10.24.2008 | Seattle PI | An economic downturn threatens to worsen health care in America, Washington and King County. Indeed, individuals already are reportedly cutting back on doctor visits, limiting prescription drug usage and delaying some surgeries, early indications of what could be much more widespread changes as an apparent recession spreads and deepens. | Read
10.13.2008 | The Bellingham Herald | Both candidates for governor have had their say on government health insurance for children, and the results are striking. | Read
09.09.2008 | Seattle Times | If you want to understand the debate over economic policy our nation should be having, look no further than Barack Obama's and John McCain's health plans. | Read
08.26.2008 | Seattle Times | The number of people without health insurance fell by more than 1 million in 2007, the first annual decline since the Bush administration took office, the Census Bureau reported Tuesday. Incomes edged up for the middle class while poverty held steady. | Read
08.20.2008 | The Olympian | Not having a plan to take care of your health care costs could take a big bite out of the retirement savings you've worked hard to accumulate. | Read
08.14.2008 | Seattle Times | The Bush administration is backing down from a threat to penalize states enrolling middle-class children in a health program intended for the poor. | Read
07.10.2008 | USA Today | Barack Obama on Sunday proposed up to a 50-percent tax credit for small businesses providing health insurance to their employees, a program he hopes has special appeal to Hispanics and other minority groups struggling for a toehold in the U.S. economy. | Read
06.27.2008 | L.A. Times | New Medi-Cal proposals put budgets and bureaucracy ahead of children's health. | Read
06.18.2008 | Seattle Times | Health and education are two sides of the same coin: Each affects the other and they combine to affect, ultimately, the well-being of our residents and our communities. Inequities in health status and education for communities of color are real in our state, and they point to tremendous missed opportunities among our residents. | Read
06.18.2008 | New American Foundation | We hear lots of talk about tax reform and lots about health care reform, but rarely hear about the two together. While there are proposals to change the exclusion for employer-provided health care, such as President Bush's proposal to remove it and provide a standard deduction for health insurance, they typically don't consider either the entire health care or tax reform picture. | Read
11.07.2007 | New York Times | New research proves that a "dose" of hands-on health care training can transform parents' abilities to care for common childhood ailments at home - and save Medicaid millions of dollars annually. | Read
08.22.2007 | Everett Herald | Our family has been in three sports events in the past 10 days. The first was the Crohn's and Colitis Three Mile Run in Seattle. Seven hundred people showed up to run, walk and push baby strollers past Safeco Field two Sundays ago. Some were great athletes. Some were sick from Crohn's. Some showed the effects of medication. One was Mike McCready, the bassist from Pearl Jam. All were out exercising on a Sunday morning, thumbing their noses at these diseases and living their lives as healthfully as they could. Plus, altogether we raised $140,000 for the Crohn's and Colitis Foundation. | Read
06.27.2007 | Everett Herald | Our modern advances in health care enable people to live a lot longer than a generation before. What becomes a concern is not so much the medical advances, but the ability of social services to keep up with people's aging and health. That's the rub. We can keep people alive. Can we make sure they have a good quality of life? | Read
08.23.2006 | Tacoma News Tribune, Everett Herald | Most of these women don’t have the time to get in shape and train up for the triathlon; they are working, taking care of their kids, volunteering in their PTAs. But they find that time anyway. And they summon their will not just for the big day of the triathlon, but for every training session they go on, whether that’s running, bicycling or swimming. It is a living metaphor for lives well lived; instead of waiting for someone or something to do something to you, you decide that you are going to do something for yourself. | Read (Tribune) | Read (Herald)
03.23.2006 | New York Times Review of Books | Medical costs are once again rising rapidly, forcing health care back into political prominence. Indeed, the problem of medical costs is so pervasive that it underlies three quite different policy crises. First is the increasingly rapid unraveling of employer- based health insurance. Second is the plight of Medicaid, an increasingly crucial program that is under both fiscal and political attack. Third is the long-term problem of the federal government's solvency, which is, as we'll explain, largely a problem of health care costs. | Read
02.22.2006 | Tacoma News Tribune, Everett Herald | The Legislature makes big and yet silent trade-offs with tax breaks. The Senate agreed to fund 5,000 additional slots for the Basic Health Plan’s subsidized sliding scale health coverage for lower-income workers. That cost about $10 million. But one in 10 Washington citizens lacks health insurance, and the number is growing. Why not take back those $46 million in tax breaks and add Basic Health coverage for 20,000 more citizens? | Read (Tribune| Read (Herald)
07.13.2005 | Tacoma News Tribune | The great thing about this ride is that it wasn’t just a bunch of jocks racing each other. There were thousands of ordinary people of all ages, shapes and sizes who got on their bikes and made the journey to Portland. | Read
06.01.2005 | Tacoma News Tribune | When you have a big and growing problem, the solution demands changes in business-as-usual. The incentive is to avoid these changes and to just make do. So we replace “can do” in policy formation and social progress with “make do” in just getting by. | Read
06.01.2005 | EOI | More than 3,200 Wal-Mart workers are on active duty. To help them, Wal-Mart claims that they continue their benefits and make up the difference between their military pay and the regular Wal-Mart wages. That’s not a very difficult thing to do when only 48% of Wal-Mart employees are covered by Wal-Mart’s health insurance and the employees end up paying 40% of the cost. | Read
05.04.2005 | Tacoma News Tribune | Wal-Mart employees and their dependents end up looking to the state for health coverage. Wal-Mart encourages its employees to sign up for the Basic Health Plan, so the public subsidizes Wal-Mart’s employees’ health care, and Wal-Mart’s profits. Wal-Mart has figured out how to outsource its benefits to other employers, the government and the taxpayer. | Read
03.30.2001 | Smoking has returned to the headlines like a flare-up in the Balkans. The latest dispatches from the nicotine wars are a grim combination of carnage and hope. | Seattle Times