(Circulation. 2000;101:e9004.)
© 2000 American Heart Association, Inc.
Cardiovascular News |
In his final State of the Union address, President Clinton called on the US Congress to make health care affordable for all Americans. "I ask you again to pass a real patients bill of rights," he said. This bill, as proposed in the past, would guarantee access to care in emergency rooms and to treatment by specialists. It would also give patients the right to challenge the decisions of insurers or administrators of health maintenance organizations. The patients rights legislation is a governmental response to grass roots opposition to some of the policies and programs of managed care organizations.
The Presidents call for affordable health care marks a return to the early days of his administration, when he attempted to devise a healthcare program that would give real access to all US citizens.
His current plan is more modest. The President proposed a 10-year, $110
billion program to lower the costs of health insurance to make it more
affordable for low- and middle-income families. As explained, the plan
would cover
5 million of the >40 million Americans who have no
health insurance.
To put the plan into effect, the President also proposed spending $5.5
billion over 10 years to speed up the enrollment of uninsured children
into the Childrens Health Insurance Program. This move would cover
400 000 children in families with incomes too high to be eligible for
Medicaid. The program would also set up programs to cover people caught
in a gap in insurance, such as elderly people
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