[Congressional Record Volume 155, Number 152 (Tuesday, October 20, 2009)]
[Senate]
[Pages S10565-S10566]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                           HEALTH CARE REFORM

  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, that is the reality of the Republican 
approach to the issues we face. But it is not the only issue. There are 
other issues that relate to health care where the Republican position 
is impossible for me to defend or even understand.
  Let me give you one specific example of a family in Joliet, IL. I 
will use their names because they have given me permission. Their story 
is so compelling, I want the Congressional Record to reflect it, and 
those who follow this debate to hear it.
  A few weeks ago, a small business owner from Joliet, IL, called my 
office to say:

       Please keep fighting for affordable health care and a 
     public option. Don't back down.

  That was the message.
  The man's name is Dave Poll. He and his wife Claire own the Sir 
Speedy Printing business in Joliet. The Polls opened their business in 
1980, in the middle of a bitter recession--almost 30 years ago. For 
years, they bought health insurance for their employees and themselves 
under a small group policy, but they had to drop that coverage 4 years 
ago after their premiums nearly doubled over just 3 or 4 years.
  Then the recession hit, and they had to let their employees go. Now 
it is just Dave and Claire running their little printing business. Dave 
is 59 years old. His wife Claire, who works there with him, is 57. They 
have two grown sons and a daughter in college.
  The week before Dave Poll called my office, his wife Claire had 
blacked out for a few seconds while waiting on a customer. She had been 
diagnosed with high blood pressure before, so they did not want to take 
any chances and Dave insisted she call her doctor. The doctor said she 
had to go to the hospital.
  After 2 hours in the emergency room, and less than 10 minutes with a 
doctor--less than 10 minutes--the Polls left the hospital with test 
results that did not show anything and about $2,000 in medical bills. 
Mr. President, 10 minutes, $2,000.
  Dave said:

       A lot of people have it a lot worse. Please keep fighting 
     for all of us.

  Two weeks later, Dave Poll called my office again. Claire had felt 
bone-tired at work one day, so she went back to the hospital. Tests 
showed this time that she had advanced cancer, and it has already 
spread throughout her body.
  A few days after her diagnosis, Claire spent 3 days in the hospital 
to have a port implanted and to receive her first dose of chemo. Just 
for those 3 days in the hospital--3 days now--her bill was $84,000--
$84,000. Additional chemo treatments are going to cost her $25,000 a 
month.
  Remember, the Polls--these small business owners--have no health 
insurance. They have no idea how they are going to pay these bills. In 
the first 6 months of this year, the Polls took out of their business a 
combined salary--in 6 months--of $15,000.
  That is how quickly families can be on the verge of bankruptcy in 
America, because of our broken health insurance system. One week you 
are getting by, hoping the medicines you need are on Wal-Mart's list of 
$4-a-month prescriptions, and praying that you do not have a serious 
illness or accident. Two weeks later, you can be diagnosed with an 
illness that will not only cost you your health but everything you have 
ever accumulated in your life.
  Could Claire Poll's cancer have been found sooner if they had not had 
to drop their health insurance? We will never know the answer to that. 
But we know this: 45,000 Americans each year--122 people every single 
day--die prematurely because they are uninsured. More Americans die 
every month because they do not have insurance than we lost in the 
tragedy of 9/11.
  We know health care costs are a major factor in two-thirds of all 
bankruptcies in America today. And of those people filing for 
bankruptcy because of medical bills, three-fourths of them had health 
insurance, but it was not any good. It did not help them when they 
needed it or it was rescinded at the last minute when the health 
insurance company saw you were sick and dropped the coverage. It 
happens too often in this country today.
  We know we cannot afford not to make this change. Health care 
spending in America doubles every 10 years. We are spending $2.7 
trillion a year on health care now. In 10 years, if we stay on this 
same path, America will be spending $5.4 trillion on health care, and 
the average premium for a family health insurance policy will be in the 
range of $25,000 to $30,000 a year.
  Health care spending will crowd out investments in education, green 
energy, and many other national priorities, and it will ruin more and 
more families financially. According to a new study by the Kaiser 
Family Foundation, if premiums continue to rise as quickly as they have 
over the last 5 years, the cost of the average family health policy 
will increase from $13,375 a year today to over $24,000 10 years from 
now.
  How many families can afford to take $24,000 out of their annual 
paycheck that they face now? How many families could even consider 
paying $25,000 a month for chemotherapy? Almost none of us.
  When Dave Poll called my office the second time, he said:

       Now we may become some of those people who lose their home 
     and business because of health care costs.

