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NAVIGATION PNHP RESOURCES
Posted on October 6, 2001

Terrorism Reveals Our Common Needs that Only Health Care Reform Can Fix

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Bob Griss, Director of the Center on Disability and Health, Washington, DC, responds to Drs. Gordon, Marmor, Oberlander and Caplan:


The objective opportunity is there for the emergence of National Health Insurance as Dr.Gordon reveals, but it is not a sure thing as Professors Marmor and Oberlander remind us.

Clearly, private insurers would prefer that Congress rely on COBRA continuation policies and CHIP expansions instead of creating a right to health care for everyone. But COBRA continuation does not guarantee adequate coverage, nor does it provide the leverage for cost containment or an information system that facilitates quality assurance in our fragmented health care system.

Now is the time to publicize the advantages of National Health Insurance at the national and state levels to all of the interest groups while:

(1) Employers lay off many of their workers as the economic recession deepens, and shift their rising health insurance premiums to their remaining employees;

(2) States seek to cut benefits and increase cost-sharing in their Medicaid programs which CMS (formerly HCFA) has enabled them to do through the recently imposed HIFA waiver and the even more pernicious gutting of consumer protections in Medicaid managed care by gutting the regulations designed to safeguard the needs of the most vulnerable Medicaid recipients with disabilities; and

(3) Medicare leaves a growing number of seniors and persons with disabilities without outpatient prescription drug coverage as drug profits continue to soar driving up health care prices throughout our health care system while drug companies continue to use their lobbying power to oppose the cost containment mechanisms that Medicare uses for all other health care providers.

Bioethicist Art Caplan correctly understood that terrorism has obliterated the distinction between soldiers and civilians making it imperative that all residents have access to medically necessary health care.

Meanwhile, Representative Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) stands poised to introduce a legislative mechanism called "First Things First Act" that would roll back the tax cut for the wealthiest Americans until various social objectives are achieved to ensure the unity and productivity of our nation. Among her objectives are:

(1) Adequate responses to the needs created by the terrorist attack, including impacts on workers,

(2) Extended solvency of the Social Security and Medicare Trust Funds,

(3) Medicare prescription drug coverage,

(4) Federal funding of school modernization, and

(5) Affordable housing.

Instead of arguing whether a Republican-dominated White House and House of Representatives would ever enact a right to health care, the challenge to health care reformers is to publicize the advantages that National Health Insurance could offer to all stakeholders in society, and mobilize support from mainstream advocacy groups like AARP, labor unions, employers, religious groups, and health care providers to get behind a political strategy like "First Things First" that could pave the way for "National Health Insurance".

Bob Griss, Director Center on Disability and Health Washington, DC Email Address: Bgrisscdh@aol.com