[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 183 (Thursday, December 1, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H8063-H8069]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GOP DOCTORS CAUCUS: MEDICARE SENIORS AND OBAMACARE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 5, 2011, the gentleman from Louisiana (Mr. Fleming) is
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
Mr. FLEMING. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I come before this House tonight to talk about a very important
issue--it's been important for years, and it's going to be increasingly
important and increasingly a part of the debate--and that is health
care, and particularly health care for our seniors. We've got lots
going on. ObamaCare, of course, was passed in 2010, and we're running
into all sorts of problems. Of course, I and my Republican colleagues
here tonight voted against it.
I'm joined tonight, by the way, by two of my colleagues, Dr. Phil
Roe, an obstetrician from the great State of Tennessee, and Dr. Scott
DesJarlais, who is, like me, a family physician.
I thought I would just give a brief introduction about Medicare and
how that fits into the budget. I know that Dr. Roe is going to talk in
more detail about that.
No speaker would be complete without a chart, and I have several
tonight. This is one I think that's important for everybody to
understand. This pie chart breaks up spending for the Federal budget.
If you will notice, the vast majority of this pie is in what we call
permanent mandatory or so-called entitlement spending and interest.
What makes up a large part of mandatory spending is Social Security,
Medicare, and Medicaid. The size of this pie, this section of the pie,
is growing. In fact, if you recall, back in the nineties we actually
balanced the budget. The last time we balanced it, I think was in the
late nineties. It was a lot easier to do back then because entitlement
spending, permanent spending, was not in place to the extent that it is
today. It was growing, but not as big.
What is the difference between mandatory spending and discretionary
spending, which is the other two pieces of this pie? Mandatory means
that if you qualify for a certain type of service or payment, whether
you're on Medicare, Medicaid, whether you earned it or not, if you
qualify for it, the government must pay. No matter who shows up or how
many people show up, the government must pay. So, therefore, the
government cannot per se control that cost.
Discretionary cost, on the other hand, is split into two: defense,
which is around $600 billion to $700 billion a year; and nondefense
discretionary, which is what we run the government on. That we can
adjust, although we've not done a good job in controlling this. In
fact, that's increased probably 25 percent just in the last 2 years
under President Obama.
But I want to illustrate for you what the problem is, and that is
that the entitlement spending, which we don't control, with an aging
population and the fact that it's dependent on government spending, is
growing at a much faster rate than our revenues and inflation.
{time} 1910
This is a chart that outlines where we are today with Social
Security, Medicaid and Medicare, the part of entitlement spending. Now,
let me say, first of all, Social Security is down here in the purple,
and you notice that it slants upward and then it flattens out. Social
Security is not our problem. Let me repeat that: Social Security is not
our problem.
And people who are on it or will be on it, in my opinion, have
nothing to worry about. Now, we may have to tweak it, we may have to
adjust it, but you'll notice that the cost really rises relatively
slowly, and that's just a matter of demographics. And we can adjust
this, as we have in the past, and make this sustainable. There are
other ways to do it, in terms of allowing Social Security recipients to
invest some of their money and so forth, but that's beyond the scope of
discussion tonight.
The next group in green is Medicaid and other health care. You'll
notice it's going up faster. And Medicaid is health care for the poor.
And then finally in red you see Medicare, and you see how that explodes
and it goes up continuously. Medicare alone will completely displace
all the budgetary spending eventually if we don't bring that under
control. And that would mean we'd have to give up on government itself,
we'd have to give up on a national defense--everything--unless we begin
to control that.
Now, at the rate things are going, Medicare will run out of money,
become insolvent by 2020. And that is straight from the CBO, the
Congressional Budget Office. Another way to look at it is that our
spending is now equal to 15 percent of the total Federal spending is
Medicare, blowing out of control. What has made this worse is ObamaCare
actually cut $500 billion, that is, half a trillion dollars, out of
Medicare to use for subsidies for middle class health care plans.
So let me repeat: Medicare is running out of money; it's exploding
through the roof. And what does ObamaCare do, the Members who voted for
it, it actually cuts money out of it and depletes it of money in the
future so that it becomes insolvent. And here's where the cuts are:
$135 billion for Medicare Advantage, which is the private health care
version of Medicare, $112 billion, which was taken from hospitals,
$39.7 billion from home health, $14.6 billion from nursing homes, and
$6.8 billion from hospice care. These are very real cuts.
And the only explanation that the other side gave us, our Democrat
friends, is that somehow we'll cut out fraud, waste and abuse. Well,
let me warn you, any time a politician tells you he's capable of doing
that, watch out, because I've never seen it done and I don't expect to
see it done in the future. Because, you see, in order to cut out the
massive fraud, waste and abuse, you have to spend even more money to
find all the bad actors. The best way to do away with fraud, waste and
abuse is to make the system much smaller, perhaps even privatize it,
and make the system accountable rather than a Big Government
bureaucracy, which wastes money, whether we're talking about the
Department of Defense or Medicare. So that should give you kind of a
beginning of where we are with Medicare.
Let me just close my opening remarks by saying that there's basically
two options when it comes to making Medicare again solvent and
available for us in the future. There is a Republican plan, which would
allow you, if you are currently on Medicare or 10 years from becoming
on Medicare, to keep Medicare as it is. And it is sustainable, as far
as the CBO tells us, indefinitely.
