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Election
2008/Quality, Affordable and portable
coverage for all in Obama health care plan
Obama's Plan to Cover
Uninsured Americans: Obama will make available a new national health
plan to all Americans, including the
self-employed and small businesses, to buy
affordable health coverage that is similar
to the plan available to members of
Congress. The Obama plan will have the
following features:
Guaranteed eligibility. No American will be turned away from any
insurance plan because of illness or
pre-existing conditions.
Comprehensive benefits. The benefit package will be similar to that
offered through Federal Employees Health
Benefits Program (FEHBP), the plan members
of Congress have. The plan will cover all
essential medical services, including
preventive, maternity and mental health
care.
Affordable premiums, co-pays and
deductibles.
Subsidies. Individuals and families who do not qualify for
Medicaid or SCHIP but still need financial
assistance will receive an income-related
federal subsidy to buy into the new public
plan or purchase a private health care plan.
Simplified paperwork and reined in health costs.
Easy enrollment. The new public plan will be simple to enroll in
and provide ready access to coverage.
Portability and choice. Participants in the new public plan and the
National Health Insurance Exchange (see
below) will be able to move from job to job
without changing or jeopardizing their
health care coverage.
Quality and efficiency. Participating insurance companies in the new
public program will be required to report
data to ensure that standards for quality,
health information technology and
administration are being met.
National Health Insurance Exchange: The Obama plan will create a National Health
Insurance Exchange to help individuals who
wish to purchase a private insurance plan.
The Exchange will act as a watchdog group
and help reform the private insurance market
by creating rules and standards for
participating insurance plans to ensure
fairness and to make individual coverage
more affordable and accessible. Insurers
would have to issue every applicant a
policy, and charge fair and stable premiums
that will not depend upon health status. The
Exchange will require that all the plans
offered are at least as generous as the new
public plan and have the same standards for
quality and efficiency. The Exchange would
evaluate plans and make the differences
among the plans, including cost of services,
public.
Employer Contribution: Employers that do not offer or make a meaningful
contribution to the cost of quality health
coverage for their employees will be
required to contribute a percentage of
payroll toward the costs of the national
plan. Small employers that meet certain
revenue thresholds will be exempt.
Mandatory Coverage of Children: Obama will require that all children have health
care coverage. Obama will expand the number
of options for young adults to get coverage,
including allowing young people up to age 25
to continue coverage through their parents'
plans.
Expansion Of Medicaid and SCHIP: Obama will
expand eligibility for the Medicaid and
SCHIP programs and ensure that these
programs continue to serve their critical
safety net function.
Flexibility for State Plans: Due to federal
inaction, some states have taken the lead in
health care reform. The Obama plan builds on
these efforts and does not replace what
states are doing. States can continue to
experiment, provided they meet the minimum
standards of the national plan.
Lower Costs by Modernizing The U.S. Health Care
System
Reducing Costs of Catastrophic Illnesses for
Employers and Their Employees: Catastrophic
health expenditures account for a high
percentage of medical expenses for private
insurers. The Obama plan would reimburse
employer health plans for a portion of the
catastrophic costs they incur above a
threshold if they guarantee such savings are
used to reduce the cost of workers'
premiums.
Helping Patients:
Support disease management programs. Seventy
five percent of total health care dollars
are spent on patients with one or more
chronic conditions, such as diabetes, heart
disease and high blood pressure. Obama will
require that providers that participate in
the new public plan, Medicare or the Federal
Employee Health Benefits Program (FEHBP)
utilize proven disease management programs.
This will improve quality of care, give
doctors better information and lower costs.
Coordinate and integrate care. Over 133
million Americans have at least one chronic
disease and these chronic conditions cost a
staggering $1.7 trillion yearly. Obama will
support implementation of programs and
encourage team care that will improve
coordination and integration of care of
those with chronic conditions.