  Think about that. Dave and Claire: 29 years in their business, they 
gave their whole life to it, and now, because they did not have health 
insurance, they could lose everything--not just their business but 
their home as well--as Dave struggles to give Claire the care she needs 
to stay alive.
  No family should have to go through what they have been through. No 
family should be forced into bankruptcy because of illness. Every other 
country in the world--every other advanced country in the world--
provides basic health care for their citizens. These countries spend 
less than we do on health care and they ensure everybody. And on many 
important measures of health--from infant mortality to life expectancy 
at age 60--many of these countries, spending a lot less, get much 
better results.
  Several years ago, the World Health Organization made the first major 
effort to rank the health systems of 191 countries in the world. France 
and Italy were the top two. The United States was not even in the top 
10, not even in the top 20. We rank 37th in the world. We are No. 1 in 
health care spending, No. 37 in health care outcomes. That is what our 
current health care system gives us.
  The health care and insurance companies spend millions of dollars to 
scare people into thinking that universal, affordable health coverage 
for all Americans will mean less coverage and less choice for Americans 
who already have health insurance. That is just a scare tactic. Look at 
all the other countries in the world that spend less than we do, cover 
everybody, and get better health results.
  America--the wealthiest, most creative society on Earth--can solve 
this problem. It is not just a matter of science and economics, it is a 
test of our moral character, and it is a test of whether our democracy 
still works.
  The profits of America's health insurance companies have increased 
428 percent over the last 10 years. They do not need any more help from 
Congress. I wonder why my colleagues on the Republican side of the 
aisle have no alternative to this current system that has treated 
this poor family in Joliet, IL, so poorly. They do not have any 
proposal they bring before us which would address the issue of the 
cost, security, and stability of health insurance that every family and 
every business wants.

  I have yet to hear the first Republican Senator come to the floor and 
call for health insurance reform saying that we have to end this 
practice of denying coverage for preexisting conditions or when 
families get sick or when kids reach the age of 23.
  Don't they hear the same things we hear? Don't they receive the same 
kinds of e-mails and telephone calls we do? I am sure they do. But if 
they do, why aren't they joining us in this effort? Only one Republican 
Senator, Olympia Snowe of Maine, has had the political courage to step 
forward and join us in this effort--1 out of 40.
  You would think there would be other Republican Senators open to this

[[Page S10566]]

idea, understanding the current system is indefensible. Some of them 
come to the floor and it sounds as if they are reading right from the 
playbook of the health insurance companies. Oh, they talk about all the 
problems if we had a so-called public option--a public option. And it 
is just that: an option.
  Well, if you do the math--and this is rough math, but pretty close--
we have about 300 million people in America. Currently, about 40 
million of these people are under Medicaid, the health insurance for 
the poorest people and disabled people in our country. Another 45 
million are under Medicare, the health insurance for people over the 
age of 65. We have another large group of those Americans who have 
served our country covered by the veterans' health care system--one of 
the best in our Nation. Eight million people--and I am one of them--are 
part of the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program. It is a program 
for Federal employees and Members of Congress and their staff. Then 
several million are under a plan of children's health insurance--a 
government-administered plan to provide that poor kids in families who 
are struggling have health insurance across America.
  So more than one out of three Americans today has some form of 
government health insurance. The health insurance companies, the 
private companies, tell us this will ruin the system, if we had an 
option that was available such as Medicare for every family in America.
  I think they are wrong. One of the most sensible things we could do 
would be to extend Medicare's reach. What if, in the next 5 years, we 
said we are going to start saying people at the age of 60 can start 
paying premiums to be part of Medicare--in a separate pool, but 
Medicare benefits--that they pay those premiums and they will have 
coverage. Well, it would mean some people would have a fighting chance 
then, as they reach the age of 60, to have basic health insurance 
coverage before Medicare. I would extend it even lower. I would extend 
it to the age of 50, and the Poll family would have been covered. They 
would have been able to buy basic Medicare protection for Dave and 
Claire that might have diagnosed this situation at an earlier point or 
reduced the cost. But it certainly would give them the peace of mind 
that they have access to the best care in America and will not lose 
their business and their home in the process.
  I wait for the Republicans at some point in this debate to stop 
saying no and start stepping forward with some idea, some proposal, 
something that moves us on the path toward making this country an even 
healthier country, a country where the injustices of the current health 
care system are not part of our future and part of our country, but 
part of the past. That is the way it should be.
  In the next couple weeks, we are going to start the debate on health 
care reform here in the Senate. It has been a long time coming. This 
idea first came up under President Teddy Roosevelt a century ago. 
President Harry Truman suggested universal health care 60 years ago. 
President Lyndon Johnson tried his best to move it forward 40 years 
ago. Fifteen years ago, President Clinton and Mrs. Clinton tried to 
move us in this direction. They never--none of them--reached the point 
we are going to reach now, where comprehensive health care reform will 
be on the floor of the Senate, to be actively and openly debated.
  This is our chance. This is our historic opportunity. We cannot miss 
it. For the Poll family in Joliet, IL, we wish them the best and hope 
Claire gets well and feels well very soon. We hope they do not lose 
their family's savings, their home, and their business in the course of 
looking for the same basic treatment we would expect for anybody in 
this country.
  This may be one of the few places on Earth--one of the few advanced 
countries on Earth--where you can literally be driven into poverty 
because of your illness. That is what has happened to this family, who 
paid their dues and kept their business open for 29 years. We could do 
better. I hope our Republican friends will stop saying no and join us 
in this opportune moment of making history for this Nation.
  Mr. President, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Delaware.

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