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The Boston Globe Is Right on Health CareKucinich Is Right on Health Care Dennis Kucinich rarely gets much airtime in Democratic presidential debates. That was underscored recently when ABC's George Stephanopoulos called on him in an Iowa forum to talk about God. Kucinich said, "George, I've been standing here for the last 45 minutes praying to God you were going to call on me." With poll numbers at 1 or 2 percent, the Ohio congressman is the nudge kicking at the knees of the Democratic Party to offer more than incremental change. He deserves more attention than he gets. On healthcare, he says what Americans believe, even as his rivals rake in contributions from the industry. In a CNN poll this spring, 64 percent of respondents said the government should "provide a national insurance program for all Americans, even if this would require higher taxes," and 73 percent approve of higher taxes to insure children under 18. Those results track New York Times and Gallup polls last year, in which about two-thirds of respondents said it is the federal government's responsibility to guarantee health coverage to all Americans. Such polls allow Kucinich to joke that, far from being in the loony left, "I'm in the center. Everyone else is to the right of me." More seriously, in a recent visit to the Globe, he accused the other Democratic candidates of faking it on healthcare reform. "One of the greatest hoaxes of this campaign - everyone's for universal healthcare," Kucinich said. "It's like a mantra. But when you get into the details, you find out that all the other candidates are talking about maintaining the existing for-profit system." Kucinich quoted the 2003 study published by the New England Journal of Medicine that found that 31 percent of healthcare expenditures pay not for actual care but for administrative costs. That compares with only 16.7 percent in Canada. Administrative and clerical employees make up 27 percent of the healthcare workforce in the United States, compared with 19 percent in Canada. "With 46 million Americans without any health insurance at all and another 50 million underinsured," Kucinich said, "isn't it really time to look at the other models that exist that are workable for all the other industrialized nations in the world? When you think about it, the only thing that's stopping us is the hold that the private insurers have on our political system ... corporate profits, stock options, executive salaries, advertising, marketing, the cost of paperwork ..." The hold of the healthcare industry on the top candidates is already apparent. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, the top recipient of campaign contributions so far from the pharmaceutical and health products industry is Republican Mitt Romney ($228,260). But the next two are Democrats Barack Obama ($161,124) and Hillary Clinton ($146,000). The top recipient of contributions from health professionals is Clinton ($990,611). Romney is second at $806,837, and Obama third at $748,637. The top recipient of cash from the insurance industry, which includes health insurers, is another Democrat, Connecticut's Christopher Dodd, at $605,950. Romney and Republican Rudolph Giuliani are second and third, with Clinton and Obama fourth and fifth. Even though Obama is in fifth place, he still has collected $269,750 from insurance companies. In a category that is relatively small in money thus far, but huge in terms of healthcare morality, Democratic presidential candidates occupy four of the top six spots in receiving money from death-dealing tobacco companies. After Giuliani's $69,500 from tobacco companies, Dodd has received $45,400, Clinton $32,300, Romney $31,400, Obama $7,885, and Democrat Joe Biden, $4,000. When the top Democratic candidates take tobacco contributions, it is hard to see them truly believing, as Kucinich says, that healthcare "is the single-most important domestic issue ... a defining issue in the presidential race." The top recipient from lobbyists by far is Clinton at $406,300. She is still so badly smoldering from the torching of her healthcare efforts as first lady that she recently asserted to the National Association of Black Journalists, "I have never advocated socialized medicine. That has been a right-wing attack on me for 15 years." The irony, as Kucinich critically points out, is that Americans are so burned from for-profit healthcare, that they want the government to guarantee coverage. "If people clearly understood that by going to vote on Election Day they would create conditions where they would have health coverage," Kucinich said, "if you could communicate that message, you wouldn't have to talk about anything else."
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Our present day Healthcare is unworkable!
I have listened to all the candidates and their rhetoric, and have come to the conclusion that they don’t have a clue in how to achieve what there are telling us about Healthcare. A continuation of co-pay and deductibles is not going help people with this unworkable Healthcare insurances system. John’s Plan will just adding to the old system and it will still be unworkable. They all have Hillary’s great healthcare plan, the one she dropped or got “blown out” when “Bill” was President. Healthcare for all US Citizens can be achieved, but not with are present–day insurances systems. The old system of healthcare insurances has been changed and doctored up so many times that it is corrupted and unworkable! It is beautiful for the Doctors and Hospitals, but not worth a damn for the people. As soon as are Government realizes this, just maybe something will get done to change this. With are unworkable Healthcare system which can be described as the worst in the world and everybody know this, insurances Companies are spending billons of Dollars in “bribes” to are representatives in Washington to cover-up anything to do with Healthcare. You can call it corruption or a conspiracy, [I like the word PREDATORS, it is the more fitting] whatever tag you would like on Healthcare it is to bleed the people of their money! The Doctors and the Drug Companies are milking the people to get into the Medicare System to bleed it of money. Drug Companies are using Doctor to sell their drugs and it is always the most expensive ones that they prescribe, not that it is any better then a cheaper drug.
They isn’t a Healthcare Plan that can or will work until they have some kind of price control that will stop Doctors and Hospitals from gouging people, especially Senior Citizens with Medicare! “This Peoples”, is becoming America’s biggest black eye and it is getting worst by the day!
The Healthcare system we have is like an old car, instead of overhauling it to work better you just keep driving it tell its ready for the junkyard. Our health system is like an old car; it needs an overhaul, badly!
I will support the first Candidate that is “for the people” and is not for big Business, and at this time I cannot see a single Candidate that has showed me this! The poor, middle class and the seniors are being torn-up by medical bill and drug overcharges. Medicare and the drug Plan has been out classed by greed and our Government is doing nothing in the form of help to our seniors!
One last thing I seen on the wall of a Doctor office that reads; [If you don’t have Insurance, don’t stop here! And all co-payments are strictly cash, “first!”]
You go Dennis!
I bet old George was shocked and made speechless when Dennis gave that remark. Dennis refused to be sucked into the "God card". What was George looking for anyway? The Red Carpet to part...and God to walk down it?
Actually, Medicare as it stands right now, does a pretty good...
job of covering much of the care that seniors need. I have had very good luck with the system and have no complaints vis-a-vis my doctors or my treatment.
Clinton wants to continue the present system of insurance companies and drug companies with their patchwork quilt of benefits and related costs. Edwards, a consultant to the insurance/HMO, wants to do the same. Obama seems to want the same thing. None of those three want to go to a fully-paid, single-payer, kind of coverage that most of our population wants and needs.
Kucinich talks about single-payer but is light on the details.
As for the rest, they don't know what they want and cannot clearly establish any position on the matter at all.
The single-payer system is already in existence, it does work in it's present form, and only needs to be simplified and clarified to work for full coverage for everyone. The system is called Medicare. The infrastructure is in place, the staff knows how to handle the paperwork for single-payer medical care. Only the congress and the presidential candidates are missing the clues that will give us what we need. They have been deliberately clueless for years.
If the doctor you presently use is pushing for immediate payment, then change your doctor for now. Find one willing to work with you. Mine work with me.
I just had three eye surgeries, cataract removal and lens implants. Total cost is about $15K. My share is about $1000. Under single-payer, fully-paid plans, it would have all been paid for. So what we have, in some circumstances, is working for seniors. It can be adjusted to provide medical care for all.
A mind once expanded can never return to its original dimensions.
Anne Hathaway: 1556-1623
The greatest derangement of the mind is to believe in something because one wishes it to be so.