A New Breed Of Doctor, From Quinnipiac's New Medical School

With the health care system swamped by the Affordable Care Act and a physician shortage threatening the future of health care, the medical community has called for more medical schools to produce more doctors specifically, more primary care physicians.

In a few months, Quinnipiac University in Hamden steps up to that challenge by opening the state's first new medical school in nearly a half-century. The Frank H. Netter School of Medicine has progressed in just a few years from conception to welcoming its first class this summer at the university's North Haven campus.

While workers affixed handrails inside the 145,000-square-foot building and finished the landscaping, administrators were finalizing the first class, whittling down about 2,000 applications to the 60 available slots. Within four years, class sizes will expand to 125 with each successive incoming class.

The Association of American Medical Colleges predicts a shortage of more than 90,000 doctors by 2020 about half being primary care doctors. The current aging population of doctors means more physicians will be retiring just as baby boomers need more care.

"The mission of ours is different from both Yale and UConn," said Quinnipiac President John L. Lahey. "They're committed to research and they're committed to the specialties. Our commitment is to primary care."

Made possible with a $100 million investment, Quinnipiac's is the state's third medical school. The UConn School of Medicine opened in 1968 and Yale's was founded in 1813. In addition to alleviating a shortage of doctors, the new medical school fits in with Quinnipiac's ongoing ambition to become a national university with its goal of meeting a need for more primary care physicians.

Nationally, about 20 percent of graduating medical students go into primary care. Quinnipiac's goal is to have 50 percent of its graduates choose primary care.

According to the physician search firm Merritt Hawkins & Associates, orthopedists and cardiologists make more than $500,000 per year, while the average family practitioner makes about $190,000. Nurse practitioners and physicians' assistants make about half that, but with only a third of the time spent in training. Considering the kind of student loan debt that comes with medical school it's four more years after the four years of undergraduate schooling it's easy to understand why primary care can be a tough sell.

That's why Quinnipiac administrators have done what they can to improve the odds of producing more internists than, say, plastic surgeons. It starts with choosing incoming students carefully. Some criteria are obvious a stated interest in going into primary care, for instance.

Anthony "Bud" Ardolino, senior associate dean for academic affairs, said there are indicators on a student's application that hint at certain tendencies. Students with a rural or urban background, are married, or who had non-science majors in college are more likely to go into primary care, he said. Also a students who played on a baseball team have a greater tendency toward primary care than someone who played a typically solo sport, such as tennis.

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A New Breed Of Doctor, From Quinnipiac's New Medical School

NCPA College Paintball "Pass The Torch" w/ Liberty University from Planet Eclipse – Video


NCPA College Paintball "Pass The Torch" w/ Liberty University from Planet Eclipse
ETV presents Pass The Torch featuring Liberty University On the heels of the 2013 NCPA College Paintball Championships, Planet Eclipse brings you Pass The To...

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NCPA College Paintball "Pass The Torch" w/ Liberty University from Planet Eclipse - Video

+18 Syrian men say Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death, Bashar’s men Pick DEATH – Video


+18 Syrian men say Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death, Bashar #39;s men Pick DEATH
Only in Syria, they have been torched, beaten to death with no chance to fight back. These are the soldiers of Bashar Al-Assad. The man who was the supposed ...

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+18 Syrian men say Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death, Bashar's men Pick DEATH - Video

1913 Liberty Head nickel sells for $3.1 million

SCHAUMBURG, Ill., April 25 (UPI) -- A 1913 Liberty Head nickel sold for $3.17 million at auction in Illinois Thursday, with a buyer calling it "one of the greatest coins at that price range."

The coin, one of five known to exist, had been stored away for 41 years because its owner had been told, erroneously as it turned out, it was not authentic.

Melva Givens, of Salem, Va., inherited the coin from George O. Walton, who was killed in a car crash in 1962. Walton, a North Carolina collector, had acquired it in the mid-1940s for a reported $3,750, Heritage Auctions, which conducted the Thursday sale, said in a news release.

Todd Imhof, executive vice president of Heritage Auctions, said the coin was found after a nationwide search and was authenticated "by experts in a secret midnight meeting Baltimore in 2003."

