[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 47 (Wednesday, March 21, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1882-S1883]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTH CARE
Mr. HARKIN. Madam President, 2 years ago President Obama signed into
law what I believe was the most forward-thinking and humane reform of
our health care system since Medicare. Just like the Republicans
opposed Medicare when it came in, they still want to get rid of it. If
we look at the Ryan budget that came out, what do they want to do? They
want to privatize Medicare. They have been at it ever since. They do
not want this humane reform we passed 2 years ago.
When the affordable care act became law, I said we have made America
a more compassionate and a more just society. I believe this with even
greater conviction now. In listening to my colleagues, my friends on
the other side of the aisle, one would think this is all just about
little nuts and bolts and this and that, but it is about humaneness. It
is about compassion and about justice and, yes, it is about making the
system work better for patients, not just for insurance companies and
the insurance industry.
Now that we have moved ahead to implement the law, the results have
been striking. Every American now is protected against the abusive
insurance company practices of the past. Let me put it another way.
Because of the health care reform law, Americans now have protections
that every Senator in this Chamber has enjoyed for years under the
Federal Employees Health Benefits Program. We now have extended that to
all Americans. Listening to my friends on the other side of the aisle,
they want to take it away from Americans but keep it for themselves.
Oh, no; they do not want to give it up. I think what is good for
Senators ought to be good for the American people.
The young lady shown on this chart is Emily Schlichting. She
testified before my committee last year, and this is what she said:
Young people are the future of this country and we are the
most affected by reform--we're the generation that is most
uninsured. We need the Affordable Care Act because it is
literally an investment in the future of this country.
Why does she say that? Because she suffers from a rare autoimmune
condition which insurance companies would not even cover. But because
we have said they cannot now discriminate if someone has a preexisting
condition, Emily gets insurance coverage. Plus, she can stay on her
parents' health insurance program.
So far, the law has extended coverage to more than 2\1/2\ million
young people such as Emily. Yet the Republicans want to take it away.
They want to take away Emily Schlichting's insurance coverage. That is
what this is all about. They want to repeal the affordable care act--
ObamaCare. What that will mean is that 2\1/2\ million people similar to
Emily will lose their insurance. But they do not talk about that. They
do not talk about that.
Here is the coverage Americans have right now. We have banned
lifetime limits. Let me tell everyone about Ross Daniels and Amy Ward
from West Des Moines, IA. After developing a rare lung infection on a
summer trip, Amy needed intensive treatment, including a course of
medication costing--get this--$1,600 a dose--$1,600 a dose. Her
insurance policy had a $1 million lifetime limit. Without our health
care reform's ban on lifetime limits, this couple would have had to
declare bankruptcy. After this experience, Ross said he can't
understand why opponents of the law want to repeal it. He said:
It is hard for us to believe that so many of the GOP
candidates would have us go back in time where an illness
like this would have forced us, or any other family for that
matter, into bankruptcy.
Listen to what Republicans are saying. They want to take this
protection away from Amy Ward and Ross Daniels and millions of other
Americans. There are 100 million people being helped by the ban on
lifetime limits.
We have also covered vital preventive services free of charge. That
has benefited more than 80 million people who
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now get free preventive care. It allows young people to remain on their
parents' insurance plans until they are age 26. I can't tell you how
many families I have talked to in my State of Iowa who have said this
has been a godsend to them and to their kids.
Here is the preventive portion. We all know prevention is the best
thing we can do to change our sick care system into a health care
system. Here is what we did. Here is what the affordable care act does
on prevention. Before health care reform, colorectal cancer screening
was covered only 68 percent by insurance companies, cholesterol
screening was only covered by 57 percent, tobacco cessation only 4
percent. Under the affordable care act, colorectal cancer screening,
cholesterol, and tobacco cessation all are covered at 100 percent by
every insurance company. Madam President, 100 hundred percent, not 57
percent or 68 percent but 100 percent. We all know that early screening
means people live longer and it cuts down on health care costs.
So millions now receive free preventive care, and 86 million
Americans had at least one free preventive service in 2011. Almost 1
million Iowans, in my State, received at least one free preventive
service in 2011. Yet Republicans want to take this away. That is what
this is about.
But Americans now have preventive care. They now are able to keep
their kids on their policies until they are age 26. They now have a ban
on lifetime limits. We now have a ban for children up to age 19 on
preexisting conditions. That is all they want to do; they want to take
this away. I say, don't let them take this away from the American
people.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator has 50 seconds
remaining.
Mr. HARKIN. I yield the remainder of my time to the Senator from
Michigan.
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