Randall Radic Takes On Commissioned Work. More

 

Please Visit Our Sponsors

WORKOUT DVDS

Natural Health

Try Health News for more interesting natural health news.

PARTNERS & FRIENDS

 

logo_blue.gif

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pluck

McClatchy-Tribune News

Google News

 

 


Inform


DeepBlog

 

Health Blogs - Blog Catalog Blog Directory


In compliance with the FTC, consumers should be aware that Basil & Spice reviewers occasionally receive books/products free of charge for reviewing purposes only from publishers, agents, and authors.  They are not compensated fiancially in any way.

Google Ad Privacy

 

banner
Powered by Squarespace
JUST PUBLISHED!!
READ US EVERYWHERE
Enter your Email


Preview | Powered by FeedBlitz

Entries in Liu, Aimee (2)

Tuesday
08Jul2008

National Call-In Day For The Fight Against Eating Disorders

1070759-1056734-thumbnail.jpgAimee Liu is the author of over 10 books, the most recent being <Gaining>The Truth About Life After Eating Disorders.

Aimee Liu--


If you want to help make a real difference in the fight against eating disorders, please read the action alert below, and call in support of Mental Health Parity this Wednesday.

Use your power!

*****
National Call-In Day for Mental Health Parity Wednesday July 9th! Your help is urgently needed to help pass Mental Health Parity this session!

Click Here for the link to National Call-in Day Online Advocacy Action Center

On the website you will see background information, a script for the call and a tool you can use to punch in your zip code and get your Member of Congress and Senator' names and phone numbers.

The US House of Representatives and the Senate negotiators have reached a final agreement on all the remaining mental health and addiction parity issues. However, approximately $4 billion over 10 years in offsets is needed to pay for the bill and must be found before parity can be brought to the floor in both chambers for final passage. Once an offset has been
found, there is commitment from leadership in the House and the Senate to bring the bill up for a vote as quickly as possible.

Although House and Senate leaders have not decided yet where they will find almost $4 billion over 10 years to pay for the cost offsets required by Congressional rules, negotiations have successfully concluded on the key policy provisions.  This compromise is the result of long negotiations and advocacy of organizations all across the country. The compromise
includes many key provisions that were included in the House-passed bill, the Paul Wellstone Mental Health and Addiction Equity Act and would be an important step in ending insurance discrimination facing people with addiction and mental illness. Here are some key points in the compromise:


- The compromise requires parity in insurance coverage for addiction and mental health treatment for both in-network and out-of-network coverage. This does not mean that the bill requires that insurers cover addiction and mental services, only that if they do cover these services, there must be parity with medical/surgical benefits.  This of course would be a very
positive development both in requiring fairness in insurance coverage and taking a strong stand against discrimination toward people in recovery or still suffering from addiction and mental illness.

- The compromise requires plans to disclose their medical necessity criteria and reasons for any denials of coverage.  This would be a major breakthrough, as many plans refuse to disclose medical necessity criteria or reasons for denial,
especially when addiction treatment is sought.

 - On the issue of protection of state laws, the compromise bill language is silent.  The House bill explicitly protected state laws, and in earlier versions the Senate bill explicitly preempted state laws.  Silence is a victory for those of us who agree with the House approach that state laws should be protected, since in most situations Congress must take explicit action to overrule a state law in order for state laws to be preempted. However, to make protection of state laws even more ironclad, we will be working to ensure that the legislative history of the bill makes clear that the sponsors' intention is to protect all state laws.  That way, as important as the passage of a federal parity law would be, stronger state laws would remain in effect and states would be free to enact additional stronger protections in the years to come.

Wednesday July 9th is National Call-in Day, so please call your Member of Congress and Senators on July 9th and tell them that now that an agreement has been reached between the House and the Senate, Congress must find the money to fund this historic mental health and addiction parity legislation and pass parity now.

Thank you for supporting Mental Health Parity and for taking a few minutes
to make these important calls. With your help we can get this done!

Kitty Westin
President
Eating Disorders Coalition for Research, Policy & Action
westin.kitty@gmail.com
www.annawestinfoundation.org

David Jaffe
Executive Director
Eating Disorders Coalition for Research, Policy & Action
djaffe@eatingdisorderscoalition.org
(202) 543-9570

Further Reading: 

Barack Obama Dares Us To Recover

An Eating Disorder Is Not An Identity

Wednesday
06Feb2008

Barack Obama Dares Us To Recover

1070759-1056734-thumbnail.jpgAimee Liu is the author of over 10 books, the most recent being <Gaining>The Truth About Life After Eating Disorders.

Aimee Liu--

As I stood before Michelle Obama, Caroline Kennedy, Oprah, and Maria
Shriver at last Sunday’s Women for Obama rally, I was struck by the
emotional strength of every point they made. 

This campaign, Maria Shriver said, is really “about us, and what we can do
when we come together.”

“The question in this race is not whether Barack is ready,” Michelle Obama
agreed.  “The question is, what are we ready for?”

“We have won the struggle,” Oprah said, “and we have the right to compete…
free from the constraints of gender and race.”

“Each and every one of us can be an agent for change,” Caroline Kennedy
told us, to which we, in our thousands, thundered back,"YES WE CAN!"

Unity, Engagement, and Hope are the real watchwords of this campaign.
They are also, in my opinion, key to our psychological and emotional
health as individuals and as a nation.  This is the real reason so many
find Barack Obama’s candidacy so inspiring, but also why he is fighting a
difficult battle.

The forces of fear are entrenched in this country, as evidenced by our
epidemic rates of anxiety disorders, depression, substance addiction,
eating and personality disorders.  While the causes of these often
intertwined conditions are enormously complex, most of them feed on fear
-- of failure or shame, rejection or futility, loneliness, poverty,
physical harm or death itself.  Whatever its source, if persistent,
pervasive, and unrelieved, fear is destabilizing. 

That is why the exploitation of fear is such an effective political tool
for those who wish to conquer by dividing us against each other and
ourselves.    Novelist Michael Chabon, in a Washington Post Op-Ed today,
wrote eloquently of the resulting political anxiety disorder: “Fear tells
us that ugliness, rage and brutality are the central facts of human
existence, that decency and tolerance are luxuries on whose altar our
enemies will be only too happy to sacrifice us.” 
Fear, in other words, is the reason we will not trust, act, or come
together even for our own good.  For fear that we might fail or be
disappointed, we dare not even hope.  This is a recipe not just for
apathy, but for despair.

Barack Obama dares us to recover from our national anxiety disorder.  He
reminds us that our health depends on our cultivating a sense of purpose,
passion, connection, and trust.  But we must not expect our candidate – or
our President, for that matter -- to solve our problems for us, any more
than we would expect our doctor to recover our mental health for us.   
As Maria Shriver said Sunday, "WE are the change we've been waiting for."

Yes, we all hopefully answered back.  We are.

MORE FROM AIMEE LIU