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Why the Obamacare Medicaid Expansion Is Bad for Taxpayers and Patients

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Why the Obamacare Medicaid Expansion Is Bad for Taxpayers and Patients
By Nina Owcharenko
March 5, 2013

Medicaid needs reform, not expansion. This federal–state health care program provides health care to over 60 million Americans and consumes a growing portion of state and federal budgets. Research shows a long history of Medicaid enrollees having worse access and outcomes than privately insured individuals.[1] Due in part to low reimbursement, one in three doctors refuses to accept new Medicaid patients.[2] Despite access issues, Medicaid spending continues to grow. In 2010, total federal and state spending on Medicaid exceeded $400 billion.[3]

Instead of reforming Medicaid, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) expands eligibility to all individuals earning less than 138 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL).[4] The Medicaid program is already struggling to provide care to its core obligations—a diverse group of low-income children, disabled, pregnant women, and seniors. Adding more people further exacerbates Medicaid’s underlying problems.

The expansion of Medicaid fuels a larger trend under Obamacare: government coverage supplanting private coverage. By 2021, 46 percent of all Americans will be dependent on the government for their health care. Of this group, 86.9 million will be on Medicaid/Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), followed by 64.3 million on Medicare and 23.4 million enrolled in government exchanges.[5] This will push U.S. health care closer to a government model.

The Temptation of Medicaid Expansion

Obamacare provides additional federal funding to the states for this new expansion population. Starting in 2014, the federal government would pick up 100 percent of the benefit costs for the newly eligible population for three years. Thereafter, this enhanced federal funding would gradually decline to 90 percent in 2020.

Obamacare also directed states to expand eligibility or risk forgoing all of their federal Medicaid dollars. The Supreme Court, however, ruled on behalf of 26 state plaintiffs that this “all-or-nothing” proposition was coercive. To rectify this, the Court essentially made the expansion optional, meaning that a state could reject the expansion but not lose its existing Medicaid funding.

Today, governors and state legislators are weighing this option as they develop their budgets for the coming year. Proponents use a variety of unrealistic arguments in support of the Medicaid expansion:

It provides states with an influx of new, generous federal revenue. This will cause states to spend money that they otherwise would not have spent. Moreover, due to the structure of Obamacare, states will likely have to absorb many currently eligible but not enrolled individuals as well as those who lose their existing employer coverage. These effects would add to the cost.[6]
It will result in savings as the cost of uncompensated care declines with expanded coverage. Heritage data analysis shows that in the first few years, when federal funding is at its peak, states may see some savings. Over time, however, in the majority of states, Medicaid spending will accelerate and dwarf any projected uncompensated care savings.[7] These savings are also contingent on states enacting legislation to further reduce uncompensated care funds (Disproportionate Share Hospital [DSH] payments) on top of the $18 billion of federal cuts enacted under Obamacare. Heritage analyst Ed Haislmaier predicts that “governors and state legislators should expect their state’s hospitals and clinics to lobby them for more—not less—state funding to replace cuts in federal DSH payments.”[8]
Finally, contrary to the theory that expanding Medicaid would cause the number of uninsured to decline and reduce the need for uncompensated care, a similar expansion in Maine found the opposite effect. In Maine, uncompensated care increased, and the number of uninsured in the targeted population (those below 100 percent of FPL) saw limited change.[9]
Rejecting the expansion will mean that other states get more. The federal share of Medicaid is based on a formula calculation and actual expenditures. Rejected funds do not go into a general fund for redistribution to other states. The fewer states that expand, the less the federal government spends. States that draw down on these new federal funds fuel the fiscal crisis in our country.

The Trade-Off Dilemma

Committing to an expansion creates a dilemma for the states. To control Medicaid spending, states typically fall back on predictable techniques to manage costs, such as limiting reimbursements to health care providers and limiting services, which ultimately limits access to care. These Medicaid cost controls, however, go only so far. Today, Medicaid consumes over 23 percent of state budgets, surpassing education as the largest state budget item.[10] As Medicaid spending continues to rise, other important state priorities such as education, emergency services, transportation, and criminal justice are squeezed.

