Election implications for consumers and health reform? – National Consumers League

Health care (and its monumental reform) was incorporated into the exit polls on November 2 to help better understand voters’ motivation, and it was apparent that it had a major impact on how citizens voted. More than 50 percent of the electorate approved of the health reform legislation that passed, and more than half of those supporters would like to see the reform to go even further.

While just fewer than half the voters said they would like to see the health law repealed or overturned, there is little chance that will actually happen. With Democrats still in control of the Senate, and a President with veto power, attempts to diminish or destroy the law would likely not make it out of the House of Representatives.

It is also important to note that the law was created in such a way that many of the programs have built-in funding mechanisms, so overall budget reductions will not have an adverse impact on the pending improvements to the health care system.

Beyond the health law itself, we might find the new budget hawks of the House preventing appropriations, and thus funding, from making their way to our public health agencies such as the Food and Drug Administration or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

NCL, FDA launch campaign to help consumers avoid food-drug interactions – National Consumers League

November 10, 2010

Contact: 202-835-3323, media@nclnet.org

Washington, DC–The National Consumers League (NCL) and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) have teamed up to alert consumers to the possibility that the medications they are taking could interact with foods, caffeine, and alcohol.  With millions of Americans taking prescription or over-the-counter medications each day, the issue of interactions between medications and certain foods is of growing importance.

“Avoid Food-Drug Interactions” (view sample pages here) is an updated version of NCL’s very popular “Food and Drug Interactions” brochure. The renamed brochure contains new information, has been published in plain language, and is re-formatted as a guide for consumers to learn more about and avoid interactions.

”Despite how widespread our use of prescription medications has come, many Americans likely don’t give a second thought to whether the foods they regularly eat and drink might make certain drugs less effective, or even pose the risk of dangerous interactions,” said Sally Greenberg, NCL Executive Director. “Our new NCL/FDA brochure is a useful tool that anyone who takes medications should have access to.”

“To take medicine safely, it’s important to follow directions about what you eat and drink,” said Janet Woodcock, M.D., director of FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “Make sure you read the drug’s label every time to avoid harmful food and drug interactions, and to get the most benefit from your medicine.”

The “Avoid Food-Drug Interactions” brochure includes dozens of common medications and examples of interactions with certain foods, alcohol, and caffeine. This updated brochure contains information on new medications including allergy treatments, pain therapy, and cholesterol-lowering therapy.

“Even within the same drug categories there are important differences. For example, some drugs may be less likely to cause interactions because they are metabolized differently than other drugs in the same category,” said Rebecca Burkholder, NCL Vice President for Health Policy. “Our brochure is a great resource to learn about your risk of possible interactions, but consumers must also talk to their doctors or pharmacists to ensure they take their medications safely.”

Other examples in the brochure include which antibiotics should be taken with food to avoid stomach upset and information on foods, like fruit juices and milk, that may cause reactions with some medications.

If you would like a copy of the brochure, please send $2 for postage and handling to the National Consumers League, 1701 K Street, NW, Suite 1200, Washington, DC 20006.

Bulk order pricing is available as well. For more information, contact NCL’s Publications Manager Theresa Smith at (202) 835-3323.

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About the National Consumers League

The National Consumers League, founded in 1899, is America’s pioneer consumer organization. Our mission is to protect and promote social and economic justice for consumers and workers in the United States and abroad. For more information, visit www.nclnet.org.

Kudos to Wash Post for exposing troubling farmworker kids’ stories – National Consumers League

By Sally Greenberg, NCL Executive Director

Sunday’s Washington Post featured a compelling – and sad – story that reaffirms NCL’s concerns about farmworker kids. In “A Harvest of Reduced Expectations,” by reporter Kevin Sieff, the youngsters interviewed describe constantly moving from town to town during the school year – following their farmworker parents, showing up at new schools in the middle of the year, and failing to enjoy any continuity in their education. As a result, many drop out.

One teenage girl talked about living in farmworker’s quarters, which are typically run down and lacking in the niceties so many of today’s teens take for granted – a good bed, a desk on which to do homework, regular hours for meals and bedtimes. One boy is pictured sitting on his bed reading over his homework; he has no desk and lives in a threadbare makeshift living quarters.

But most troubling in the teenage girl’s story is that though she is glad to be able to be with her father and take care of her siblings, she is often surrounded by farmworkers who are NOT there with their wives and families. During the weekends many of these men bring prostitutes back to the quarters where these children live.

Reid Maki at NCL has worked tirelessly with the other members of the Child Labor Coalition, which NCL co-chairs, to gain passage of the CARE Act, which will help to get farmworker kids out of the fields and in school full-time. This Washington Post article is particularly well headlined: A Harvest of Reduced Expectations; the piece does a great job of shining a light on the substandard and unacceptable living conditions of so many farmworkers – and their kids. Let’s pass CARE and get these kids into schools where they will be learning on a continuous basis and not exposed to a world that is hardly fit for adults, let alone children.