Melva Givens had "kept the nickel in a box with family items in the closet, and it stayed there for four decades," said her nephew, Ryan Givens -- who consigned the coin to Heritage Auctions with his two sisters and his brother.

Ryan Givens and his siblings took it to the American Numismatic Association World's Fair of Money in Baltimore after a $1 million reward was offered.

"This is one of the greatest coins at that price range," said Jeff Garrett, of Lexington, Ky., who bought the coin in partnership with Larry Lee of Panama City, Fla.

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1913 Liberty Head nickel sells for $3.1 million

Statue of Liberty and early crowdfunding

24 April 2013 Last updated at 19:39 ET

As the Statue of Liberty was shipped from France, efforts to raise funds for its pedestal stalled. But thanks to a newspaper campaign and the small donations of hundreds of residents, the base was eventually built. Rodrigo Davies, a researcher at the Center for Civic Media at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, explores America's first major crowdfunding project.

By the summer of 1885 the Statue of Liberty was in New York in pieces, awaiting assembly.

Designed by French sculptor Frederic Auguste Bartholdi and paid for by the government of France, the statue was a diplomatic gift to the US. However, the US had been unable to raise $250,000 for a granite plinth for the statue - around $6.3m (4.1m) at today's prices.

A group called the American Committee of the Statue of Liberty was tasked with raising the money but fell short by more than a third.

New York Governor Grover Cleveland rejected the use of city funds to pay for it, and Congress could not agree on a funding package.

Amid the uncertainty, Baltimore, Boston, San Francisco and Philadelphia offered to pay for the pedestal in return for the statue's relocation.

It seemed as though New York had run out of options when renowned publisher Joseph Pulitzer decided to launch a fundraising campaign in his newspaper The New York World.

The campaign eventually raised money from more than 160,000 donors, including young children, businessmen, street cleaners and politicians, with more than three-quarters of the donations amounting to less than a dollar.

It was a triumphant rescue effort: in just five months The World raised $101,091 - enough to cover the last $100,000 to complete the pedestal and have money leftover for a gift for the sculptor.

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Statue of Liberty and early crowdfunding

Liberty edges Emmaus in LVC boys volleyball

Fittingly, it was Liberty's Gilberto Figueroa who took a perfectly placed set from Hurricanes teammate Adam Hann, leapt high into the air and above the net, took a big windmill swing and slammed down the clinching kill onto the Memorial Gymnasium court.

Figueroa was on fire. He was also clutch.

Liberty captured the fourth and fifth sets against perennial power Emmaus to rally for a key victory in Thursday evening's Lehigh Valley Conference volleyball match between championship contenders. The Hurricanes prevailed 21-25, 25-23, 19-25, 25-23, 15-10.

Coach Neiad Ammary's squad improved to 8-2 overall and 7-1 in the conference. Emmaus is now 8-2 and 6-2.

A junior who came to the United States from Puerto Rico prior the school year, Figueroa finished off both the tying and go-ahead points in the decisive final game. His first kill tied the set at 9 and his second put Liberty ahead to stay at 10-9.

The Hurricanes scored six straight points to open a 14-9 lead. Figueroa then ended it in style.

"My Achilles tendon is bothering me," he said, "so I tend to start slow. But once I was confident in the foot, I started to feel really strong. I've got to give credit to my teammates, though, especially Adam Hann. He made very good decisions and very good sets. We're like a big family, everyone works together."

"Gilberto played very, very well in the offseason," Ammary said. "But his grades were low and I suspended him about a month before the season started. Then he had heart surgery and was out a couple more weeks. He's just getting back to the level he's capable of playing at."

Figueroa had plenty of help from his more experienced teammates.

Hann, a senior, finished with 52 assists. Senior Ryan Holzer produced 13 kills and three aces, and played particularly well in the second-set victory for Liberty. Senior Zach Gallagher had 10 kills and eight aces, including five consecutive service points during the fifth-set spurt.

