This time “repeal and replace”
is just repeal. And because it’s tucked away in the massive tax cut bill rather
than being labelled as health care reform, Congress is hoping Americans won’t
notice. Or that we’re suffering from protest fatigue. But quite apart
from the concern I expressed last week that passage of the proposed tax bill
will lead to enormous cuts in Medicare and Medicaid, the only plausible way to
begin to pay for the planned handouts to corporations and the wealthy, there’s another issue: basic access to health care. Medicare, for all its imperfections,
has for fifty years assured that people over 65 have access to medical care.
Out-of-pocket expenditures have been rising as co-payments and drug prices have
gone up, but the big-ticket items such as hospitalization are covered. The Affordable
Care Act was intended to provide comparable access to medical care for the 47
million Americans without health insurance. While there are still millions
without insurance today, the ACA has cut that number of 47 in half. The tax
bill that will go to both chambers of Congress next week would eviscerate the
ACA by removing the mandate to buy health insurance. The way that insurance
works is by spreading the risk; if healthy people can opt out of sharing in the
risk, the system collapses. Health care is no different.
The access to health insurance, and by inference to
medical care, that is at stake is primarily an issue for people under age 65.
But it affects those over 65 as well—if fifty-year-olds don’t have health
insurance and get sick, they won’t be able to serve as the support system for
their parents and grandparents. And the 62-year olds who were laid off and are
unemployable because of their age will soon, if they can hang in there just a
few more years, enroll in Medicare. If they've been uninsured for several years, they will likely enter Medicare in less than vigorous health. The effect will be an influx of sicker
people into the Medicare program—placing a further stress on Medicare
resources. So don’t let protest fatigue sink in—contact Susan Collins and John
McCain and Lisa Murkowski and any other senator who isn’t ready to repeal the
ACA, now, before it’s too late.
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