However, we would have to reform that for younger adults today who
will be senior citizens by opening up the insurance system, creating a
marketplace for seniors to buy insurance, and then let government help
them with what we call ``premium support,'' and allowing competition in
private care to drive the cost down and raise the level of service. In
fact, what we in Congress have today is the very same thing.
The Democrats, their plan is this: goose egg, no plan whatsoever.
Under their plan--or non-plan--Medicare runs out of money in 8 years.
And they've failed to present an idea, much less a bill, as we have,
that would even solve that. Well, that gives you an idea of some of our
opening discussion.
First tonight, I want to introduce my good friend, Phil Roe. Dr. Phil
Roe, as I said, is an obstetrician. I think he has some comments about
the financing of Medicare and other things as well.
Mr. ROE of Tennessee. I thank you, Dr. Fleming, and I appreciate you
hosting this hour tonight and a chance for us to discuss in detail the
health care of this Nation.
You know, about 4 or 5 years ago I made a decision, after 31 years of
practice, to think about running for Congress. And one of the reasons
was I knew that the health care issue was going to be huge in the
debate in this Nation's future. And, boy, has that turned out to be
prophetic.
Secondly, the thing that I noticed in my patients when I practiced,
the single biggest factor for both Medicare patients and my other
private patients and patients without health insurance, was it was too
expensive; it cost too much money to go see the doctor and go to the
hospital. If it were more affordable, more of us would have health care
coverage.
Thirdly, we had a group of patients in my practice that couldn't
afford expensive health insurance premiums.
[[Page H8064]]
They both worked. Let's say it was a carpenter, perhaps his wife worked
at a local diner or at a local retailer that may not provide health
insurance coverage, and they make $35,000 or $40,000 a year, but they
could not afford $1,000 a month for health insurance coverage. And,
lastly, we have a liability crisis in this country.
The other thing that we're going to get into a little later in this
discussion today--and this is the absolute sacrosanct in health care--
is that health care decisions--and I'm going to say this a couple of
times--health care decisions should be made between a patient and the
doctor and that patient's family. It should not be made by an insurance
company, and it should not be made by the Federal Government. And we're
going to talk a little bit later about the Independent Payment Advisory
Board that will be making those decisions in the future.
Do we need health care reform in America? Absolutely. Do we need this
type of health care reform? Absolutely not. It's a disaster. And we'll
go into that a little later about what my major concern is for my
patients that I left in Johnson City, Tennessee, which was how are they
going to access a Dr. John Fleming, how are they going to access a Dr.
Scott DesJarlais, who are family practice primary care physicians. And
the group I have at home that I'm in that I left to come here had over
80 primary care providers. How are they going to access those?
Well, let's go look at where we were in the sixties when I was a
young college student, which was that we had a group of people, my
grandparents and so forth, who would be retiring. And at that point in
time, because their insurance was tied to their employment--if they had
health insurance coverage--there was no way for them to get any
coverage. They couldn't buy it; there was no way it could be provided
for. So the Federal Government then got involved in this by forming
Medicaid and Medicare in 1965.
Our Medicare program in 1965 was a $3 billion program. There was no
Congressional Budget Office at that time, but the estimates were that
in 25 years--so in 1990--this program was going to be a $15 billion
program. The actual number was $110 billion. They missed it by seven
times. And in your initial graph right here, if you had placed in that
graph, Dr. Fleming, interest on the national debt--the one you showed
with Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security--by 2020 or 2022, even at
current interest rates, it will absorb the entire Federal budget. And
that is why we're having this discussion today, to save Medicare.
I want to mention just briefly, because we'll kick this off later, in
the current health care bill there have been many changes to Medicare.
There are increased taxes on medical devices. The President said the
other day--and we're going to talk about it next week, I think, and
debate the payroll tax--about how he was a tax cutter. Well, I would
suggest that the President read his own health care bill because there
are massive tax increases in that bill.
The Independent Payment Advisory Board is a bureaucratically
appointed board, 15 people appointed by the President--and I don't want
a Republican President appointing them and I don't want a Democrat
President appointing them--approved by the Senate to do what? To look
at this Medicare, as we've pointed out, with millions of Medicare
recipients each day and--as Dr. Fleming pointed out--$500 billion to
$550 billion less going into the system. More people going in, people
living longer--much longer, which is a very good thing--we're looking
at a catastrophe for our Medicare program if we don't make some
proactive changes now.
{time} 1920
And how can you talk about how can you fix a system that everybody in
this Chamber knows is broken--all 435 of us know it--if you can't even
discuss it, if you're accused of dumping Grandma off a cliff if you
even talk about a system that--I personally am on Medicare. Right now
I'm a Medicare recipient, so I have a vested interest in seeing that
this program works for current seniors.
I was at Furman University Monday night speaking to a group of
college students on health care. It was a privilege to be there. It's a
great college. A big turnout of young people. And it was embarrassing
for me to look at those young people who are just beginning their
careers and to think that we're going to not leave them the same access
to care that I have available to me right now.
If you look at these numbers, Dr. Fleming, you see that it is not
sustainable, so we have to have this conversation. I want to thank you
for holding this 1-hour.
I see we have numerous other colleagues here tonight.
Mr. FLEMING. I thank the gentleman.
We have also been joined, in addition to Dr. Scott DesJarlais, by Dr.
