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Fact Sheet: President
Outlines Agenda for Improving Health Security in the Best Health Care
System in the World
February 11, 2002
President Outlines
Agenda for Improving Health Security in the Best Health Care System in the
World
TODAY'S PRESIDENTIAL
ACTION
- In
a speech at the Medical College of Wisconsin, President Bush outlined a
comprehensive health care agenda that improves health security for all
Americans by building on the best features of American health care. Our
health care system can provide the best care in the world, but rising costs
and loss of control to government and health plan bureaucrats threaten to
keep patients from getting state-of-the-art care.
- To
create a health care system that puts the needs of patients first, the
President proposed steps to: (1) help all Americans get
affordable health care coverage; (2) help patients get high-quality care
every time; and (3) develop new treatments to keep patients healthy and
prevent complications from diseases and strengthen the health care safety
net. The President will back up this agenda with more than $300
billion in proposed funding.
BACKGROUND ON THE
BUSH ADMINISTRATION'S HEALTH CARE AGENDA
- President
Bush outlined a comprehensive vision for helping all Americans benefit from
the potential of American health care in the 21st century. The
President's health care agenda is designed to improve the accessibility,
affordability and accountability of health care for every American -- and
to make sure that American health care keeps getting better.
- Ensuring
Every American Can Choose Affordable Health Care That Meets Their
Needs: The President believes that we should trust patients,
working with health care professionals, to decide which treatment is best
for them. Everyone should be able to choose a health care plan that meets
their needs at a price they can afford. When people have good
choices, health plans have to compete for their business -- which means higher
quality and better care. Many Americans enjoy access to good choices in
employer-sponsored health care plans, but many others do not have good
coverage options or are in danger of losing them. The President proposes to
address this problem through over $117 billion in initiatives to make good
health care coverage more available and affordable:
- Expanded
Health Accounts: The President's plan lifts the excessive restrictions on
Medical Savings Accounts (MSAs), by lowering the deductible requirements to
levels that are increasingly common in private health insurance plans and
to allow preventive care coverage. These changes will allow many
more Americans to set up tax-free accounts to protect themselves from high
out-of-pocket costs. The President also proposed expanding
Flexible Savings Accounts (FSAs), to allow employees to roll over as much
as $500 in unspent health care contributions to an FSA to use the following
year or to contribute to their 401(k) plan. The budgetary cost
of these proposals to help families manage their medical costs is $14
billion over 10 years. - Association Health Plans:
The President supports legislation that would make it easier for small
employers to pool together to offer their employees better health coverage
options, like many large corporations are able to offer.
- Health Credits: The President's budget proposes
$89 billion in new health credits to make private health insurance more
affordable for low- and middle-income American families who do not have
employer-subsidized insurance. The credits would be worth up to
$1000 for individuals and $3000 for families, would be available when
people need them to pay their insurance premiums, and do not depend on
taxes owed. The Administration will work with states to give many Americans
the option of using the health credits through state-sponsored purchasing
pools, to help ensure that they too have access to a broad range of
affordable coverage options. The credits will enable 6 million Americans
who would otherwise be uninsured during a year to get coverage, and will
help many more who are struggling to pay for their own health insurance
with little or no government help. The President also supports legislation
to provide $15 billion in health credits to provide quick help for workers
who have lost their jobs during the recession. The credits would
pay 60 percent of the cost of keeping their health care coverage and would
assist over 4 million displaced workers.
- Better
Medicaid and State Children's Health Insurance Program (S-CHIP)
: The Bush Administration will continue to work with states and
Congress to provide innovative coverage in these important government
programs, including health care coverage options. In just the
past year, the Administration has already worked with states to expand
innovative Medicaid and S-CHIP coverage for almost 2 million more
Americans. - Medicaid: The President's budget
provides $350 million to continue funding Medicaid for families in
transition from welfare to work. This coverage helps to ensure that work
pays for families by preventing them from losing their health coverage when
they start jobs. - S-CHIP: The President's budget
strengthens S-CHIP by making available to states an estimated $3.2 billion
in unused S-CHIP funds that otherwise will be lost. The S-CHIP law
originally required states that did not use their full S-CHIP allotment
during the previous three years to return unused funds to the Federal
Treasury. These additional matching funds will enable all states to expand
coverage to the uninsured.
- Strengthening
Health Care for Seniors and the Disabled
- Strengthened
Medicare: In his budget and State of the Union address, the
President renewed his commitment to provide prescription drug
coverage in Medicare, based on the framework for bipartisan legislation
that he proposed in July 2001. The President's budget includes $190 billion
in net additional spending for improving Medicare. The
President's framework would give seniors better health care options, including:
- Making
Medicare prescription drug coverage available to all seniors, including
lower prices on all prescriptions and protection against high out-of-pocket
drug costs. - Providing a government plan with a prescription
drug benefit, better preventive coverage, and better protection against
high medical costs, with more affordable Medigap (supplemental insurance)
options. - Giving more reliable private health care
options for seniors who prefer the lower out-of-pocket costs and innovative
benefits like "disease management" services available in such
programs. Seniors who choose more efficient plans would be able
to use the savings to reduce their Medicare premiums.
