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Single-Payer Advocates, Excluded from Summit, Take to Sidewalk
WASHINGTON - February 24 -
STEFFIE WOOLHANDLER, M.D., M.P.H.
MARGARET FLOWERS, M.D.
QUENTIN YOUNG, M.D.
MARK ALMBERG
Young, national coordinator of Physicians for a National Health Program, an organization of 17,000 doctors who support a single-payer, Medicare-for-All approach to reform, said today: "Regrettably, the president's proposal is built on some of the worst aspects of the Senate bill. For example, the president's proposal would ship hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars to the private health insurance industry in the form of subsidies. And to help finance this, it would impose a new tax on health benefits of workers, especially those in high-cost states.
"Its individual mandate would force millions of middle-income uninsured Americans to buy insurers' skimpy products -- insurance policies full of gaps like ever-rising co-pays, deductibles and premiums. Such policies already leave middle-class American families vulnerable to economic hardship and medical bankruptcy in the event of a serious illness like cancer.
"Even so, at least 23 million people would remain uninsured. We know that being uninsured raises your chance of dying by about 40 percent. That translates into about 23,000 unnecessary deaths each year. As physicians, we find this completely unacceptable.
"In short, this proposal is an insurance company bonanza -- not good, evidence-based health reform. The president would do better by abandoning the insurance and drug companies and instead taking up the single-payer approach. By building on and improving the already popular Medicare program, we could put our patients' interests first. Were President Obama to do so, he would meet with strong public support, including from the medical community."
Although the physicians' group requested an invitation to Thursday's summit at Blair House, no reply from the White House has been forthcoming, Young said. The group also noted: "Similarly, requests from Reps. Dennis Kucinich of Ohio, Anthony Weiner of New York and Peter Welch of Vermont that single-payer advocates be included in the meeting have apparently gone unanswered."
Young knew Obama while he was in Chicago. His partner, Dr. David Scheiner, also a PNHP member, was Obama's personal physician.
Outside the Blair House on Thursday, a grassroots "Sidewalk Summit for Medicare for All" organized by PNHP and other groups will begin at 9 a.m.
Woolhandler is co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program and a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. Flowers is a pediatrician who leads PNHP's Maryland chapter, and Almberg is the group's communications director.
STEFFIE WOOLHANDLER, M.D., M.P.H.
MARGARET FLOWERS, M.D.
QUENTIN YOUNG, M.D.
MARK ALMBERG
Young, national coordinator of Physicians for a National Health Program, an organization of 17,000 doctors who support a single-payer, Medicare-for-All approach to reform, said today: "Regrettably, the president's proposal is built on some of the worst aspects of the Senate bill. For example, the president's proposal would ship hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars to the private health insurance industry in the form of subsidies. And to help finance this, it would impose a new tax on health benefits of workers, especially those in high-cost states.
"Its individual mandate would force millions of middle-income uninsured Americans to buy insurers' skimpy products -- insurance policies full of gaps like ever-rising co-pays, deductibles and premiums. Such policies already leave middle-class American families vulnerable to economic hardship and medical bankruptcy in the event of a serious illness like cancer.
"Even so, at least 23 million people would remain uninsured. We know that being uninsured raises your chance of dying by about 40 percent. That translates into about 23,000 unnecessary deaths each year. As physicians, we find this completely unacceptable.
"In short, this proposal is an insurance company bonanza -- not good, evidence-based health reform. The president would do better by abandoning the insurance and drug companies and instead taking up the single-payer approach. By building on and improving the already popular Medicare program, we could put our patients' interests first. Were President Obama to do so, he would meet with strong public support, including from the medical community."
Although the physicians' group requested an invitation to Thursday's summit at Blair House, no reply from the White House has been forthcoming, Young said. The group also noted: "Similarly, requests from Reps. Dennis Kucinich of Ohio, Anthony Weiner of New York and Peter Welch of Vermont that single-payer advocates be included in the meeting have apparently gone unanswered."
Young knew Obama while he was in Chicago. His partner, Dr. David Scheiner, also a PNHP member, was Obama's personal physician.
Outside the Blair House on Thursday, a grassroots "Sidewalk Summit for Medicare for All" organized by PNHP and other groups will begin at 9 a.m.
Woolhandler is co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program and a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. Flowers is a pediatrician who leads PNHP's Maryland chapter, and Almberg is the group's communications director.
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4 Comments so far
Show AllWe, the working classes, the base of the Democratic party,
were double-crossed by Bill, "Slick Willie", Clinton when he gave us Nafta and sold out our industrial base to China in a move that left us completly jobless.
Again, we the working classes are being double-crossed by Obama by his sellout to the Insurance Industry. The Health care bill was written by the Insurance industry, the group that donated so heavily to Obama campaign. We will have to buy insurance from the insurance companies. We wanted single payer system and we will never get it, thank you for the doublecross Obama.
Sandy,
Here are a few reasons I didn't trust my vote to Obama'
He threw his Preacher under the bus after how many years?
He announced he couldn't win on citizen bucks alone..why was he begging for money from a desperate citizenry, when he knew he would pull his candidacy off anyway?
I became weary of the same old song of...I went to work for Main street instead of Wall Street. Like the constant ass kissing of McCain's Service Record every time his name was mentioned.
He stated he was going after al-CIAduh everywhere, and in response to Amy Goodmans' questioning of Contractors in Iraq, he gave a creepy smiley non-response.
I had a copy of his Gramma's face on cover of YES! magazine...and I bet she ain't smilin' no more, just rolling in her grave, along with MLK and everyone else that bought his product. McKinney; smart, courageous and feared by Rummy!
I noticed the response to Death Penalty for child rapists and child killers. Recall what he said? CIA and others involved in raping those kids in Iraq should be executed according to these tough on crime politicians! He turns the blood soaked page...and smiles all the while...Captain Obvious.
We need to impeach, boycott, reject, march and demand. Everybody. The time is now.
The only sure way to get what we want is to replace. And it's the only way where we have significant power; we can run in our own Congressional districts as independents or work our asses off for those who are willing to run. We can begin with strong write-in campaigns in 2010; organizing at that level is realistic and empowering.
Can you imagine how different the health-care debate would be if a mere 100 out of 435 members of the House were independents solidly and uncompromisingly behind a single-payer bill with another 335 candidates set to run in the remainder of the districts?