Download and print these trifold brochures to help promote single payer Universial Health Care
http://www.kucinich.us/supporter_resources/otherpdfs/HealthCareBrochurePetition.pdf
http://www.kucinich.us/supporter_resources/otherpdfs/HealthCareBroch_NoPetition.pdf
Learn More: http://www.kucinich.us/issues/universalhealth.php
Health care is currently dominated by insurance firms and HMOs, institutions that are more bureaucratic and costly than Medicare. Right now, private companies are charging about 18% for administration, while the cost of Medicare administration is only 3%. People are waiting longer for appointments. Fewer people are getting a doctor of their choice. Physicians are being given monetary incentives to deny care. Pre-existing illnesses are being used to deny coverage. It's important to understand that insurance companies make more money by NOT providing health care. A single-payer system can save money by investing in preventive care, as well as by cutting out the insurance companies' profits. Insurance companies do not heal or treat anyone. Physicians and health practitioners do.
Non-profit national health insurance will actually decrease total health care spending while providing more treatment and services -- through reductions in bureaucracy and cost-cutting measures such as bulk purchasing of prescriptions drugs. A study by researchers at Harvard Medical School and Public Citizens found that health care bureaucracy last year cost the United States $399.4 billion. The study estimates that national health insurance could save at least $286 billion annually on paperwork, enough to cover all of the uninsured and to provide full prescription drug coverage for everyone in the United States.
How would we pay for it? Funding will come primarily from existing government health care spending (more than $1 trillion) and a phased-in tax on employers of 7.7% (almost $1 trillion). Employers who provide coverage are already paying 8.5%, on average. That would raise about $920 billion. In addition to that, there's already over a trillion dollars being spent a year in local, state and federal dollars for health care. The American people are already paying for universal health care; they're just not getting it.
Privately delivered health care, publicly financed -- has worked well in other countries, none of which spend as much per capita on health care as the United States. The cost-effectiveness of a single-payer system has been affirmed in many studies, including those conducted by the Congressional Budget Office and the General Accounting Office. The GAO has said: "If the US were to shift to a system of universal coverage and a single payer, as in Canada, the savings in administrative costs (10% to private insurers) would be more than enough to offset the expense of universal coverage."
Over the years, groups and individuals as diverse as Consumers Union, labor unions, the CEO of General Motors, the editorial boards of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and St. Louis Post Dispatch, and Physicians for a National Health Program have endorsed a single-payer approach. In the "Physicians Proposal for National Health Care," 7,782 physicians agreed that "proposals that would retain the roles of private insurers -- such as calls for tax-credits, Medicaid/CHIP expansions, and pushing more seniors into private HMOs -- are prescriptions for failure."
It is sound economics -- what actuaries call "Spreading the Risk" -- to extend Medicare to younger and healthier sectors of our population, thereby putting everyone in one insurance pool. It permanently saves and improves Medicare, while eliminating duplicative private and government bureaucracies.
==================================== Petition to the Democratic Party: We Want Universal Health Care (you do not have to be a democrat to sign the petition) http://www.kucinich.us/petitions/petition_text_uhc1.php?s=p I, the undersigned, approve the establishment of a universal single-payer national health care system in the U.S.
Such a system will be publicly financed and privately delivered, allowing people to choose their own health care providers. The system will provide preventive health care, dental care, mental health care, and affordable prescription drugs. This system will make health care available to everyone, regardless of pre-existing conditions, status of employment, or income level.
I urge Democrats to make this resolution a plank in the 2004 party platform.
http://www.kucinich.us/petitions/
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