10 Reasons To Support The Health Care Reform Bills
10 Reasons To Support The Health Care Reform Bills
10 Reasons To Support The Health Care Reform Bills
The health reform debate is in full swing and proposals are taking shape. Even though key
decisions are still being made, it is clear we have gained significant ground. There is much to be
excited about in these proposals: Millions more people will gain health insurance, coverage will
be more affordable, and people will have access to the health services they need. These provi-
sions will improve the lives of millions of Americans and give us the peace of mind that comes
with knowing that we have coverage no matter what. But the road ahead will not be easy. We
must continue to work for improvements and we must ensure that we do not lose the gains
we have made so far—they are worth fighting for. Below are some highlights in the health care
reform proposals.
A strong public plan option that will provide choice, stability, and an
Our current system, where some employers offer coverage and others do not,
promotes so-called “job lock,” which happens when people stay in a job just
for the health insurance. Leveling the playing field so that all workers have
coverage no matter what will increase job mobility, labor market efficiency,
and economic growth.
9 Better access to coverage for uninsured children so they can get the
care they need
What’s in the bills:
Health care reform will expand Medicaid eligibility for parents that will allow
whole families to qualify for Medicaid together. Research shows that when par-
ents and kids have the same coverage, kids are more likely to get enrolled and
get necessary care.14
Reform efforts include a guarantee that all babies born in this country start life
with health coverage.
6 10 Reasons to Support the Health Care Reform Bills
Endnotes
1
Families USA calculations.
2
Health Policy Institute, Georgetown University, Individual Market Guaranteed Issue, Not Applicable to HIPAA Eligible
Individuals, 2007 (Menlo Park, CA: Kaiser Family Foundation, December 2007), available online at www.statehealthfacts.
org, accessed on July 14, 2009.
3
Ella Hushagen, Cheryl Fish-Parcham, and David Tian, Failing Grades: State Consumer Protections in the Individual Health
Insurance Market (Washington: Families USA, June 2008).
4
Ibid.
5
Gary Claxton, et al., Employer Health Benefits 2008 Annual Survey (Menlo Park, CA: Kaiser Family Foundation and Health
Research and Educational Trust, 2008).
6
Families USA calculations of mean revenue and profits from data reported in Fortune Magazine’s annual Fortune 500
listing for Health Care: Insurance and Managed Care, 2009, available online at www.money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/
fortune500/2009/industries/223/index.html.
7
Kim Bailey and Laura Parisi, Too Great A Burden: Americans Face Rising Health Care Costs (Washington: Families USA, April
2009).
8
David Himmelstein, Deborah Thorne, Elizabeth Warren, and Steffie Woolhandler, “Medical Bankruptcy in the United
States, 2007: Results of a National Study,” The American Journal of Medicine, prepublication copy, available online at http://
www.pnhp.org/new_bankruptcy_study/Bankruptcy-2009.pdf.
9
Paul Fronstin, Sources of Health Insurance and Characteristics of the Uninsured: Analysis of the March 2008 CPS Survey
(Washington: Employee Benefit Research Institute, September 2008).
10
Gary Claxton, op. cit.
Families USA, Welcome to the Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit: An Illustration of the Doughnut Hole (Washington: Families
11