Win-win for LifeSmarts partnership – National Consumers League

By Lisa Hertzberg, LifeSmarts Program Director

We are continually looking for new ways to expand the LifeSmarts program, and one way we do this is by partnering with companies and organizations that believe in our mission and help us sponsor new initiatives.

This post highlights a success story of a recent partnership that we took to the next level – we developed the materials we envisioned for LifeSmarts students and educators, and the sponsoring company was able to use the same educational pieces to train its workers and employees.

LifeSmarts U is an online learning tool that contains interactive lessons that individuals, teams, and classrooms of students can use to delve deeply into key consumer topics.

Western Union was receptive when we approached it to ask whether the company would support development of the consumer rights and responsibilities section of LifeSmarts U, and sponsor the first three consumer lessons on fraud awareness and prevention.

We quickly found that a successful collaboration would fulfill the needs of both partners, and that became a key component to our project. Western Union was interested in supporting LifeSmarts, and the company also welcomed the opportunity to create educational materials about fraud to help train its employees and agents around the world.

With an unrestricted educational grant from Western Union, we developed the three fraud  lessons that can be found in the Consumer Law section of LifeSmarts U. We shared the materials with Western Union, and the company immediately began using them in its training program. In fact, since LifeSmarts follows the traditional school year, and the new LifeSmarts U lessons are just going online this fall, Western Union was able to scoop us and begin using the new materials several months before we introduced them! In English, Spanish, and several other languages, no less.

Working on this project allowed us to enhance the content of our program, develop a strong working relationship with a program sponsor, and, most importantly – discover a new way to work in partnership. We created a win-win scenario for LifeSmarts participants and for a company interested in fostering smart consumers and educating its workforce.

Breastfeeding denied coverage by IRS – National Consumers League

By Sally Greenberg, NCL Executive Director

Since our founding in 1899, the National Consumers League has worked hard to advocate for the better health of women and children. Florence Kelley, the League’s first leader, grew up in a family in which five of her mother’s eight children died from infection or disease. Babies during that time – the period right after the Civil War – were relatively safe while breastfeeding. Once weaned, they were exposed to illness from unsanitary food, water, and milk. Today, though we pasteurize milk and have access to safe drinking water, breastfeeding remains the best option for babies and their mothers, at least for the first 6 months of a child’s life.

That is why NCL was disturbed to read about an Internal Revenue Service decision that denies nursing mothers the ability to use their tax-sheltered health care accounts to pay for breast pumps and other breastfeeding supplies. NCL has written to the IRS to ask that the agency reverse its decision.

According to IRS Publication 502, reimbursable items include those that aid in the “prevention of disease.” The IRS apparently has determined that breast-feeding does not help in the prevention of disease. NCL could not disagree more. Medical evidence that far more widespread breastfeeding would not only “prevent disease” in the United States, but would save our health care system billions of dollars is overwhelming.

Consider the following evidence about the myriad health benefits to both breastfeeding mother and child:

  • According to a Harvard study published in April of this year, if 90 percent of American families would comply with medical recommendationsto breastfeed exclusively for 6 months, the United States wouldsave $13 billion per year and prevent an excess 911 deaths,nearly all of which would be among infants ($10.5 billion and 741deaths at 80 percent compliance).

  • The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has found that breastfed infants have a lower risk of contracting ear infections, stomach viruses, atopic dermatitis, type 1 and 2 diabetes, childhood leukemia, and other health problems.

  • Mothers also benefit from breastfeeding because of lower risk of contracting type 2 diabetes, breast cancer, ovarian cancer, and postpartum depression (PPD).
  • Breastfed infants typically need fewer sick care visits; Congress recently acknowledged the importance of breastfeeding in landmark health care reform legislation by requiring that workplaces provide women with a private place to nurse or use a breast pump.

As Dr. Robert W. Block, president-elect of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) noted in the New York Times this week, “The old adage that breast-feeding is a child’s first immunization really is true … So we need to do everything we can to remove the barriers that make it difficult.”

We agree with Dr. Block. And NCL reached out to our friends at AAP to share our letter and join forces with those who work to protect and improve the health of babies.

NCL strongly believes we need to encourage, not discourage, barriers to widespread breastfeeding. As in Florence Kelley’s day and ours, breast-fed babies get the best of all protections. Unfortunately, the IRS determination NOT to allow parents to use their tax-sheltered flex accounts to cover the cost of breast pumps has the impact of further discouraging women from breastfeeding and directly undermines what is by every measure a critical practice for improved public health. We believe the cost of breast pumps should and must be covered cost in these flex plans. We hope that NCL’s voice, along with the voices of AAP and so many others, will help to press the IRS Commissioner to reverse his decision.

Advocating for nursing moms – National Consumers League

NCL has been advocating for measures to improve the health of women and children since its founding in 1899 and was very concerned to read about the IRS’ decision to deny nursing mothers the ability to use their tax-sheltered health care accounts to pay for breast pumps and other supplies. Read NCL’s letter to the IRS.