Phil Gingrey, also an OB-GYN; Nurse Ann Marie Buerkle; and Nan
Hayworth, an ophthalmologist from New York. So we've got a full cadre.
If anybody here has a headache or, certainly, a heart attack, I think
they would be very well taken care of on the floor of the House.
With that, I'm going to ask Dr. DesJarlais to talk to us a little
bit. I think you have an interest in some of this discussion on IPAB
and perhaps other things, so I'd love to hear what you have to say,
sir, on that.
Mr. DesJARLAIS. Thank you, Dr. Fleming. And I, like Dr. Roe,
appreciate you holding this tonight because I think there's so much
fear, frustration, and confusion among our Nation's seniors right now
about what's really going on. There's a lot of misinformation out
there. And I think it's good that we, as health care providers, can get
together and help clear up some of the misinformation because, as Dr.
Roe said, we should never let the government or bureaucrats get between
the doctor and the patient. That's a very important relationship, and I
think most all patients would agree.
How did we get into this mess?
It's really kind of mind boggling that it has come this far. And as
you stated earlier, the Democrat plan is doing nothing; and we know
that the consequences of that as, per the CBO, the actuary of CMS, Mr.
Foster, has said Medicare will be bankrupt by 2020. So we cannot afford
to do nothing. And we got into this mess really just by kind of the
head-in-the-sand approach that sometimes occurs here in Washington.
As Dr. Roe mentioned, Medicare was initiated in 1965, and at that
time the life expectancy for a male was 68. Well, thankfully, through
good medicine, good follow-up, good care, better drugs, better
techniques, the life expectancy has gone up at least by a dozen years.
But that being said, there really wasn't any planning for that
increase. A program that was designed for, on average, 3 years of
coverage is now 12 years more, and so that's part of the problem.
A second big factor is we all knew about the baby boomers. Everyone
knows about them. And the bottom line is they have started hitting the
system at an alarming rate. Ten thousand new members every day are
entering the Medicare system. Again, something that we've all seen
coming, but it wasn't accounted for in terms of cost; and Dr. Roe
explained how it was underestimated greatly what it would cost in the
first place.
We know that people pay into Medicare because that is going to be
their health care plan when they retire. That's what was promised to
them. So we can't do nothing.
In the Paul Ryan plan, we laid out that those 55 and older won't have
to worry about it. We know that we can't do nothing, so those 55 and
under will have to make changes, as you discussed, and I'm sure we'll
discuss more.
But for those seniors out there that are concerned that the
Republican plan is cutting them off or killing Medicare as we know it
simply isn't true. We're trying to preserve, protect, and save it for
future generations as well as take care of them.
Right now you can take an average couple who makes $80,000 a year and
they pay, over a lifetime, about $109,000 in Medicare taxes into the
program. But with health care costs the way they are now, the average
extraction for that same couple is $343,000.
Mr. FLEMING. If the gentleman will yield on that point, I want to be
sure that that's not missed, and that may be the most important
statement made tonight. I believe you said that, through a lifetime, a
Medicare recipient will pay in an average of 100,000 or so dollars but
will take out, on average, $300,000.
[[Page H8065]]
So what we really have with Medicare is somewhat of a subsidy system
which does not subsidize according, necessarily, to need. My point in
saying that is: Warren Buffett, today, because he's over 65, qualifies
for Medicare, and if he gets care, I assume would get the same
subsidized care, subsidized by whom? Taxpayers--middle-class, working-
class people who pay the private insurance rates.
In some ways, Medicare has become not just help for the poor and the
elderly, but just subsidy for people over 65. And so we're going to
have to look at: Is there a way in the future that we can even this
out, where we're not necessarily subsidizing for those who are capable
of paying some of their own costs?
Mr. DesJARLAIS. Right.
As you say, it's clear that $1 in for $3 out doesn't add up by
anybody's math, even Washington's math. So those factors make it very
clear that Medicare is on an unsustainable path.
I find it very frustrating that so many people are living in fear
right now with this misinformation. And if any of the other Members--
I'm sure they experienced, as my office did, the AARP here, a few weeks
ago, had seniors calling Congressmen to say, you know, Don't cut our
Medicare. They're referring to the SGR cuts, which actually pertains to
the doc fix. But the seniors are confused thinking that their Medicare
was actually going to be cut 30 percent or 29, 27 percent, whatever it
is. And so when they were calling my office, I was glad to tell them,
Yes, we get it. That actually is a cut to physician reimbursement.
But what it does to seniors, more concerning, is that it's going to
limit their access to care, because physicians right now are in a
position where they can't afford the overhead to even keep their
practices open.
I think it was good that the AARP brought that to their attention,
but it certainly is great that we have the opportunity tonight to clear
that up for our seniors, that it's not a cut, a direct cut to their
Medicare benefits, but it is going to directly impact their access to
care.
Mr. FLEMING. Absolutely. I thank you for the wisdom of your
experience, Dr. DesJarlais.
I'd like to turn to Dr. Gingrey here. He's joined us and, of course,
has conducted a number--I can't even count the number that I've
participated in with Dr. Gingrey with respect to Special Orders that
we've had.
And before doing that, just to follow up on what Dr. DesJarlais said
about the 100,000 in, 300,000 back, I can recall one day in my own
practice sitting there and thinking about the three patients that I
just saw. In Room 1, I saw a little lady who's on Medicare who could
barely scrape by by the end of the month, and she's on Medicare and
getting the benefits of Medicare, and God bless her, she was getting
them. And then I thought about the second room where there was a
gentleman who's a multimillionaire. But you know what? My charge to
both of them and what Medicare did for both of them was precisely the
same.
