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Physician's Group: Obama Should Seize Moment to Push for Medicare for All

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FourScore Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-23-10 02:43 PM
Original message
Physician's Group: Obama Should Seize Moment to Push for Medicare for All
Physicians for a National Health Program is a single issue organization advocating a universal, comprehensive single-payer national health program. PNHP has more than 15,000 members and chapters across the United States.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 22, 2010
4:36 PM
CONTACT: Physicians for a National Health Program
Mark Almberg, (312) 782-6006

Obama Should Seize Moment to Push for Medicare for All, Doctors' Group Says
Dr. Quentin Young comments on Massachusetts election, next steps for health reform


A spokesman for a national physicians' group says it would be a mistake for President Obama to conclude from Tuesday's vote in Massachusetts that he needs to "tack more toward the right," as some pundits have advised, or to aim for a scaled-back set of piecemeal reforms. Instead, the spokesman says, the president and Congress should immediately move to expand the popular Medicare program to cover everyone.

"President Obama and Congress should seize this moment to change course and re-inspire the U.S. public with a plan that is simple, clear, workable, fiscally responsible, comprehensive and truly universal -- namely, single-payer Medicare for All," said Dr. Quentin Young, national coordinator of Physicians for a National Health Program.

Young dismissed suggestions by some that the House should adopt the Senate bill as it presently reads, send it to the president's desk, and have Congress improve upon it later. "The Senate bill is rotten," he said. "It's a huge financial handout to the for-profit insurers and big drug companies. If passed, it will still leave at least 20 million uninsured and millions more unable to afford the care they need.

"Yesterday's Supreme Court decision removing bans on corporate contributions in candidate elections will only make this fatally flawed bill even more difficult to improve upon," he said. "It's too laden with concession after concession to the private health industry to serve as a starting point."

"Instead, we need to start anew and build on a system that we know works well, is cost-efficient and that could quickly be extended to cover everybody," Young said. "That's the Medicare program, which was implemented within one year of its enactment in 1965 and now covers about 45 million people, mainly seniors and the totally disabled."

"Extending Medicare to cover the entire population would result in $400 billion savings annually by eliminating the administrative waste -- the unnecessary paperwork and bureaucracy -- inflicted on the U.S. economy by the private health insurers," he said. "That would be enough to ensure high-quality coverage for everybody."

Young said it would be a mistake to interpret the election of Republican Scott Brown to the late Sen. Edward Kennedy's seat as a rejection by voters of fundamental health reform. Many independents and Democrats voted for Brown or stayed home because of mounting economic insecurity and their belief that the health reform process led by the Democrats had been corrupted by the big insurance and drug companies, he said. Union voters were especially angry with the proposed excise tax on workers' health plans.

"It was more of a protest vote," he said.

Young pointed to a 2008 ballot initiative in 10 legislative districts in Massachusetts, including one that overlaps with Brown's state senatorial district, that asked voters if they support "legislation creating a cost-effective, single-payer health insurance system that is available to all residents, and oppose laws penalizing those who fail to obtain health insurance," i.e. an individual mandate.

"Seventy-three percent of Massachusetts voters in these districts voted for a single-payer program and against the individual mandate, a hallmark of their own state's plan," Young said. "The Massachusetts plan is now in financial trouble. It's fair to assume that those who voted this way in 2008, like many others in exit polls this week, believe the bills in Congress don't go far enough toward real reform."

"Nationwide," he said, "polls show about two-thirds of the U.S. population would favor a Medicare-for-All approach, and a solid majority of physicians now support efforts to establish national health insurance."

Young also pointed to the robust movement in several states, including California and Vermont, where physicians, among others, are pressing for single payer at the state level.

Nearly 1,000 health professional students and their allies rallied on the steps of the State Capitol in Sacramento, Calif., on Jan. 11, in support of S.B. 810, a single-payer bill that was reintroduced Thursday in the Legislature, he said. Similar bills were approved twice by California lawmakers in recent years, only to be vetoed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.

In Vermont, some 300 citizens bearing thousands of petition signatures flooded the chambers of the State Capitol in Montpelier on Jan. 12, calling for enactment of a similar proposal there. Many participants said the national bills were completely inadequate to address the state's urgent health care needs, Young said.

A bold policy shift to single payer on the national level is more plausible than many people think, given the public's support for such an approach, he said, and given the Medicare program's "44-year track record of proven success."

Whatever deficiencies the Medicare program presently has could be easily remedied in a streamlined, better-funded single-payer system, he said. "In fact, single-payer Medicare for All would yield enormous efficiencies and savings through measures like bulk buying and negotiated fees, benefiting everyone and making the program sustainable for future generations. It would also be a much-needed boon to our economy."

"The president and Congress, if they truly stand up against the insurance and drug companies and press for single-payer Medicare for All, will find a public and a medical community ready and willing to support them," he said.

http://www.commondreams.org/newswire/2010/01/22-7
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BrklynLiberal Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-23-10 02:44 PM
Response to Original message
1. If only.....
Edited on Sat Jan-23-10 02:44 PM by BrklynLiberal
I hope SOMEONE in DC is listening/reading...
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Beavker Donating Member (784 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-23-10 03:16 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. They aren't, or won't
It's going to be impossible in my lifetime. Special interests/lobbies, and basically ignorant pricks like some of the wingers that I work with will never go for it, even if it benefits them. We will be the last country in the World to do so. That includes 3rd world countries that don't even have the facilities or resources we do. Yet they'll give their people free healthcare. Even some Dictatorships. It's funny, but we'll have more in common with Terroristic Countries and Fascist regimes than the rest of the Democratic World out there. We'll just have more cell phones.
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tblue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-23-10 03:24 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. We are one dumb country.
Edited on Sat Jan-23-10 03:25 PM by tblue
Present company excepted.
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BrklynLiberal Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-23-10 03:27 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. Sad. really sad. We have become a nation of lemmings..following blindly
into our own destruction..:(
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leftstreet Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-23-10 03:25 PM
Response to Original message
4. K&R
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Cleita Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-23-10 03:28 PM
Response to Original message
6. As usual, they are right. They have the solution, but they will be
pounded into the ground by the for profit health care industry and big PhRMA like they always are and ignored by the bought and paid for Congress who turns deaf ears to them. To get to this point, we have to run this industry out of the market place. This will take doctors and other health care providers accepting only government single payer insurance programs like Medicare, Medicaid, Tri-Care and others and refusing to take any other insurance or HMOs from the private sector. Everyone else must pay cash and each patient will have to try to get the money out of their insurance after the fact. If two-thirds of the health care providers in the country do this, people will stop buying insurance and it will become useless as a product and unprofitable for the industry. Then and only then will they get out of the business and we can look at real universal single payer health care.

In the interim, doctors and non-profit hospitals may have to commit to doing maybe 10% of their practices pro-bono for the uninsured and underinsured, maybe with sliding scale fees so people don't go without needed care. In order for this to work though, there has to be a commitment from the care givers acting as a bloc committed to this. A public option like Medicare sold to anyone who wants it for extra taxes in their FICA deduction would have accomplished this as well but our Congress won't pass such a statute because their pockets are so full of for profit health industry money.
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donheld Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-24-10 12:42 AM
Response to Original message
7. We can dream can't we?
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