October 29, 2010

Douglas H. Shulman, Commissioner

Internal Revenue Service

1111 Constitution Avenue, NW

Washington DC 20224

Re: The use of tax-sheltered health care accounts for breastfeeding costs Dear Commissioner Shulman:

The National Consumers League has been advocating for measures to improve the health of women and children since our founding in 1899. We were therefore very concerned to read about the IRS’ decision to deny nursing mothers the ability to use their tax-sheltered health care accounts to pay for breast pumps and other supplies.

According to IRS Publication 502, reimbursable items include those that aid in the “prevention of disease.” The IRS apparently has inexplicably determined that breast-feeding does not help in the “prevention of disease.” The National Consumers League could not disagree more with this determination. We ask that you review and reverse this misguided decision. Indeed, the medical evidence is overwhelming that far more widespread breastfeeding would not only “prevent disease” in the United States, but would save our health care system billions of dollars.

Consider the following evidence about the myriad health benefits to both mother and child of breastfeeding:

  • According to a Harvard study published in April of this year, if 90% of US families would comply with medical recommendations to breastfeed exclusively for 6 months, the United States would save $13 billion per year and prevent an excess 911 deaths, nearly all of which would be among infants ($10.5 billion and 741 deaths at 80% compliance)
  • The risk of infant death due to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) is lowered, and respiratory infections such as pneumonia, and necrotizing enterocolitis are nearly eliminated if mothers breastfeed their infants until at least six months after birth.
  • The US Department of Health and Human Services has found that breastfed infants have a lower risk of contracting ear infections, stomach viruses, atopic dermatitis, type 1 and 2 diabetes, childhood leukemia, and other health problems.
  • Mothers also benefit from breastfeeding because of lower risk of contracting type 2 diabetes, breast cancer, ovarian cancer, and postpartum depression (PPD).
  • Breastfed infants typically need fewer sick care visits. Congress recently acknowledged the importance of breastfeeding in the landmark health care reform legislation it enacted this year by requiring that workplaces provide women with a private place to nurse or use a breast pump.
  • As Dr. Robert W. Block, president-elect of the American Academy of Pediatrics noted in the New York Times this week, “The old adage that breast-feeding is a child’s first immunization really is true … So we need to do everything we can to remove the barriers that make it difficult.”

We agree with Dr. Block. We need to encourage, not discourage, barriers to widespread breastfeeding. Unfortunately, the IRS determination NOT to allow parents to use their tax- sheltered flex accounts to cover the cost of breast pumps has the impact of further discouraging women from breast feeding and directly undermines what is by every measure a critical practice for improved public health. We ask that you, as IRS Commissioner, review this decision and, in light of the overwhelming evidence, reverse it. We believe the cost of breast pumps should and must be a covered cost in these flex plans.

Thank you for your attention to our concerns.

Sincerely,

Sally Greenberg, Executive Director

National Consumers League

Cc: Senate HELP Committee Chairman Tom Harkin

House Energy and Commerce Chairman Henry Waxman

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner

Surgeon General Regina Benjamin

An Election Day primer – National Consumers League

By Jacob Markey, LifeSmarts Summer 2010 Intern

November is finally here, and LifeSmarts is, appropriately, focusing on topics in Consumer Rights and Responsibilities! As a political science major at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, very few moments get me as excited as election night — watching the polls come in and finding out the winners (especially if the people I vote for win).

Tuesday, November 7 is Election Day, one of the most important days of the year for both the short and long-term state of the country. Voting is one of the most important actions a citizen can take in a democracy. By voting, you can have your say in who is elected, the direction of the local, state or national government, and what could potentially be accomplished in the future. In honor of Election Day, I think a blog post about elections and voting rights will be fun.

The upcoming election is what is known as a midterm election, meaning the President is not up for re-election (his election will be in 2012). Even with the President’s office absent from the ballot, there are still many important races happening across the country. If you are a member of the House of Representatives, you certainly are up for re-election next month, as all House members have terms of two years. The terms for members of the Senate are for six years, but they are staggered so that, on average, one-third of the members are up for re-election during each election cycle. This helps to prevent the likelihood of the same amount of turnover as in the House.

Additionally, in most states there are gubernatorial elections and countless races for senators and representatives. There are numerous local races and many other issues up for referendum in various states.

Not just anyone can vote. Knowledgeable LifeSmarts participants know that there are some important criteria you must meet in order to vote, including:

  • Thanks to the 26th Amendment to the Constitution, if you are at least 18 years old and a U.S. citizen, you are eligible to vote.
  • There is no uniform method of voting. Each state runs elections slightly differently and has their own rules. These include hours the polls are open, how you can register, and locations where you may vote.
  • You don’t necessarily have to be in your home state on Election Day to vote. Through absentee voting, you can send in your choices ahead of time. So, if you are out of town on vacation, for work, school, or some other reason, you can use this method to still ensure your vote is counted.

There is so much information about the electoral system. If you are interested in more information about both the upcoming election the electoral process, I recommend you check out any major news site and/or your local paper. They have detailed information that will help to explain much more about American politics and our country’s political system.

I hope you are all as excited as I am about Election Day. If you are eligible to vote on November 7, go out and vote!