Today's Date: April 19, 2024
Anta Kids joins hands with teenagers to launch running events in five cities, showcasing the essence of Chinese culture   •   Divert Announces Purchase of New Site in Lexington, North Carolina for Future Integrated Diversion & Energy Facility   •   Avangrid Thanks Southern Connecticut Gas Employee for 51 Years of Service   •   University of Phoenix College of Nursing Faculty Leadership Selected for Prestigious Fellows of the American Association of Nurs   •   Clarification of Details Regarding Oceansix's Engagement with RB Milestone Group LLC   •   Prime Minister announces appointment of the next Commissioner of the Northwest Territories   •   Strengthening Canadian research and innovation   •   El Car Wash Partners With “CARD” to Support Neurodiversity in the Workplace   •   R.H. Boyd Hosts Third Annual Legacy Ball Honoring Influential Leaders and Supporting Scholarships and Grants   •   Hartford HealthCare makes Earth-friendly pledge of carbon neutrality by 2050   •   NABCO 2024 Leadership Summit & Retreat: Uniting African-American County Officials for Empowerment and Advocacy   •   New Jersey Natural Gas to Reduce Fleet Emissions with Neste MY Renewable Diesel   •   Eaton to announce first quarter 2024 earnings on April 30, 2024   •   USAA to Gift Vehicles to Military and Their Families in 2024   •   Energy Transition Accelerator Advances with New Secretariat, Expert Consultative Group   •   Kellanova and Shaw's join No Kid Hungry to help end summer hunger for kids and families in Maine   •   Investigation by the RCMP National Child Exploitation Crime Centre results in the arrest of a Gatineau man for distribution and   •   H2 Green Mining and Ohmium Sign Agreement to Boost Green Hydrogen in Chile   •   MCR and BLT Complete $632 Million Refinancing of 53-Hotel Portfolio   •   Adhering to Asthma Medication is Safe for Pregnant Women with Asthma
Bookmark and Share

Minority Caucuses Unite: Real Healthcare Requires a Real Public Option

 

By

Rep. Barbara Lee, Chair, Congressional Black Caucus
Rep. Michael Honda, Chair, Congressional Asian Pacific Caucus
Rep. Nydia Velazquez, Chair, Congressional Hispanic Caucus
Rep. Raul Grijalva, Co-Chair, Congressional Progressive Caucus
Rep. Lynn Woolsey, Co-Chair, Congressional Progressive Caucus

Throughout the month of August, defenders of the healthcare status quo have assailed efforts to reform a system in crisis. They have raised any number of spurious claims ranging from the absurd to the macabre in a desperate attempt to stand between 47 million uninsured Americans and their doctors. 

But the debate over reforming America’s broken healthcare system isn’t only about covering the uninsured. We must also control the escalating premiums and deductibles draining the bank accounts of the two-thirds of Americans with health insurance.

        Without healthcare reform, the American taxpayer will continue to suffer from the economic consequences of absorbing healthcare costs that are spiraling out of control. One in every six dollars spent in this country is now spent on healthcare.

The quality of life of millions of Americans and the health of our economy hang in the balance. The crisis is real, and it is urgent.

        The insurance industry has demonstrated it is incapable of meeting the twin challenges of covering all Americans and controlling costs.

        As long as we rely solely on private health insurers, healthcare coverage will remain out of reach for 47 million Americans, and costs will continue to soar for everyone else. Every year those with insurance each pay an extra $1,100 in premiums to compensate for the costs of the uninsured and it will get only worse. Insurance costs for a family of four are projected to jump $1,800 a year without healthcare reform.

The only reasonable solution—and the cornerstone of comprehensive healthcare reform—is a robust public health plan option like Medicare.

The benefits of a public health plan are obvious: it will guarantee coverage regardless of pre-existing condition; give patients a choice of doctors and hospitals, and create incentives for private insurers to lower costs to compete.

The insurance industry can do none of this because its profits and administrative costs consume about one-third of every health care dollar. Without a public option there will be no way to keep insurance companies honest and their rates down. A public health option that competes with private insurers will set standards that could help lower costs and improve access

A bill without a public option will result in the public, both as insurance purchasers and as taxpayers paying even higher rates to insurance companies. In a July 30th letter to the House leadership 60 members of Congress signed stated unequivocally that “we simply cannot vote for such a proposal.”



Back to top
| Back to home page
Video

White House Live Stream
LIVE VIDEO EVERY SATURDAY
alsharpton Rev. Al Sharpton
9 to 11 am EST
jjackson Rev. Jesse Jackson
10 to noon CST


Video

LIVE BROADCASTS
Sounds Make the News ®
WAOK-Urban
Atlanta - WAOK-Urban
KPFA-Progressive
Berkley / San Francisco - KPFA-Progressive
WVON-Urban
Chicago - WVON-Urban
KJLH - Urban
Los Angeles - KJLH - Urban
WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
New York - WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
WADO-Spanish
New York - WADO-Spanish
WBAI - Progressive
New York - WBAI - Progressive
WOL-Urban
Washington - WOL-Urban

Listen to United Natiosns News