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Health Care
2005: How Do the Policies of President Bush and Senator Kerry
Compare?
In 1991, in a Resolution on Christian
Responsibility and a National Medical Plan 1,
the 203rd Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) General Assembly noted
that it "decries our nation's failure to establish an equitable,
efficient, and universally accessible medical plan. It asks
the nation's legislative leadership, with help from religious,
health care, insurance, and other organizations or industries,
to break the impasse for the purpose of establishing a National
Medical Plan. It returns to the roots of healing found in our
faith and speaks forthrightly for health care services guided
by theological vision. It calls upon the Presbyterian family
to step into the fray, advocating access to health care for
all."
Further, the Assembly "simply recognizes that most Americans
desire an equitable and accessible health care system. The current
system is neither; it fails the American dream of compassion
and justice. Corporate society is squeezed by its high costs.
Morally sensitive individuals are scandalized by its inequity.
A growing number of individuals are suffering and dying because
of lack of access to health care. Increasing numbers of people
are becoming impoverished by health care costs. Reformation
is required."
The Assembly called upon "the president of the United
States and his administration to provide moral and political
leadership so that an equitable, efficient, and universally
accessible health plan, which includes a National Medical Plan
defined by the elements and principles noted in the background,
will be established" and called on "Presbyterians
who are active in party politics to seek candidates for office,
especially for their party's presidential nomination, who will
place high priority on the establishment of an equitable, efficient,
and universally accessible health plan, which includes a National
Medical Plan."
In the 13 years since that call, our nation
is still faced with extraordinary challenges in terms of health
care. According to the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the
Uninsured, 43.3 million were uninsured in 2002, over 80% of
whom came from working families. The U.S. also leads the world
in health care costs, spending nearly $1.6 trillion on health
care in 2002 — 14.9% of the U.S. Gross Domestic Product
(GDP) — nearly double the amount spent in 1992. Yet, in
several indicators, U.S. health outcomes still lag behind other
industrialized countries that spend less on health care. As
the Presidential campaign season heats up, what are the two
major candidates, President George W. Bush, and Senator John
F. Kerry (D-MA), proposing regarding health care issues —
particularly regarding the uninsured and health care costs?
2
While their plans for health care are
very different, both candidates "support refundable tax
credits for individuals who purchase their own health insurance,"
noted Ceci Connolly in the Washington Post. She added that they
"also propose opening up larger purchasing pools to individuals
and small businesses to help take advantage of group discounts."
3 |
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President George
W. Bush
In the State of the Union in January 2004,
Mr. Bush said, "Our goal is to ensure that Americans can
choose and afford private health care coverage that best fits
their individual needs." His health
care proposal 4,
calls for the following to make health care more affordable:
- Association Health Plans (AHPs), which he says "will
help small businesses provide affordable health insurance
coverage to their workers,"
- Health Savings Accounts (HSAs), tax-exempt, portable accounts,
to help individuals pay for health expenses,
- New health insurance deductions for individuals who establish
HSAs,
- Refundable tax credits for lower-income Americans, of up
to $1,000 for individuals and $3,000 for families, to buy
health insurance coverage, and
- Medical liability reform to "help improve health care
quality and slow the rise in health care costs."
The Kaiser Commission noted that Mr. Bush's
general approach is "individual tax incentives to purchase
coverage and restructuring Medicaid into a block grant."5
Mr. Bush has also called for increased funding (of approximately
$169 million) for community health centers and giving states
the option to block grant their Medicaid programs, increasing
federal funding to states who accept the block grant through
fiscal year 2010, and decreasing federal funds from that year
through fiscal year 2013. The block grant proposal
met with resistance from states in the 108th Congress. 6
At a recent meeting of the National Coalition on Health Care,
Megan Hauck, a representative of Mr. Bush's campaign, said that
his plan would expand health coverage to 2.5 million uninsured
people at a cost of approximately $90 billion. |
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Senator John
F. Kerry
The presumptive Democratic nominee, Mr.
Kerry of Massachusetts, has developed a health care proposal,
available in its entirety through the Kaiser
Election Web site. In a speech in Florida in May, Mr. Kerry
noted, "'It is long-since time that we stopped being the
only industrial nation on the planet that doesn't understand
that health care is not a privilege for the wealthy and the
connected and the elected, it's a right for all Americans."
