FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 22, 2004
Kuehl’s Statewide Health Coverage Bill Takes Historic Step Forward In Assembly Health Committee
CONTACT: Sara Rogers (916) 445 1353 or Robin Podolsky (310) 441 9084
Senate Bill 921, authored by State Senator Sheila Kuehl (D-23) which would provide comprehensive health benefits to every Californian at no new cost to California’s general fund, has been passed by the State Assembly Health Committee by a vote of 12 to 5.
SB 921 would create a single, streamlined reimbursement system for medical care in California that has been projected to save the state about $14 billion dollars in administrative healthcare costs alone. These and other substantial savings make it possible to insure every resident of California with a comprehensive health plan that would include medical, dental, vision, mental health and prescription drug coverage among benefits.
Because SB 921 would cover every Californian, it would offer each patient the freedom to choose among all healthcare providers. Healthcare provision would remain subject to competition and in private hands. The legislation would also require the State of California to use its purchasing power negotiate directly with pharmaceutical companies to buy prescription drugs in bulk, thus drastically lowering their cost.
“I’m very grateful to my colleagues in the Assembly Health Committee for voting to extend healthcare coverage to every Californian,” said Senator Kuehl. “SB 921 will make it possible for every Californian to keep their health care coverage even if they change jobs; start a business; family; continue our education; or travel out of state. Our important relationships with the doctors we trust will not be interrupted. People with undetected chronic illnesses will get the care they need to avert the heartache and economic burden of medical catastrophes. This bill will save our state money and improve the quality of life for all of us.”
Today, approximately 1 out of 5 Californians is uninsured, and, nationally, catastrophic medical illness remains the leading cause of personal bankruptcy. Most uninsured Californians are employed but either cannot afford the medical insurance offered to them at work or are not offered healthcare benefits through their job. Analysts agree that the costs of healthcare are propelled upward by the overuse of emergency room care (the most expensive kind of healthcare delivery) by people who are not insured and do not receive regular medical attention. Doctors and hospitals also report that, as insurance premiums rise in cost, the reimbursements paid by private insurance companies to medical providers are shrinking.
Cost Controls in SB 921 would mean that businesses would not be burdened with suddenly rising health care premiums; would no longer have the responsibility for negotiating complicated health care benefits packages for their employees; and would also insure the self-employed.
SB 921 would also relieve doctors and hospitals of the administrative costs associated with multiple insurance plans. Since all patients will be insured, healthcare providers will not have to worry about uninsured patients being unable to pay for the care they receive. Physicians will have a direct voice in the amount of reimbursement they receive. Those reimbursements will reflect the actual costs, on a regional basis, of providing care, and they will come on time. Doctors, not insurance companies, will be in charge of deciding what is medically appropriate for patients.
SB 921 will be funded with those federal and state dollars already earmarked for healthcare, along with a means-based, equitable tax. Individuals and employers will pay into the plan based on what they can afford, not what insurance companies want to charge. This tax will replace all premiums, deductibles, co-pays and out-of-pocket expenses. For most taxpayers and businesses, this will lead to sizeable savings.