Finally, if states resist balancing among spending programs, the alternative is generating more revenues with tax increases. But higher taxes come with a steep price: They reduce economic growth. With most states still experiencing anemic growth, tax increases on top of already higher taxes at the federal level are not an appealing option.[11]

Fueling the Country’s Fiscal Crisis

Any positive assumptions about Medicaid expansion also assume that federal funding remains unchanged. With deficits running over $1 trillion a year, the country’s fiscal future is in need of reform. Federal spending on health care entitlements, including Medicare and Medicaid, is the largest driver.[12]

Even this Administration recognizes that such entitlement spending, including Medicaid, is unsustainable. The President’s fiscal year (FY) 2011 budget outlined several Medicaid reform policies, including setting an across-the-board blend rate for federal reimbursement and limiting the states’ ability to leverage provider taxes for the state share of matching funds. Although the Administration attempts to distance itself from its own proposal, any serious efforts toward entitlement reform must include Medicaid.

In spite of this fact, several Democrat and Republican governors that support Medicaid expansion condition their support on federal funding remaining untouched. In essence, pro-expansion governors are telling Washington, “don’t touch entitlement spending.” This reliance on federal revenues exacerbates the country’s fiscal challenges and could also affect states’ own fiscal health. Recently, Moody’s cited Missouri’s reliance on the federal government, including Medicaid funding, as adversely affecting its credit rating outlook.[13]

Setting Good Policy

There are several recommendations that the states and Congress could adopt to help mitigate the crisis that Obamacare has exacerbated:

Reject the Medicaid expansion. Greater dependence on federal dollars tangles the states in bad fiscal policy and bad health care policy. States that reject the expansion avoid relying on unsound federal revenues, stretching an already thin program beyond its means and adding millions to a failing program.
Scale back existing eligibility where possible. Some states have allowed Medicaid to grow beyond its original intent by moving middle-class families into a welfare program. To restore Medicaid as a safety-net program, states should review eligibility levels, scale back eligibility where possible, and restore the program’s focus on its core Medicaid functions.
Advance a separate, state alternative. Instead of using a flawed Obamacare model, states should put in place an alternative. States should develop a state solution tailored to the specific needs of this new population rather than placing them in a one-size-fits-all Medicaid option.[14] A non-Medicaid, state-based approach, especially for this targeted population, would give states the control to design policies best suited to addressing the needs of their citizens without onerous Medicaid constraints.
Congress should eliminate the federal enhanced Medicaid match. To avoid the argument that states rejecting Medicaid are leaving federal dollars on the table, Congress should level the playing field by removing the new, enhanced federal dollars. This would remove/minimize the temptation of excessive and unsustainable federal funding and restore fiscal constraint at the federal level. States would still be able to expand eligibility but would have to do so with the traditional (non-enhanced) federal matching rate. If Congress ignores this opportunity to restrain federal spending, it could “block grant” the enhanced federal dollars to the states to develop their own state-specific approaches, including alternatives outside of Medicaid.

Alternate Solution Needed

Medicaid is already spread too thin. Adding a new and complex population to this program does not solve its challenges; it only makes them worse. States should resist, and Congress should remove, this temptation. Both should begin to lay out a better and more sustainable alternative than a failing government health program to care for the less fortunate.

—Nina Owcharenko is Director of the Center for Health Policy Studies and Preston A. Wells, Jr., Fellow at The Heritage Foundation.

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Readers debate value of a “Super Bowl ” ready Ridgewood

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Ridgewood High School Field ?

Readers debate value of  a “Super Bowl ” ready Ridgewood
March 9,2013
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ , a 20-member village committee headed by John Saracin has been devised with a singular mission in mind: make Ridgewood a draw for tourists coming to the area for 2014′s big game.

Some readers remained skeptical , Mr. Saracino is the Head of the Library Board, member of the parking garage committee. applicant in front of the planning board for a large apartment development ( old Selfons building) and a donator to Mayor Paul Aronsohn campaign.Leads one reader to how many things are be done behind the scenes.

