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1:07 pm CST - July 22, 2009
Posted under The Scoop
How to Make Health-Care Reform Bipartisan .
By Bobby Jindal
In Washington, it seems history always repeats itself. That’s what’s happening now with health-care reform. This is an unfortunate turn of events for Americans who are legitimately concerned about the skyrocketing cost of a basic human need.
In 1993 and 1994, Hillary Clinton’s health-care reform proposal failed because it was concocted in secret without the guiding hand of public consensus-building, and because it was a philosophical over-reach. Today President Barack Obama is repeating these mistakes.
The reason is plain: The left in Washington has concluded that honesty will not yield its desired policy result. So it resorts to a fundamentally dishonest approach to reform. I say this because the marketing of the Democrats’ plans as presented in the House of Representatives and endorsed heartily by President Obama rests on three falsehoods.
First, Mr. Obama doggedly promises that if you like your (private) health-care coverage now, you can keep it. That promise is hollow, because the Democrats’ reforms are designed to push an ever-increasing number of Americans into a government-run health-care plan.
If a so-called public option is part of health-care reform, the Lewin Group study estimates over 100 million Americans may leave private plans for government-run health care. Any government plan will benefit from taxpayer subsidies and be able to operate at a financial loss—competing unfairly in the marketplace until private plans are driven out of business. The government plan will become so large that it will set, rather than negotiate, prices. This will inevitably lead to monopoly, with a resulting threat to the quality of our health care.
Second, the Democrats disingenuously argue their reforms will not diminish the quality of our health care even as government involvement in the delivery of that health care increases massively. For all of us who have seen the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s response to hurricanes, this contention is laughable on its face. When government bureaucracies drive the delivery of services—in this case inserting themselves between health-care providers and their patients—quality degradation will surely come. House Democrats seem willing to accept that problem to achieve their philosophical aim—the long-term removal of for-profit entities from the health-care landscape.
Third, Mr. Obama’s rhetoric paints a picture of a massive new benefit that will actually cost average Americans less than what they pay today. The Democrats want middle-class taxpayers to believe they won’t feel the pinch of this initiative, even as their employers are assessed massive new taxes. They might as well try to argue that up is down. The analysis of the Democrats’ proposal by the Congressional Budget Office shows that it will not reduce government spending on health care, and that it will substantially increase the federal deficit—and this despite all the tax increases.
I served in the U.S. House with a majority of the current 435 representatives, and I am confident that if given the proper amount of legislative review, they will not accept the flawed Pelosi plan that is currently stuck in committee. Yet there is general agreement among Republicans and Democrats that we need health-care reform to bring costs down. This agreement can be the basis of a genuine, bipartisan reform, once the current over-reach by Mr. Obama and Mrs. Pelosi fails. Leaders of both parties can then come together behind health-care reform that stresses these seven principles:
•Consumer choice guided by transparency. We need a system where individuals choose an integrated plan that adopts the best disease-management practices, as opposed to fragmented care. Pricing and outcomes data for all tests, treatments and procedures should be posted on the Internet. Portable electronic health-care records can reduce paperwork, duplication and errors, while also empowering consumers to seek the provider that best meets their needs.
•Aligned consumer interests. Consumers should be financially invested in better health decisions through health-savings accounts, lower premiums and reduced cost sharing. If they seek care in cost-effective settings, comply with medical regimens, preventative care, and lifestyles that reduce the likelihood of chronic disease, they should share in the savings.
•Medical lawsuit reform. The practice of defensive medicine costs an estimated $100 billion-plus each year, according to the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, which used a study by economists Daniel P. Kessler and Mark B. McClellan. No health reform is serious about reducing costs unless it reduces the costs of frivolous lawsuits.
•Insurance reform. Congress should establish simple guidelines to make policies more portable, with more coverage for pre-existing conditions. Reinsurance, high-risk pools, and other mechanisms can reduce the dangers of adverse risk selection and the incentive to avoid covering the sick. Individuals should also be able to keep insurance as they change jobs or states.
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Martin Kozlowski
.•Pooling for small businesses, the self-employed, and others. All consumers should have equal opportunity to buy the lowest-cost, highest-quality insurance available. Individuals should benefit from the economies of scale currently available to those working for large employers. They should be free to purchase their health coverage without tax penalty through their employer, church, union, etc.
•Pay for performance, not activity. Roughly 75% of health-care spending is for the care of chronic conditions such as heart disease, cancer and diabetes—and there is little coordination of this care. We can save money and improve outcomes by using integrated networks of care with rigorous, transparent outcome measures emphasizing prevention and disease management.
•Refundable tax credits. Low-income working Americans without health insurance should get help in buying private coverage through a refundable tax credit. This is preferable to building a separate, government-run health-care plan.
These steps would bring down health-care costs. They would not bankrupt our nation or increase taxes in the midst of a recession. They are achievable reforms with bipartisan consensus and public support. All they require is a willingness by the president to slow down and have an honest discussion with Americans about the real downstream consequences of his ideas. Let’s start there.
Mr. Jindal is governor of Louisiana.











8 Comments
CWJensen
7:15 pm CST
July 22, 2009
THERE IS NOTHING WRONG WITH HEALTHCARE……………………………there are simply put TOO DAMN many people that do NOT belong in this country recieving FREE healthcare.
