The following opinion piece, written by Director of Aging Policy Rachel Goldberg, appeared on JTA:
There’s a lot of noise about health care -- wildly false claims,
meetings being disrupted, shrill voices shouting down legislators. Amid
the din, real ideas and concerns are getting lost.
It’s easy and lazy to criticize something. What’s difficult and bold
is to recognize that a critically important part of our country’s
infrastructure is severely broken and come up with a plan to fix it.
The premise of many health reform naysayers is that the system isn’t
bad now, but it will be if we “reform” it. The next part of that theory
is that what Canada and England have creates problems that do not exist
in the health care utopia we currently occupy. (Incidentally, none of
the congressional proposals would adopt their systems.)
Even assuming the initial premise is true --and it’s not unless you
are wealthy and lucky -- we still know the next parts are demonstrably
untrue.
If we do nothing, employer-based coverage will continue to erode,
even as our unstable job market means more people are losing access to
employer plans. And when people lose or switch jobs, often they are
unable to acquire coverage in the private market.
That can mean long periods without coverage, or with costly
catastrophic coverage, and dangerous Catch-22 provisions down the line:
You can’t get coverage if you didn’t have coverage in the past – that
pesky pre-existing condition exclusion.
Particularly offensive are attempts by opponents to convince older
people that reform proposals would steal their benefits or destroy
Medicare. Many of the Medicare “cuts” are delivery system reforms that
aging advocates have been urging. We actually could see improvements to
the Medicare program if reform occurs – changes that won’t happen
otherwise.
Seniors are an important constituency because they know the
importance of health care and care about their children and
grandchildren. Using fear to turn them against reform is reprehensible.
Also outrageous: Raising the specter of Nazis to promote the absurdist scare tactics about fictional death panels. too.
The U.S. health care system is broken. In the richest nation in the
world, about 47 million Americans have no health insurance. Millions of
Americans are underinsured, unable to afford co-pays or prescriptions,
or even are forced into bankruptcy by uncovered expenses (medical costs
are the biggest single cause of bankruptcy in the United States).
The numbers of people who don't visit doctors or fill prescriptions
because they are underinsured is rising. Meanwhile, the traveling
clinics created to serve disease-ravaged parts of the developing world
now also visit underserved communities in poor and rural parts of the
United States. People travel many miles and wait countless hours for
those services.
In the face of this crisis, some have chosen venom, demagoguery and
misinformation over real dialogue – jeopardizing the chance to make
life better for millions. A better health care system, we should not
forget, would provide real security for everyone – even those who like
whatever arrangement they have now.
As a human rights organization, B’nai B’rith is dedicated to health
care for all. We have not yet endorsed any piece of legislation – we
see problems, as well as real promise, in each of them. Legislators are
working hard to do more than stake out ideological and political
territory.
At the most basic level, health care coverage needs to be
comprehensive, affordable and secure. It must ensure that people can
keep the coverage they like and acquire coverage they can afford.
Realistic health care reform must address long-term services and be
both politically feasible and financially fair.
A reform plan should include provisions for the high costs of
prescription drugs and long-term care issues. Our population is aging
and the latter’s costs have the potential to further erode our current
system.
Americans, regardless of their opinion or knowledge base, obviously
are passionate about health care: Just watch any town hall meeting with
members of Congress or listen to callers on talk radio. Health issues
can serve as the great leveler of our society. Everyone gets sick and
needs medical attention. It’s time for a better system.
There are real proposals on the table that could expand coverage.
Will everyone like every element of the proposals? Of course not. But
if we can quiet the shouting and stay in touch with the reality that
demands we do something, we have an opportunity to work together to
reach an effective compromise.
That compromise could improve, and even save, millions of lives and
deliver the human right of health security to a country in desperate
need.