I just couldn't quite understand that, especially when I thought
about the little mother in Room 3 who's on private insurance, two-
paycheck family, baby, barely scraping by, paying far more in their
premiums than someone in Medicare and having to raise children. It was
her insurance premiums that were subsidizing both the little old lady
who was poor and the multimillionaire.
We're going to have to do something about that to make the economics
of this system work. It is unsustainable, as we know.
Dr. Gingrey, I would like to ask you if you could give us a few
words, sage wisdom on what your perspective of where we are with health
care, ObamaCare, Medicare, and all the other cares that we're talking
about.
Mr. GINGREY of Georgia. I thank the gentleman from Louisiana, Dr.
Fleming, for yielding, Mr. Speaker, and I thank our leadership for
giving us this hour to focus in on Medicare and ObamaCare, formally, I
guess, called Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. We all know
it to be the Unaffordable Care Act.
But I think it's very important, Mr. Speaker, and instructive for the
folks back home, especially our seniors, to look at this body and the
other Chamber as well, Congress as a whole, and you look at the Members
who are health care providers. In this House of Representatives, there
are 435 Members, and 21 of them on the Republican side are health care
providers: nurses, doctors, psychologists, dentists.
{time} 1930
On the Democratic side of the aisle, three. You look at the other
body, at the Senate, and you see four doctors on the Republican side.
None on the Democratic side.
So as we get into this season, this political season, of course the
Presidential election cycle, Mr. Speaker, you know, we all know, that
we're already seeing the ads. I think Dr. DesJarlais referred to this
add about cutting Medicare 30 percent. Don't let Congress cut Medicare
30 percent. And who cares more about seniors.
And I think those statistics are pretty darn telling in regard to who
cares more about our seniors. Many of us, in fact, have practiced so
long that we're seniors. Thank God we've got good health and vigor and
enthusiasm for giving up what has been a wonderful profession, whether
we were nurses or doctors or whatever, but caring for people and the
compassion that goes with it, to come to Congress, come here inside the
Beltway and really work on behalf of our seniors, work on behalf of
getting the health care policy right. But particularly in regard to our
senior citizens and the millions that depend on Medicare either because
of a disability or their age.
So it's the Republican Party, Mr. Speaker. It is the Republican Party
that is really working on behalf of our seniors.
What did the Democrats do when they were in control for that brief
period of time and Ms. Pelosi was the Speaker? They brought the country
a whole new entitlement program, ObamaCare. It had nothing to do with
seniors. It had nothing to do with the poor, who are covered by
Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program, the SCHIP
program. In Georgia it's called PeachCare. They did nothing to
strengthen Medicare.
In fact, to pay for this new entitlement program, health insurance
for all, young and healthy people, they gutted the Medicare program.
Mr. Speaker, the gentleman from Louisiana has a poster before us
right now, the first slide, if you will, and we need every one of us on
both sides of the aisle to focus on that. And as he points to the first
bullet point, cutting $575 billion from the Medicare program. And most
of it, in the next bullet, is from the Medicare Advantage program. And
of the 40 to 45 million people that are on Medicare, most of them,
because they're 65, maybe 10 million of them because they're disabled
and younger, but so many of them, Mr. Speaker, get their health care on
the Medicare program through something called Medicare Advantage. And
that's the key word.
Why is it Advantage? Because it gives them comprehensive care, it
gives them an emphasis on wellness, prevention. It's not just treating
disease. It gives them a drug benefit even before Medicare Part D was
enacted by a Republican Congress back in 2003. And what do the
Democrats do? They took--what was it, Dr. Fleming?--$135 billion out of
the Medicare Advantage program over a 10-year period. That is a 14
percent cut.
And President Obama says if you like what you have you can keep it.
Well, you can keep it if it's still available, but it won't be.
We're here tonight to let the American people know and let our
colleagues know, and if we have to hit them over the head with a 2-by-4
to get their attention, we're going to do it. Because they are ruining
a great program. And we're health care providers. It breaks our heart.
We know. We see the patient. We are at their bedside in sickness and in
health when they come to our office for routine checkups.
But we're here now I guess as policy wonks. It's our colleagues back
home--we want to keep them in the Medicare program, particularly
primary care doctors seeing those patients. It just breaks my heart to
see what's happening.
I thank the gentleman from Louisiana for managing the hour tonight on
behalf of our leadership to make sure that these points are made and
[[Page H8066]]
made very clear to the American people, particularly our seniors.
Mr. FLEMING. I thank the gentleman. Dr. Gingrey serves on the House
Energy and Commerce Committee, a committee that has oversight and
jurisdiction in this area, very important, looking at a lot of
legislation.
Next, I want to turn to another of our freshmen. We've had a
wonderful cadre of freshmen we appreciate so much and a wealth of
physicians and dentists as well bringing in their years of experience,
training, and education.
Next I would like to recognize Dr. Hayworth, Nan Hayworth from New
York, and would be very interested to hear what you have to say this
evening.
Ms. HAYWORTH. Thank you, Dr. Fleming, and I add my thanks to our
distinguished colleague from Georgia in gratitude for your hosting and
managing this session tonight.
