Posts Tagged ‘Bernie Sanders’

Sanders/McDermott single payer American Health Security Act of 2011

May 10th, 2011

Single-Payer, Medicare-for-All Legislation Introduced

Senator Bernie Sanders
May 10, 2011

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) announced today that he introduced legislation to provide health care for every American through a Medicare-for-all type single-payer system.

Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.) filed a companion bill in the House to provide better care for more patients at less cost by eliminating the middle-man role played by private insurance companies that rake off billions of dollars in profits.

The twin measures, both called the American Health Security Act of 2011, would provide federal guidelines and strong minimum standards for states to administer single-payer health care programs.

“The United States is the only major nation in the industrialized world that does not guarantee health care as right to its people,” Sanders said at a press conference on Capitol Hill. “Meanwhile, we spend about twice as much per capita on health care with worse results than others that spend far less. It is time that we bring about a fundamental transformation of the American health care system. It is time for us to end private, for-profit participation in delivering basic coverage. It is time for the United States to provide a Medicare-for-all single-payer health coverage program.”

McDermott said, “The new health care law made big progress towards covering many more people and finding ways to lower cost. However, I think the best way to reduce costs and guarantee coverage for all is through a single-payer system like Medicare. This bill does just that – it builds on the new health care law by giving states the flexibility they need to go to a single-payer system of their own. It will also reduce costs, and Americans will be healthier.”

http://sanders.senate.gov/newsroom/news/?id=47d632b8-4a43-4d2b-b500-cb2c105e93ef

American Health Security Act of 2011:
http://thomas.gov/ (select bill number and insert S.915 or H.R.1200)

And…

Doctors’ group greets single-payer health bill in Senate

Physicians for a National Health Program
May 10, 2011

Physicians for a National Health Program says Sen. Bernie Sanders’ American Health Security Act would go far beyond federal health law, slash bureaucracy and lay the basis for universal, high-quality care.

http://www.pnhp.org/news/2011/may/doctors-group-greets-single-payer-health-bill-in-senate

Comment:

By Don McCanne, MD

The single payer concept has not gone away. We really don’t have to accept the deficiencies of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA): tens of millions uninsured, and under-insurance as the new standard. The low actuarial value plans being established by PPACA will create financial hardships for middle-income Americans who have significant health care needs.

What we do need is an America that understands what we can have in health care for everyone, but what we won’t be receiving if we simply sit back and let PPACA play out. It’s our job to get the word out.

Re-posted with permission from pnhp.org.

As Vermont Goes, So Goes the Nation

January 25th, 2011

Vermont is going full-steam ahead on its plans to establish a single payer healthcare program for its citizens. Last week, Harvard healthcare economist William Hsiao went before the full Vermont state legislature to present his ideas on how the state can implement a single payer system. Professor Hsiao most notably helped set up Taiwan’s single payer program. Below is a video of the entire presentation, filmed by Vermont Health Care For All. After the presentation, Hsiao and members of the Vermont legislature addressed reporters at a news conference, which you can access at vtdigger.org.

Hsiao’s proposal for Vermont is not a pure government-run single payer system, but a public/private plan run by an independent board. Although Dr. Don McCanne of Physicians for a National Health Plan has a few quibbles with Hsiao’s recommendations, he believes the plan is a good start. Writes McCanne, “Although advocates of the pure single payer model will find some problems with this report on a reform proposal for Vermont, there is very good news in this analysis. The report emphatically confirms the superiority of the single payer model in ensuring that everyone is included while containing health care costs.”

Predictably, the insurance companies are not happy with Vermont’s plans to spoil their party. It’s gratifying to see how helpless they are in the face of a single-payer friendly legislature, and their worst nightmare, a new governor, Peter Shumlin, who is a fierce advocate of single payer and ran on it in his platform. And the state is represented in the U.S. Senate by longtime single-payer cheerleader, Bernie Sanders. It’s as if the stars have aligned for Vermonters. It looks like Vermont may beat us here in California in the race to become the first state to embrace a single payer plan and be a model for the nation. If Arnold Schwarzenegger hadn’t stood in the way, California could have been first long ago. Watch Gov. Shumlin being interviewed below on Democracy Now! on Jan. 21:

Gov. Jerry Brown is up to his eyeballs in California’s intractable budget mess. Meanwhile, State Sen. Mark Leno soon plans to re-introduce SB 810 into our state legislature. After being passed in the legislature twice (and vetoed by Schwarzenegger twice), the bill failed last year to go through a third time. It’s still not yet clear whether Brown will sign it, even though he campaigned on single payer as a presidential candidate in 1992. So, what explains the foot dragging? The nature of California politics? The passage of federal reforms in Washington? Brown can’t possibly use the budget crisis as an excuse because single payer will save the state money. Maybe Professor Hsiao and Vermont can give him a nudge.

