[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 40 (Thursday, March 18, 2010)]
[House]
[Page H1632]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WOMEN AND HEALTH CARE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentlewoman from California (Ms. Lee) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Ms. LEE of California. Mr. Speaker, as we stand now on the cusp of
history, we have never really been this close to assuring quality,
affordable health care for all Americans. While health care reform is
essential for everyone, women are in particularly dire need for major
changes to our health care system. Too many women are locked out of the
health care system because they face discriminatory insurance practices
and cannot afford the necessary care for themselves and for their
children.
In 40 States and in the District of Columbia, insurers are allowed to
consider gender, mind you, when setting premium rates in the individual
insurance market. This practice permits insurers to charge women more
than men for the exact same coverage. Additionally, businesses with
predominantly female workforces can end up paying significantly more
for their coverage than for predominantly male businesses.
In the past 2 years, nearly 7 million Americans have lost their
health care coverage. This is just not acceptable.
While we all know that the current health care reform bill has some
flaws--unfortunately it does not have a public option, or an expansion
of Medicare, or a single-payer option--it offers vitally important
advances for women's health. The bill makes health care coverage more
affordable and extends many health services that women need.
Without health care reform, family premiums will continue to
skyrocket leaving more and more women unable to afford health care. The
health care system is failing American women. We owe it to each and
every woman to pass this health care bill.
When I cast my vote, I will be thinking of my mother who nearly died
giving birth to me, my mother Mildred. When I cast this vote, I will be
thinking of my sister, Mildred, who suffers from multiple sclerosis. I
will be thinking of all of the women who are denied coverage because
domestic violence is considered a preexisting condition by insurance
companies. When I cast my vote, I will be thinking about so many of my
friends who died prematurely because they did not have access to
preventative health care.
And, Mr. Speaker, when I cast my vote, I'm going to be thinking about
my granddaughters Jordan, Giselle Barbara Lee, and Simone Lee, because
we, when we cast this vote, are going to ensure that my granddaughters
and my grandsons live longer and healthier lives.
So if we do nothing, the health care system will continue to work
better for insurance companies than it does for the American people.
And that is why the President has put forward a plan that will give
American families and small business owners more control over their own
health care by giving them more consumer protections and shifting power
away from the insurance companies.
But if we pass health care insurance reform, we also know that
families and businesses will have control of their health care, the
insurance industry will be prohibited finally from continuing its worst
practices like denying coverage based on preexisting conditions, and we
also will cut the deficit by up to $1 trillion over the next two
decades. As the President said this past week, if not us, then who. If
not now, then when. Now is the time.
I urge my colleagues to support this health care reform legislation
for our women, for our families, for our children, for all Americans.
This is a major first step in setting a strong foundation where finally
health care becomes a basic human right for all rather than a privilege
for the few, which it has been in the past. We are finally, mind you,
finally catching up with the rest of the industrialized world.
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