arizona governor's death decisions

Schadenfreude

patriot and widower
where the death panels live - the governor decided to spend stimulus money on prisons rather than medicaid

2nd person denied Ariz. transplant coverage dies​

Associated Press/AP Online

By PAUL DAVENPORT PHOENIX - A second person denied transplant coverage by Arizona under a state budget cut has died, with this death "most likely" resulting from the coverage reduction, a hospital spokeswoman said Wednesday.

University Medical Center spokeswoman Jo Marie Gellerman said the patient died Dec. 28 at another medical facility after earlier being removed from UMC's list for a liver transplant needed because of hepatitis C.

Gellerman cited medical privacy requirements in declining to release any information about the patient.

Arizona reduced Medicaid coverage for transplants on Oct. 1 under cuts included to help close a shortfall in the state budget enacted last spring.
Officials at the Tucson, Ariz., hospital said the patient's death "most likely" resulted from Arizona's scaling back coverage for transplants, she said.

It's impossible to say with 100 percent certainty whether the patient would have died anyway, Gellerman said, "but we do know that his condition has gotten more severe since he was taken off the list."

The patient's worsening condition would have elevated his place on the list, she added.

A Phoenix-area man, Mark Price, died Nov. 28 of complications from preparation for a bone-marrow transplant that was to be privately funded. That funding was provided anonymously after The Associated Press and other media outlets reported that he was notified of two possible donors on Oct. 1, the same day the coverage was reduced.

The second person's death was reported by KOLD-TV in Tucson and the Arizona Guardian.

Democrats and other critics have slammed Republican Gov. Jan Brewer and the Republican-led Legislature for the transplant coverage reduction, and incoming Senate Minority Leader David Schapira called on them to restore the approximately $1.4 million of funding.

"Failure to restore this funding is a death sentence for people who have committed no crimes," he said.

Contacted for comment on the latest death, Brewer spokeswoman Paul Senseman said the governor's office didn't have confirmation that the person was enrolled in the state Medicaid program, the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System.

Brewer earlier Wednesday renewed her defense of the transplant coverage reduction but expressed a willingness to have it reviewed.
"It's something that probably needs to be discussed," Brewer said.

"Eveybody is concerned about it, as I am. The bottom line is ... that was one of those areas that we could cut and we moved forward on that."
Brewer commented when asked by a reporter about a legislative committee chairman's intention to review the transplant cutbacks during a future budget hearing.

Brewer and Republican lawmakers want to drop approximately 250,000 people from AHCCCS enrollment because of the state's continuing budget troubles and the impending loss of federal stimulus funding that has propped up spending on the Medicaid program.

Arizona faces a projected $1.4 billion shortfall in its next state budget.
Brewer has said she will ask President Barack Obama's administration for a waiver permitting the enrollment reduction. The federal health care overhaul otherwise bars the enrollment reduction.

A service of YellowBrix, Inc. .
 
I'm skeptical about this being accurate.

The first guy died of complications from preparations for a bone marrow transplant. Private funding was available and was paying for the procedure. So why is the lack of funding being blamed for his death?


Without any additional info on the 2nd patient (but I read they had Hepatitus. C) I can't say whether the budget cuts are at fault.
 
I'm skeptical about this being accurate.

The first guy died of complications from preparations for a bone marrow transplant. Private funding was available and was paying for the procedure. So why is the lack of funding being blamed for his death?


Without any additional info on the 2nd patient (but I read they had Hepatitus. C) I can't say whether the budget cuts are at fault.

for the one with hep c, a liver donor was available (a family friend died) but that was before the governor decided to pull the plug on transplants

the other guy was at the top of the bone marrow list but once more the funds were cut off

the private funding came too late to save the guys

the additional information was on CNN
 
But this governor can find NO money for this program she says is optional.

She just cant bring herself to end some of the tax relief for the states business,

This woman is evil.
 
But this governor can find NO money for this program she says is optional.

She just cant bring herself to end some of the tax relief for the states business,

This woman is evil.

She also couldn't cut the pensions of public workers either... I guess they are all evil too for wanting things and thus denying people medicaid bene's.
 
for the one with hep c, a liver donor was available (a family friend died) but that was before the governor decided to pull the plug on transplants

the other guy was at the top of the bone marrow list but once more the funds were cut off

the private funding came too late to save the guys

the additional information was on CNN

A Phoenix-area man, Mark Price, died Nov. 28 of complications from preparation for a bone-marrow transplant that was to be privately funded. That funding was provided anonymously after The Associated Press and other media outlets reported that he was notified of two possible donors on Oct. 1, the same day the coverage was reduced.


The man get private funding 10/1/2010
and died from complications on 11/28/2010

The private funding DID NOT come too late...and had nothing to do with his death.


and
saying someones death "is "most likely" resulting from the coverage reduction"...is hardly an accusation to make judgments on.

More into in required here.
 
It's all about the benjamins.

"The reality at this stretch of the border is more complex, with hospitals reporting some immigrants arriving to give birth in the United States but many of them frequent border crossers with valid visas who have crossed the border legally to take advantage of better medical care. Some are even attracted by an electronic billboard on the Mexican side that advertises the services of an American doctor and says bluntly, “Do you want to have your baby in the U.S.?
 
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