[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 122 (Thursday, July 31, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Page S5303]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MEDICARE'S 49TH BIRTHDAY
Mr. NELSON. Madam President, this week Medicare is turning 49 years
old. Since July 1965, Medicare has provided critical access to health
care benefits for older Americans and people with disabilities. Florida
alone is home to over 3.5 million Medicare beneficiaries.
Medicare has become a landmark program based on its popularity among
beneficiaries and the comprehensive benefits offered. In 1959, almost 4
out of 10 Americans over age 65 were living below the poverty line, as
compared with about 1 in 10 seniors living in poverty in 2000. Prior to
Medicare, seniors paid almost half of the cost of their health; in
1997, seniors paid only 18 percent of their health care costs. Medicare
pulled millions of Americans out of poverty by not only providing them
with important health benefits, but also by enabling seniors to use
their hard-earned retirement savings for needs other than their health
care.
As chairman of the Senate Aging Committee, I understand that Medicare
is essential to the Nation, particularly as the baby boom generation
enters retirement. Those served by Medicare often have modest incomes
and complex health conditions that depend on these lifesaving benefits.
As a committee, we have looked at Medicare's prescription drug benefit,
researched ways to eradicate fraud and waste in the program, and
ensured that seniors have access to quality, affordable care. In fact,
just yesterday, the committee convened a hearing about how to improve
Medicare beneficiaries' access to skilled nursing care.
The Affordable Care Act has helped to reduce costs, increase
benefits, and improve health care delivery for Medicare beneficiaries.
Earlier this year, Derrick in Tampa wrote to me about how much the ACA
has meant to his family in providing care for his mother. His mother
was the victim of gun violence and will need extensive medical care for
the rest of her life. So Derrick wrote that when Congress passed the
ACA, ``I was excited for my mother and the many others'' who will
benefit from the improvements in providing health care to America's
seniors. For example, thanks to a provision I fought for in the ACA,
Floridians have saved more than $756 million on their prescription
drugs.
While we can still make improvements, the Medicare trustees report,
released earlier this week, reported that the Medicare hospital
insurance trust fund solvency has been extended by 4 additional years
from last year's estimate and 13 years longer than it was prior to the
passage of the Affordable Care Act. Today, Medicare is more solvent
than it was in 1965.
It is our job, in Congress, to ensure that Medicare is available for
all Americans when they need it and, as was the case for Derrick's
mother, when they are impacted by ``circumstances not of their own
doing.'' Though the new projections are encouraging, we must continue
to work to preserve Medicare for generations to come.
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