There is good news on the horizon and it has to
do with getting quality, guaranteed healthcare for every person
in the United States - from womb to tomb. Michael Moore’s
new film SICKO will dramatize the problem of healthcare
in America – graphically demonstrating why our country is
ranked #38 in the provision of healthcare for our people, just
one notch above the country of Slovenia. Why do we need quality
guaranteed healthcare for everybody? Is there anyone out there
who is not yet convinced?
See the film. Tell the following stories from the
people in our country struggling to survive with insecure and
unjust healthcare coverage. And be sure to tell people that there
is a solution in the offing!
Remember the life of Deamonte Driver. Portions
of his story are excerpted here as posted by Mary Otto of the
Washington Post.
Twelve-year-old Deamonte Driver died of a toothache
in February. A routine, $80 tooth extraction might have saved
him.
Response from Healthcare-NOW: If the United States
National Health Insurance Act had been in place, Deamonte Driver
would be alive today. Under H.R. 676, every child (and every adult)
is entitled to quality dental care. Deamonte might have had a
brilliant future as a poet, a Congressperson, a farmer, a carpenter,
a dentist himself. His mother might be looking forward to grandchildren
instead of being grief-stricken and broken-hearted.
If we had a guaranteed national single payer healthcare
system, that is.
If his mother had been insured. If his family had
not lost its Medicaid. If Medicaid dentists weren't so hard to
find. If his mother hadn't been focused on getting a dentist for
his brother, who had six rotted teeth.
Response from Healthcare-NOW: If we’d had
in place what every other industrialized nation has, a national
healthcare system, we would no longer need Medicaid, the sad excuse
for healthcare that was created for the poor back in 1964 when
Medicare was created to serve the elderly and the disabled. If
we had an improved Medicare for All, then Deamonte Driver would
have gotten dental care and would be alive today.
Deamonte’s Story: By the time Deamonte's
own aching tooth got any attention, the bacteria from the abscess
had spread to his brain, doctors said. After two operations and
more than six weeks of hospital care, the Prince George's County
boy died. Deamonte's death and the ultimate cost of his care,
which could total more than $250,000, underscore an often-overlooked
concern in the debate over universal health coverage: dental care.
Response from Healthcare-NOW: Under the current
system, the tax-payers may pick up the cost of Deamonte Drivers’
six weeks of hospitalization. If we had H.R. 676, a national healthcare
system, that piece of the healthcare bill for the nation would
not be necessary. Everybody who needs dental care or hospitalization
or antibiotics or prescription drugs or other healthcare needs
is entitled to get them under this bill. And we all share in a
large pool (300 million of us) in paying for whatever healthcare
is needed whenever we need it. No more waiting until we die.
We Must Eliminate Insurance Company Profits: This
excellent comprehensive healthcare system will only be possible
if we eliminate insurance company profits. All we want is healthcare
for everybody. We don’t want or need for-profit insurance
companies making healthcare decisions for us. We can’t afford
to keep wasting one-third of every healthcare dollar on the unnecessary
middle man, the insurance company, whose primary interest is in
collecting more money, denying care, and making a bigger profit.
Instead, we need to spend all of our healthcare money on healthcare.
Under the current system, insurance-waste accounts for more than
enough money to cover everybody who is uninsured.
MEDICARE FOR ALL, BUT IT MUST BE IMPROVED and NON-PROFIT!
Mr. Wesley writes: “I am a Senior Citizen
on a limited income and with multiple physical problems as the
body succumbs to aging. I am appalled that Medicare does not cover
dental, foot care, hearing problems, and even limits medicare
coverage of such items as refraction by the eye doctor and urinalysis
by the gynecologist.
Response from Healthcare-NOW: We want improved
and enhanced Medicare for All. At the moment, Medicare is increasingly
being privatized under Bush administration legislation that has
allowed the private companies to sell so-called “Medicare
Advantage plans" and receive premiums and subsidies for that
insurance, costing 12½% more than regular Medicare. Under
John Conyers’ H.R. 676, all of the above symptoms and ailments
will be covered without additional cost – foot care, eye
refraction, hearing problems and equipment, urinalysis and other
lab tests. All necessary medical care will be covered for everybody
under an enhanced and improved Medicare for All.