We just had a Medicare telephone town hall today with our
constituents in the beautiful Hudson Valley. We had a Medicare
administrator with us because it's open enrollment season for Medicare
throughout the country, I believe, up through December 7. So we were
very grateful to have a Medicare administrator with us who helped
answer some of the questions about some of the complexities of Medicare
because there are a number of them, as you might imagine.
But we did get one question that was conspicuous because the
gentleman asked me, and it's one that we've all been asked, as Dr.
DesJarlais was saying not long ago, ``Nan, why are you against
Medicare?'' I explained to my constituent that gosh, sir, it's exactly
the opposite. I want to preserve and protect Medicare. I want to make
it secure and sound. This is very important to all of us, to me as a
doctor. I had the privilege of practicing for 16 years. I'm an
opthamologist. So many of my patients were seniors. I'm the daughter of
two elderly parents, both of whom rely on their Medicare benefits. So
the last thing that I would want to do, the last thing that any of us
want to do is to harm Medicare. We know how important it is.
More specifically, this nice gentleman was asking about our vote on
the budget this past spring. And as all of us here know and as our
listeners may not be fully aware, we did pass a budget in the House of
Representatives this past April. They may not have heard quite as much
about it as they otherwise should have, if you will, because the Senate
did not pass a budget. They did give ours 47 more votes than the one
proposed by the President. Nonetheless, that was not enough to pass a
budget so we've been waiting now, the American public, for at least
2\1/2\ years for the Senate to pass a budget.
But in our budget, and Dr. Gingrey and Dr. Fleming have just been
referring to the $575 billion that was removed from Medicare by the
massive 2010 health care overhaul. In our budget, we restore those
funds to Medicare. That is a very, very important fact.
We all voted here as doctors, as caring legislators, as
representatives of our districts to restore funding to Medicare, to
strengthen Medicare, not to weaken it. That's the last thing we want to
do and the last thing we can afford to do.
So I think it's very important for the American people to understand
that as things stand now, the Medicare benefits that people are
counting on are threatened in ways that they don't have to be.
So that's something that people should think about, people who
cherish Medicare, who receive Medicare and who have loved ones who
depend on Medicare; that Medicare is, unfortunately, as our colleagues
have discussed, running out of funds.
When we think about payroll taxes, and we hear a lot about payroll
taxes in the news these days, payroll taxes go to pay for Social
Security and for Medicare. And the way these programs were set up, as
we all know but just so that everybody understands, they were supposed
to be, people would contribute from their paychecks, and the money
would be kept by the Federal Government and then returned to them in
their benefits in their senior years, when they would need them.
{time} 1940
That could be a very helpful thing; but as Dr. DesJarlais has pointed
out, thank the good Lord, people are living much, much longer than they
were when Medicare was first made law.
So we are facing a challenge because, for several decades,
contributions to Medicare from the payroll taxes were built up. People
weren't taking out as much in their Medicare benefits as they were
paying in. The baby boomers were not part of the Medicare-eligible
senior group yet, and now they are. Now our seniors are living many
years longer, thank the good Lord--and I wouldn't trade a day with my
parents nor with any of our seniors--and our health care is wonderful
in the United States, but it is costly for a number of reasons.
The Medicare funds that were built up have now started to be
depleted, and they're going to run out, it's projected, anywhere from
2024 to now 2021. What we all know is that the estimates are probably
off the mark. So, to take an extra $575 billion out of Medicare is the
last thing we want to do.
It's very important for everybody to understand that because,
although there are workers in this country who are contributing their
payroll taxes now--and those are going to help fund Medicare--when
those folks become retirees, Medicare is going to be very different in
terms of the funds it has. That Medicare trust fund is going broke.
So folks have been thinking about--Dr. DesJarlais in particular
mentioned it, I think--and may have heard three letters, SGR, about the
doc fix. What is that? What does that mean?
When patients go to visit their doctors and when they receive
Medicare, as Dr. Fleming was saying, our Medicare patients have a
certain fee schedule that we are obligated to follow. In a lot of
cases, depending on their insurance and other factors, that fee
schedule is far less than the fee schedule that is set up for our other
patients. So Medicare pays doctors and other providers, and it
generally pays less than other programs do. We accept that when we
participate in the Medicare program, but to provide Medicare in the
United States is very expensive. We have staff that we have to pay. We
have overhead. Everybody who has a business--and I had my own practice,
a small business--has rent and supplies and staff and insurance to pay.
One of the unique aspects of America in terms of our medical care is
that we do have what's called a ``liability system,'' which is very
costly, to cover lawsuits for malpractice. We should, indeed, do
everything we can to prevent malpractice, but lawsuits in this country
are very expensive.
Mr. FLEMING. If the gentlelady would yield, I think Dr. Gingrey has
something he would like to add.
Mr. GINGREY of Georgia. I thank the gentleman from Louisiana for
allowing me to take up a little time--maybe just a minute--to interrupt
the gentlelady from New York.
Ms. HAYWORTH. Absolutely.
Mr. GINGREY of Georgia. She has made such great points.
The thing that I wanted to mention to my colleagues is that if we do
nothing--and I think Representative Hayworth pointed this out--it is
really not an option. She talked about those dates--2024, maybe, but
probably closer to 2021--when part A becomes fiscally insolvent. If we
do nothing, then what would happen is our seniors under the Medicare
program would take a 22 percent cut in their benefits package, or else
we would have to raise the payroll tax 22 percent.