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Liberty edges Emmaus in LVC boys volleyball

Liberty Media Primed for More Acquisitions

Industry juggernaut Liberty Media (NASDAQ: LMCA) is a busy, busy organization -- acquiring and spinning off companies at an impressive clip. While it has recently taken the reins over satellite-radio company Sirius XM (NASDAQ: SIRI) , it has also spun out the largest premium cable company available, Starz (NASDAQ: STRZA) . Liberty gives investors plenty of options (no pun intended) to evaluate with its myriad of subsidiaries, not to mention the parent company itself. And still, the company has a sizable cash hoard and the ability to tap capital markets for another substantial acquisition. Though at this point it is mere speculation, where could Liberty be heading next?

Strong startLiberty Media spent much of 2012 getting ready to take control of Sirius XM. While the company is now officially under the Liberty umbrella (Liberty CEO Greg Maffei is chairman of Sirius' board), there has plenty other action in the new year.

Most recently, the company took a 27.3% stake in cable operator Charter Communications (NASDAQ: CHTR) . The deal cost Liberty $2.62 billion in cash with proceeds from the Starz spinoff. Charter is the eighth biggest pay-TV provider in the United States. After a period of struggle, Charter is quickly approaching profitability -- an effect of a very capable management team that Maffei strongly supports. Liberty's motive was probably the seemingly endless demand for broadband services in the country.

The deal came on the heels of another, much larger deal with European pay-TV operator Virgin Media. Liberty acquired all of Virgin Media for $16 billion, putting it in direct competition with News Corp. as one of the top cable companies on the continent.

So what's next for the media giant, famous for its insatiable appetite for acquisitions and investments?

Look abroadAccording to Maffei, Liberty still has around $1 billion in non-core assets that it could sell, in addition to tapping capital markets for cheap financing. The company may have exhausted most of its appealing prospects in the U.S., but there remains an enormous opportunity beyond our borders. Possible interests lie in South America, Europe, and the Middle East.

Recently, Time Warner (NYSE: TWX) bid $1 billion for Turkey's largest cable operator, ATV. For cable, at least, the U.S. is a saturated market. Now, Liberty is by no means confined to cable businesses -- it holds stakes in businesses ranging from bookstores to ticket sellers. But with valuations high, especially in the U.S., investors should keep an eye on potential acquisitions abroad. Liberty could benefit from greater exposure in Brazil or the aforementioned Turkey.

As for now, investors in Liberty Media or its subsidiaries (namely Sirius) should look for further shareholder value in the form of share buybacks and dividends. While it has made some missteps in the past, Liberty Media continues to be one of the dominant forces in the industry, and investors should consider it a stable, long-term holding.

More from The Motley Fool Even though Sirius XM is one of the market's biggest winners since bottoming out three years ago, there is still some healthy upside to be had if things go right for it -- and plenty of room for it to fall if things don't. Read all about Sirius in The Motley Fool'sbrand-new premium report. To get started, just click here now.

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Liberty Media Primed for More Acquisitions

Libertarians meet

by PHILLIP WILLIAMS The Gilmer Mirror

Upshur County Libertarian Party Chairman Vance Lowry quoted from an article which contends that Libertarian principles are becoming mainstream at the local Libertarians monthly meeting here April 9.

In Massachusetts, he said, 45 percent of voters supported a proposal to abolish the state income tax, although opponents of repealing it outspent supporters 100-1. And two states, Colorado and Washington, have decriminalized marijuana, he noted.

Lowry also said that in the past year, his party has organized in four area countiesMorris, Cherokee, Anderson and Hopkinsand that it is reorganizing in Smith County.

He said he attended the April 5 organizational meeting in Hopkins County, as did state Libertarian Chairman Pat Dixon. The partys former gubernatorial nominee, Kathie Glass, and her husband addressed the gathering of about 14 people, Lowry said.

The newly-forming groups include disaffected Republicans, many of whom supported Ron Paul for President, the Upshur chairman added. Youve got a lot of unhappiness among Republicans with the way the GOP is being run, Lowry asserted.

On another matter, Lowry told the meeting at the Buckeye Country Cafe that all proposed state laws in the current legislative session which would have been detrimental to third parties have been pretty much blocked.

One included requiring the partys nominees for public office to pay ballot access fees to be listed on an election ballot. Lowry noted those fees go to the state to run party primaries (unlike the Democratic and Republican parties, Libertarians nominate their candidates at conventions without holding primary elections).

The Upshur Libertarian chairman also expressed disappointment that a state bill, which would have allowed vouchers for school choice, had failed.

