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Category: AllConsensus Group Statement: Would the Health Reform Prescriptions Offered by President Obama and Congressional Leaders Help Patients?April 1, 2009
STATEMENT ON HEALTH REFORM From the Health Policy Consensus Group1 President Obama repeatedly has reassured the American people, “If you've got health care already, and probably the majority of you do, then you can keep your plan if you are satisfied with it. You can keep your choice of doctor.”2 Research shows 82 percent of Americans rate the health care they receive as good to excellent.3 At the same time, there are serious problems of cost, value, and access throughout our health sector. It is vital to address these problems. But any health reform proposal to change what needs fixing also must preserve the freedom, innovation, and quality of American medical care that people value. We believe a better functioning, more competitive, and transparent marketplace would cover more people and deliver the higher-value care we seek. We are gravely concerned that several of the proposals offered by the President and the Congressional leadership would make matters worse, not better. These flawed prescriptions for radical change should not be accepted as part of any serious and sustainable health reform proposal:
Many people then would be left with little or no choice, as employers would drop their current coverage and send their workers into the public plan. Research by The Lewin Group4 shows that as many as 118.5 million Americans would lose or be switched out of private health coverage. This massive crowding out of private health insurance would undermine the employment-based coverage that most Americans under age 65 have today.
Whether they choose to pay or to play, small employers will be hit especially hard by a new mandate to finance all or part of the health insurance premiums for their employees, directly or through new taxes. Any initial subsidies to them will quickly be overtaken by higher mandated costs. As they absorb new tax burdens they cannot control, the result will be more lost jobs and lower wages for workers.
Many individuals will need subsidies to receive coverage that otherwise would be unaffordable to them, but taxpayers will resist filling an abyss. As a result, political leaders will try to cover rising costs indirectly and invisibly – through general revenue subsidies, tax increases, deficit spending, and escalating fees, fines, and taxes imposed on employers. And to make the mandate work, the government also must establish and enforce binding penalties for individuals who do not comply.
The clear and present danger is that any centralized health board will use the cover of comparative effectiveness findings to meet budgetary bottom lines, at the expense of patients’ medical needs and personal preferences. This is a particular danger to the health of people who suffer from rare conditions or who need access to specific medicines and treatments but who may lack the political power to influence the reviewers’ decisions.There are many problems that need to be addressed in the health sector, and the signatories to this statement have written extensively about our ideas for reform.5 Because the reform agenda is moving rapidly through Congress, we believe the American public should be aware of the likely impact of the policies described in this statement which are under active consideration by elected leaders. We believe that the proposals put forth by the Administration and Congressional leaders would harm, not help, patients and would not fulfill the goals and promises made to the American people. Click here to sign our Do No Harm petition. Signatories:6 HEALTH POLICY CONSENSUS GROUP MEMBERS Grace-Marie Turner*7 Galen Institute John S. Hoff, Esq.* Galen Institute Thomas Miller, Esq.* American Enterprise Institute Joseph Antos, Ph.D.* American Enterprise Institute James C. Capretta* Ethics and Public Policy Center Nina Owcharenko* The Heritage Foundation Robert Helms, Ph.D.* American Enterprise Institute Robert Moffit, Ph.D.* The Heritage Foundation Amy Menefee* Galen Institute Greg D’Angelo The Heritage Foundation Linda Gorman Independence Institute Sally Pipes Pacific Research Institute Paul Guppy Washington Policy Center John Goodman, Ph.D. National Center for Policy Analysis John R. Graham Pacific Research Institute Scott Gottlieb, M.D. American Enterprise Institute Merrill Matthews, Ph.D. Institute for Policy Innovation Robert Book, Ph.D. The Heritage Foundation Stephen Entin Institute for Research on the Economics of Taxation Roy Ramthun HSA Consulting Services Doug Badger Center for Medicine in the Public Interest Peter Pitts Center for Medicine in the Public Interest Robert Goldberg, Ph.D. Center for Medicine in the Public Interest Stephen T. Parente, Ph.D. University of Minnesota Joseph L. Bast The Heartland Institute Greg Scandlen The Heartland Institute Jeff Emanuel The Heartland Institute Thomas R. Saving, Ph.D. Private Enterprise Research Center Texas A&M University Andrew J. Rettenmaier, Ph.D. Private Enterprise Research Center Texas A&M University 1 The Health Policy Consensus Group is an affiliation of the policy experts from the major market-oriented think tanks and others who work together to advance patient-centered ideas for health reform. 2 Barack Obama, Second Presidential Debate, Nashville, TN, October 7, 2008, at http://www.ontheissues.org/2008/barack_obama_health_care.htm. 3 Robert J. Blendon, Sc.D., Drew E. Altman, Ph.D., John M. Benson, M.A., Mollyann Brodie, Ph.D., Tami Buhr, A.M., Claudia Deane, M.A., and Sasha Buscho, B.A., "Voters and Health Reform in the 2008 Presidential Election," The New England Journal of Medicine, November 6, 2008, at http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/359/19/2050. 4 The Lewin Group, “Opening a Buy-In to a Public Plan: Implications for Premiums, Coverage and Provider Reimbursement,” Presentation to Senate Finance Committee Republican Staff, December 5, 2008, at http://www.lewin.com/content/publications/OpeningBuyInPublicPlan.pdf. 5 Empowering Health Care Consumer through Tax Reform, 1999, University of Michigan Press, and other papers and statements of the Health Policy Consensus Group are available at http://www.galen.org/content/consensus-group.html. The writings of individual signatories are available on their and their organization’s websites. 6 Affiliations of those signing this statement are listed for identification purposes only. The views in this statement do not necessarily reflect those of their organizations. 7 The health policy experts whose names are followed by an asterisk served on the drafting committee for this statement. |
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