I'll yield back after making this comment as I think this is
important.
Medicare was enacted as an amendment to the Social Security Act in
1965. I guess it's title XVIII. We didn't have all of the information
we needed back then. As Representative Hayworth points out, situations
were different. Back then, people were not reliant so much on
medication. It was more surgery and that sort of thing. Now we have
Medicare part D. The point is that things change; and if we hadn't
changed with the times, we would still be watching analog television.
It's just as clear and as simple as that.
For people to criticize what the Republican budget called for in
regard to making changes to Medicare so that it remains solvent for our
children and grandchildren--and, as Dr. Hayworth pointed out, to
protect it, preserve it
[[Page H8067]]
and strengthen it for those who are already on it--it would not do
anything in regard to them but would be a phased-in change for our
children and grandchildren so they'll have it like we've had it.
I thank the gentlelady for letting me interrupt briefly.
Mr. FLEMING. Since we are beginning to run a little short on time--
and I want to make sure we get to all of our doctors and nurses--I'm
going to recognize Ms. Buerkle, a very excellent nurse and a wonderful
addition to our freshman class.
Ms. BUERKLE. I thank my colleague from Louisiana.
Mr. Speaker, I just want to say what an honor it is to be here
tonight on the floor with my colleagues and the members of the Doctors
Caucus.
I do stand here as a nurse and also as the daughter of a 90-year-old
mother. So Medicare for her, I know how she depends on the system.
One of the things we didn't talk about and one of my roles in life
was as an attorney, as an attorney who represented a large teaching
hospital. About 2 weeks ago, I joined with some of my colleagues on the
House floor, and we talked about what this health care law is going to
do to our hospitals. When our hospitals and our doctors are affected by
reimbursements, by Medicare cuts, that really affects our seniors. That
reduces their access to care.
So the first thing I want to do tonight as a health care professional
and as someone who cares deeply--and I think that's the beauty of this
tonight, of our getting together as people who have invested their
lives in health care, who love people, who care about people. This
isn't a Republican or a Democratic issue. This is an American issue
because health care affects all of us. This is a group of people who
really believes that there is a better way, that there is a much better
way to provide access to health care in our country without
jeopardizing that access and without jeopardizing the quality of care
that our country has to offer.
So the first thing I want to do tonight is reassure our seniors that
we are talking about protecting and allowing the Medicare system to
continue on. What they need to understand is that the health care law
has changed Medicare forever. Medicare is different now than it was
before the health care law passed. The health care law cuts, Mr.
Speaker, $500 billion from Medicare.
I just want to make clear on this graph what happens to Medicare
reimbursements from 2012. You can see where we are. It's a minus, a cut
of 9.7 percent; but here in 2018, the cuts to Medicare and the
reimbursements to our hospitals are down 28.6 percent. I've had all the
hospitals in my district come to me, and they were proponents of the
health care law. They wanted reform. They've come to me and they've
said, This health care law is going to bankrupt us because not only is
the health care law affecting their Medicare reimbursements; it's
affecting their disproportionate share reimbursements, which keeps many
hospitals afloat that treat indigent patients and that treat Medicaid
patients. It also affects their GME and their IME, which we talked
about in the last Special Order we had in regards to how we're going to
keep our teaching hospitals and keep all of our hospitals viable.
So I just want to leave the message tonight with the American people
that we care about preserving Medicare for our seniors. We are not
proposing anything in our budget proposal that would affect our seniors
and those back to age 55. We want to assure the American people that we
care so deeply about health care and about the quality of health care;
but we are very concerned about this health care law, and it's why we
voted to repeal it several months ago. One of the first things we did
when we came to Washington was to repeal the health care law because we
know what it will do to our seniors and to our health care providers.
I thank my colleague for organizing our time here tonight on the
floor. Again, we just want to reassure the American people that we care
about our seniors. We want to make sure they have access to quality
care, to good health care.
{time} 1950
Mr. FLEMING. I thank the gentlelady for a very compelling discussion,
both as a health care provider and nurse, but also as a daughter of an
elderly mother. Those words are very heartfelt, and obviously it means
as much to you that we protect Medicare and health care in general as
it would anybody. There's no reason why, just because you're a Member
of Congress, that you would love your mother any less, so I think those
are important words.
We're going to move now from a nurse to a surgeon. Dr. Benishek from
Michigan has joined us this evening, and let's hear from you, Doctor,
and see what you have to tell us.
Mr. BENISHEK. Thank you. Mr. Speaker, it's my pleasure to be here
this evening to join my colleagues to talk about Medicare.
As you may know, before coming to Congress, I served as a general
surgeon in my district for the last 30 years, and many of my patients
were on Medicare. And as a practicing physician, I often expressed to
my patients--and my understanding wife--about our broken health care
system here in America. In fact, that's one of the reasons I decided to
get more involved in the political process and actually run for
Congress.
Most Americans don't understand that Medicare will be bankrupt within
the decade if we don't do something to fix it. I didn't make this up.
The actuary for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services actually
provided this number. You know, I think if you ask most 65-year-olds
just beginning to use Medicare, most would be very worried to learn
that their primary health care provider was projected to be bankrupt
within the decade.
In fact, according to a recent Social Security Trustees report,
Medicare seniors should expect to see a 22 percent benefit cut or
workers should expect to see a 22 percent hike in their payroll taxes
unless some action is taken. The bottom line is, if action isn't taken
today, seniors in the program today, not to mention those looking to
retire in the near future, begin to lose their benefits.