What’s so exciting about what’s happening in Vermont is that the single payer movement may finally get the laboratory it desperately needs right in our own back yard. The state still needs to get a waiver from the federal government to start the plan, something Shumlin and Sanders are actively pursuing. Vermont can show the skeptics that single payer is the most affordable and fairest way to deliver health care to everyone. And the naysayers will no longer be able to dismiss single payer as “foreign.” Vermont’s efforts can help propel our case forward here in California. It would be great if Sen. Leno could get Hsiao to do his presentation before Brown and our legislature. The skeptics would have no choice but to listen.

Sylvia@californiaonecare.org

Don McCanne, MD: Will the Wyden/Brown state waiver enable single payer?

December 6th, 2010

Senators push bipartisan state healthcare waiver

Reuters
November 18, 2010

A Democrat and a Republican teamed up in the Senate on Thursday to offer legislation that would give states the flexibility to implement their own healthcare approaches when the federal overhaul goes into full effect in 2014.

The proposal by Democrat Ron Wyden and Republican Scott Brown moves up the date when states can apply for waivers from the federal law in order to implement their own approaches.

The law, which passed in March, currently allows states to apply for waivers in 2017.

Under the Wyden and Brown proposal, states could apply for an exemption from some requirements of the reform law — including the mandate that everyone purchase insurance and the employer penalty for not providing coverage — if they offer an alternative that is considered at least as effective and affordable.

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6AH4NT20101118

And…

S. 3958 (the entire bill)

To allow an earlier start for State health care coverage innovation waivers under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
NOVEMBER 17, 2010

Mr. WYDEN (for himself and Mr. BROWN of Massachusetts) introduced the following bill; which was read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance

A BILL
To allow an earlier start for State health care coverage innovation waivers under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the “Empowering States to Innovate Act”.

SEC. 2. EARLIER START FOR STATE HEALTH CARE COVERAGE INNOVATION WAIVERS.
Section 1332(a) of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is amended—

(1) by striking ‘‘January 1, 2017’’ in paragraph (1) and inserting ‘‘January 1, 2014’’, and
(2) by inserting ‘‘beginning not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of the Empowering States to Innovate Act’’ after ‘‘application’’ in paragraph (4)(B)(ii).

http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=111_cong_bills&docid=f:s3958is.txt.pdf

And…

Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (excerpts):

PART IV–State Flexibility to Establish Alternative Programs


Sec. 1332. Waiver for State innovation.

(a) Application.
(3) Pass through of funding.–With respect to a State waiver under paragraph (1), under which, due to the structure of the State plan, individuals and small employers in the State would not qualify for the premium tax credits, cost-sharing reductions, or small business credits under sections 36B of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 or under part I of subtitle E for which they would otherwise be eligible, the Secretary shall provide for an alternative means by which the aggregate amount of such credits or reductions that would have been paid on behalf of participants in the Exchanges established under this title had the State not received such waiver, shall be paid to the State for purposes of implementing the State plan under the waiver.

(b) Granting of Waivers.
(1) In general.–The Secretary may grant a request for a waiver under subsection (a)(1) only if the Secretary determines that the State plan–
(A) will provide coverage that is at least as comprehensive as the coverage defined in section 1302(b) and offered through Exchanges established under this title as certified by Office of the Actuary of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services based on sufficient data from the State and from comparable States about their experience with programs created by this Act and the provisions of this Act that would be waived;
(B) will provide coverage and cost sharing protections against excessive out-of-pocket spending that are at least as affordable as the provisions of this title would provide;
(C) will provide coverage to at least a comparable number of its residents as the provisions of this title would provide; and
(D) will not increase the Federal deficit.

http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=111_cong_public_laws&docid=f:publ148.111

And…

Sen. Bernie Sanders: ‘Vermont stands a chance to be the first state in the nation to pass single-payer’

By Ezra Klein
The Washington Post
November 18, 2010

Ezra Klein:  So what happens if Scott Brown and Ron Wyden get their way and the waiver moves up to 2014? Will Vermont use it?