Turning to specific political figures, Lowry praised Republican County Pct. 2 Comm. Cole Hefner, who held an informal question-and-answer presentation with the Upshur Libertarians at their March monthly meeting.

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Libertarians meet

China slams Philippine bid to "legalise" occupation of islands

BEIJING (Reuters) - China accused the Philippines on Friday of trying to legalise its occupation of islands in the disputed South China Sea, repeating that Beijing would never agree to international arbitration.

Frustrated with the slow pace of regional diplomacy, the Philippines in January angered China by asking a U.N. tribunal to order a halt to Beijing's activities that it said violated Philippine sovereignty over the islands, surrounded by potentially energy-rich waters.

Claims by an increasingly powerful China over most of the South China Sea have set it directly against U.S. allies Vietnam and the Philippines. Brunei, Taiwan and Malaysia also claim parts of the waters and China has a separate dispute with Japan in the East China Sea.

Manila said on Thursday that a U.N. arbitration court had set up the tribunal which would hear Manila's complaint, but China said this was an attempt to steal Chinese territory.

"The Philippine side is trying to use this to negate China's territorial sovereignty and attach a veneer of 'legality' to its illegal occupation of Chinese islands and reefs," the Foreign Ministry said in a statement on its website (www.mfa.gov.cn).

The Philippines must immediately withdraw personnel and facilities from the islands, the ministry added, listing those which it said Manila was occupying.

Manila asked the tribunal of the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) to order a halt to China's activities.

But the convention did not apply in this case as what the Philippines was actually asking for was a decision on sovereignty, the ministry said.

"China's refusal to accept the Philippines' request for arbitration has full grounding in international law," it said.

China had always believed that the two countries should resolve their dispute through direct talks, the ministry added.

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China slams Philippine bid to "legalise" occupation of islands

China slams Philippine bid to "legalize" occupation of islands

BEIJING (Reuters) - China accused the Philippines on Friday of trying to legalize its occupation of islands in the disputed South China Sea, repeating that Beijing would never agree to international arbitration.

Frustrated with the slow pace of regional diplomacy, the Philippines in January angered China by asking a U.N. tribunal to order a halt to Beijing's activities that it said violated Philippine sovereignty over the islands, surrounded by potentially energy-rich waters.

Claims by an increasingly powerful China over most of the South China Sea have set it directly against U.S. allies Vietnam and the Philippines. Brunei, Taiwan and Malaysia also claim parts of the waters and China has a separate dispute with Japan in the East China Sea.

Manila said on Thursday that a U.N. arbitration court had set up the tribunal which would hear Manila's complaint, but China said this was an attempt to steal Chinese territory.

"The Philippine side is trying to use this to negate China's territorial sovereignty and attach a veneer of 'legality' to its illegal occupation of Chinese islands and reefs," the Foreign Ministry said in a statement on its website (www.mfa.gov.cn).

The Philippines must immediately withdraw personnel and facilities from the islands, the ministry added, listing those which it said Manila was occupying.

Manila asked the tribunal of the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) to order a halt to China's activities.

But the convention did not apply in this case as what the Philippines was actually asking for was a decision on sovereignty, the ministry said.

"China's refusal to accept the Philippines' request for arbitration has full grounding in international law," it said.

China had always believed that the two countries should resolve their dispute through direct talks, the ministry added.

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China slams Philippine bid to "legalize" occupation of islands

MN Faces Looming Workforce Crisis for Long-Term Home Health Care

Updated: 04/25/2013 11:23 PM Created: 04/25/2013 10:13 PM KSTP.com | Print| Email By: Scott Theisen

Minnesota is facing a looming workforce crisis when it comes to long-term home health care.

Baby Boomers are aging, and the projected need for personal care assistants in the next decade far exceeds the number of people entering the field.

Health care advocates say it's difficult to attract and retain quality workers due to low wages and a lack of benefits.

KSTP investigated just how this so called "care gap" is already creating problems statewide.

Every day from 8 a.m to 4 p.m., Becky Pollack tends to Sharon Bramhall's most intimate needs.

Once a nurse herself, a botched sinus surgery led to an ongoing series of medical problems for Bramhall, and she ended up with a spinal fluid leak.