There are too MANY DAMN politicians that will sell their soul to be relected by these same people.
There are too many people that have stood back and let those same illegals and politicians ride rough shod over their RIGHTS.
It is TIME to TAKE Back what is OURS……………………ONE WAY or the OTHER.
Ringotruth
7:25 pm CST
July 22, 2009
How to make health care bipartisan? Just start liking communism. No choice, do what your told, just accept that 535 people plus the President get to make all the decisions about your body… now shut up and get on the train… and hey… what’s that, an oven? Of course it is… you are just too old, according to health ‘care’ policy to live.. so it’s YOUR turn. Yea. This is how ‘bipartisan’ leads to … welll the hammer of communism. The state owns everything, including YOU.
THIS IS SATANIC.. WHERE in the Constitution does it authorize the President or Congress to OWN the health care system and make laws that control what tests you can have or how many? Where?
I swear, if even ONE republican votes for a universal health care system, this will PROVE that there is absolutely NO difference in liberals and so called republicans. They are ALL communists with very few exceptions.
The crooks in the government have ALREADY bankrupted medicaid and medicare. What makes anyone think for even one second that anyone’s health care would be better off in the hands of yet another government run, government DICTATED, and health care RATIONED program? THIS one would be MANDATORY and unfathomably more expensive, with far, far less choice.. in fact NO choice at all.. Just sacrifice! And they really mean SACRIFICE.
In fact, they have already made up height to weight proportions which if you are unlucky enough to not fit into this pre-determined catagory, you can’t even BUY insurance anymore! You have to go into a special RISK insurance, like they do for automobile insurance when you’ve had a wreck …. imagine that. We are treated just like a cars now.
I’ve watched the government intrude on health care in the last 30 years and completely ruin it in an effort to change our once FABULOUS and affordable medical system into a scary place to EVER be, even for preventive health care. Once, health care was so affordable that you didn’t need insurance for anything except major medical. They had the SAME equipment then as they do now. I know. I was a lab tech, x-ray tech, and went to nursing school. NOTHING has changed except the costs and that has all been due to government interference in our food, our drugs, our wages – basically everything government gets its fingers into is RUINED. By God they will NOT get me to be involved in government health care. I’ll die first! And I will never set foot into that system! I have lived 2 years now without a single bit of health care and have found that my out of pocket expenses has been FAR less in one year than it cost me to pay for insurance! I carry major medical and that is all!
And, if you want a second opinion in Mr. Obama’s government run system, where do you get it when the entire system would be required to do the same thing no matter where you go. Only one test, Obama said. OK. One false positive or false negative… and your life could be over.
Health care is not up to the President or Congress. Your body is your own property and you should NEVER submit to this evil plan to remove the right to make your own choice, via health care competition. The government at all levels in my lifetime has RUINED our medical system, made it so expensive to get good care, and has added millions of illegal immigrants at OUR expense. THEY DON”T WANT health care to succeed at ALL. The sacrifice is YOU and your children.
Ringotruth
7:29 pm CST
July 22, 2009
Congress, the Prez and the Judges, along with CEO’s of corporations, banksters, etc.
They all will have a DIFFERENT health care system and we will also pay for THEIRS>
BTW, did you hear Obama tell you that not only will you pay for the universal health care system they want to force upon you, but you will also have to PAY when you go to the doctor, get treatment, or get medicines.
SHEEZ…. I’d rather not have ANY health care.
I’d rather not give them this power at ALL.
LET”S NOT allow our government servants to dictate our health… they have not done such a good job up to now, as all they have done is bring us tainted drugs, gmo food, poison in our food, animals that are full of poisons, shall I go on?
anna Sentari
12:06 am CST
July 22, 2009
Jindal will never get out of the minor leagues. Glad we found out sooner rather than later what he’s all about. If what he is talking about is so important, why didn’t he do it in Louisiana? There is nothing wrong with the system just because the other side says so. Jindal, wake up. Don’t you know the old saying about ‘if it ain’t broke?’
Well, it ain’t.
Bob Thompson
3:36 pm CST
July 22, 2009
Want to bring health care costs down? Get government out of the way and let the free market (a.k.a. competition) take over. Remember when doctors made house calls? Now you wait in their office for over an hour when you arrive early for your appointment.
Janet
5:46 pm CST
July 22, 2009
I read that even if there is an option for private insurance, it will be ‘mandatory’ and it will still be required to register with the government and show proof of insurance.
I don’t see a free market in there anywhere.
I don’t see this going over well with the American people even if they, God forbid, get it passed.
Can you spell “NO”? r-e-v-o l-u-t-i-o-n
CWJensen
7:50 pm CST
July 22, 2009
THE SENATE CAVED TODAY SO WILL THE HOUSE…………………………..BUT KEEP CALLING WRITING AND NEVER GIVE THEM A REST………………………………….THE PRESSURE REALLY WORKS BUT WE NEED MORE SOLIDERS.
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2:55 am CST
July 22, 2009
I was gonna comment on Obama’s health care bill scaring the daylights out of the Democratic party resulting in his ratings nose diving to earth. The drop is so precipitous I shall wait till it hits single digits.
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