Bernie Sanders:  We believe Vermont stands a chance to be the first state in the nation to pass single-payer. The governor-elect campaigned on it, and we have support in the House and Senate. We’re not asking for one nickel more than we’d otherwise get. The other thing we think we have an opportunity to do is reach out to our conservative friends and say, hey, Vermont wants to go forward with a single-payer system, and Mississippi and Alabama don’t, but maybe they have other ideas. Now, we’re conscious of the need to make sure that the health-care reform bill’s standards aren’t diminished. So everyone needs to provide the same quality of health care as the bill provides and at the same, or lower, price. But if they can do that, then they should be able to go for it.

Ezra Klein:  And then the various models can compete with one another and, presumably, spread to other states if successful?

Bernie Sanders:  Absolutely. And that’s what we wanted from it. In my state, it’ll be single-payer. In California, I think there’s a chance it could be single-payer. In other states, it will be something else. This makes the states laboratories for the system, and then other states can copy them. Now, you need a minimum level for coverage and quality. You can’t go lower than health-care reform.

http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-klein/2010/11/sen_bernie_sanders_vermont_sta.html

Comment:


By Don McCanne, MD

The initial reaction to S. 3958, The Empowering States to Innovate Act, sponsored by Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA), is that the bill will enable states to bypass the requirements of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) and set up their own state-based programs, even single payer should the states prefer. But what does the bill actually say?

PPACA already authorizes a program for state waivers, but not until 2017. The Wyden/Brown bill does only one thing. It moves the state waiver program forward to 2014, the same year that the individual mandate and insurance exchanges go into effect. It does not change the waiver in any other way.

For those states that wish to establish their own programs, advancing the eligibility date removes the very burdensome task of complying with the insurance exchanges, mandates and other requirements for an interval of only three years, and then facing the additional costs and burdens of transitioning to their own programs. If you agree with the policy that states should be able to set up their own programs, then this is a very wise move.

Massachusetts already has a program similar to PPACA. Sen. Brown would much rather modify what they have by complying with the waiver than to have to comply with all details of PPACA for the first three years. For Sen. Wyden, his preferred model of reform was rejected by Congress, but he would still like to experiment with his model, as much as possible, within the state of Oregon, while protecting what innovative programs they already have.

So just how much leeway does the PPACA state waiver allow? It does allow innovations as long as coverage is at least as comprehensive, cost sharing is at least as affordable, at least as many residents would be covered, and as long as the federal deficit would not be increased. It also passes through to the state the funds that would have been used for premium tax credits, cost-sharing reductions, and small business credits. Is that enough funding to establish a single payer system?

What about the funds for Medicare? Medicaid? CHIP? Taft-Hartley plans? What about ERISA requirements? What about the multitude of other funding requirements such as the VA system, academic institutions, safety-net institutions, community health centers, the Indian Health Service, the U.S. Public Health Service, and the many others?

There is no authorization in the Wyden/Brown bill, PPACA, nor any other existing law or regulation to fold many or all of these programs into one single payer system. Think of trying to run a partial single payer system (an oxymoron) while still having to deal with the massive Medicare and Medicaid programs. The point is, don’t let up on your advocacy, thinking that Wyden/Brown is our entry to single payer. We would still have a highly fragmented financing system.

Our best option remains enacting a national single payer bill such as HR 676, which will be re-introduced in the next session of Congress. In lieu of that, we should continue with our efforts to enact single payer systems on the state level. Just don’t be fooled into thinking that a bill such as Wyden/Brown is the ticket. The enabling federal legislation that would be required for state programs would be as complicated, if not more so, than a bill establishing a national single payer program – an improved Medicare for everyone.

Vermont is a test. Without enabling comprehensive federal legislation, I’m already apprehensive.

Re-posted with permission from pnhp.org.

365 Ad # 269 Adam Arkin

November 24th, 2010

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