Making Sure The States Don't Pay (Too Much) For Reform

(Blog Post) The House is still deliberating between two versions of the public option, as Cohn laid out earlier: a stronger version that would tie public option pay rates to Medicare “plus 5” percentage points, and a weaker version that would have negotiated rates, but also separately raise Medicaid eligibility from 133% to 150% percent above the poverty line to save money. (It’d be cheaper to cover Medicaid patients than in the public plan.) Full Story »

Posted by Kaizar Campwala
Tags Help
Stats Help
# Tweets: 0 (as of 2009-10-25)
Editorial Help
Posted by: Posted by Kaizar Campwala - Oct 25, 2009 - 7:07 AM PDT
Content Type: Blog Post
Edit Lock: This story can be edited
Edited by: Kaizar Campwala - Oct 25, 2009 - 7:46 AM PDT

Reviews

Show All | Notes | Comments | Quotes | Links
kathryn klein
3.1
by kathryn klein - Oct. 25, 2009

The author of this article assumes that the reader already knows about the issue being analyzed. This article is confusing and not very articulate. There needs to be more background information and content.

See Full Review » (11 answers)

Comments on this story Help (BETA)

NT Rating | My Rating

Ratings

3.0

not enough reviews
from 2 reviews (23% confidence)
Quality
3.0
Information
3.5
Insight
3.0
Style
3.0
Context
2.5
Expertise
4.0
Originality
2.0
Relevance
4.0
Responsibility
4.0
Popularity
2.9
Recommendation
2.5
Credibility
3.5
# Reviews
1.0
# Views
5.0
# Likes
1.0
# Emails
1.0
More
How our ratings work »
(See these related stories.)

Links Help

  • A guide to the public option compromises in the Senate

    (Blog Post) There are three "compromise" public options currently being considered in the U.S. Senate (and yes, I know many argue that the public option is itself a compromise, and ...
    Posted by Kaizar Campwala