Panel Urges Basic
Coverage on Health Care
By Robert Pear;
The New York Times ~
Sep 26, 2006
WASHINGTON , Sept. 25 — A federal advisory panel said
Monday that Congress should take immediate steps to guarantee
that all Americans have access to affordable health care by
2012.
As a first step, the 14-member panel, appointed by the
comptroller general of the United States , said, “A national
public or private program must be established to ensure
protection against very high out-of-pocket medical costs for
everyone.”
The panel, the Citizens’ Health Care Working Group, said
Congress should create an independent “public-private entity” to
define a basic set of health care benefits and services for all
Americans.
While leaving many details to be worked out, the panel declared,
“It should be public policy, written in law, that all Americans
have affordable access to health care.”
The panel was created by the 2003 law that added a drug benefit
to Medicare. Under the law, President Bush has 45 days to
comment on the recommendations and offer a report to Congress.
Five Congressional committees are then supposed to hold hearings
on the proposals.
The citizens’ group went to great lengths to solicit opinions
from average Americans, in addition to health experts. It tried
to forge a consensus after listening to views expressed by more
than 7,000 people at 98 community meetings in 37 states.
“This is a fresh approach,” said Senator Orrin G. Hatch,
Republican of Utah, who wrote the panel charter with Senator Ron
Wyden, Democrat of Oregon.
The number of uninsured Americans keeps growing despite
fluctuations in the economy, and the report from the working
group increases the chances that health care will be a major
issue as candidates gear up for the 2008 presidential race.
Census Bureau figures show that 39.7 million people lacked
health insurance in 1993, when President Bill Clinton took
office. The number rose, to 44.3 million in 1998, and then began
to decline. Since 2001, when President Bush took office, the
number of uninsured has increased by more than 5 million, to
46.6 million in 2005.
The panel did not say how much its proposals would cost or how
to pay for them. But, it reported, many consumers said they were
“willing to pay more to ensure that all Americans are covered.”
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company