[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 152 (2006), Part 5]
[House]
[Pages 6933-6934]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                        COVER THE UNINSURED WEEK

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the 
gentleman from Texas (Mr. Gene Green) is recognized for 5 minutes.
  Mr. GENE GREEN of Texas. Mr. Speaker, I rise tonight to address the 
most pressing problem facing our country and the health care system of 
our country: the growing number of uninsured.
  Since 2000, the number of uninsured has grown by more than 10 percent 
as an additional 1 million Americans have joined the ranks of the 
uninsured each year. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation recently 
reported that the number of individuals without health insurance in 
this country rose to 46 million this year. This is a problem that we 
literally cannot afford not to address.
  In my State of Texas, we have the unfortunate distinction of ranking 
number one in the country for our level of uninsured, which has reached 
crisis proportions. Twenty-five percent of Texans are uninsured, 
compared with 15.7 percent of Americans nationwide. Twenty-two percent 
of children in our State are uninsured, compared to 12 percent of 
American children nationwide.
  The increase in the number of uninsured is due in part to the 
changing nature of health care in this country. Gone are the days when 
we could rely on our employers to provide comprehensive health 
insurance for us and our families. While more than 90 percent of firms 
with more than 50 employees still offer employer-sponsored coverage, 
many smaller firms have found they simply cannot afford to offer their 
employees health insurance. In fact, only 47 percent of firms with 
fewer than 10 employees offer employer-sponsored coverage.
  We are proud that Texas is a small business State, but an unintended 
consequence is that many of our small business employees do not have 
access to affordable health insurance. The result is that many Texans, 
and folks throughout our Nation, have few choices for health insurance 
other than the individual market.
  For American families near the poverty level, the cost of health 
insurance has to compete with the cost of putting food on your table or 
a roof over your heads, which is really no choice at all. The typical 
family of four at the poverty level brings home $20,000 a year. Given 
that private health insurance cost $9,000 a year in 2005, it is no 
surprise that more than half of Americans below the poverty level spent 
at least some or part of each year uninsured.
  The plight of the uninsured should worry all Americans, as the 
uninsured have less access to care, become sicker, and impose 
tremendous costs on our health care system. The uninsured are less 
likely to seek preventative health care and only get care once their 
health problems reach emergency proportions. A recent study by the 
Institute of Medicine estimated that 2,500 Texans die each year as a 
result of being uninsured. In fact, nearly 50 percent of the uninsured 
adults have postponed seeking health care because they could not afford 
it. Only 15 percent of individuals with health insurance have postponed 
care for this reason. The difference can literally be life or death.
  For example, uninsured women with breast cancer have a 30 to 50 
percent higher risk of dying from the disease than breast cancer 
patients with insurance, 30 percent higher than people with health 
insurance. Uninsured auto accident victims with trauma are 37 percent 
more likely to die from their injuries than their insured counterparts.
  Everyone can agree that something must be done to stem the tide of 
the uninsured. Yet it is important that we put in place policies that 
not only increase the number of Americans with health insurance but 
also ensure that they have quality and comprehensive insurance.
  Unfortunately, the health savings plans and association health plans 
supported by the administration and our Republican colleagues are not a 
silver bullet. The success of any health insurance plan lies in its 
ability to spread the risk. However, both the Health Savings Accounts 
and the AHP models would separate out the healthy and wealthy, leaving 
sicker and poorer

[[Page 6934]]

Americans to fend for themselves in an individual health insurance 
market that is already out of reach for low-income Americans. This is 
not the way to ensure our citizens are healthy and productive members 
of society.
  The Federal Government needs to renew its commitment to the most 
vulnerable members of our society. Faced with record levels of 
uninsured, we should be adding people to the Medicaid and S-CHIP rolls, 
not dropping them. We should expand the S-CHIP program to include 
parents of CHIP kids. That option alone would provide health insurance 
to 67 percent of CHIP parents in Texas.
  We should restore funding for the Healthy Community Access Program, 
which in my community has helped enroll an additional 250,000 
individuals in Medicaid and CHIP, while also directing the uninsured 
away from the ERs and toward a more appropriate health care home.
  These are the programs that work, not HSAs and the AHPs that will 
place additional burdens on those who need help the most.
  Mr. Speaker, if we are going to get this country's health care system 
out of the ditch, we have to first stop digging.

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