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Uninsured Americans Hope Reform Brings Health Coverage
NEWARK, Ohio - As debate rages on how to reform the U.S. healthcare system, many of the one in six Americans now without medical insurance are hoping that reform brings at least one thing -- affordable coverage.
Supporters of the health care reform hold signs outside a health care town hall meeting with U.S. congressman Kendrick Meeks (R-FL) in Miami, Florida September 3, 2009. (REUTERS/Carlos Barria) "I'd like to have some sort of health insurance I could actually afford," said Stuart Burrows, a Vietnam War veteran in Newark, a small town in central Ohio. "I stand to lose everything I ever worked for if I can't pay my medical bills."
Burrows, 61, said he was exposed in Vietnam to Agent Orange, a toxic mix of herbicides used by the U.S. military as a defoliant that has since been linked to numerous diseases.
He is retired on partial disability. But in March he had emergency surgery to remove blockages in his arteries and now owes tens of thousands of dollars in medical bills, since his veteran's disability only covers service-related health issues and he has no other insurance.
"I thought I had finally reached a point where I could relax and own something," Burrows said in the living room of his modest, five-room house. "But now I can't because they may take my house and throw me into the street."
Burrows is one of 46 million Americans -- in a population of 300 million -- without health insurance. Reforming the $2.5 trillion U.S. healthcare industry, including affordable coverage for the uninsured, is a top priority for President Barack Obama and a major test for his young presidency.
With unified opposition by most Republicans in Congress, the debate over healthcare reform has been heated and has left many Americans wary of Obama's desire for a "public option" -- a government-run non-profit insurer to offer coverage that private for-profit health insurers currently do not.
Many among the uninsured say they find the reform plans confusing, but believe the current system is unsustainable.
"I've heard a lot of crazy things about health reform and I'm worried about how the country will pay for it," said Moira McKamey, 52, an unemployed worker in southwestern Ohio who is retraining as a medical assistant. "But healthcare is in a critical state and something must be done."
'NO INSURER WILL COVER ME'
Many of the uninsured say they would pay for affordable coverage and many are angry at private health insurers.
But according to opinion polls, Americans are divided over plans to reform the healthcare industry. A Washington Post-ABC News poll released on September 14 showed 46 percent of respondents in favor of Obama's healthcare reform plans and 48 percent opposed. A CNN/Opinion Research Corporation poll released the same day showed 51 percent in favor and 46 percent opposed.
Polls of the uninsured are rare. But a May 2009 survey by Rasmussen Reports of uninsured voters showed 56 percent described the U.S. healthcare system as poor and 48 percent said health costs had caused them to miss credit card or mortgage payments.
"Healthcare in this country sucks," said Charlotta Shepherd, 54, who runs a beauty salon near Oconto Falls, Wisconsin and cannot afford health insurance.
"If countries like Canada and Germany can provide affordable healthcare to everyone, why can't we?"
One reason is the hot-button social issues that critics and opponents have included in the complex debate, whether factual or not. In a nationally televised speech to Congress on October 9, Obama assailed the "scare tactics" of his opponents, such as claims of death panels to decide the fate of senior citizens or free healthcare for illegal immigrants.
"We have already have death panels," said Gloria Smith, Stuart Burrows' partner. "They're called insurance companies."
The country's 12 million or more illegal immigrants have been a special target of the attacks on Obama's reform plans.
Samuel Rolden, 33, an illegal immigrant in Phoenix, Arizona, said he could probably afford a low-cost public option healthcare plan.
"If they offered me a medical insurance plan that cost $100 for my family, I'd pay it. But if they want $250 to $450 a month, I can't pay it," he said. "How are we going to be able to eat or pay the rent?"
There are also those like Devin Baty, 32, a former music teacher in the Cleveland suburb of Lakewood. He is unable to work because of an "organic tick disorder," which sounds innocuous. But when he has an attack his entire upper body shakes violently in a way that is painful to watch.
He has just become eligible for coverage under the government's Medicare program because he is disabled, but this does not include medications, which cost him $400 a month. He spent years without any coverage and said that "without financial help from my mother we would have lost our house."
Baty said he is now skeptical of private insurers.
"No insurer will cover me because of my condition," Baty said. "I don't know what Americans feel they would be giving up with a public option. But just from a philosophical standpoint you will never convince me that someone making a profit from my healthcare would make the best decisions on how to treat me."
(Additional reporting by Tim Gaynor; Editing by Eric Walsh)
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11 Comments so far
Show AllSorry folks, but Nancy Pelosi and Henry Waxman drove the stake through the heart of real Health Care reform with their silly complicated proposal's. President Obama closed the lid on it himself by supporting something he knew little about.
These fools will reap their just rewards.
Pelosi...loss of Speakership
Waxman...a return to well deserved obscurity
Obama....one term and marginalization
Unless they go buy stock in insurance and drug companies, these folks will be unhappy with Obama's NO INSURER LEFT BEHIND, NO PATIENT LEFT A DIME program, disguised as health care reform.