Require full transparency about quality and
costs. Obama will require hospitals and
providers to collect and publicly report
measures of health care costs and quality,
including data on preventable medical
errors, nurse staffing ratios,
hospital-acquired infections, and
disparities in care. Health plans will also
be required to disclose the percentage of
premiums that go to patient care as opposed
to administrative costs.
Ensuring Providers Deliver Quality Care:
Promote patient safety. Obama will require
providers to report preventable medical
errors and support hospital and physician
practice improvement to prevent future
occurrences.
Align incentives for excellence. Both public
and private insurers tend to pay providers
based on the volume of services provided,
rather than the quality or effectiveness of
care. Providers who see patients enrolled in
the new public plan, the National Health
Insurance Exchange, Medicare and FEHBP will
be rewarded for achieving performance
thresholds on outcome measures.
Comparative effectiveness research. Obama
will establish an independent institute to
guide reviews and research on comparative
effectiveness, so that Americans and their
doctors will have the accurate and objective
information they need to make the best
decisions for their health and well-being.
Tackle disparities in health care. Obama will
tackle the root causes of health disparities
by addressing differences in access to
health coverage and promoting prevention and
public health, both of which play a major
role in addressing disparities. He will also
challenge the medical system to eliminate
inequities in health care through quality
measurement and reporting, implementation of
effective interventions such as patient
navigation programs, and diversification of
the health workforce.
Reform medical malpractice. Obama will strengthen
antitrust laws to prevent insurers from
overcharging physicians for their
malpractice insurance and will promote new
models for addressing errors that improve
patient safety, strengthen the
doctor-patient relationship and reduce the
need for malpractice suits.
Lowering Costs Through Investment in
Electronic Health Information Technology
Systems: Most medical records are still stored on paper,
which makes it hard to coordinate care,
measure quality or reduce medical errors and
which costs twice as much as electronic
claims. Obama will invest $10 billion a year
over the next five years to move the U.S.
health care system to broad adoption of
standards-based electronic health
information systems, including electronic
health records, and will phase in
requirements for full implementation of
health IT. Obama will ensure that patients'
privacy is protected.
Lowering Costs by Increasing Competition in
the Insurance and Drug Markets: The insurance business today is dominated by a
small group of large companies that has been
gobbling up their rivals. There have been
over 400 health care mergers in the last 10
years, and just two companies dominate a
full third of the national market. These
changes were supposed to make the industry
more efficient, but instead premiums have
skyrocketed by over 87 percent.
Barack Obama will
prevent companies from abusing their
monopoly power through unjustified price
increases. His plan will force insurers to pay out a
reasonable share of their premiums for
patient care instead of keeping exorbitant
amounts for profits and administration. His
new National Health Exchange will help
increase competition by insurers.
Lower prescription drug costs. The second-fastest growing type of health
expenses is prescription drugs.
Pharmaceutical companies are selling the
exact same drugs in Europe and Canada but
charging Americans more than double the
price. Obama will allow Americans to buy
their medicines from other developed
countries if the drugs are safe and prices
are lower outside the U.S. Obama will also
repeal the ban that prevents the government
from negotiating with drug companies, which
could result in savings as high as $30
billion. Finally, Obama will work to
increase the use of generic drugs in
Medicare, Medicaid, and FEHBP and prohibit
big name drug companies from keeping
generics out of markets.
Fight for New Initiatives
Advance the Biomedical Research Field: As a
result of biomedical research the
prevention, early detection and treatment of
diseases such as cancer and heart disease is
better today than any other time in history.
Barack Obama has consistently supported
funding for the national institutes of
health and the national science foundation.
Obama strongly supports investments in
biomedical research, as well as medical
education and training in health-related
fields, because it provides the foundation
for new therapies and diagnostics. Obama has
been a champion of research in cancer,
mental health, health disparities, global
health, women and children's health, and
veterans' health. As president, Obama will
strengthen funding for biomedical research,
and better improve the efficiency of that
research by improving coordination both
within government and across
government/private/non-profit partnerships.
An Obama administration will ensure that we
translate scientific progress into improved
approaches to disease prevention, early
detection and therapy that is available for
all Americans