|
The current issue is always free to all readers
If
you need the access available to a
and cannot afford the $50 subscription price, request a complimentary
subscrpition here.
|
|
Without thinking about
it, Healthcare-NOW created a petition to Congress on our website
with an extra space next to the form where people signed their
names. It was an innocuous mistake, but it turned out
to be a great bonus, because it meant that we took much more
than a list of NAMES to Congress last week.
We put the petition to
Congress on the website of Healthcare-NOW. We asked people
to sign it, and thousands did so. But in addition to signing
it, many people added, alongside their names, their heartfelt
pleas for help. In many cases, they actually told of their poignant
and enraging healthcare experiences – stories of needless death
and loss and poverty, induced by healthcare crises, including
devastating fear and suffering in this U.S. healthcare system.
For example:
-
Richie in California
wrote: “My husband, age 77, has been diagnosed with Lewy Body
dementia. Those of us who are primary caregivers need
help, without losing all of our lifetime of working and saving
assets in the process. HELP us please!"
-
Estela wrote from Mississippi:
"The sick suffer three times over – from the pains of
the ailment, from the money lost paying medical bills/co-payments,
and from the inability to work/earn money due to the ailment.
We have the opportunity to relieve these sufferings with Medicare
for All!"
-
Sheri in NJ wrote:
"Thank God I found this website! I’ve written to everyone
I could think of for help. I’m a Domestic Violence survivor.
Hard as that is to get out of, it’s no wonder to me why women
return to the abuser. There’s no help. My teeth
are rotting, painfully from my head because of years of neglect.
Nobody cares. I’m 38 years old and I worked hard since
I was 15. …I have to suffer with painful arthritis and
abscessed teeth. OH MY GOD!"
- Judith: "I see so many of my neighbors
and friends – especially family farmers who have no access
to healthcare because the have no insurance. Universal
healthcare is badly needed."
-
A woman wrote that
her son has been taken off state healthcare assistance and
that she is told she must buy private insurance. Her
job lays her off for a period of five months each year.
Her husband died three years ago. Her child has a
chronic illness…what is she to do?
These are just a few of
the thousands of pleas and petitions on our website begging
Congress to take action. Congressman John Conyers of Michigan
has now taken copies of that book of petitions that we printed
out, and is sending them with a “Dear Colleague” letter to every
member of Congress.
The Institute of Medicine,
the prestigious and respected non-partisan research institute,
says that 18,000 people die each year simply for lack of health
coverage. We believe that figure to be way low. It may
be in the way one counts the deaths and their causes.
However, the number could come to as many as 18,000 per year,
in just one State alone, because there are so many people who
are forced to put off a doctor’s visit until it is too late.
One idea for challenging
the heartless response to the suffering of those who are sick
and dying is for people reading this column is to organize Healthcare
Memorial Services in your churches and synagogues and mosques,
remembering these unnecessary deaths. Many faith communities
could join together to carry the 18,000 caskets or even the
144,000 caskets memorializing the people who officially will
have died for lack of coverage by the time the Bush administration
is ended. Carry them through the streets or carry signs with
torches or candles. You or your pastor or other clergy
could create a special liturgy about the issue of denial of
healthcare.
Another issue we need to
talk about in our communities is “the privatized rape of Medicare.”
We should talk about the Medicare Advantage plans that have
now stolen 19% of the participants from traditional Medicare.
The way it works is that some people are enticed to sign up
for these so-called advantage privatized plans that may provide
an additional service such as optical or dental. However, if
you have diabetes or high cholesterol or something that might
cost these profiteers some real money, you need not apply. In
addition to taking the Medicare money that is a legacy for all
Americans, these private companies with high CEO salaries and
marketing bills also require a 12% additional subsidy from the
government, provided by the Bush administration. To put the
icing on the cake, if you are dissatisfied with the policy,
you are not allowed to drop it and change back to traditional
Medicare, for a whole year.
As we move forward in the
debate about the possibility of a single payer, Medicare for
All healthcare plan in the United States, a plan that would
provide equal quality healthcare to all, we need to be wise
to these profiteers and their intentional goal of the destruction
of Medicare.
What about the Federal
Employees program that supplies an insurance program for the
hundreds of thousands of federal employees? The truth
is, we subsidize that program to the tune of hundreds of millions
of dollars and, not surprisingly, given the corruption in the
current government, those dollars are also going to private
insurance companies such as United Health and Aetna, Anchor
and Blue Cross. We, the tax-payers, pay for Bush’s healthcare
coverage and all of the other federal employees, but the private
companies get a bounty of tax-payer dollars for TV advertising
and high CEO salaries.
Study the United Health
Care Insurance company as just one example: The CEO, in 2005,
received 122.7 million, plus stock options, bringing his compensation
to almost $1 billion. His salary alone would have covered 34,000
people who are uninsured. Last week, United Health Care
and their cohorts at AARP, announced a new partnership to get
more tax-payer dollars into their coffers.
John Conyers’ healthcare
bill, H.R. 676 is the best plan in the current healthcare debate,
and would cover everybody for an amazingly good healthcare system.
However, every other day or so, we hear about yet another plan
that is supposed to heal the healthcare system.
