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PUBLICATIONS
Health reform shouldn't mean end of compassionate care
- * This publication was
produced by Citizens for Choice in Health
Care and is published here with their
permission.
- Published
- Minneapolis Star Tribune Commentary
- May 28, 1994
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- While President Clinton's call to compassion for the uninsured
and underinsured is laudable, the true measure of compassion in
his or any other government regulated health care plan needs to be
carefully weighed.Health care in the United States has often been
noted for its humanitarian efforts, which have included the
donation of services and supplies, treatment of the poor and care
given to our neighbors around the world whose needs cannot be met
in their own countries
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- Any state or federal health care system would diminish if not
eliminate these services. Since all health care personnel,
equipment and facilities would be placed under government
regulation, physicians would become paid servants of the
government. While they could freely offer their skills outside the
country on medical teams, any private services provided to
unqualified, desperate or impatient citizens within the United
States could be construed as "bribery in connection with health
care" (Clinton Health Security Act, Sec. 5434). Physicians may
also be required to reimburse the regional alliance for any
services given to noncitizens or for services given to citizens
beyond the guidelines set forth by the National Health Board, if
the NHB agreed to allow these services.
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- Elizabeth McCaughey, one of the few who have read the entire
1,342-page Clinton plan, titled her article for the New Republic
"No Exit." Rather than assuring us of compassion, specific page
numbers of the plan are included throughout the article to
document Clinton's true agenda: price controls through rationing
based on age, illness and alliance-determined "quality of life."
The plan also mandates new federal health care laws to discourage
the development of black market health services for dissatisfied
consumers.
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- True compassionate health care will find itself in need of
resuscitation without an available life support unit. Then in the
wake of rationing it will slip off the emergency cart ignored and
trampled under the feet of the clamoring crowds. Later we will
wonder how we let the 2,000-year-old Hippocratic oath of patient
as primary be rendered impractical against the concept of a global
budget. But it will be too late. There is another solution: the
Consumer Choice Security Act. This plan achieves universal
coverage and preserves personal freedom while maintaining
compassion and choice. Disconnecting health insurance from
employment, it gives citizens the tax breaks businesses now
receive for providing health insurance. The only mandate is
universal minimal coverage, which can be found in a low-cost
catastrophic health insurance policy.
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- Premiums will be paid for with pretax dollars, by the
individual or by the employer, but the individual will own the
policy. By buying portable catastrophic health insurance with a
$2,000-#3,000 deductible for each employee and then placing the
complete deductible in an employee-owned Individual Medical
Account (IMA), the company can save $700 per employee. Employees
can also choose to take health benefits in pretax wages and on
their own purchase health insurance and start an IMA. The IMA is
portable and can grow with interest or individual pretax deposits
until medical expenses occur. Money can then be pulled from the
account and no insurance paperwork is required.
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- This plan also includes tax credits for all health care
expenses and premiums not paid through an IMA, choice of all
available health insurance plans, federal subsidies for those
unable to afford the minimum premium or deductible, tort reform,
and allowance of additional health insurance for Medicare patients
to assist with uncovered expenses. It encourages privatization of
Medicaid to greatly reduce costs, bureaucracy and personal stigma.
It does not include new taxes, federal health care laws, a Health
Security card, a national electronic data bank, increased
bureaucracy or limitation of services.
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- Before espousing the regulations and dictates of ClintonCare
or MinnesotaCare, investigate the options carefully and contact
Congress with your informed decision. It is not too late to
preserve the individual freedom and choice that have for
generations upheld our high standard of compassion in health care.
-
Twila Brase, St. Paul, Director,
Citizens for Choice in Health Care
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Citizens' Council on Health Care
1954 University Avenue West, Suite 8, St. Paul, MN 55104
Phone: 651.646.8935 / Fax: 651.646.0100, e-mail
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