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Jim--This health and medicine part of it maybe understated. According
to the NYT Almanac/US Census Bureau, Texas has the largest percent of people
without health insurance coverage with 24.3% of the population un-insured.
And as far as I know Texas has no state personal income tax and no corporate
income tax! No wonder they are at the bottom!
<p>Tom Lehman
<br>
<br>
<p>Jim Westrich wrote:
<blockquote TYPE=CITE> Texas is one of the few states that bans the
"corporate practice of medicine." Consequently they have a lot of
public and non-profit hospitals (and a lot of HMO's playing fast and loose
with their "non-profit" status). This makes up a little bit for their
stingy Medicaid eligibility and mean spirited state health policy.
Medicaid spending per person in Texas is consistently 20-30% below the
national averages.
<p>Bush's initial plan when elected governor for Medicaid reform was horrible.
He proposed eligibility for managed Medicaid at 45% FPL for adults (!!!)
and 133% FPL for kids. Most of the state would only be served by one plan.
HCFA said no way (and they have let some other mean programs through).
A few years later, George W. Bush "led" the nation in mean spiritedness
when he booted 12,700 disabled (SSI eligible) children off Medicaid (although
many retained Medicaid through poverty eligibility). The legislature
gave the disabled kids their eligibility back about a year later after
some really bad publicity. Compassionate conservatism I guess.
<p>Outside of Dallas and Houston the rest of the state is greatly underserved
by health care professionals. The Texas Department of Health has
declared 112 entire counties and parts of 22 others health professional
shortage areas. The poor areas and the colonias are the most underserved
populations in the United States.
<p>Also, Texas is 43rd in spending for people with developmental disabilities
and 42nd for community options for people with developmental disabilities
(source: The State of the States in Developmental Disabilities (5th
ed.); Braddock, Hemp, Parish, and Westrich).
<br>
<p>Peace,
<p>Jim
<p>At 11:29 AM 3/13/00 , you wrote:
<blockquote type=cite cite><b>Do you have the references for these stats?</b>
<blockquote type=cite cite>----- Original Message -----
<br><b>From:</b> <a href="mailto:uswa12@Lorainccc.edu">Tom Lehman</a>
<p><b>The state of Texas, under the leadership of Governor George W. Bush,
is</b>
<br><b>ranked as follows:</b>
<p> 50th in spending for teachers'
salaries
<br> 49th in spending on the
environment
<br> 48th in per-capita funding
for public health
<br> 47th in delivery of social
services
<br> 42nd in child-support collections
<br> 41st in per-capita spending
on public education and ...
<p> 5th in percentage of population
living in poverty
<br> 1st in air and water pollution
<br> 1st in percentage of poor
working parents without insurance
<br> 1st in percentage of children
without health insurance
<br> 1st in executions (an average
of 1 every 2 weeks for Bush's 5 years as
<br> governor)</blockquote>
</blockquote>
<br>
<br>
<p><x-html>"What's breaking into a bank compared with founding a bank?"
<p>--Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956). Mac, in *The Threepenny Opera *, act 3,
sc. 9.</x-html></blockquote>
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