Another reader chastised commentators saying the negativity on this blog never ceases to amaze me. The thought behind Ridgewood being a hub destination during Super Bowl week is to attract folks from nearby communities into Ridgewood’s downtown to enjoy a fun, family experience.

There are many Ridgewood residents that are working on this committee with the good intent of introducing or reintroducing nearby residents to our downtown with the expectation that they will become return shoppers, diners, etc. ….and yes there are issues that need to be addressed, e.g. parking, traffic, etc….

ah wait did you say parking… ?

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The calm before the solar storm? NASA warns ‘something unexpected is happening to the Sun’

sunspots

The calm before the solar storm? NASA warns ‘something unexpected is happening to the Sun

    2013 was due to be year of the ‘solar maximum’
    As this picture shows, in fact the sun is incredibly calm – baffling experts

By Mark Prigg

Sunspot numbers are well below their values from 2011, and strong solar flares have been infrequent,’ the space agency says.

The image above shows the Earth-facing surface of the Sun on February 28, 2013, as observed by the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) on NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory.

It observed just a few small sunspots on an otherwise clean face, which is usually riddled with many spots during peak solar activity.

Experts have been baffled by the apparent lack of activity – with many wondering if NASA simply got it wrong.

However, Solar physicist Dean Pesnell of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center believes he has a different explanation.

‘This is solar maximum,’ he says.

‘But it looks different from what we expected because it is double-peaked.’

‘The last two solar maxima, around 1989 and 2001, had not one but two peaks.’

Solar activity went up, dipped, then rose again, performing a mini-cycle that lasted about two years, he said….

Astronomers have been counting sunspots for centuries, and they have seen that the solar cycle is not perfectly regular.

Solar Cycle

Conventional wisdom holds that solar activity swings back and forth like a simple pendulum.

At one end of the cycle, there is a quiet time with few sunspots and flares.

At the other end, solar max brings high sunspot numbers and frequent solar storms.

It’s a regular rhythm that repeats every 11 years.

Reality is more complicated.
Read more: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2290289/NASA-warns-unexpected-happening-Sun-year-supposed-peak-sunspot-

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Pew Research Center : Twitter lies

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Pew Research Center : Twitter lies
March 5, 2013 | 7:28 am

A remarkable year-long study by the Pew Research Center finds that what’s trending on Twitter, often used by national reporters to gauge immediate public opinion of news events like President Obama’s election, exaggerates to the point of lying.

The key reason: a majority of those who tweet are young Democrats, giving the social network an unbalanced view of the world. What’s more: reaction is more negative than what public polls find.

Take the reception to Obama’s reelection as an example. Pew said polling found that 52 percent of the public was “happy,” and 45 percent “unhappy.” But the Twitter reaction was 77 percent “happy,” 23 percent “unhappy.”

But there are times when the “Twitter universe” turns negative, even conservative. Here Pew offers the reaction to Obama’s second Inaugural Address. Polling found that 48 percent had a positive view of it, 22 percent a negative view. But on Twitter, 66 percent were neutral, 13 percent positive, and 21 percent negative.

https://washingtonexaminer.com/pew-twitter-lies/article/2523268

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Bloomberg Says Government ‘Probably’ Shouldn’t Force People to Exercise

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Hunger Games

Bloomberg Says Government ‘Probably’ Shouldn’t Force People to Exercise
By Colin Campbell 3/08 3:03pm

Mayor Michael Bloomberg may be one of the world’s biggest proponents of government action to promote public health, but Hizzoner has his limits. In his weekly radio appearance on John Gambling’s radio show, the mayor was asked whether he would consider ordering mandatory gym memberships and he admitted that’s taking things too far.

“Well, you have to be practical about what legally you can do and what people will do,” said Mr. Bloomberg. “The nice thing about the soda thing is it’s really just a suggestion. So, if you want to buy 32 ounces, you just have to carry it back to your seat in two cups. And maybe that would convince you to only take one, but if you want two you can do it. I think government’s job … is to give you advice, not to force you do things.”

