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Louisville, KY
From the Kentucky Citizen/Congressional Hearing:
The crisis is rooted in the current for-profit financing of health
care. There is a solution. It is comprehensive reform based on
non-profit, public financing with private delivery of health services.
--Garrett Adams, MD, MPH, Hearing Moderator
In
everybody's family, there's a testimonial like those we heard
today . . . what's happening now is breaking people's lives.-The
Hon. Gerald A. Neal, Kentucky State Senator (pictured left)
If anyone isn't angry about this, they
just aren't listening! -Gerry C., small business owner
Her out-of-pocket expenses were 77
percent of her gross income-- and she had insurance!-Edgar Lopez,
MD, commenting on a neighbor's experience
As chair of the Health and Human Services
Committee, I represent the uninsured and the underinsured in our
community - Mary Woolridge, Metro Louisville Councilwoman
On this issue, I believe the people
are out in front of the politicians.
-John Yarmuth, Congressional candidate, KY -3rd district
Co-pays are higher, coverage is decreasing—soon
we will all be among the have-nots.
—J. Wayne Crabtree, Louisville Metro Health Department
The so-called “ownership society”
talk is just a smokescreen. The health care supply side-the insurance
companies and drug companies-they own the system and control policy.
—Mark McKinley, testifying on behalf of a friend burdened
with medical debt
I
thought this would be primarily an urban issue, but I was amazed
at the groundswell in the rural areas.
—The Hon. Joni L. Jenkins, State Representative, sponsor
of a Kentucky resolution urging Congress to enact HR 676 (pictured
to the right)
At a certain point I noticed the hushed
attentiveness of the audience, the unique bonding among everyone
there.
—Mary Ann Garnar, on the impact of the testimonials
We will pay for health care the way
we pay for all the things we think important-our justice system,
our roads, our common needs.
—Ewell Scott, MD, featured speaker
Kentuckians hold Citizens’
Hearing on Health Care Crisis
On Saturday morning, June 10, an estimated
140 people joined elected representatives, public health officials,
and health care providers at Calvary Episcopal Church in downtown
Louisville to hear the testimonials of individuals who understand
the real costs of our national health care “meltdown.”
Representing diverse interests—the
uninsured, the underinsured, small business owners, those coping
with the increasing costs of premiums and/or medication, and those
burdened by medical debt-the testifiers told their stories, hoping
to move both the public and public officials to take immediate
action.
The two-hour event, billed as a “Citizens’
Congressional Hearing on the Health Care Crisis,” was sponsored
by Kentuckians for Single Payer Health Care (KSPH) and the Kentucky
Chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP-KY).
Co-sponsors included 33 labor and social justice organizations
(listed below).
The forum was one of 70 such hearings
being held across the country, and one of many special events
scheduled during the week of 6/7/06, a week of national action
called by Healthcare-NOW.org in support of HR 676, the United
States National Health Insurance Act, the single payer plan proposed
by Congressman John Conyers.
Congressional candidate John Yarmuth,
whose platform includes single payer, joined State Senator Gerald
Neal, State Representative Joni Jenkins, Louisville Metro Councilwoman
Mary Woolridge, and Metro Health Department official Wayne Crabtree,
on the hearing panel.
Congresswoman Anne Northup was invited,
but she responded through staff that she would be unable to attend.
Kentucky
House members Darryl Owens (left) and Jim Wayne (right) were in
the audience, and several state lawmakers—from both sides
of the aisle—sent messages of support for the event.
Each testimonial addressed a different
facet of our broken health care system. Gerry C., owner of a small
business, had tracked the percentage rise in the employer’s
share of premium costs over the past few years, finally admitting
that he could no longer cover his employees and stay in business.
“If anyone isn’t angry about this, they just aren’t
listening,” he concluded.
Paula V. spoke tearfully of her husband’s
need for a liver transplant. The family, including two young children,
has been caught in a bureaucratic nightmare, asked to meet competing
criteria for disability benefits, the wife’s employer-based
insurance, and Passport/Medicaid. Through it all, a very sick
young man has been asked to jump through multiple financial and
therapeutic hoops.
Michele F., a self-employed widow in
her mid-forties, was paying $2000 annually for a catastrophic
plan when, last summer, the catastrophe occurred. Michele suffered
a stroke, spent three days in the hospital and is now trying to
pay off $7,000 in out-of pocket expenses. Currently, she has a
family policy with a $20,000 deductible and prays her children
don’t get ill.
