[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 40 (Thursday, March 18, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H1633-H1634]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTH CARE REFORM
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentlewoman from Ohio (Ms. Kaptur) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Ms. KAPTUR. I thank the gentlewoman from California, Congresswoman
Woolsey, for calling us together tonight on such an important topic and
rise to speak for decent health insurance for all of our people as
essential to respecting life, to preserving life, and to protecting
life from the very beginning to the very end.
The health system we have now does not adequately respect, protect,
or preserve life. In fact, America doesn't even rank in the top 12 of
global nations in terms of the quality of our health care. That is
truly shocking. Yet we spend enormous amounts of money, and yet so many
people are left out. There's not time to talk about all of them tonight
in 5 minutes, so I am pleased to join my colleagues in focusing on
women and children of this great Nation who need health care reform.
In our country, every year, more than a half million, 530,000 babies,
one out of every eight, are born premature in our country. Premature
birth is the leading cause of newborn death and a major cause of
lifelong disability. These outcomes are morally wrong, and they are
ultimately very expensive, very expensive to our society, most
expensive to those children.
The March of Dimes reports that, in 2008, more than 20 percent of
American women of childbearing age, more than one-fifth, 12.4 million
American women, were uninsured. They also report that uninsured women
receive fewer prenatal services and report greater difficulty in
obtaining needed preventive care than women with insurance. Ohio, the
State that I represent, is among the worst States for its premature
birth rate. The primary reason for this is because we have among the
highest rates of uninsured women.
If we think about some of the most gruesome aspects of what happens,
in 2006, which was the most recent study conducted in the United States
by the Centers for Disease Control, in our country, 846,181 abortions
were reported. Studies have shown that for approximately three out of
four women who have an abortion, their belief is they cannot afford a
child, and that was one of the key reasons for having to make that
life-changing decision. Economic hardship, lack of access to health
insurance and to health care, and even the lack of medicines all play a
part in the gruesome number of abortions and premature births in our
country.
The women of our Nation, the children of our Nation, all people of
our Nation deserve a better chance.
The bill that's working its way to the floor will ban preexisting
conditions and help expand coverage and access to women's health care,
prenatal health care, to all of our people. It provides financial
assistance surely to women who want to bring their baby to term or put
the child up for adoption but fear they simply cannot afford it. What a
terrible choice that must be for any woman. We know that the bill
before us will improve community health clinics. In so many of our
communities, they are the only lifelines to any health care at all.
Importantly, the bill that is moving to the floor intends to leave no
one out, even the smallest among us, even the most voiceless among us.
The bill we will soon consider has some fine points yet to be
perfected. There is no question that for women and children, finally,
all will have access to decent health care coverage, and it will be a
great day in America when that will be possible.
All of us have situations in our own families where we have seen
relatives grow older. This was certainly the case in our family, and
without Medicare our grandmother would have had a very different end.
Lyndon Johnson gave her dignity. All the Democrats and some Republicans
who created that program in the House back in those days made the end
of her life one with dignity. We would hope that that would be the case
for all of America's
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families, the beginning of life to the end of life.
I thank the women of the House and Congresswoman Woolsey for making
this evening possible.
____________________