- Allowing seniors to keep the coverage that they
have now, with no changes, if they prefer it.
- Because
the Medicare drug benefit and other improvements will take several years to
set up, President Bush has also proposed steps to improve Medicare benefits
immediately, including:
- Implementing
a Medicare-endorsed prescription drug card program to give seniors quick
access to competitive discounts from drug manufacturers and to provide
other valuable pharmacy services, and to provide the experience needed to
implement the Medicare drug benefit effectively. - Helping
states implement comprehensive drug coverage for low-income beneficiaries
as quickly as possible. The Federal government will pay 90 percent of the
costs of comprehensive drug coverage for beneficiaries with incomes between
100 and 150 percent of poverty -- providing comprehensive drug coverage for
up to 3 million additional low-income Medicare beneficiaries who lack drug
coverage now at a cost of $8 billion over the next 3 years. This
coverage would be fully integrated with the new Medicare drug benefit when
it is set up. - Taking immediate action to make
better private health plan options available in Medicare, by correcting
chronic underpayments to Medicare's private plans. This proposal
costs approximately $4 billion over 3 years.
- Giving seniors access to two additional Medigap
(supplemental insurance) plans, with updated benefits that provide better
protection against high medical expenses and assistance with prescription
drugs at a more affordable cost than the most popular plans.
- Long-Term
Care: The President believes that Americans who need long-term care
assistance should have more control over how they receive the care they
need. The President's budget proposes to make premium payments
for long-term care insurance fully deductible, to provide a much-needed,
more flexible alternative to 'spending down' to Medicaid. The
10-year cost of this proposal is $20 billion.
- Assistance for Caregivers: The Bush Administration
proposes an additional tax exemption for persons who take time to care for parents
or children who need long-term assistance. The personal
exemption is $3,000 in 2002, and the 10-year cost of this proposal is $3.6
billion.
- Improving
the Quality of Health Care
- Patients'
Bill Of Rights: The President strongly supports the passage of a Patients'
Bill of Rights that leaves medical decisions in the hands of physicians,
instead of insurance companies -- and urges Congress to reconcile
differences and complete its work this year.
- Prohibit Genetic Discrimination: President Bush
will work with Congress to develop fair and reasonable legislation that
will make genetic discrimination illegal and provide protections consistent
with other existing anti-discrimination laws.
- Better Information for Patients: The
Administration continues to take steps to make better information on
medical treatments and the quality of health care providers available to
the public, including new information on nursing home quality.
- Effective Privacy Protections for Medical
Records: Electronic medical records hold the promise of
improving quality of care for patients and for giving them more control
over their health information, but only with strong medical privacy
protections give patients the security and confidence they need. The
Administration is implementing new medical privacy protections to do just
that.
- Effective
Support to Increase Biomedical Research and Strengthen the Health Care
Safety Net:
- Support
for Biomedical Research: The President's budget includes a total of $27.3
billion for the National Institutes of Health (NIH), including the final
installment of $3.9 billion that will complete the goal the doubling of the
NIH budget. This increase will allow NIH will expand its efforts
to support research to improve the prevention, detection and treatment of
diseases.
- Improved Public Health Systems to Better Protect
the Public: The President's budget includes $5.9 billion for
bioterrorism preparedness, an increase of $4.5 billion -- more than three
times the 2002 base funding level. The budget supports a variety of
activities to prevent, identify and respond to incidents of bioterrorism --
including strengthening state and local health infrastructures, enhancing
medical communications and disease surveillance capabilities and improving
specialized Federal response capabilities. The budget also
provides $1.7 billion for NIH research into new vaccines and diagnostics
and increased security at its facilities.
- Community Health Centers: The President's budget
includes $1.5 billion for CHCs, a $114 million increase that would continue
the Bush Administration's long-term strategy to add 1,200 new and expanded
health center sites over five years and serve an additional 6.1 million
patients. The increase for fiscal year 2003 will support 170 new and
expanded health centers, and provide services to a million more patients.
- National Health Service Corps: Since 1970, over
20,000 doctors, nurses, dentists, midwives, and mental health clinicians
have been placed in medically underserved communities through the National
Health Service Corps (NHSC). The President's budget includes
$191.5 million -- a $44 million increase -- to strengthen the
NHSC. With the increased funding, the NHSC will provide scholarships
or loan assistance to about 1,800 professionals practicing in underserved
areas - an increase of about 500 participants.
For more information
on the President's initiatives please visit www.whitehouse.gov
 
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