On healthcare: back to the basics or new innovation?

Palmetto Promise Institute met with Dr. Jerome Aya-ay in his Spartanburg office to talk with him about Direct Primary Care.
Palmetto Promise Institute met with Dr. Jerome Aya-ay in his Spartanburg office to talk with him about Direct Primary Care.
Two months into the new Administration, the fight over whether to repeal and replace Obamacare simultaneously or separately continues to rage on Capitol Hill.
This week we talked with Rep. Rep. Anne Thayer about a Direct Primary Care Bill that she sponsored in the House.
Direct Primary Care may not be for everyone in every case, but it is a useful tool in the Healthcare freedom toolbox.
As the battle for healthcare heats up, let's separate some fact from fiction about what it means for South Carolinians.
This article was written by Ellen Weaver and Caleb Crosby, President of Alabama Policy Institute and was published in National Review on 1/19/2017. As the 115th Congress convenes and President-elect Trump prepares to take office tomorrow, our nation faces incredible challenges and opportunities. On health care in particular, the stakes couldn’t be higher, nor the path forward
Conservatives have no reason—none— to take a back seat on the compassion front to any Obamacare supporter.
It’s time for South Carolina lawmakers to examine the facts and make healthcare more accessible, more affordable and more safe by repealing South Carolina’s CON laws.
As the dust begins to settle from the raucous 2016 election season, President-elect Donald Trump and Congressional Republicans are turning their attention toward governing.
For the past six years, Republicans — across Washington, and across the country — have virtually to a person run against Obamacare.