Kathy writes: I am sickened by the fact that I
pay more and more for premiums with less and less coverage each
year. My husband had a successful kidney transplant six years
ago. In September 2006 he had a hernia repair. Just six years
later, the cost of the hernia repair was almost the same as the
transplant!
Response from Healthcare-NOW: Under our bill, none
of us will ever pay premiums again. We will pay a small payroll
tax on a sliding scale – those who make more money will
pay more, those who can’t work will pay nothing. Virtually
all but the very rich will be paying less money than we are paying
now in co-pays, deductibles, and denials of healthcare. Yes, Kathy,
kidney transplants will be fully covered. Hernias too. Every necessary
procedure.
Writes Marvin: Why do doctors’ offices have
huge staffs just to handle the paper work? Why do insurance companies
make a fortune off our backs? Why are so many people without coverage?
Almost everyone has no long term care coverage other than Medicaid.
And in order to get Medicaid they must impoverish themselves.
Response from Healthcare-NOW: Everybody will be
entitled to long term care under H.R. 676. How will we pay for
it? The money that we used to spend on Medicaid for the poor will
go directly into providing long term care for the poor and everybody
else. This savings as well as the costs of providing COBRA for
those who have lost their jobs and a lot of the costs of disability
insurance will be covered. Doctors’ offices will no longer
need huge clerical staffs to handle 1500 insurance companies and
thousands of types of claims. They can devote their time and their
staff to helping the sick. People will no longer have to impoverish
themselves to get the long-term care they need.
From a nurse in Camden: My own three hard-working
children who are young adults don’t have coverage. They
are unable to be covered under my husband and my insurance policies
without us paying outrageously high premiums and are unable to
afford the premiums that any high quality insurance would [require
of] them.
Response from Healthcare-NOW: All adult children,
teens, students, young workers, old workers, everybody will be
covered with comprehensive quality care. No more high premiums,
no more insurance company profits. Everybody in; nobody out.
Mary Lee writes: After breaking my leg in Scotland
and being cared for by the National Health Service of Lothian
in Edinburgh, I am committed viscerally (to National Health Care).
I had fantastic care through my 12-day hospital stay. And hospitalization,
surgery, and treatment [that] would have cost $30,000 or more
in the U.S. was given to me, a U.S. citizen and tourist, at no
charge. Being free from worry and stress at times of serious illness
and injury helps promote healing…
Response from Healthcare-NOW: Everybody whose feet
are on the ground will be covered – all residents of the
United States and its territories under H.R. 676. Nations with
National Healthcare systems believe that everybody residing in
their countries should be healthy – for the sake of the
people and the sake of the nation.
Writes Taylor: The kids are covered under state
health insurance but my husband and I are not. We both have previous
conditions that keep us from buying any individual healthcare
insurance plan; they turn you down if you have any previous health
conditions. We have had to file for bankruptcy and our credit
is ruined because of medical debt that we could not pay. Even
our dream of getting a home that was big enough for the five of
us is ruined. Just one medical emergency can wipe out your savings
and your hopes.
Response from Healthcare-NOW: The increasing poverty
caused by the health care crises and most bankruptcies (over 50%
of which are caused by healthcare emergencies) would be gone.
No one would have to worry about not getting care because of a
previous medical condition; under H.R. 676 everything is covered
for everybody.
These are just a very few excerpts from thousands
of letters we have received on our website from people who signed
the petition in favor of H.R. 676 and told their stories in the
comment section.
The booklet of thousands of Petitions to Congress
is available to the press and the public. They were sent to us
on the internet for all to see. Call 1-800-453-1305, or go to
our website www.healthcare-now.org.
to read the stories, and sign on with your own comments and stories.
Don’t forget to tell Congress what they should do. We are
seeking more stories and more signatures for our next book of
petitions to Congress. Send us yours. Congress must begin to hear
us, hold hearings on this crisis, and vote for H.R. 676. Then
we’ll see how President Bush or the next president deals
with it. Now is a good time to push forward. We are gaining ground.
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. |