Mr. Bloomberg did note, however, that the government does force behavior under certain circumstances. Nevertheless, he said forcing physical exercise “probably” crosses the line of acceptability.

https://politicker.com/2013/03/bloomberg-says-government-probably-shouldnt-force-people-to-exercise/

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Ridgewood Teacher Evaluation Update (DEAC)

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Ridgewood Teacher Evaluation Update (DEAC)

Assistant Superintendent Regina Botsford presented information on the newly implemented teacher evaluation system, as required by the state.

DEAC, an advisory committee of parents, Board members, teachers and administrators created to help the district select and implement the new system , chose the Stronge system.

This year the teacher evaluation component is in place; next year the administrators will go onto the Stronge system, also, and measures of student growth will be incorporated.

Sirius XM Radio

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Ridgewood Schools 2013-2014 Preliminary $ 91,287,513 Budget

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Ridgewood Schools 2013-2014 Preliminary  $ 91,287,513 Budget

Following a detailed presentation by Assistant Superintendent Angelo DeSimone and a presentation by Superintendent Dan Fishbein on the types of cuts that a zero percent growth budget would require, the Board approved a resolution adopting the 2013-2014 school district preliminary proposed budget, as follows, for submission to the Executive County Superintendent:

Budget $ 91,287,513
Tax Levy $84,608,635
Special Revenue Fund 1,464,288
Debt Service Fund 3,733,973
Debt Service  Tax Levy 3,239,342
Total Budget $96,485,774
Total Budget Tax Levy $87,847,977

This budget reflects a two percent tax increase, which would impact the average Ridgewood home, evaluated at $687,364, by $203.63 per year.

On Tuesday, April 16, the following question will be presented to the voters of Ridgewood Village for their approval: There should be raised for the General Fund Tax Levy $84,608,635 for the ensuing School Year: (2013-2014).

Sirius XM Radio

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BOE announces public presentations and public hearing on the 2013-2014 school budget

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BOE announces public presentations and public hearing on the 2013-2014 school budget

Information about the 2013-2014 school budget may be found on the district’s website. Questions may be directed by e-mail to budget14@ridgewood.k12.nj.us In addition, public presentations on the proposed budget and opportunities for discussion
have been scheduled as follows:

o Wednesday, March 13 at 1 p.m. at GWMS Auditorium: public budget presentation.
o Wednesday, March 27 at 7:30 p.m. at the Ed Center: public hearing on the budget.
o Tuesday, April 2 at 8 p.m. at RHS Library Media Center: public budget presentation.
o Wednesday, April 3 from 7-8:30 p.m. at the Ed Center: Drop in for Coffee and Conversation with the superintendent and Board

Sirius XM Radio
o Thursday, April 4 at 7 p.m. at Travell Elementary School: public budget presentation

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Ridgewood Crew Annual Row-A-Thon, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Van Neste Square

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photo from 2012 Row-A-Thon

Ridgewood Crew Annual Row-A-Thon, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Van Neste Square

Ridgewood Crew Rowing Program’s annual Row-A-Thon, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Van Neste Square. Information: ridgewoodcrew.com.

Ridgewood Crew introduces Ridgewood, NJ high school-aged youth to the traditions, athleticism, sportsmanship, techniques and camaraderie of the sport of rowing. Founded in 2004, the team rows on the Passaic River in northern NJ and competes in the sport’s premier regattas held throughout the Northeast.

In the program’s 8 years, our youth, board and parent volunteers have moved Ridgewood Crew forward by leaps and bounds. That success is represented by the widespread individual and team achievements of each of the 63 student-athletes on the 2011 roster. To facilitate that success, Ridgewood Crew continues to make unprecedented investments in coaching and new equipment. The 2012 coaching staff is one of the most experienced in program history and we were pleased to take delivery of three additional Vespoli boats.

