You’ve been fighting laryngitis and you just learned your basement has flooded.
Sounds like a perfect night to try to make sense out of the most complicated subject known to man — health care reform.
Despite the aforementioned personal distractions, UNMC’s Tom Tape, M.D., stepped to the plate Tuesday night and knocked it out of the park. Or — should I say — bar?
Tom O’Connor |
It’s not easy to dissect a 3,000-page bill in 30 minutes. But, Dr. Tape did it in a clear, concise, nonpartisan fashion. He boiled it down in layman terminology, using a PowerPoint presentation that spelled out the key problems of the current health system, the evolution of the legislation, and the key provisions of the new law.
He didn’t debate the pros and cons. Rather, he tried to provide nuggets that would help the audience understand this two-ton gorilla known as health care reform.
Some of his interesting tidbits included:
- The U.S. ranks No. 19 in preventable mortality out of the 19 countries ranked.
- The Congressional Budget Office estimates the new legislation will produce a modest increase in health care spending but will reduce the deficit by $143 billion over 10 years.
- The average cost per person per year in America is more than double other developed countries.
For Stuart Chittenden, a frequent attendee of the Science Cafe series, it was another educational night at the Slowdown.
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A huge user of the social media tool, Twitter, Chittenden “tweeted” throughout the evening. In one of his tweets, he wrote: “Just thinking that, whatever your views, you have to be grateful for UNMC’s public service for Omaha through their Science Cafe initiative.”
I’ll drink to that.
I know I am biased, as Dr. Tape is not only a Vice Chair/Dvision Chief in my department, as well as a long time family friend and physician, but I was at The Slowdow to hear his talk and he did an incredible job. Tommy O, you described it perfectly. To take one of the most complex and controversial legislative pieces the U.S. has ever seen and explain it in a way that the mostly non-medical audience could understand was a remarkable feat. Kudos to Dr. Tape!
I'm sorry I was not able to attend. Is there any chance Dr. Tape would be willing to repeat it again over a noon hour on campus for those of us that were not able to be there the other night?