Despite these facts, the other side of the aisle has spent the last 6
months attacking us, often saying that House Republicans' attempt to
protect and preserve Medicare was, in fact, destroying it.
Are you kidding me? Accusing myself and my fellow physicians in the
House of wanting to end Medicare? We spent our careers caring for
Medicare patients and are proud now to call them constituents.
The real truth of the matter is that President Obama was elected in
2008 with the promise of hope and change. He did accomplish change in
America's health care system, but I don't think it's the kind of change
that Americans bargained for.
Mr. Obama's health care law cut $575 billion from an already ailing
Medicare system. The name of Mr. Obama's health care bill is the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Mr. Speaker, I ask you:
What type of patient protection cuts $14.6 billion from nursing homes,
$112 billion from hospitals, and $135 billion from Medicare Advantage?
While I'm on the record extensively for balancing the budget, I do
not believe that our health care system should be made affordable on
the backs of America's seniors.
If the $500 billion in cuts made by ObamaCare were not bad enough,
this bill did nothing to address the nearly 28 percent cuts to
physician payments scheduled for January 1 of 2012. I believe in
providing access for America's seniors, not taking it away.
I am happy to announce here tonight that I'm working with members of
the Doctors Caucus, House leadership, and Members across the aisle to
develop legislation that will solve this issue once and for all. Mr.
Speaker, tonight I call on all my colleagues to work together to ensure
America's seniors that America will continue to be there for them in
their time of need.
I have made a pledge to seniors in my district that I will not
support any changes to Medicare benefits for those 55 years of age or
older. It is my belief that for those age 54 years of age or younger,
some reforms will be necessary to guarantee that Medicare remains
solvent in the long term for our children and our grandchildren. Mr.
Speaker, we are here tonight to show that, as physicians, we want to
preserve Medicare for the future.
[[Page H8068]]
I thank Dr. Fleming for organizing this Special Order hour.
Mr. FLEMING. I thank the gentleman from Michigan.
Again, we're getting a world of experience here tonight, all the way
from OB-GYNs, ophthalmologists, family physicians, nurses, so much in
the way of words of wisdom, and we have so much on our side of the
aisle with Republicans, as my friend points out, a dearth of available
physicians, health care workers on the other side of the aisle. It
seems a shame that we were completely closed out of the creation of and
passage of the health care reform act, which certainly suggests that we
need to go back and do it.
We also are joined tonight by our colleague from Arizona, Dr. Gosar,
who is a dentist and a very valued member, as well, of the conference.
I would love to hear from you this evening.
Mr. GOSAR. Dr. Fleming, thank you so very much for organizing this
hour and being able to have a fireside chat with the American public
about health care and what really is coming about and what actually is
going on with a broken health care system. I also want to take the time
to educate, to understand--have the American people understand what it
is about a vibrant economy that actually helps our Medicare system.
Now, I know the holidays are coming up and we're going to be
discussing giving a continuation of a tax holiday for many Americans,
about the thousand dollars for an individual on their FICA, on their
withholding tax, and to employers; but I also want to take the time to
explain to the American public that there is a cost involved here. And
part of that cost when a withholding tax is taken out goes into Social
Security and partly to Medicare, and part of this is particularly
Medicare part A, the hospitalization act, which is the closest one to
insolvency of all parts of Medicare.
Now, we lost 5 years, particularly on Medicare part A, the
hospitalization act, just from the years of 2010. We have yet to start
looking at the disastrous parts of the economy to 2011 to be added into
the insolvency. But what ends up happening is this takes a further hit
in the numbers and amount of money that is actually part of the
equation for our seniors in Medicare, so it's going to get worse before
it gets better. And when you couple that with this administration
taking--I call it stealing--over $500 billion away from the current
Medicare program to build another entitlement, that's just not right.
I came into Congress because I was concerned about health care. As a
dentist, I love seeing a smiling face, because a smiling face tells me
something about vibrancy, about health, and participating in the
greatest things that this life gives us. But it also tells me that it
has to be a participating sport and that what we have to have is a
patient taking care of and being involved actively in the choices and
decision processes in their health care, and that's what I want to see.
I'm flabbergasted, to be honest with you, that we see a program
rectifying Medicare, or attempting to, through ObamaCare, but then we
leave the SGR fix or the physician fix completely separate. It doesn't
make sense to the average person why these aren't all integrated and
part of the same equation.
I also want to remind the American people, this is not an easy
solution. We didn't get here overnight, because we didn't do our due
diligence like we had talked about earlier. We didn't change with the
times as we grew older. We changed our participation and age and the
variables that we had.
We also enveloped technology, unbelievable things that no one in 1965
could have even imagined, they could have dreamed but couldn't have
actually imagined. And that's what the other part is is that we also
have to look--I come from a very rural district, and what is happening
back in my neck of the woods is the primary care doc who was that
gatekeeper, they're no longer around. They either are associated with a
hospital or a federally qualified health center--if you can get them to
see you. And that's the part that also makes me tell the American
public we have got another problem.
You were involved in this Joint Committee that had Democrats and
Republicans, 12 of them, trying to figure out some type of a debt
solution for $1.2 trillion.