7 The Kaiser
Commission described his general approach as "FEHBP (Federal
Employees Health Benefits Program) buy-in, available to all
Americans and small businesses, combined with a federal reinsurance
pool and a 'swap' of federal and state Medicaid
responsibilities to expand public coverage."8
Mr. Kerry's plan includes:
- Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program
(SCHIP) Expansion, to cover more lower-income children and
adults,
- Allowing individuals and businesses the option to join
the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP),
- Providing private insurers help in handling the most expensive
medical cases by having the federal government pay for 75%
of the cost of catastrophic cases (once individual care reached
$50,000), in return requiring companies who accept federal
help to pay for health insurance for all employees, and
- Encouraging technological innovation to reduce medical errors.
At a recent meeting of the National Coalition on Health Care,
Sarah Bianchi, National Policy Director for the Kerry Campaign,
noted that Kerry's plan would cost $653 billion over 10 years,
would cover 27 million uninsured people, and would be paid for
by rolling back tax cuts for the wealthy that were passed during
the Bush Administration. |
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What You Can
Do
In the 1991 General Assembly resolution mentioned above, the
Assembly encouraged "all members of the PC(USA) to engage
in advocacy for universal access to health as a normative part
of their devotional life and stewardship commitment." In
2002, the General Assembly reiterated past calls for advocacy
on behalf of the uninsured, calling on the Presbyterian Washington
Office to "encourage members of the Congress to recognize
the importance of Universal Health Care — that is, equal,
accessible, affordable, and high-quality health care for all
persons residing in our nation."
In this election year, remind candidates at all levels of
government that health care is important to you.
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Excerpts from
"The Health-Care System Needs Strong Medicine" by
Robert Kuttner (BusinessWeek, May 24, 2004, p. 30)
Neither candidate quite comes to grips with the underlying
forces driving health costs higher. Expenses are inexorably
rising for three basic reasons. First, people are living longer,
and oldsters consume more health dollars. Second, medical technology
keeps finding ways to keep us alive. Third, health care can't
get major productivity gains because it is a labor intensive
enterprise*.But absent more fundamental reform, the most likely
source of cost reduction for employers, insurers, and government
alike will be shifting the burden to individuals. Employer-provided
insurance is already shifting costs at an alarming rate. As
the Medicare and Medicaid budgets come under increased stress,
fiscal pressure will mount to cap the government's costs, too.
In reality, most people who lack adequate health coverage
can't afford it at prevailing prices. Bush's proposed health
tax credit would cover only $1,000 of the cost of a decent family
policy ($6,000 to $9,000), just as his Medicare drug program
leaves very sick people paying about 50 percent to 75 percent
of the cost of their medications. His health savings account
requires insurance plans with high deductibles, which undermines
the goal of preventive care. These "market incentives"
aren't much help. Indeed, marketization can exacerbate the problem
if it encourages insurers to fragment the risk pool and maximize
profits by discriminating against people likely to get sick.
Kerry would actually deliver some expansion of coverage. Even
so, allowing people on modest incomes access to the excellent
Federal Employees plan isn't much use to families that can't
afford the premiums. Absent stronger medicine (such as mandatory
employer coverage or a universal, single-payer system), government
incentives to employers or tax credits to individuals won't
solve the problem. Advocates of universal coverage contend that
only by putting everyone in the same risk pool — and reducing
the hundreds of billions of dollars that go to marketing, claims
processing, and profit — can we afford both to contain
costs and cover the entire population. At the same time, however,
society just can't afford to give every patient every possible
treatment. That's a reality that no one wants to face. [Robert
Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect and author
of Everything for Sale.] |
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Footnotes
- To purchase the study paper, A Resolution
on Christian Responsibility and a National Medical Plan,
click
here to order from the online Marketplace or contact Presbyterian
Distribution Service at (800) 524-2612 and ask for Item #OGA91021.
Copies are $1.50 each. [back]
- This article will focus on the two major
candidates for President. At press time, Representative Dennis
Kucinich is still in the Democratic primary race, and Mr.
Ralph Nadar plans to run as an independent. Both Mr. Kucinich
and Mr. Nadar support a single-payer, universal health care
system. [back]
- Connolly, Ceci, "Candidate Health
Care Plans Analyzed," Washington Post, May 6,
2004, A08. [back]
- See "Fact Sheet: The President's Health
Care Agenda." [back]
- From "Side-by-Side Summary of Presidential
Candidates' Proposals for Expanding Health Insurance Coverage,
" December 17, 2003, available from theKaiser Family
Foundation. [back]
- More details are available in the SPL
Health Care Quarterly, First Quarter, 2003. [back]
- Clark, Lesley, "Kerry: Health care:
A Right for All," The Miami Herald, May 12, 2004.
[back]
- Available from the Kaiser
Family Foundation. [back]
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