Carrie I., a young mother who has asthma
and high blood pressure, spoke of having remained in a very unpleasant
job because she feared losing her health coverage. Although she
now has a better work situation, health care expenses absorb one
third of her salary. She admits to skimping on her own medication,
and must often renegotiate with her insurer to make certain her
children are covered.
An uninsured home health aide, Francene
S., age 51, told of her struggles to get specialized care after
her heart attack. She worries what will happen if the stents in
her heart need to be replaced. She works and has tried to get
insurance but the $2000 to $3000 monthly premiums quoted are far
beyond her ability to pay.
Mark McKinley relayed the story of
his friend, Penny K, injured in a kayaking accident. Penny had
been paying $290 a month for what she thought was adequate health
insurance. She received excellent medical care for severe back
and neck trauma, but she has been left with a debt of $11,000
for uncovered expenses. “The so-called ‘ownership
society’ talk is just a smokescreen,” Mr. McKinley
remarked. “The health care supply side-the insurance companies
and drug companies-they own the system and control policy. We
get stiffed and just own more debt. It’s time to say ‘no’
to the status quo! “
Speaking
for the Jefferson County Teachers’ Association (JCTA) and
Jobs with Justice, Ann Walsh recalled that health care was the
major issue in the teachers’ recent round of negotiations
with the State. She expects it to come up again. She decried the
“greed of the health insurance industry” as costs
are increasingly being shifted to the worker.
The Reverend A. David Bos reminded
attendees of the accumulating wealth and political power of the
health care and pharmaceutical industries. Public monies that
should be used to fight disease and environmental harms are being
funneled instead to the profit-making health care “juggernaut.”
Dr. Edgar Lopez, a member of PNHP-KY,
wore black armbands in memory of the estimated 18,000 who die
each year for lack of access to care. Waving invoices as proof
of the out-of-pocket costs paid by a neighbor who suffered from
a chronic illness, Lopez exclaimed, “Her out-of-pocket expenses
were 77 percent of her gross income—and she had insurance!”
Reflecting on the combined impact of
the testimonials, KSPH member Mary Ann Garnar said, “At
a certain point I noticed the hushed attentiveness of the audience,
the unique bonding among everyone there.”
The featured speaker, Dr. Ewell Scott,
an internist from Morehead, KY and also a PNHP member, outlined
“the single payer solution.” He explained how a national
nonprofit health insurance system would work, and why attempts
at short-term fixes will not. “Reducing the number of health
insurance companies in the US from an estimated 2,000 to one will
save us 400 billion dollars a year,” he exclaimed. “No
one disputes these figures.”
To those who would ask how the system
would be financed, Dr. Scott offered this response: “We
will pay for health care the way we pay for all the things we
think important-our justice system, our roads, our common needs.”
The savings generated by the administrative
efficiency of single payer, combined with the public dollars already
in our system, would provide enough funds to cover everyone in
the US. If supplemental financing is necessary, HR 676 proposes
minimal taxes. “There will be no premiums, no co-pays,”
Dr. Scott reminded his listeners, adding that any required taxes
would be levied equitably: “Each of us will participate
to the degree that we are able.”
“My plea is to spread the word,”
Dr. Scott concluded. “Talk to your representatives about
single payer. Tell them ‘It’s easy, but you’ve
got to have the guts to do it!’”
Members of the hearing panel were asked
to give a brief response. They thanked the testifiers for their
courage in speaking out, and they pledged to redouble efforts
in support of health care for all.
“In everybody’s family,
there’s a testimonial like those we heard today,”
observed Senator Neal. “That means there’s an army
out there waiting to be organized, to be focused [on reform] .
. . what’s happening now is breaking people’s lives.”
The Senator promised to support a state
endorsement of HR 676, but he believes true reform must be implemented
at the federal level. He urged the hearing organizers to continue
efforts to raise public awareness, to educate their representatives
on the merits of single-payer. Referring to the challenging task
ahead, the Senator spoke bluntly: “The insurance companies
are well organized and well funded. Only sustained activity by
motivated volunteers can counteract the power of that ‘paid
army.’”