I want to remind the American people there's another consequence in
this, not only to our military, but to our health care providers as
well, because the sequestration, when it goes through, is also going to
tap, once again, the providers who are no longer being able to afford
to see patients, and our hospitals, particularly those rural hospitals
that will be going out of business. So there won't be an access to
care. We won't have the ability to be a part of our own health care
because there won't be a health care provider out there.
{time} 2000
This is the dynamics that we have to look at. This is the equation
that is so immense. What I have always said is start a little bit at a
time. Make sure that the playing field is level and all of the
participants are actually there, increasing the competition, making
sure the public health and the private health are all in balance, and
then making sure we have some tort reform.
We have to have that. That was absolutely missing within this health
care system. That is what we are going to have to get back to. And
we're going to have to have sunset clauses that we reactivate and
reevaluate each of the process as our aging population gets older and
as our technology gets better and there are new advances in medicine.
We have to empower people to be part of their health care solution and
empowering them to get back with their physician and their health care
system. That's what we need to do.
And that's the most vibrant aspect that I can challenge our seniors
with. We're here for Medicare. We're here to change Medicare in the
right way. We're here to change it for you
Mr. FLEMING. I thank the gentleman, Dr. Gosar. I'm just going to make
a couple of closing comments; and in the few moments we have left, I'm
going to allow some of our other physicians to give closing comments.
One of the important things we have learned here tonight is under
ObamaCare, $575 billion was cut out of Medicare. Medicare is going
broke, becoming insolvent, according to the actuary in 8 years. The
Republicans passed a budget earlier this year that would have fixed
that for good. And the Democrats have yet to even talk about it or even
acknowledge that it exists. But they do know it. So I want to be sure
that we leave here tonight with an understanding of the seriousness of
the challenges that we have before us.
Now I would like to recognize Dr. Roe for some parting comments.
Mr. ROE of Tennessee. Dr. Fleming, thank you. I was just looking
here, over 200 years of experience. What a diverse group. We have
nursing, dentistry, family practice, OB-GYN, surgery, and so on. I
think one of the greatest frustrations I had when I came to Congress,
and Dr. Gingrey has been here longer than you and I have, and one of
the things that I noticed in the health care debate that we had, now
going on 3 years ago, was this: with nine physicians, M.D.s in the U.S.
Congress, in the 111th Congress, not a single one of us was consulted
about this health care bill. This was done on a completely partisan
basis.
I have to kind of chuckle. I have never seen a Republican or a
Democrat heart attack in my life. I have never personally operated on a
Republican or a Democrat cancer in my life. These are people problems,
as Congresswoman Buerkle said a moment ago. These are people problems
that affect all of us in this country.
What we wanted to do, as I stated when we started, was to make the
cost of care go down. This is not going to do this. Look, this is very
simple. When we talked about the IPAB, and I think we'll have to use a
different time to discuss the Independent Payment Advisory Board
because it is so detailed, but just very briefly, this is how this
works.
Several of us have pointed out that $575 billion was taken out. Three
million seniors a year going into Medicare, reaching Medicare age, and
this group, this group of bureaucrats up here appointed, and I don't
want them appointed by a Republican or a Democrat. I think Congress
ought to be accountable, and we ought to be accountable to the American
people about what happens to Medicare, not push it off to some
bureaucrats that are going
[[Page H8069]]
to make these decisions, and then we say, oh, I'm sorry, we can't do
anything when care is denied because when you have $575 billion less,
and 3 million more people added per year, that's 30-something million
people in 10 years, you know what that leads to, Mr. Fleming.
It leads to a rationing of care. Decreased access. And if you have
decreased access to your primary care provider, it means decreased
quality of your care and the cost is going up. That's what's going to
happen with this plan. That's why it's imperative, not just Medicare,
but that we overturn the Affordable Care Act because it's not good
medicine for patients.
If we simply had been included in the debate, this would not be a
plan that you had to run through and get rid of the 1099 form, the
IPAB. It's a bipartisan bill now with 214 bipartisan cosponsors. Those
folks realize it's a bad idea. I could go on and on and on.
One of the good parts of the Affordable Care Act, let's point it out,
it costs more money, but allowing a 26-year-old to stay on their
parents' health care plan, that's a great idea unless your parents are
not paying the bill. Currently, if a young person, 22 or 23 years old,
gets health care, they'll pay one-sixth what I do. Now what happens
with this, it has to be a three-to-one ratio, so their health insurance
plan costs double.
We could go on and on about the inconsistencies. I think the previous
Speaker, the current minority leader, had it right when she said let's
pass it and then find out what's in it. Well, I read it, as most of us
physicians did, and we found out all of the things that were in there
that were not good for our patients. We're just now discovering it's
going to be more costly for businesses out there, and we need to have
an entire hour on that.
Mr. FLEMING. I thank the gentleman. Before I recognize another Member
in the last minute or two that we have, I would just like to say that
we are going to be having a lot more of these sessions. So we've just
started. We've just scratched the surface. We're running out of time,
so just to wrap things up, we have just barely scratched the surface.
And these are not all the physicians or health care workers we have on
our side. There are others here who could have been here, but had some
other commitment tonight, but will be here next time.
I would love to talk more on IPAB. Even many Democrats see that was a
very big mistake. It will be one way that you can get the door closed
on your health care and getting the right sort of care in the future.
I thank everyone for being here tonight, and I look forward to doing
it again very soon. God bless you all.
I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________