The Times West Virginian

West Virginia

October 3, 2008

Many state residents don’t visit doctor because of costs

CHARLESTON — The majority of West Virginia residents with weight and health problems admit they need help, but many don’t see a doctor because they can’t afford it or can’t get there.

Eighty-four percent of 625 people questioned in a poll commissioned by a new coalition called West Virginians’ Campaign for a Healthy Future agree that West Virginia residents are overweight and don’t take care of themselves, the group announced Thursday.

The telephone poll, conducted by Global Strategy Group of New York during the last week of August, also found that 33 percent of West Virginia’s low-income residents haven’t gone to the doctor in the past year because of the costs. And 19 percent didn’t go because there was no physician available in their area.

“We have a very, very strong need in West Virginia, and that is we need to provide health care coverage to every West Virginian,” George Manahan, a spokesman for the coalition, said during a news conference.

The coalition is comprised of 37 business, labor, health care advocacy and provider groups. The group’s goal is the passage of state legislation to significantly reduce health care costs and increase access to quality care.

Manahan said the initiative started over the past year with a handful of organizations — including the AARP, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, the AFL-CIO, the West Virginia Education Association, West Virginians for Affordable Health Care and the West Virginia Council of Churches — deciding “to get together to stop fighting against each other and start fighting with each other.”

The coalition has grown to include many other labor and business groups and is also recruiting individuals to join the effort. A Web site, www.wvhealthyfuture.com, has been launched and an advertising campaign is about to start.

About $100,000 has already been collected for the media blitz and additional contributions are being accepted on the Web site.

Coalition representatives have met with the governor and legislators, Manahan said, and will be working with them to ensure that any legislative proposals meet its standards for health care reform. Those standards include allowing all West Virginians affordable access to high-quality health care and continuous, comprehensive coverage regardless of income, geography, age, health or any other factor.

The poll asked respondents if they support health care reform. Eighty-eight percent said yes and of those, 60 percent said they strongly support it. Sixty percent rate the state’s health care system as not so good or poor.

Other key findings were: 45 percent of those polled are very worried about having to pay more for health care and 40 percent are very worried they won’t be able to pay medical bills for serious injury. Thirty-five percent want the state’s top priority to be reducing the cost of health care, 17 percent want it to be improving the quality of health care and 79 percent would be more likely to vote for a political candidate who worked to guarantee quality health care to all West Virginians.

“West Virginians are not saying this should all be done by government or it should all be done by businesses. It’s a shared responsibility and that is certainly the way the voters feel,” said Global Strategy President Jefrey Pollock. “Everybody’s got to come together.”

The poll’s margin of error was plus or minus 3.9 percent.

West Virginia
  • As session ends, ethics, tax items stalled

    Measures offering ultrasound images to women seeking abortions and creating a single agency to manage the state’s vehicle fleet were among those sent to Gov. Joe Manchin on Saturday as West Virginia’s Legislature wound down its regular session.

    With the economy still weak from the recession, lawmakers and Manchin both worked from hemmed-in agendas during the 60-day session. 

     

    March 14, 2010

  • Snow hampered helicopter rescue

    Three hours after a Navy helicopter crashed last month in West Virginia’s snow-covered mountains, National Guard medic Casey Dunfee cracked his cable on the floor of a Blackhawk rescue helicopter to break the ice and lowered himself hundreds of feet to the wreckage below.

     

    March 13, 2010

  • Varied topics left for W.Va. lawmakers

    West Virginia’s Legislature headed toward the end of its regular session Friday with just a handful of measures from its recession-inhibited workload left on the agenda.

    On the eve of the 60-day session’s midnight finish, the House and Senate began exchanging a final batch of bills that include several items from Gov. Joe Manchin’s agenda.

     

    March 13, 2010

  • W.Va. gets $22M for ‘bad schools’

    Nearly $22 million in federal stimulus money will help West Virginia’s worst schools take drastic measures, including replacing principals and overhauling curriculum, U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan announced Thursday.

    West Virginia is the first state to receive money through the federal School Improvement Grants program, which seeks to improve student performance by targeting chronically low-performing schools.

     

    March 12, 2010

  • Dead bills pile up in W.Va. Legislature

    Teenage tanners, seat belt scofflaws and adults who text while driving are among those who will evade further legislative restriction this year.

    With three days to go before the regular legislative session ends, Thursday was the last day for most bills to reach the full House or Senate in time for a final vote.

     

    March 12, 2010

  • W.Va. Senate bolsters proposed FY11 budget

    Federal stimulus dollars and a recent pension funding change have allowed West Virginia’s Senate to tweak the upcoming state budget by $248 million.

    But the amended budget bill unanimously passed Wednesday still cuts general revenue spending by $47 million from what the Legislature passed last year.

     

    March 11, 2010

  • Proposed fees may doom election funding bill

    The head of the Senate Finance Committee warned that the governor’s proposal to publicly finance state Supreme Court races could be derailed by concerns over the fees it would charge.

    Senate Finance Chairman Walt Helmick, a Pocahontas County Democrat, questioned whether his committee would consider the legislation after it advanced late Monday from the Senate Judiciary Committee.

     

    March 10, 2010

  • Mountain State cities may get more freedom

    State lawmakers appear ready to increase the independence of West Virginia’s local governments, and they aren’t waiting on results from an ongoing experiment on the subject.

     

    March 8, 2010

  • Lawmakers entering session’s crunch time

    West Virginia’s Legislature has less than a week to decide the fate of proposals targeting abortion, corporate political spending and prescription drug abuse.

     

    March 7, 2010

  • Foreman says mine boss ordered him to fake records

    A mining foreman accused of forging safety inspection reports at a West Virginia coal mine says his boss put profit ahead of potential danger, telling him to stop production and evacuate the mine only if a federal inspector was watching.

     

    March 6, 2010

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