On the river, Ridgewood Crew athletes compete in the Philly Flicks on the Schuylkill River as well as at the highly competitive SRAA Nationals, Stotesbury Cup Regatta, Philadelphia City Championships, Passaic River Northern NJ Championships and Garden State Championships. Additionally, the team’s overall performance continued to attract interest from top rowing colleges and universities including: Bucknell, Boston College, Boston University, Drexel, Duke, Georgetown, George Mason, Harvard, Holy Cross, Lehigh, Syracuse, Marist, Williams, Trinity College, University of Delaware and others. The program also celebrated its first female athlete to receive a full, four-year rowing scholarship.

Ridgewood Crew offers several ways for you to experience our mission. Join the team, volunteer or donate.

As a not-for-profit organization, Ridgewood Crew receives no public funding. Accordingly, we rely upon numerous fundraisers throughout the year to support the club’s mission. Money raised from fundraising activities goes toward equipment purchases and maintenance, coaching costs, transportation and race entry fees.

In 2007, the Board of Directors founded the Robert Zeller Scholarship Fund, in honor of Ridgewood Crew’s founding president, Robert Zeller.  The scholarship is funded through private donations and is open to eligible Ridgewood Crew seniors.

For more information about supporting Ridgewood Crew or the Robert Zeller Scholarship Fund, please contact us at row@ridgewoodcrew.com

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Youth Unemployment at 12.5 Percent in March

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Youth Unemployment at 12.5 Percent in March

Opportunities remain scarce for young people after years of debt-fueled government spending

Washington, DC – (3/8/13) – Generation Opportunity, a national, non-partisan organization advocating for Millennials ages 18-29, is announcing its Millennial Jobs Report for February 2013. The data is non-seasonally adjusted (NSA) and is specific to 18-29 year olds:

The youth unemployment rate for 18-29 year olds specifically for February 2013 is 12.5 percent (NSA).

The youth unemployment rate for 18-29 year old African-Americans for February 2013 is 22.8 percent (NSA); the youth unemployment rate for 18-29 year old Hispanics for February 2013 is 13.4 percent (NSA); and the youth unemployment rate for 18–29 year old women for February 2013 is 11.5 percent (NSA).

The declining labor force participation rate has created an additional 1.7 million young adults that are not counted as “unemployed” by the U.S. Department of Labor because they are not in the labor force, meaning that those young people have given up looking for work due to the lack of jobs.

If the labor force participation rate were factored into the 18-29 youth unemployment calculation, the actual 18-29-unemployment rate would rise to 16.2 percent (NSA).

“In 2008, the national debt was $10 trillion, and youth unemployment was spiraling out of control. Five years later, our national debt has nearly doubled to close to $17 trillion, and young people have even less economic opportunity. Perhaps it’s time to admit that government is the problem, not the solution,” said Evan Feinberg, President of Generation Opportunity and one of the first Millennials to run for Congress. “Young people agree: 72 percent believe we should reduce government spending to create economic opportunities. After four years of debt-fueled government spending, far too many young people – nearly one in six – are still out of the game. This is unacceptable – my generation won’t put up with it for much longer.”

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Record 89,304,000 Americans ‘Not in Labor Force’ — 296,000 Fewer Employed Since January

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Record 89,304,000 Americans ‘Not in Labor Force’ — 296,000 Fewer Employed Since January
March 8, 2013
By Elizabeth Harrington

(CNSNews.com) – The number of Americans designated as “not in the labor force” in February was 89,304,000, a record high, up from 89,008,000 in January, according to the Department of Labor. This means that the number of Americans not in the labor force increased 296,000 between January and February.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) labels people who are unemployed and no longer looking for work as “not in the labor force,” including people who have retired on schedule, taken early retirement, or simply given up looking for work.

The increase marks the second month in a row, after rising in January from 88.8 million in December.  Those not in the labor force had declined in December from 88.9 million in November.

