[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 72 (Tuesday, May 21, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H2809]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTH CARE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Colorado (Mr. Tipton) for 5 minutes.
Mr. TIPTON. Mr. Speaker, there are probably very few issues that
touch Americans, families, our States, and small businesses more
personally than health care.
This House has dealt numerous times with addressing the Affordable
Care Act. But when we talk about it on that very personal level--of a
mom taking a sick child down to visit the doctor, to a senior citizen
who's counting on that hospital being able to be there, to be able to
deliver the care that they need--we need to recognize that the
overarching view that Washington typically performs when passing a bill
and delivering it to the American people, that it has very real
consequences, very real impacts.
In my district in rural Colorado--and in fact throughout rural
America--there is a looming health care crisis that is just on the
horizon. That ability to be able to go to the doctor, to be able to
have a hospital that's going to be there to be able to provide the
service that's necessary--they're feeling that real impact right now at
home.
We've had a lot of discussion about that big, overarching bill: the
IPAB boards that are going to be making the medical choices for our
senior citizens--indeed for all Americans--rather than that choice
being made between the doctor and the patient; about the State mandates
that are coming through; the Medicare payment cuts; higher health
costs; the budget that is now going to be estimated at $1.76 trillion
in costs over a 10-year period, and rising, on a struggling American
economy, on struggling families and small businesses; the 150 new
boards that are being established; the better than 12,000 pages of new
regulations that our hospitals, our doctors, and our families are going
to have to be dealing with; and the short form, to simply be able to
fill out and be able to apply for the Affordable Care Act, 21 pages
just to be able to get insurance.
We need, Mr. Speaker, to be talking about those real impacts, not
from the 30,000-foot view, but on the ground at home.
I recently went to Delta Memorial Hospital in my district, a small
community hospital that's proud of their service. In fact, they've had
multiple surveys that went through and rated their service among the
best. They are now being challenged by the Affordable Care Act in terms
of that health care delivery.
They have a program called the Recovery Audit Contracts conducted by
individual companies that don't even have to have health care
background, but they're going back in and reassessing costs. And
they're having to pay back money now, money that they simply do not
have.
We're seeing reimbursements to doctors drop at Delta Memorial
Hospital, making it harder for the physicians to be able to deliver
that service.
These are small hospitals. They don't have big HR departments;
they're there for the health of the community. But they are seeing real
challenges in being able to continue. In fact, in many of our rural
hospitals, they're beginning to wonder if they're going to be able to
continue to deliver that service.
{time} 1040
I've talked to doctors in Delta, Montrose, Grand Junction, Pueblo,
throughout my entire district, who are frustrated that they are now
seeing their reimbursements--money that they need to have to be able to
conduct their business--being cut by the Federal Government, the
Federal Government determining what the value of that service is going
to be and saying you can afford it. That's not real life.
What we are seeing now are senior citizens who just became senior
citizens by the virtue of a birthday over the last few months, they
cannot find a doctor who is willing to take Medicare, simply because
they can no longer afford it.
We have a system, Mr. Speaker, that completely forgot the original
premise that every American, I believe, can agree on. We need to have
real reform, but we need to go back to that initial premise of
affordability and accessibility. The Affordable Care Act fails on both
levels.
We are seeing right now, in my home State of Colorado, estimates for
individual insurance policies this year are going to go up an estimated
23 percent or more. Small businesses, who are trying to provide group
insurance, are seeing their costs going up this year estimated better
than 17 percent.
Have we achieved more affordability, as was promised? We have not.
When we are talking about that accessibility issue, when that senior
citizen in Delta, Colorado, walks into a doctor's office and is told
that they aren't accepting any new patients, are we achieving that
accessibility? We are not.
Mr. Speaker, we need to go back to that original premise, because so
many small businesses right now that would like to be able to deliver
that service are feeling the impact. I have a friend who owns several
small Pizza Huts throughout the West, and she is dealing with those
additional costs that are hurting her business and her ability to be
able to deliver that real service for her employees.
We have a challenge in this country, Mr. Speaker, and it can and will
be addressed if we will go back to that original premise of
affordability and accessibility. The Affordable Care Act fails on both
points.
Let's roll up our sleeves and get the job done for the American
people.
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