Even careful users will frequently experience highs (which increase the likelihood of long-term complications like heart disease and blindness) and lows (which can be immediately life-threatening).

Yes, we families with Type I pray for a cure. But the recent progress in technology has offered really tantalizing possibilities. Medical-device manufacturers have recently debuted a new technology that is key to the health of Type I diabetics — continuous glucose monitors. These provide 24/7 data on the patient’s blood sugar to supplement the six daily finger sticks. Eventually, the combination of these two technologies — the insulin pump and the continuous glucose monitor — could provide the Holy Grail for Type I diabetics: an artificial pancreas. The AP would keep blood glucose at normal or near-normal levels and thus prevent the worst effects of diabetes. We’ve heard estimates that the technology may become available within five years.

Unless the medical-device industry is hit with a major tax.

While the U.S. leads the world in medical technology, most device makers are not huge conglomerates, but smaller companies already hurting in this recession. According to the Advanced Medical Technology Association, the industry consists of about 6,000 companies, most of which earn less than $100 million annually. The chief executive of B. Braun Medical, which makes pain-control devices, told the Washington Post that paying his share of the new tax would “exceed my research and development budget.” The $4 billion annual tax would represent about 40 percent of the industry’s outlay for research and development ($9.6 billion).

If this tax is enacted, medical-device manufacturers will cut back drastically on R&D, and may have to lay off employees. In addition, they will charge higher prices for their products to compensate for the money confiscated by Washington. Since health-insurance plans frequently cover half or more of the cost of these already-expensive products, health-insurance rates would have to rise as well. This is just one more example of the ways health-care costs would be driven up, not down, by the Democrats’ reforms.

As for David, he will see the prospect of an artificial pancreas — his greatest hope for a healthier and longer life — recede over the horizon.

— Mona Charen is a nationally syndicated columnist. © 2009 Creators Syndicate, Inc.

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Don't bring up Healthcare Bill! A message from the Administrator.

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Whatever happens with health care legislation, at minimum the anti-monopoly exemption granted to the health insurance industry should be revoked.

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Don't bring up Healthcare Bill! A message from the Administrator.

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+1 think you're right w/ that

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You folks may be interested in joining the US Healthcare Reform discussion group here on TuDiabetes. It's a group we created where political discussion of the debate is welcome.

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Don't bring up Healthcare Bill! A message from the Administrator.

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Teresa,
Are you writing these messages? What's the deal here? I sure hope there is not censorship going on at Tu Diabetes.

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this was at least a civilized discussion - why pull the plug?

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Sorry, I was also enjoying the conversation, I was learning from it as well. I like to hear everyone thoughts and opinions. I am worried about it for my daughter and all diabetics, I just want us to get it right. But I did get a nasty gram from the administrator about posting the piece from Mona Charen and Thomas Sowell. Thanks.

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ok well then off thos the US healthcare forum then

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No "nasty gram" was sent. The message sent to Teresa was in regard to her posting of the same letter in three locations, which we do not allow. We are allowing her to leave it in two locations (Robin's discussion and here), but we cannot allow it to appear additionally as a comment to an unrelated group (Omnipod Users).

As far as shutting this discussion down is concerned, you will note that it remains open and we have not closed the discussion.

That being said, we have found that politically charged discussions often turn into unfriendly exchanges between members, which do not support the values of our community (http://tudiabetes.com/profiles/blogs/the-values-of-tudiabetes). Any discussion regarding healthcare that would bring up potentially unfriendly exchanges would be better suited to our healthcare reform discussion board (which MelissaBL referenced), where we have certain agreed upon rules of engagement. These discussions are relevant to our lives as diabetics and often productive, but do not always reflect the non-partisan values of TuDiabetes.com

Thanks,
The TuDiabetes Administration Team

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