The nation’s unemployment rate decreased to 7.7 percent in February, down from 7.9 percent in January.  Overall unemployment “has shown little movement, on net, since September 2012,” the Labor Department said.

https://cnsnews.com/news/article/record-89304000-americans-not-labor-force-296000-fewer-employed-january

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Urbanization : Village continues to play the fool and residents are not buying

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Gwen make the latest Valley gaff photo by Boyd Loving

Urbanization : Village continues to play the fool and residents are not buying
March 8th 2013
the staff of the Ridgewood blog and readers

Ridgewood NJ, you must be kidding “Councilwoman Gwenn Hauck said she has been unfairly tagged as a Valley supporter because of her past work as a vice president of the Valley Hospital auxiliary. Before she joined the council, she testified at a hearing in support of the hospital”

VP of a volunteer organization and she does not know why she is seen as a Valley supporter? And, oh yeah, she spoke in support of the expansion at a public meeting. In spite of that she does not know why she is seen as a valley supporter?

This is almost as ridiculous as claim that 4 new developments ,a Valley doubling in size and 2 parking garages will  have “minimal impact”.

Next thing someone will run a study and claim that high-density housing complexes could alleviate traffic congestion ,oh wait someone already did.

Clearly someone didn’t get the credibility memo . If you want people to take you seriously you need to stick to credible fact based statements or make a very compelling argument to state your case .

Much of the local media may buy into this type on nonsense but serious people looking for solutions  are beginning to think that both Valley and the Village Council are clearly looking to put one over on residents and taxpayers .

Can you say Village Hall fiasco take two .

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Mountain of donated books needs sorting, Paterson library chief says

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Mountain of donated books needs sorting, Paterson library chief says
March 7, 2013, 10:06 AM
BY  ALLISON TROBIANO
STAFF WRITER
The Record

As a Central Jersey volunteer group Wednesday morning delivered another 1,000 children’s books for the Big Book Drive, the coordinator of the effort sent out an appeal for volunteers to help sort an avalanche of donated books in preparation for a major distribution event in April.

Cynthia Czesak, Paterson’s library director and book drive organizer, said the drive has been a “tremendous success,” with an estimated 10,000 books already collected. The Big Book Drive is an effort of the Paterson library and The Record and the Herald News to collect as many new or gently used books as possible to give to Paterson children to take home.

With heaps of books in boxes at the Southside library branch at 930 Main St., and untold hundreds more gathering at partner libraries in Allendale, Maywood and Ridgewood, Czesak says the new priority is recruiting volunteers to sort the donated volumes.

“There are already some individuals and groups who have volunteered to help, but we will need all the help we can get,” she said, having begun setting up a sorting project in hopes of beginning on Saturday.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/195807851_Mountain_of_donated_books_needs_sorting__Paterson_library_chief_says.html

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Hypnosis for Weight Control Program Set for April 10

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Hypnosis for Weight Control Program Set for April 10

On Wednesday, April 10 beginning at 7 p.m., The Valley Hospital will sponsor a two-hour Weight Loss Program that will provide behavior modification and hypnotic suggestions to participants so they can make permanent lifestyle changes to lose weight naturally and successfully.

It is widely known that going on a diet doesn’t address the reasons for overeating.  Often, people cling to unproductive habits such as overeating to ease stress or relieve boredom.  This program will address the internal and external triggers of these unproductive habits by using hypnotic suggestion and behavior modification techniques to recognize them.

Hypnosis is a universal way of reaching the subconscious mind and effectively communicating new ideas and suggestions to enhance motivation and change.  When a person understands why they overeat, they can make subtle changes to reduce their weight without feeling denied or deprived.  By communicating in a relaxed – or hypnotic – state of mind, internal strengths and resources are brought to light, alternative behavior patterns are discovered, motivation is increased, and the self-confidence to overcome the unhealthy habit is achieved.

Participants in the program receive a 30-day reinforcement audiotape and a series of behavior modification cards to be used daily as positive reinforcement.  The program fee is $75, which includes the cost of materials and revisits to future seminars for one year for reinforcement.

conduct the program.  Ms. Van Duyne has more than five years experience in the field of habit control.  She has conducted wellness programs on a monthly basis in more than 20 hospitals through out New Jersey, Connecticut and Pennsylvania.  She is a member of the International Association of Counselors and Therapist and the National Guild of Hypnotics.

For more information, or to register, please call 1-800-VALLEY 1 (1-800-825-5391).