One of the most recent
is the Kennedy Dingell bill that came out last Thursday, calling
for Medicare for All – unfortunately Medicare for All with
exceptions – You can buy into Medicare, yes. Or you can
buy into the federal health program, or depend on ever more
expensive employer plans if any of them remain, or you can even
buy private insurance for yourself if you can afford it or get
a government subsidy to pay for it. All of these options
are a part of the Kennedy/Dingell bill. This bill would
cost an additional $600 Billion in federal funding – assumedly
to subsidize everyone who can’t afford private insurance, so
they will have enough money to purchase it from insurance companies,
who will continue to pocket enormous profits.
Most of the current bills
require everybody to purchase private insurance. They are “hybrid”
bills – because they tip a hat to some public funding of healthcare,
but basically have only one choice: either 1.) single payer
(Conyers’ bill that removes profits from the system) or 2.)
mandated individual or employer policies with lots of additional
subsidies, to provide partial coverage or stripped-down healthcare
plans, for those who cannot afford the gold-plated plans.
Senator Obama’s failure to embrace
single payer was a great disappointment. He said
last weekend that the insurance companies “must be at
the table.” However, he is only one of the plethora
of presidential candidates, virtually all of whose plans
fall short of a real, publicly funded, privately delivered,
single payer system. It is a long 18 months from
here to the presidential election. We have a long
difficult period to go before the election, and now is
the time to do some work.
NO presidential candidate,
not even Kucinich, who supports Conyers’ bill, will bring us
an affordable national healthcare plan that covers everyone,
with equal access to care. The work that has to be done has
to be done by us, the organizers and activists and voters, during
these coming 18 months.
The people of this country
must rise up as the people in Taiwan did a few years ago and
say we do not want expensive privatized and poorly delivered
healthcare. We want a single payer national healthcare
system for all, a system that will provide equality and justice
for all (to paraphrase a few words from the pledge of allegiance
to the flag.) The people themselves demanded and got
a single payer system in Taiwan and it is working quite well.
But the leaders didn’t bring it to the country. It was
the people’s demands that won this victory.
We are taking a hard line
against allowing any profiteers to remain inside the healthcare
industry. We believe that calling for a non-profit system is
the only position that will provide for excellent healthcare
for every single man woman and child in the United States with
the money we are now spending. No additional money will need
to be raised. We will use the money we now spend, for healthcare,
instead of giving it to insurance companies.
Dr. Don McCann, former
president of the Physicians for National Health Program says
this about our task. “Here are the roles of those of us
involved: John Dingell and Ted Kennedy and all of the
other politicians are politicians. Their role is to negotiate
the political process, carefully traversing minefields, to make
reform a reality.
The role of those of us
in the policy community is quite different. We advocate
for the most effective policies that will bring about high quality,
comprehensive healthcare services to everyone. Policy and politics
frequently clash. The political process involves compromise
so that the perfect doesn’t become the enemy of the good. The
policy community advocates for the perfect, unrelentingly so,
so that the good does not become the enemy of the perfect.
The policy community informs, but does not compromise."
Here’s what we are talking
about. It is: H.R. 676, an excellent bill. It provides
for a national system like Medicare for All without the profiteers
taking any money away from it. Corruption and ill-gotten
gains will not be a thing of the past, of course. We will
have to guard a non-profit system against the undermining of
those who have made such enormous profits and want to continue
to do so. Such a system must have strong protections –
protection for the consumers – protections that we have been
forbidden, under the Bush administration programs such as Medicare
Part D, that will not allow for negotiating the prices of drugs.
H.R. 676, John Conyers’
excellent bill provides for….
-
no co-pays or deductibles
-
no out of pocket costs
– except aspirins and bandaids and the like
-
no denials of healthcare
such as “Pre-existing Conditions”
-
vou will have just
one card to take to any doctor or healthcare facility
-
you will not receive
a bill - ever
When you think about it,
It is almost incomprehensible to believe, but the insurance
companies are allowed to turn people down for healthcare under
the rubric of pre-existing conditions. They only want healthy
people who will give them money, but not require any care.
They promote the idea of
our covering all of the children for example, the cheapest group
of insured people, (and the most profitable) because they are
generally the healthiest. They love it as long as the insurance
companies get the money. In some states, however, the insurance
companies don’t get the money. For example, New York State
does not provide the money to insurance companies, but just
covers everybody without insurance company profits taking away
about 1/3rd of the money. This allows New York
to cover a lot more children – up to 400% of poverty.
In any event, we all agree
that all children must be covered. But we must take it
farther. What about the rest of their families? How can
a child be truly healthy if his or her parents are unable to
be healthy – cannot work, can’t get their prescription drugs,
can’t get mental healthcare or treatment for high cholesterol
or so many other healthcare needs. Everybody in; nobody out.
Healthcare for Everybody!
To sign the petition and
make your comments online, go to www.healthcare-now.org/petition.php.
If you tell your story, you’ll be in the next people’s petition
to Congress. If you would like a copy of the petition book we
took to Congress last week, please give us a call or send an
email. For more information, call Healthcare-NOW, 1-800-453-1305.
Marilyn
Clement is the National Coordinator of Healthcare-NOW.
Click
here to contact Ms. Clement and Healthcare-NOW.
Click
here to read any of the articles in this special BC series on Single-Payer Healthcare.
|
|
Home |
|
|
|
Your comments are always welcome.
If you send us an e-Mail
message we may publish all or part of it, unless you
tell us it is not for publication. You may also request
that we withhold your name.
Thank you very much for your readership.
|
|
|