Hurricane Health Care
Healthcare swept away
By Derrick Z. Jackson, Boston Globe, September 21, 2005
. . .With the exception of 1999 and 2000, the number of Americans without health insurance has risen steadily from just over 30 million in 1987. It is a bipartisan failure. After President Clinton dropped his botched attempt for a more universal form of healthcare in his first term, the numbers of the uninsured soared from 35 million to nearly 45 million. Aided by a booming economy, the numbers fell in Clinton's last two years to 40 million. Under Bush, the number cracked the 45 million barrier for the first time -- 45.8 million, to be exact.
Last week, as Bush conducted damage control over the negligent federal response to Katrina, the Kaiser Family Foundation released a report indicating that healthcare premiums continue to increase at triple the rate of inflation. The average cost of family health coverage is now $10,880, surpassing the gross earnings of someone working full time at the federal minimum wage.
In the Bush years, the cost of health insurance has skyrocketed by 73 percent. While Bush has given vastly disproportionate shares of his tax cuts to corporations and wealthy individuals under the guise that the rich will create jobs, not only has there been no rise in income for the average American; business firms, especially small ones, are cutting workers out of healthcare. Since Bush took office, the percentage of companies that offer health insurance has dropped from 69 percent to 60 percent.
Healthcare spending in the United States is expected to grow from $1.4 trillion last year to $3.1 trillion a year by 2012. Yet virtually nothing on a large scale has been done about it, with insurance companies, drug companies, and major medical associations lobbying forcefully on Capitol Hill and in state legislatures against cost controls and single-payer coverage. The travesty of the hospitals in New Orleans is only a prelude to the disaster that is about to strike healthcare in America.
Click here to read the full op-ed>
By Derrick Z. Jackson, Boston Globe, September 21, 2005
. . .With the exception of 1999 and 2000, the number of Americans without health insurance has risen steadily from just over 30 million in 1987. It is a bipartisan failure. After President Clinton dropped his botched attempt for a more universal form of healthcare in his first term, the numbers of the uninsured soared from 35 million to nearly 45 million. Aided by a booming economy, the numbers fell in Clinton's last two years to 40 million. Under Bush, the number cracked the 45 million barrier for the first time -- 45.8 million, to be exact.
Last week, as Bush conducted damage control over the negligent federal response to Katrina, the Kaiser Family Foundation released a report indicating that healthcare premiums continue to increase at triple the rate of inflation. The average cost of family health coverage is now $10,880, surpassing the gross earnings of someone working full time at the federal minimum wage.
In the Bush years, the cost of health insurance has skyrocketed by 73 percent. While Bush has given vastly disproportionate shares of his tax cuts to corporations and wealthy individuals under the guise that the rich will create jobs, not only has there been no rise in income for the average American; business firms, especially small ones, are cutting workers out of healthcare. Since Bush took office, the percentage of companies that offer health insurance has dropped from 69 percent to 60 percent.
Healthcare spending in the United States is expected to grow from $1.4 trillion last year to $3.1 trillion a year by 2012. Yet virtually nothing on a large scale has been done about it, with insurance companies, drug companies, and major medical associations lobbying forcefully on Capitol Hill and in state legislatures against cost controls and single-payer coverage. The travesty of the hospitals in New Orleans is only a prelude to the disaster that is about to strike healthcare in America.
Click here to read the full op-ed>

5 Comments:
Universal health care can be a great impact on health care system. It is unfortunate to hear so many lack health insurance. We really need to improve our health care system. Health insurance is a major aspect to many and we should help everyone get covered.
I hope Bush can do something about our health care crisis. Many lack health coverage and we need to resolve these issue by providing better health insurance for all.
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