[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 40 (Wednesday, March 16, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1712-S1713]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ANNIVERSARY OF HEALTH CARE REFORM
Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, this is the 1-year anniversary of the
President's signing of health care reform, and I am happy to stand and
say it represents one of the most important pieces of legislation in
decades. For too long, we let our Nation's health care crisis grow and
ignored it. People who said let the market work its will, have to be
honest about what the market did. The market started excluding people
who had preexisting conditions--and who among us doesn't? The market
started charging higher and higher prices for health insurance. The
market, unfortunately, was uncontrollable.
We tried to deal with it, to bring pricing under control and deal
with the realities families face across America. When I was in the most
heated debate about the health care bill with tea party devotees in
front of my office in Springfield, I told them: Let me tell you about
some of the people in Illinois I have met. At some point, the tea party
people said: Stop telling stories, Durbin. We don't want to hear any
more stories. Of course, they don't because those stories are the
reason we did this. Those stories represent real lives.
Let me tell one of those stories, representing a family who comes
from East Peoria, IL. This is Jill and Ric Lathrop. They have two sons,
Sam and Nat. One of them has a Superman t-shirt on. They are 12 and 14
years old and they have severe hemophilia. It is a rare and costly
medical condition.
Thanks to the twice-weekly injections of blood clotting replacement
factor they receive, the boys are able to live happy and healthy
lives--and they look pretty darn good in that picture. That lifesaving
medication costs roughly $250,000 per child, per year.
For years, the family has lived in fear they would reach the lifetime
limit of their insurance plan. That was a reality. Many of these plans
had a ceiling that paid no more beyond a certain amount. Well, it
happened to them in 2005. The hospital where Ric works as an MRI
technician instituted a $2 million lifetime cap on benefits. For most
families, that wouldn't even be an issue, but for the Lathrops, who
know their annual medical expenses will always total hundreds of
thousands of dollars to keep their boys alive, that was devastating.
Rather than waiting for their benefits to run out, the Lathrops moved
to Peoria, where Ric found a job that provided insurance without
lifetime limits. He moved his family and found a job to get an
insurance policy that would keep their boys alive. When the open
enrollment period for their health insurance plan rolled around, they
waited on edge to see if their insurance would, once again, institute
an annual or lifetime limit on care that would force them to move again
to ensure adequate coverage for their sons.
Thanks to the bill we passed last year, insurance companies can no
[[Page S1713]]
longer place lifetime limits on care. Think about what that means to
this family who picked up and moved and looked for a new job to get
health insurance to keep their boys alive. Is that what America should
be? I think not.
Let me be very blunt about this. As good as this law was, it was not
perfect. There are things that need to be addressed, examined, and
changed. I have said before, and say again, the only perfect law was
written on stone tablets and carried down a mountain by ``Senator
Moses.'' Everybody else has been trying and hasn't quite hit that
standard. So let's be humble about this and be open to change. But
let's not repeal this, as the Republicans have called for time and
again. Let's not say to the Lathrop family: Sorry. You are on your own
if another lifetime limit comes along that may literally endanger the
lives of these two beautiful little blue-eyed boys.
That is what this debate is about. It is a story about a real family.
That is why the other side hates to hear these stories, because the
stories literally explain why stepping backward in time and repealing
health care is exactly the wrong course for America.
I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. BARRASSO. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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