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Kucinich Universal Single Payer
Topic Started: Jul 23 2011, 06:47 PM (112 Views)
prometheuspan@hotmail.com
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Universal Health Care
"Health care is an essential safeguard of human life and dignity and there is an obligation for society to ensure
that every person be able to realize this right." -- Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, Chicago Archdiocese
Our health care system is broken, and H.R. 676,
the Conyers-Kucinich bill, is the only
comprehensive solution to the problem. It is also
the system endorsed by more than 14,000
physicians from Physicians for a National Health
Program. Nearly 46 million Americans have no
health care and over 40 million more have only
minimal coverage. In 2005 some 41% of moderate
and middle income Americans went without health
care for part of the year. Even more shocking is
that 53% of those earning less than $20,000 went
without insurance for all of 2005. In fact, the
National Academy of Science's Institute of
Medicine estimates that 18,000 Americans die each
year because they have no health insurance.
The American health system is quite sick.
Pulitzer Prize journalists Donald Barlett and James
Steele, in their stunning analysis of the health care
industry, Critical Condition (2006 Broadway
Books), insist that "... U.S. health care is secondrate
at the start of the twenty-first century and
destined to get a lot worse and much more
expensive." Considering the following facts from
Tom Daschle's article for the Center for American
Progress: "Paying More but Getting Less: Myths
and the Global Case for U.S. Health Reform":
Americans Are the Healthiest People in the World.
FACT: Citizens of 34 nations live longer than
Americans.
The U.S. Is the Best Place to Get Sick.
FACT: The World Health Organization ranked
the U.S. 37th in the world for health system
performance. Countries like Australia and the
United Kingdom rank above the U.S. Americans
have lower odds of surviving colorectal cancer and
childhood leukemia than Canadians who do have
national health care. Americans also experience
greater problems in coordination of care than the
previously mentioned countries and New Zealand.
Covering All Americans Will Lead to Rationing.
FACT: Same-day access to primary-care
physicians in the U.S. (33%) is far less available
than in the United Kingdom (41%), Australia
(54%) and New Zealand (60%). Per capita
spending for health care averaged $2,696 in
countries without waiting lists and $5,267 in the
U.S.
Global Competitiveness Is Hampered in
Comprehensive System.
FACT: "Health care costs are not just a burden
and barrier to care for individuals; they are taking a
heavy toll on American businesses." The strain on
employers in 2005 was staggering. "The average
total premiums for an employer-based family plan
was $9,979 in 2005 ..." Most of our competitors in
the world markets finance their systems outside
corporate taxes and employer mandates. Without
Medicare for Everyone, the U.S. will continue to
hemorrhage jobs.
We Cannot Afford to Cover All Americans.
FACT: We already spend enough to have
universal health care. "The truth is, we cannot
afford to not reform the health system." We spend
about 50% more than the next most expensive
nation and nearly twice per person what the
Canadians do. On May 1, 2006 Paul Krugman
explained in Death by Insurance how incredibly
wasteful the current system is. The doctor he
referenced has two full-time staff members for
billing, and two secretaries spend half their time
collecting insurance information on the 301
different private plans they deal with. This type of
waste is easily 20%. Also consider that 98% of
Medicare funds are spent on medical care.
Kucinich for President 2008 Toll free: 1-877-41-DENNIS www.dennis4president.com
Paid for by Kucinich for President 2008, Inc.
IMPORTANT: The hackneyed -- and
inaccurate -- mantra of Republicans when
universal health care is introduced is to blame trial
lawyers and malpractice cases for our lack of
national health care. In fact, 0.46% of our total
health spending is spent on awards, legal costs, and
underwriting costs -- about the same as Canada
and the United Kingdom and about the same
amount we spend on dog and cat food each year.
While "defensive medicine" may drive up the
price, it hardly accounts for our stunning health
care costs. The belief that citizens should give up
their right to fair legal redress for legally proven
medical mistakes in exchange for lower health care
costs rings as true as the promise that if we must
give up our civil rights to be safe from terrorists.
Even those with coverage too often pay
exorbitant rates. The current profit-driven system,
dominated by private insurance firms and their
bureaucracies, has failed.
We must establish streamlined national health
insurance, "Enhanced Medicare for Everyone." It
would be publicly financed health care, privately
delivered, and will put patients and doctors back in
control of the system. Coverage will be more
complete than private insurance plans; encourage
prevention; and include prescription drugs, dental
care, mental health care, and alternative and
complementary medicine.
Perhaps the clearest and most eloquent
explanation of the Conyers-Kucinich National
Health Insurance Bill was given on February 4,
2003, in Washington, D.C., by Dr. Marcia Angell
in introducing H.R. 676. Backed by over 14,000
doctors, this is the future of American medicine.
"We are here today to introduce a national
health insurance program. Such a program is no
longer optional; it's necessary.
"Americans have the most expensive health care
system in the world. We spend about twice as
much per person as other developed nations, and
that gap is growing. That's not because we are
sicker or more demanding (Canadians, for
example, see their doctors more often and spend
more time in the hospital). And it's not because we
get better results. By the usual measures of health
(life expectancy, infant mortality, immunization
rates), we do worse than most other developed
countries. Furthermore, we are the only developed
nation that does not provide comprehensive health
care to all its citizens. Some 42 million Americans
are uninsured (nearly 46 million today -- updated
figure) -- disproportionately the sick, the poor, and
minorities -- and most of the rest of us are
underinsured. In sum, our health care system is
outrageously expensive, yet inadequate. Why? The
only plausible explanation is that there's something
about our system -- about the way we finance and
deliver health care -- that's enormously inefficient.
The failures of the system were partly masked
during the economic boom of the 1990's, but now
they stand starkly exposed. There is no question
that with the deepening recession and rising
unemployment, in the words of John Breaux, 'The
system is collapsing around us.'
"The underlying problem is that we treat health
care like a market commodity instead of a social
service. Health care is targeted not to medical
need, but to the ability to pay. Markets are good
for many things, but they are not a good way to
distribute health care. To understand what's
happening, let's look at how the health care market
works ..."
"Mainstream" writers like Ph. D. economist and
columnist for the New York Times Paul Krugman
now agree with those doctors and Dennis that
"covering everyone under Medicare would actually
be significantly cheaper than our current system."
They all recognize that we already spend enough
to provide national health care to all but lack the
political courage to make the tough decisions that
doctors, nurses and medical professionals must
run our health care system -- not "for profit"
insurance companies, who make money by
denying health care.
It is time to recognize that all the civilized
countries have a solution that we must adapt to
this country. American businesses can no longer
be competitive shouldering the entire cost of
health care. Health care is a right that all
Americans deserve.
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