J. Wayne Crabtree brought greetings
from the Director of the Louisville Metro Health Department, Dr.
Adewale Troutman who has researched the more equitable delivery
of health care in countries having single-payer systems.
Public health officials view health
care from a disease prevention perspective, said Mr. Crabtree.
“As we have seen with HIV-AIDS and other infectious diseases,
sickness can quickly spread throughout the world.”
Moving the argument for reform to the
local level, Crabtree reported that an estimated 12 percent of
Kentuckians are uninsured. “These individuals have names,
faces, and families.” Even the insured cannot be complacent:
“Co-pays are higher, coverage is decreasing—soon we
will all be among the have-nots.”
“Health care for all is long
overdue,” exclaimed Councilwoman Woolridge, pledging to
work towards passage of a Metro Council resolution in support
of HR 676. She invited area residents to sign up to speak at local
Council meetings. “As Chair of the Health and Human Services
Committee,” she pointed out, “I represent the uninsured
and the underinsured in our community.” She closed with
a quote from Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., noting that his words
are still relevant today: “Of all the forms of inequality,
injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane.”
Candidate Yarmuth urged voters to boldly
confront candidates on health care, to track campaign donations
from the health care industry, and to vote for those who support
a national single payer system. Facing an incumbent well-funded
by the for-profit health care sector, he acknowledged that it
is not easy “to discuss a complex issue like health care
reform in sound bites.” Mr. Yarmuth is, however, encouraged
by the fact that “on this issue, I believe the people are
out in front of the politicians.”
Rep. Joni Jenkins recalled her work
as sponsor of HCR 40 (a State resolution calling on Congress to
enact the Conyers bill) during the recent Kentucky legislative
session.” I thought this would be primarily an urban issue,
but I was amazed at the groundswell in the rural areas. Several
colleagues, Republicans as well as Democrats, came to me and said,
‘I need to sign on to this. I am hearing about this back
home.’” The resolution went to the House floor with
bipartisan support but the bill was not ultimately called for
a vote.
“Don’t worry—we’ll
be back in Frankfort for the next session,” said KSPH Coordinator
Kay Tillow, issuing an urgent call for grassroots action. Ms.
Tillow has been successful in gaining endorsements for HR 676
from labor organizations around the country.
Dr. Garrett Adams, coordinator of PNHP-KY,
explained the rationale for holding such a public hearing: “It
is clear that we have a very serious health crisis in this country
caused by a gradual change of health care delivery from a human
service, a social good, to a market-driven industry. The crisis
is rooted in the current for-profit financing of health care.
As Dr. Scott has said, there is a solution. It is comprehensive
reform based on non-profit, public financing with private delivery
of health services. The United States Health Insurance Act, HR
676 will accomplish this true reform. Our people deserve to see
this bill enacted.”
Hearing co-sponsors: AFSCME Local 2629,
Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1447, Citizens Against Police
Abuse, Coalition for the People’s Agenda, Crescent Hill
Presbyterian Church, Fairness Campaign, Fellowship of Reconciliation,
Graphic Communications Union Local 619-M, Greater Louisville Central
Labor Council, Interfaith Paths to Peace, Jefferson County Chapter
Kentuckians for the Commonwealth, Jefferson County Teachers Association,
Justice Resource Center, KY AFL-CIO, KY Alliance Against Racist
& Political Repression, KY Coalition Against the Death Penalty,
KY Interfaith Task Force on Latin America & the Caribbean,
KY Jobs with Justice, KY Nurses Association, Laborers’ International
Union Local 576, Louisville Branch of the NAACP, Louisville Peace
Action Community, Louisvillians in Favor of Equality, Metropolitan
Housing Coalition, National Writers Union-UAW 1981, Nurses Professional
Organization, Pro-Se Plaintiffs & Litigants Association, Social
Concerns Committee—First Unitarian Church, Teamsters Local
89, UAW Local 862, University of Louisville Peace and Justice
Committee, Western KY Area Council AFL-CIO, Women in Transition
Submitted by Harriette Seiler, hearing
coordinator. hmseil01@insightbb.com
www.kyhealthcare.org
Kentuckians for Single Payer
Healthcare
(502) 636 1551
Healthcare-NOW!:
339 Lafayette Street,
New York, NY 10012
info@healthcare-now.org
Phone: 800-453-1305