Friday, September 18, 2009

Quo Vadis? Where to From Here?

Monday's class will be your last day to work in the lab. You can go directly to room 227 for the beginning of class on Monday.

The health care assignment will be due of Thursday, September 24 at the beginning of class.

Please take time to consider what aspect of the health care debate that you would like to make part of your study as you are working on this introductory assignment.

I will take time on Tuesday and Wednesday to discuss the fundamentals of a good research study and how to write a proposal. You will then begin to write your proposals on Thursday. A deadline will be set soon thereafter and published on the blog.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Bills? We Don't Need No Stinking Bills! Chasing the Treasure of Health Care

So now we are on our way...

The task as outlined previously is as follows:

1. Where is the health care debate going?

Track the bills that are in the House of Representatives and the Senate. What do they offer? Who supports them?

2. What does public opinion say about health care?

Find public opinion polling results on questions concerning health care and how that opinion is changing over time. For example, to what extent to Americans support a government operated health option? How has that support changed over the last six months?

3. What are the three strongest arguments on both sides?

In your research, decide on the three best arguments on each side and justify why you think they are the most important.

4. How are people debating this issue in the media?

Check out the ads being run across America right now both in support and in opposition to changes in health care. Is there a pattern? Who is running these ads? Identify the best and worst ads. Do these ads help or hurt the debate? Are they addressing the best arguments their respective side has to make?

While you all are responsible for finding appropriate sources online to meet the requirements of the assignment, here are some examples of the material available to assist you in these endeavors:

1. Where the health care debate is going

Bill Tracking

http://www.opencongress.org/

http://www.govtrack.us/

http://thomas.loc.gov/


Compare Health Care Reform Plans

http://www.kff.org/healthreform/sidebyside.cfm

How A Bill Becomes a Law

http://www.cybertelecom.org/images/howlaw.gif


http://www.votesmart.org/resource_govt101_02.php

2. What does public opinion say about health care?

Public Opinion Research

http://www.gallup.com/home.aspx

http://www.pollingreport.com/health.htm

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/content/search?SearchText=health+care

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

The Alamo Pop quiz

Today, you wrote a quiz on the Alamo article. See the quiz below:



  1. What is the Alamo?

  2. What took place there?

  3. Who was involved?

  4. Why is it considered significant?

  5. What is the author’s thesis?

  6. What is the author’s bias?

  7. Provide an example of this bias.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Introducing the Universal Health Care Debate

For the last 15 minutes of class on Monday, we discussed the universal health care debate that has risen recently in the United States. What follows in this and some subsequent blog entries is some very general information to introduce the issue for our study purposes.



Why is Health Care an Issue At All?





1. The Uninsured



To begin, there are simply many people who are not presently covered. There is dispute over the exact number, but somewhere between 30 million and 47 million people are without health insurance in the United States. The former number does not include illegal immigrants or young Americans who choose not to purchase health care. Any way you look at it, 30 million or roughly 10% of the population is a significant number.



If they require medical care, they will get it, as it is illegal for care to be refused to someone simply because they have no insurance and can't afford to pay. However, in these cases the standard of care declines and often people choose to avoid visiting a doctor until they require emergency care. In other words, they do not generally participate in the routine checkups recommended for detecting life threatening illness early and other preventative care practices.



2. The Rising Cost of Insurance Premiums



Medical care is expensive and as such the United States has seen the cost of medical insurance climb at an alarming rate. The average cost of an employer supported health plan for a family of four is just over $12000 a year.



There are projections that health care costs will rise faster than economic growth over the next number of years.



3. Loss of Insurance for Pre-Existing Conditions



An insurance company can refuse to renew your insurance once you have been diagnosed with a life threatening illness. This, of course is problematic when people are looking for additional treatment.



4. Medical Malpractice Insurance On the Rise



Due to the fact that there is no cap on court awards for medical malpractice insurance, people have received seemingly disproportionate cash awards for "pain and suffering". Everyone pays when insurance companies have to shell out millions for court settlements. Premiums can rise quickly and some doctors either stop practicing, stop performing certain procedures or risk it all and go without insurance.

Between 2000 and 2002, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that premiums for doctors went up 15%. In one Florida county for general practitioners, malpractice insurance went up to $175000 for the year. Rising malpractice premiums may also encourage physicians to practice "defensive medicine," performing more tests and procedures than necessary in order to reduce exposure to lawsuits. Both rising malpractice premiums and defensive medicine practices may contribute to the increase in health insurance premiums.


See the link below, read the arguments posed there and do some of your own research on the topic of health care. Over the next two classes in the lab, learn as much as you can about the topic. Put together a set of notes on what you have learned. These notes should include the following headings:

http://www.balancedpolitics.org/universal_health_care.htm



1. Where is the health care debate going?

Track the bills that are in the House of Representatives and the Senate. What do they offer? Who supports them?

2. What does public opinion say about health care?

Find public opinion polling results on questions concerning health care and how that opinion is changing over time. For example, to what extent to Americans support a government operated health option? How has that support changed over the last six months?

3. What are the three strongest arguments on both sides?

In your research, decide on the three best arguments on each side and justify why you think they are the most important.

4. How are people debating this issue in the media?

Check out the ads being run across America right now both in support and in opposition to changes in health care. Is there a pattern? Who is running these ads? Identify the best and worst ads. Do these ads help or hurt the debate? Are they addressing the best arguments their respective side has to make?



The Star Spangled Banner

Today we discussed (and some of us sang) the Star Spangled Banner, which was originally written by Francis Scott Key. It was written by Key in response to seeing the American flag as it flew at the dawn of a new day after an intense nighttime British naval bombardment during the War of 1812.

It was quickly set to music. Specifically, the popular British drinking song
"Anacreon in Heaven." was used as a fit with the lyrics. Eventually, it became the nation's official anthem in 1931.

Before 1931, other songs were used to represent American patriotism in some official way. Most popularly, "My Country, 'Tis of Thee", whose melody was derived from the British national anthem, served as a de facto national anthem of the United States before the adoption of "The Star-Spangled Banner".

Remember the Alamo!

Review the article that appears in the last post and be prepared to write a little pop quiz on Tuesday, September 15. To make sure you are prepared, answer the following:

What is the author's thesis? Do they reveal a bias of their own? What is this bias? What are the main examples that the author uses to prove his thesis?