America’s Healthcare Crisis:
Even with the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), the two primary challenges of healthcare reform persist: 1) The skyrocketing cost of healthcare continues unabated. To reduce spending without providing coverage for the uninsured leaves the crisis unresolved. To cover some of the uninsured through uncontrolled federal spending greatly exacerbates the national debt.
Sadly, the PPACA greatly exacerbates out-of-control government spending while putting access to care for seniors in jeopardy. · Total U.S debt now exceeds $15 trillion. There must be a better way.
The Fundamental Question:There are only two ways to control costs. Either patients, physicians, nurses, hospitals, and the business community work together to use healthcare dollars more efficiently, or the government will restrict access to care. History teaches us there is no third option. In considering healthcare reform we must begin with one fundamental question. Who should control the personal and complex process of healthcare decision-making? You and your physician? Or Washington? All reforms fall into one category or the other. Physicians for Reform strongly believes patients and physicians should remain at the center of American medicine. This is only possible when patients control their own healthcare dollars, not the government. test
*U.S. Government Accountability Office, “Medicaid and CHIP: Most Physicians Serve Covered Children but have Difficulty Referring them for Specialty Care,” GAO-11-624 June 30, 2011. http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-624?source=ra *Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services, “National Health Expenditure Projections 2009 – 2019,” September, 2010. https://www.cms.gov/NationalHealthExpendData/downloads/NHEProjections2009to2019.pdf |


Copyright © 2011 C.L. Gray