"NO INSURER LEFT BEHIND, NO PATIENT LEFT A DIME"
Permission to use please! This is great!!
matthew loughran
i like that raydel. that should be plastered all over this bullshit so called health reform.
matt
Health Care wont be made affordable under the proposed plan, but it WILL become mandatory...so now not only will these uninsured people be poor and sick, but they will be made criminal...there last few dollars taken away as fines for not having health care.
The Audacity of Fake Hope
"The only means of strengthening one's intellect is to make up one's mind about nothing, to let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts." - John Keats
At least this article talks about the uninsured. I disagree with the implication, though, that those uninsured support Obama's plan - whatever that may be.
I am uninsured. I was insured up until my income dropped precipitously in 2007. At that time I dropped my $7500 deductible partial insurance when the premium was raised again.
I have something to lose. I own a home. I will lose that home if I become sick. I want insurance. The problem is affordable insurance that will actually be insurance against loss of everything I worked my whole life for.
Making people buy insurance is one step away from sending Guido to bust my kneecaps if I don't pay. It does nothing to help with the original premise: PEOPLE NEED HELP GETTING AFFORDABLE COVERAGE.
I am not in a union getting a subsidy by having part of my income tax free. I don't get special rates for being in a special pool. I get hosed. When I go to the hospital I get charged MORE - more than the care even costs - because I am not in Guido's pool. So, let's not pretend that uninsured means you don't pay for healthcare.
I have other mandated insurances and guess what? If you mandate insurance, the cost does not go down. Supply and demand. Mandate the supply of customers and the insurers will take advantage.
I want congress to give up their care paid for by people like me. I want them out here in the too small to give a rat's ass pool of predatory insurance.
And young Obama supporters - wake up - it's a tax all right. It's another Social Security tax because you all are going to be paying for not denying anyone coverage. You think it is going to come out of insurance executive's stock options?
"When I go to the hospital I get charged MORE"
Isn't that a great policy? If you don't have insurance you get to pay more. And if you want to know the cost before anything is done, no one can well you.
Maybe all charges should be posted in the lobby on a menu like many European restaurants do.
You pay much, much more if you are uninsured. Based on the EOB's I get from my insurance co, and the experience of my formerly uninsured brother (now living in toronto and enjoying Canada's system) the hospital charges up to 10 times more if you are uninsured. This is the other side of the insane US healthcare equation - the huge monopoly hospital corporations and so-called not-for-profits are as bad as the insurance companies.
As a rather complicated professional service involving the saving of human lives and relieving pain and suffering, I think the idea of "consumer driven healthcare", with the consumer shopping around, a-la-carte, for the best deal on treatments, or not gettin treatment if the price is too high, is loony. Sure, like someone is going to say, well, that chemo is awful expensive, and the house needs a new roof, I think il'll get thge new roof and put up with dying a bit young...
"I think the idea of "consumer driven healthcare", with the consumer shopping around, a-la-carte, for the best deal on treatments, or not gettin treatment if the price is too high, is loony."
Its absurd. Just what some one needs to do when they are sick, go shopping.
Your EOB's sound like ours. We offered a settlement to the Hospital of exactly what insurance would have paid. They turned it down. A few minutes later, the young lady left another message to wait, she had talked to a "co-worker" and they felt this should be referred higher up. HA!!!
Because of Texas law, if we send them $1.00 per month, without fail, they are stopped in their tracks. They MUST accept our attempt to pay. Based on their charge I'd be about 3,229 years old when we paid them off.
Frankly though we will pay the amount we offered since we owe (that) and nothing more, if they choose not to accept it....I will gladly institute our payment plan...and the old Italian salute to them!!!
Offer to pay them in cash at 50% as payment in full. To pay full price is to succumb to fraudulent billing, because it is based on the assumption they will sell the debt to a collection agency at a discount.
The Republicans are not going to vote for this. Their only goal is to reclaim Congress. In the name of "bipartisanship" they have been allowed to input many amendments, not to make the bill bipartisan, but to insure that it will fail to pass, or that if it does, it will be a supreme failure guaranteed to upset a majority of Americans. I voted for Obama. I voted for Kucinich in the Primary. Obama offered next to nothing that I looked for, while Kucinich offered pretty much everything that I thought that America and the world very much needed. Kucinich pushed for Single Payer Medicare for all, not because he is a Socialist, but because it is the best option for the most Americans. Anything less than this will fail and at great expense to all, except the Insurance and Pharmaceutical industries. If it is mandated to have insurance they say it is just like mandatory auto insurance. I disagree. One doesn't have to own a car, thereby avoiding that expense. There is only one way out of mandatory health insurance, and that is death, unless Single Payer is adopted. HR 676 reconciled with S 703 is the only true reform.