And if Becky weren't here, she wouldn't be at home. "At this point, (I'd probably be) dead," said Bramhall.

In 2011, nearly 27,000 people in Minnesota were deemed eligible for PCA benefits. That's more than double the number of recipients the program served in 2002.

The 2011 spending topped $422 million in state and federal dollars.

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MN Faces Looming Workforce Crisis for Long-Term Home Health Care

Health Care M&A Spending Falls 50% in Q1 2013, Compared with Q1 2012, According to Irving Levin Associates, Inc.

NORWALK, Conn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Health care merger and acquisition activity plunged in the first quarter of 2013. (View full video: http://www.levinassociates.com/pr2013/pr1304mamq1). Deal volume was down 33% versus the previous quarter, with just 204 deals announced. The quarter also sagged (-31%) in comparison with the first quarter a year ago, when 295 deals were announced, according to The Health Care M&A Report. Deal value dropped as well. The early total for M&A activity in the first quarter is just $14.6 billion, down 39% compared with Q4:12. Compared with the first quarter of 2012, when buyers committed $29.4 billion, deal value slumped 50% in Q1:13.

The Health Care M&A Market Deal Volume by Sector

Source: Irving Levin Associates, Inc., April 2013

Behavioral Health Care was the only sector that posted a gain against the previous quarter, with deal volume up by 133% versus Q4:12. However, the seven deals announced in this sector in Q1:13 exactly matched the number of deals announced in Q1:12, which is more of an indication that deal-making in this sector picks up after the first of the year.

The Pharmaceutical sector also showed some weakening in deal volume, down 16% compared with Q4:12 and remaining flat compared with the year-ago quarter. Still, four of the first quarters 10 largest deals were announced in the Pharma sector, and three of those topped $1 billion.

Overall, the health care merger and acquisition market is doing smaller, more strategic deals while it waits for the economy to improve and the results of the sequester to settle in, said Lisa E. Phillips, editor of The Health Care M&A Report. Deal-making activity seemed to be picking up towards the end of the quarter, so we expect more positive results in the second quarter.

Even the Long-Term Care sector, which typically shows the most robust M&A activity, saw first-quarter deal volume slide by 28%, to 44 deals, compared with the previous quarter. The first quarter results were still higher than they were in the year-earlier first quarter, up 7%. In long-term care, the fourth quarter is usually the most active quarter of the year, so it was no surprise to see a drop off in the first quarter of 2013, according to Stephen M. Monroe, a partner at Irving Levin Associates. That said, where we have seen a decline is in the large, over $100 million transactions. But there has been a decline in the mega deals across most of the health care segments, so long-term care is no exception.

The number of announced health care M&A transactions in 2012 (1,063) was the highest since 2007, while the dollar value of those transactions ($143.3 billion) was the lowest since 2003, which indicates a lot of activity by a diverse group of buyers, but not the willingness to take on as many of the billion-dollar deals that were so prevalent in the past. This acquisition atmosphere has carried over into 2013 as companies decide how to approach the changes coming with health care reform.

For more information on The Health Care M&A Information Source or The Health Care M&A Report, or for a membership to any of Irving Levin Associates subscriptions, please call 800-248-1668. Irving Levin Associates, Inc., established in 1948, has headquarters in Norwalk, CT and is online at http://www.levinassociates.com. This privately held corporation publishes research reports and newsletters, and maintains merger and acquisition databases, on the health care and senior housing markets.

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Health Care M&A Spending Falls 50% in Q1 2013, Compared with Q1 2012, According to Irving Levin Associates, Inc.

Lawmakers set to make more health care changes

ST. PAUL Minnesota already is on track to establish a new way for its residents to buy health insurance, and now legislators are poised to change how the state takes care of its elderly, disabled and poor.

Senators debated late Thursday night their plan to spend $11.2 billion in the next two years for health care, which is second only to public school funding in the $38 billion state budget.

The plan by Sen. Tony Lourey, DFL-Kerrick, builds on the federal Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare. State leaders this year established a federally required online health insurance sales program, which in several ways is tied to the Lourey bill.

Lourey said he was disappointed when handed a spending target $150 million less than in the current budget. It was much lower than I was hoping for.

