[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 55 (Thursday, April 14, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2476-S2477]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONTINUING RESOLUTION
Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Madam President, I rise near the end of this very
important and profoundly significant budget debate to make some points
not only about the dollars and cents in our health care system, but
also to speak about a growing and persistent threat--the threat of
irresponsible cutbacks to vital health care services for our Nation's
most vulnerable--in the name of an ideological war on women's health
care.
Our Nation is in the midst of a fiscal crisis. We need to recognize
that there is a very immediate and important imperative to cut the
costs of health care in this country. The costs of health care are
spiraling out of control at a rate five times the rate of inflation.
The President, commendably, is talking about the need for serious
measures and sensible conversation about what can be done to control
and reduce the costs of health care. Just this week, the administration
initiated Partnership for Patients, which is another step in the
President's continuing efforts, and I believe this body's continuing
efforts, to prevent and reduce needless costs to our health care
system. For example, reducing the incidence of re-admissions to
hospitals and providing for better outpatient treatment after people
are out of the hospital; reducing the incidence of hospital inquired
infections; to reducing the incidence of overprescription--or
misprescribed drugs--these kinds of costs are preventable. We have an
obligation to reduce those costs in health care when they are
preventable.
Higher quality at lower cost has to be our objective. And, lowering
costs also means preventive care for women when they cannot afford it.
That is what Planned Parenthood does. The threat of H. Con. Res. 36 is
to that profoundly important goal--higher quality health care at lower
cost--that we can achieve as a nation if we invest in preventive care.
The threat of H. Con. Res. 36 is, therefore, not only to the 1.4
million Medicaid patients across the country who would be deprived of
that preventive care, and not only to the more than 60,000 women in
Connecticut who are at risk, but to all of us, to our families, and to
our fiscal health. We know Planned Parenthood saves $4 for every $1
invested. Smart investments that go to provide the Pap smears, breast
exams, and other kinds of preventive health care that not only save our
health care system money, but that are an absolutely critical part of
high quality health care in the United States.
But this debate is about more than costs. It is about human beings.
It is about those women who need that preventive care for their future
and their family's futures and eventually for their children's futures.
Every woman across our Nation, including 1.4 million Medicaid patients
who consider Planned Parenthood their primary source for preventive
health, deserves to visit a health care provider she trusts--a health
care provider that many of us have in this body whether we are men or
women.
I am talking about women such as Rebecca in Meriden, CT. Rebecca's
parents' health coverage did not extend to her, and she made too much
money to qualify for Connecticut's Husky Program--too much money
meaning $10 an hour and working part time, a total of $10,000--too much
money to qualify for Husky. She depended on Planned Parenthood for
regular health screenings and contraceptive care. As she said in her
own words:
Planned Parenthood was my saving grace for my reproductive
health.
Women such as Maya, a 23-year-old uninsured young woman, a waitress,
part time, doing an unpaid internship for a nonprofit organization. She
went to Planned Parenthood for her routine Pap smear, and the results
showed abnormal cells that required a biopsy and an operation to have
the precancerous cells removed. That procedure could have been
lifesaving for Maya; as are all of the routine screenings that Planned
Parenthood provides for countless women across the country and in
Connecticut. All of these procedures take place day in and day out
around Connecticut, for a price they can afford. These stories from
Rebecca and Maya are heard around our Nation, at least 60,000 strong in
Connecticut alone.
As Martin Masselli, Community Health Center advocate and the
president of Community Health Care, Inc. in Middletown, recently said:
[[Page S2477]]
Defunding Planned Parenthood would be the moral equivalent
of turning off the electricity and a whole segment of health
care would go dark.
That is what H. Con. Res. 36 means in human terms. In dollars and
cents: preventive health care, the kind of work done by St. Vincent's
in Bridgeport and Hartford Hospital, and Yale-New Haven hosptial, and
countless others around the State and in the country because our
hospitals and health care providers are responding responsibly to the
need for higher quality and lower costs. We must preserve the momentum
to move forward and to make sure the promise, as well as the
obligation, the opportunity as well as the mandate, is fulfilled.
I call for my Senate colleagues to stand together for women such as
Rebecca and Maya and for clinics and hospitals and providers across the
Nation who depend on Planned Parenthood and to reject this resolution,
to reject the effort to turn back the clock and to settle this debate
once and for all, to end the ideological war which has itself nothing
to do with saving money; that in fact, will cost more than it saves. I
call for us to turn our attention, as we should and we must, to people
who want us to put America back to work to create jobs, to foster
economic growth, to fulfill the mandate that was articulated and
expressed so eloquently by the people of this country in this last
election, which was not to wage war on women's health.
The message was to put Connecticut and put America back to work,
create jobs and continue our fragile economic recovery.
I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Manchin). The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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