Posts Tagged ‘Richard Burr’

GOP: Let the Patients Choose their Health Care Plan

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

By Courtney Ann Jackson-Talk Radio News Service

More Americans should have the opportunity for affordable health care and the choice of doctors according to GOP Leaders from the House and Senate who introduced new legislation Wednesday. The Patients’ Choice Act of 2009 would allow for universal health care managed outside of government entities.

GOP Leaders

U.S. Representative Paul Ryan (R-WI) said, “We propose to equalize the taxed treatment of health care, giving every American regardless of employment status the ability to purchase health insurance. And if you like what you’ve got, you can keep it.”

Senator Lamar Alexander (R-TN) was present at the press conference to show his support of the legislation and explained that the legislation lets “the patient makes the decision, not Washington D.C.”

The Patients’ Choice Act as laid out in a summary statement released at the press conference, would transform health care by: preventing disease and promoting healthier lifestyles, creating affordable and accessible health insurance options, and equalizing the tax treatment of health care.

The proposed plan will “empower the American people” to have access to their own doctor and their own health care coverage, according to U.S. Representative Devin Nunes (R-CA).

Senator Richard Burr also explained they are hopeful that the Act will “push Congress to enact a more sensible health care reform bill this year.”

The GOP leaders said the American’s need a health care system centered on their individual needs and that is what the Patients’ Choice Act of 2009 could do.

If There’s No Pork, Where’s The Beef?

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Coffee Brown, MD, University of New Mexico, Talk Radio News

A typical flu season kill 37,000 Americans. The swine flu, officially known as “2009 H1N1″, may be responsible for up to 160 deaths in Mexico and one infant death in the U.S.

Of those who have contracted the disease outside of Mexico, the illness has been relatively mild. So, what’s the big deal?

“This is a whole new kind of flu,” said Dr. Anthony Fauci, Director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Flu viruses mutate slightly every year, but not like this, Fauci said. Genes from four separate viruses – avian, human, and two kinds of swine flus, have combined into this strain.

Our vaccines and immune systems have “never seen anything like it,” Fauci said. That’s what makes it potentially more dangerous. While this means that we have little or no natural immunity, it does not necessarily mean that this flu must be any more infectious or virulent than the average flu.

So, why is it called “swine flu”? Actually, Sen. Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) really wishes we wouldn’t call it that, as it’s hurting the pork industry. Fauci agrees, “The name that is now being used is ‘the 2009 H1N1 flu.’”

Despite Egypt’s decision to eliminate all swine from the country, people can still eat pork without contracting the swine flu. The American Heart Association may advise moderation, but this flu is entirely unrelated to pigs. Still, the pork industry and health officials are going to have to come up with a catchier name than “2009 H1N1 flu” if they want us to stop calling it “swine flu.”

Epidemic or Pandemic? An epidemic means that more cases are occurring than predicted. With seasonal flu, epidemiologists have so much experience that they can usually predict the number of cases fairly accurately. The number they are seeing right now wouldn’t even be noticeable in the middle of flu season, but this one was winding down for the year. Since this is really a new type of flu, the CDC don’t yet have the experience to predict a “normal” season or number of cases.

A pandemic occurs when a disease covers a large geographic area, such as a continent, or multiple continents, as this one has. The common cold is a type of pandemic, though we usually don’t bother to call it that. Neither word actually refers to the severity of the disease, the likelihood that a sufferer will end up in the hospital or even die.

So what about the rising number of cases? If that makes you nervous, stop watching them, because the numbers will rise steeply with every re-count for the foreseeable future, whether this is a killer flu or of ordinary severity.

On April 29, 2009, the WHO raised the level of alert to “phase 5. “What does that mean? Phase 4 meant human to human transmission, phase 5 means the same thing, but in more than one country, phase 6 will mean clusters of cases, outbreaks, in more than one country. Phases 7 and 8 describe the trailing off of the disease.

So, is it going to get worse, or go away? It may do either. The behavior of flus is variable, and epidemiologists don’t have enough information yet to predict this one’s course. Almost any scenario imaginable could occur.

At a Senate hearing Wednesday, convened on short notice in response to this flu, John McCain (R-Ariz) asked, “Should we close the borders?”

“No,” Richard E Besser, MD, Acting Director, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, HHS,responded. That was tried during the SARS outbreak, and it appears to have been unsuccessful. Simulations suggest that closing the borders would have little, if any, effect on limiting spread, and it would tie up massive resources that could be put to much better use elsewhere. If we had been one of the later countries to be hit, we might have tried closing the borders to buy a few more weeks to get ready, but even then the gain would be slight, Besser said. The World Health Organization concurs.

That led Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) to ask about resources. Besser told him that stockpiles of antivirals , masks, and respirators are sufficient, because they had been bought when funding was better. Recent cutbacks have cost public health thousands of jobs, lost or threatened, and have made it harder for states to exercise their pandemic control plans.

The Office of the Biomedical Advance Research and Development Authority , which prepares contingency plans and caches supplies, has never had its own funding, but has receives sporadic money from NIH, according to Fauci.

In his 100 day address last night, President Obama re-iterated many of these points, saying “We are continuing to closely monitor the emergency … (This is) obviously a very serious situation,” adding that schools with confirmed or suspected cases should close temporarily.

Obama is requesting $1.5 billion for the further stockpiling of medicines and equipment, and for logistical support. He echoed the CDC and WHO by reminding people, “I’ve asked every American to take the same steps you would take to prevent any other flu: Keep your hands washed; cover your mouth when you cough; stay home from work if you’re sick; and keep your children home from school if they’re sick.”

Readers: Please send questions, tell us what you need to know.

Obama’s “eyes and ears closed”

Thursday, July 17th, 2008

In a press conference this afternoon Republican Senators and Congressmen launched an attack against Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) by launching a new seven minute video titled “The Obama Iraq Documentary: Whatever the Politics Demand.” The video asks the question: Where does Barack Obama stand on Iraq? In the video, Obama’s own words are used against him to paint the senator as a politically expedient politician who will say and do anything to get elected. (more…)

Obama discredits McCain, McCain fights back

Monday, June 9th, 2008

Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) and Doug Holtz-Eakin from Sen. John McCain’s (R-Ariz.) campaign team offer a rebuttal to Sen. Barack Obama’s (D-Ill.) earlier speech. Burr and Holtz-Eakin explain McCain’s economic policy, saying that McCain is the presidential candidate with the better track-record, refuting Obama’s false claims. (22:00)

 
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More secure with McCain

Monday, June 9th, 2008

Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) and Doug Holtz-Eakin from Sen. John McCain’s (R-Ariz.) campaign team held a conference call to rebuttal some issues brought up in Sen. Barrack Obama’s (D-Ill.) campaign speech on economic policy held in Raleigh, North Carolina. Burr began by saying that if the American people focus on the campaign rhetoric they will find big differences between what candidates propose and what they have done. (more…)

House Committee Joint Hearing on Disabled American Veterans

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

At the House Committee on Veteran’s Affairs Joint Hearing to receive legislative presentation of the Disabled American Veterans, Congressman Steve Buyer (R-IN) said whether or not veterans are service connected or non-service connected (in regards to disability), he feel that the DAV should be able to stand for veterans. He wants to simplify the process for compensation and retirement, and essentially “take the DOD out” of the system to make the process faster.
(more…)