Healthcare Reform and Closing The Medicare Doughnut Hole
Capitol Hill News Conference on HealthCare Reform and Medicare September 30, 2009
Nancy Pelosi: Medicare is our solemn pledge, a pledge of stability for our seniors. They paid into the system and we want them to get everything they deserve out of it. What we are promising with our new legislation is the following: better benefits, closing the doughnut hole and lowering drug costs, ensuring free preventive care and better primary care. Number 1 is better benefits. Number 2 is guaranteed access to your doctors for our seniors. Eliminating the 21% pay cut your doctor was facing for Medicare reimbursements, ensuring that these doctors will be able to care for our seniors, especially in rural areas. And third, extended financial stability of Medicare.
Extending the solvency of Medicare trust fund for 5 years. Cutting waste, fraud and abuse in Medicare, and re-investing those savings in benefit improvements. And focusing healthcare dollars on care and benefits, instead of overpayments to private insurance companies.
John Dingell: This is the gavel I used when I presided over the House when we passed Medicare in 1965. I want to reintroduce some of the comments that my Republican colleagues were making when I was sitting up in the chair using this gavel. Here is what Carl Curtis, senator from Nebraska, said about Medicare: “It is not needed, it is socialism. It moves the country in a direction which is not good for anyone, whether they’re young or old. It charts a course from which there will be no turning back. It is not only socialism, it is brazen socialism.” Sounds a little like what they’re saying about the health bill that we’re pushing.
Barbara B. Kennelly: I stand here as a senior, absolutely appalled at what I’ve heard all summer. Absolutely appalled. Max Richmond, my vice-president is somewhere here. We have gone around the country and done townhall meetings with members of Congress. And I hear things that are absolutely wrong, and all that din and all that noise doesn’t tell what Speaker Pelosi’s bill does. And so that’s why I am here today, to make sure that seniors understand what is going on right now. And you know, here is the big problem. Seniors think, and they’ve been told, if we don’t have healthcare reform that they can have the status quo. Well, they can’t. Because healthcare costs are increasing. We all know about how much all healthcare costs are increasing.
Martin Heinrich: We know, as you’ve heard before today, that the status quo is unsustainable. American seniors included simply can’t afford to keep paying the rising costs of health insurance, and our seniors shouldn’t have to choose between necessary prescription drugs and paying their utility bills. The house bill does a great deal for seniors. It weighs deductibles and co-pays for preventative care. It improves quality and lowers costs, extending the solvency of the Medicare program, and cracks down on unscrupulous companies who would take advantage of our seniors. Significantly, the bill will reduce and eventually eliminate the prescription drug doughnut hole. There is no issue that I hear more about from my seniors than closing the doughnut hole in Medicare Part D.
Gerry Johnston: I’m Gerry Johnston, and I’m a causality of a medicare doughnut hole. Last year, as I was refilling a prescription, I was told that I owed a hundred dollars. I thought, “They must be mistaken”, since I had been asked to pay that much before. But no, I was told I was in the doughnut hole and if I wanted to get my pain relief for my back, I would have to pay the $100. It was a terrible surprise because I didn’t have room in my budget to pay for the medicine that allows me to manage my chronic back pain. I was torn between going without the prescription and coping with the pain of putting the charge on my credit card, and hoping I could work out something later. I’m glad to be here today to speak for the millions of seniors who understand that we can’t reform Medicare and solve the doughnut hole problem unless we address the healthcare reform bill overall. Most seniors are on fixed incomes, as myself, and don’t have a lot of options when it comes to paying their rising health costs bills. We need reform now. Thank you so much.
Comments
Leave a Reply