However, he said, his committee was able to craft a bill that cuts no state-provided health care.

We raised some revenue in innovative ways, he said, including gaining $80 million by adding a surcharge on HMO revenues.

The bill would increase rates for nursing homes and other long-term care programs by 2 percent in 2015.

Republicans said Loureys bill does too little to help nursing homes and other long-term care programs.

The long-term care industry says it would be better off with current law, said Sen. Julie Rosen, R-Fairmont.

Some of the 115-plus nursing homes in financial crisis could be forced to close, Rosen said. Its going to be very, very tough.

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Lawmakers set to make more health care changes

California Hospital Medical Center Recognized for National Health Care Environmental “Partnership” Award

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

California Hospital Medical Center has received the Partner Recognition Award from Practice Greenhealth, the nations leading health care membership community that empowers its members to increase their efficiencies and environmental stewardship while improving patient safety and care. The Award is one of the Environmental Excellence Awards given each year to honor environmental achievements in the health care sector.

This Award applauds organizations that are just beginning their journey in environmental stewardship, said Laura Wenger, RN, Executive Director, Practice Greenhealth. California Hospital Medical Center's commitment to sustainability firmly places them on the path of sustainability for the future of health care.

The Partner Recognition Award is for health care facilities that have begun to work on environmental improvements, have achieved some progress, and have at least a ten percent recycling rate for their total waste stream.

As evidenced in a recent Health Care Research Collaborative study, Can Sustainable Hospitals Help Bend the Health Care Cost Curve? introducing environmental sustainability measures in hospitals not only results in significant savings, it wont increase operating costs. The implications are clear given the return on investment, all hospitals should adopt and expand their sustainability programs.

"We have a very active Green Team," said Larry Dopson, Director of EVS and Transportation. We serve some of the most vulnerable population in the city and keeping the hospital green in this environment is both a challenge and an imperative. It respects the dignity of our patients to be cared for in a green environment, and that is important to all of us. Practice Greenhealths recognition with this award is confirmation that we are doing all we can to accomplish that and secure the future of the environment.

Some of the hospital's ongoing green programs include:

The Practice Greenhealth Environmental Excellence Awards were presented in Boston, MA, April 25 at CleanMed, THE premier national environmental conference for leaders in health care sustainability.

About California Hospital Medical Center

California Hospital Medical Center is a 319-bed acute care community hospital serving the health care needs of our community for the past 125 years. As a Dignity Health member, we are committed to delivering compassionate, high-quality, affordable health services.

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California Hospital Medical Center Recognized for National Health Care Environmental “Partnership” Award

Florida House swats health care plan to use federal money

TALLAHASSEE | After more than five hours of heated discussion Thursday, the dynamic of Floridas health care expansion debate officially shifted to 74 House Republicans versus the rest of the Legislature.

That chambers GOP majority Thursday protected a plan, sponsored by Rep. Travis Cummings, R-Orange Park, that would rely on state funding to offer $2,000 to low-income parents and those eligible for disability under Social Security.

The plan would require those eligible to make a $25 monthly contribution to a health care account. Money in the account would be used to shop for health care on Florida Health Choices, a marketplace created by lawmakers in 2008. Once fully implemented, it would cost an estimated $237 million each year.

The debate centered on an amendment sponsored by Rep. Mike Fasano, R-New Port Richey, that would have replaced the House plan with a version authored in the Senate. The Senate plan, sponsored by Sen. Joe Negron, R-Stuart, would use $51 billion over the next decade under the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, to place people into private insurance.

Its supported by Democrats, Gov. Rick Scott, business and hospital-aligned special interest groups, and was passed out of its last Senate committee stop on a unanimous vote.

It would require a monthly contribution of $15 to $20 and cover about 1.1 million people currently uninsured when fully implemented. Of those, 438,113 would be covered next year.

Under Obamacare, the first three years would be covered by the federal government.

House Republicans have balked at the idea of accepting federal funds because they see it as an inconsistent funding source.

They just increased our taxes and are still trillions of dollars in debt, said Rep. Jimmie, R-Lecanto.

Democrats point to the fact that Floridas budget already includes billions in federal money, including $14 billion for health care in the Houses proposed budget.

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Florida House swats health care plan to use federal money