Obama expects passage of ‘good healthcare bill’
By the Associated Press
President Barack Obama began a week that will dwell heavily on overhauling the healthcare system, declaring himself confident Congress will pass “a good healthcare bill” even though some Republican opponents were trying to kill the measure for political gain.
At the same time, the president and some members of both parties were shifting from hard positions about a government insurance option toward some agreement on reducing medical care costs and restricting insurance company practices
Consensus appeared to be growing on the need to prevent the insurance industry from denying coverage to those with existing medical conditions or canceling policies when a person becomes seriously ill.
A Washington Post-ABC News poll published Monday found the public in a virtual deadlock on the Democrats’ health plan, with 46 percent favoring the proposed changes and 48 percent against them. Americans are also closed divided on whether they should be required to have health coverage, with 51 percent in favor and 47 percent opposed.
The survey was conducted Thursday through Saturday, after the president’s address to Congress, and had a sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
“I believe that we will have enough votes to pass not just any healthcare bill, but a good healthcare bill that helps the American people, reduces costs, actually over the long-term controls our deficit. I’m confident that we’ve got that,” Obama said in an interview broadcast Sunday on CBS’ “60 Minutes.”
Obama’s spokesman, Robert Gibbs, reiterated that the president prefers the public option, but has said “what’s most important is choice and competition.”
Sen. Olympia Snowe, the Maine Republican who could be the party’s only senator who votes with Democrats, believes choice and competition can be ensured without the public option.
“It’s not on the table. And it won’t be,” she said Sunday. “We’ll be using the co-op as an option at this point, as the means for injecting competition in the process.”
Snowe sits on a six-member panel—three from each party—of the Senate Finance Committee that is writing a version of the healthcare overhaul bill.
Instead of the government running a program that provides low-cost health insurance, Snowe and fellow negotiators are considering a not-for-profit cooperative system. Those backing the measure contend it would substantially lower health insurance premiums by cutting out private-industry profits and guarantee coverage to all who want it.
Such systems exist in some areas of the country but their success has been spotty.
Obama is trying to sweeten the deal for Republicans by indicating he is open to their ideas.
In his Wednesday speech and again in the CBS interview, the president signaled he was open to so-called tort reform. Under current practice, doctors and hospitals must pay huge amounts to insure themselves against malpractice lawsuits by patients seeking large court-ordered settlements for poor treatment.
Democrats, thanks to heavy backing from lawyers, have not supported Republican efforts to limit such payments. Doctors—and Republican politicians—say the current system drives up costs through unneeded medical procedures ordered by physicians who fear being sued.
“I would be willing to … consider any ideas out there that would actually work in terms of reducing costs, improving the quality of patient care,” Obama said in the Sunday interview, which was taped Friday.
While he said he did not back limits on court-ordered rewards for malpractice, he said “there are a range of ideas that are out there, offered by doctors’ organizations like the AMA (American Medical Association), that I think we can explore.”
Gibbs spoke on CNN’s “State of the Union.” Snowe appeared on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”
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September 17, 2009 No Comments
Obama sticks by healthcare IT in prime time plea for reform
WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama says the nation can use healthcare IT to dig itself out of the ever-increasing burden of escalating healthcare costs.
In his fourth prime time TV press conference Wednesday night, Obama said he would like to see a bill pushed through as early as this summer, but he won’t sign a bill that puts the majority of the burden on the backs of the middle class.
As Capitol Hill debates the merits of proposed healthcare reforms, the president has been lobbying for change, making almost daily speeches to educate the American public on what his reform plan would hold.
Obama and the Democrats have said two-thirds of the cost of the proposed healthcare overhaul would come from eliminating wasteful or fraudulent spending of taxpayer dollars. The remaining third is up for debate, with Obama recommending limiting tax deductions for the wealthiest Americans to match deductions available to middle class Americans. He said he is not sure if Congress will follow his advice, and the House is currently considering taxing Americans who jointly earn more than $1 million a year.
Obama’s speech and his answers to questions about healthcare reform emphasized that change must come, and it will involve the use of healthcare IT to eliminate duplicate testing, prevent medical errors, help monitor chronic care, encourage preventive care and help doctors know what care is most effective. Without these changes, he said, the nation will maintain a status quo that will bankrupt more families.
“Currently, 14 million Americans lose their health insurance every day,” Obama said. “This is about Americans who don’t have healthcare, and this is about every American who has ever worried about losing healthcare.”
Obama rebuffed recent attacks from Republicans over the healthcare plans. “This isn’t about me. I have excellent healthcare, as do all the members of Congress. This is about the American people,” he said.
He also reiterated that his plan would provide a public plan to compete with the private insurance industry, helping to drive innovative market solutions to lowering costs.
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July 24, 2009 No Comments
