[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 130 (Friday, September 24, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7438-S7439]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTH CARE REFORM
Mr. BROWN of Ohio. Mr. President, six months ago our Nation
accomplished something that so many generations before had struggled to
achieve. Six months ago yesterday, with the enactment of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act, our Nation stood up and declared
that the health of our citizens is worth fighting for.
There has been a lot of debate, as the Presiding Officer knows, in
this Chamber and in the House of Representatives and on the talk shows
and talk radio. There is a lot of debate about theories and death
panels and health care and preexisting conditions. But behind all of
that is human beings in difficult situations. After hearing people say
things about this health care law that simply aren't true, it is
important to remember how this affects individual human beings.
This legislation began to take effect when, yesterday, several things
happened. One is that a 22-year-old who is home from school who just
got a job but doesn't have insurance in that job can stay on her
parents' health care plan until she turns 27. Small businesses can get
tax breaks to insure their employees. Something most small businesses--
almost every small businessperson I know--want to do is provide decent,
affordable health insurance to their employees. They will be better
able to do that because of this bill. Also yesterday, because of this
legislation, we saw movement toward the doughnut hole being closed.
That simply means that senior citizens, conflicted with very high
health care costs, having to choose between medication and heating
their home or proper food, cutting their pills in half or having to
skip a day in taking it because they couldn't afford it--this bill will
begin to close that doughnut hole
[[Page S7439]]
that President Bush and the Republican Congress created.
We are seeing major progress which affects individual people. Mary
from Ashtabula, OH, which is in the northeast corner of the State,
shared a story with me about her friend who is paying $56 each month
for medications to treat her chronic illness. After the doughnut hole
kicks in, she worries that her friend will have to pay literally 10
times that--not $56, which she can handle, but literally $500 per
month, which she can't. This increase will catastrophically affect her
friend, who is 80 years old and living on a tight budget. Next year,
because of this legislation that is taking effect now, Mary's friend
will see her prescription drug costs cut in half.
Robert from Cleveland wrote me a letter sharing his concerns about
being young and uninsured. As happens to many young adults, Robert was
dropped from his mother's insurance on his 21st birthday. He has been
unable to obtain full-time employment. He has remained uninsured, not
by choice but because he really had no options. In fact, he saw the
risks associated with being uninsured firsthand as he accompanied his
also uninsured friend to the hospital after sustaining a basketball
injury not too long ago. His friend left the emergency room with a
$3,000 bill. Robert understands that young adults such as him and his
friend will no longer have to face the uncertainty and fear associated
with being uninsured.
This legislation also, as of yesterday, allows States such as Ohio
and every State in the country to set up what are called high-risk
insurance pools. We all know--and the Presiding Officer knows it from
talking to people in Rochester and Duluth and St. Paul, and I have
talked to people in Toledo and Dayton and Springfield who can't get
insurance because they have a preexisting condition. So 462 Ohioans
already have signed up for what is called this high-risk insurance
pool. That means that even with a preexisting condition, those 462
Ohioans have insurance. Six months ago, they were uninsured and
uninsurable. Today, they have insurance.
Laura from Hamilton County wrote to me when she learned about the
health care law. She wrote:
I cheered when I learned that children with chronic
conditions cannot be denied health insurance coverage. I have
a child with Type 1 diabetes. I have worried for years about
what will become of him as he ages and moves off our
insurance policy. I have worried for years what his health
plan options will be. It is a relief to now be able to shift
our efforts to battling the disease, not the health care
system.
Any mother or father with a sick child wants to focus their efforts
on taking care of that illness, not fighting with insurance companies,
not worrying about cobbling together payments to pay the doctor, the
hospital, and the drug company.
I am proud to say these changes are just the beginning. As of
yesterday, when you renew or purchase a health insurance plan, you
don't have to worry about lifetime limits. We know what happens: If you
get sick, if you live in Akron or Youngstown and you get very sick and
spend a lot of time in the hospital, insurance companies--it is called
rescission--will simply cancel your insurance because you exceeded the
lifetime limits they set up. Well, no more lifetime limits because of
this bill.
From now on, recommended preventive services, immunizations,
mammograms, and other recommended screenings, will be covered without a
copay or deductible. We want people to get screened, to get preventive
care. It saves their health, and it saves all of us money. So they can
get less expensive health care. For them, taking away their requirement
to pay copays and deductibles will make a huge difference.
There are now new restrictions on private insurers from placing
unreasonable limits on your coverage. Patients can access out-of-
network emergency room services and children can no longer be denied
insurance because of a preexisting condition. Think of the parents we
talk to who have a child who is sick and can't get insurance because
that child has a preexisting condition, as if a parent wanted it that
way. Now we have fixed this.
The Presiding Officer was part of this debate, as all of us in this
institution were, during last year and the beginning of this year when
we passed this bill. We know what the opponents--people speaking mostly
on behalf of the insurance industry, the drug industry, and people who
just don't agree that we should do something like this--we know what
they did. They lied about death panels. They spread half-truths about
costs. They even labeled health care reform ``communism.''
They did the same thing with Medicare. I remember the same arguments
when I was a kid. I was 12 years old, 13 years old when Medicare
passed. They used the same arguments about Medicare. They said: The
government is going to stand between you and your doctor. They said: It
is going to turn the United States into the Soviet Union. They said: We
are never going to be able to get health insurance again. It is going
to be big government running our lives. I don't think they say that
about Medicare anymore. They have tried to dismantle and privatize
Medicare, but they know it has worked.
In the 1930s, these same people with the same philosophy campaigned
against Social Security, saying it wouldn't work. In the 1960s, they
campaigned against Medicare, saying it wouldn't work. Now they are
campaigning against the health care law.
There are Republicans all over this country--not many voters, I don't
think--who are talking about repealing the health care law. So what
they are going to do is kick the 23-year-old off their parents'
insurance. Now they are going to take away these tax breaks for small
businesses to insure their employees. They are going to reinstate the
doughnut hole. They are going to put more costs back on senior
citizens, who finally are getting some help with their drug costs. I
don't get it. They are going to bring back preexisting conditions. They
are going to say it is OK again to deny somebody coverage for a
preexisting condition. I don't think the public is going to buy that. I
don't think this institution will vote that way.
It is important to recognize from where we have come. Most of all, it
is important to think about individual human beings we have met who are
affected so positively by this law. They are going to be able to get
insurance. They are not going to be denied coverage if they have a
preexisting condition. Businesses will be able to help their employees
by covering them for insurance. Senior citizens are going to get
significant help for their drug costs. What is not to like about that?
That is why it is important that we stand firm as we mark this 6-month
beginning of these changes that will make our health care system work
better, be more responsive to people, and, most importantly, take care
of individual Americans better than ever before.
____________________