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Sen. John Kerry

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Healthcare Is Better and More Affordable Because of Health Reform

Posted: 03/23/2012 11:43 am

Two years ago today, President Obama signed into law our landmark universal health care reform.

The 24/7 news cycle left little time to provide historical context, but it was a milestone a century in the making. Presidents as disparate as Teddy Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton had all tried to do this and come up short.

But we got there in 2010. And then all hell broke loose. Yes, we paid a political price, and some good folks went down to defeat because they'd put their careers on the line for health care. Good for them. One day a vote for health reform will be remembered the same way as a vote for the Civil Rights Act or the Clinton deficit reduction package of 1993, because when you're on the right side of history, and you do the right thing despite the heat of the moment, ultimately the pendulum swings back your way.

And well it should, because despite some of the ugliest and most deceitful rhetoric I've ever seen in a legislative debate -- from the smear of "death panels" to the lies about "socialized medicine" -- the lives of tens of millions of Americans will be demonstrably better because of the Affordable Care Act. They say the proof is in the pudding; in this case, the proof will be in the patients. Patients who won't be turned away or denied insurance because of preexisting conditions such as cancer, childhood asthma, or even past pregnancies.

While others refuse to recognize this reality, one thing is certain. None of this national change would have been possible if Massachusetts hadn't paved the way and provided the model for reform. We took a moral imperative and showed the nation it was achievable. Now, as we approach the sixth anniversary of reform in Massachusetts, our coverage rates are the best in the country -- 98 percent of people have health insurance, including 99.8 percent of kids. We've made coverage affordable to low-income folks, maximized enrollment in Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), ensured that individuals and employers pay their fair share, and created a health insurance exchange so consumers can comparison shop for health insurance. Contrary to ideological bluster, which forecasted that reform would erode private health insurance, employer-based coverage has grown in Massachusetts even as it has declined in most states. In Massachusetts, 76 percent of employers now offer coverage; the national average is just 60 percent.

Even better, the Affordable Care Act will bring the successes of Massachusetts to the nation -- ensuring that by 2016, 93 percent of Americans will have health insurance and 30 million previously uninsured Americans will have the care that should be a right, not a privilege.

What we accomplished nationally is also good for Massachusetts. It's bringing us substantial federal assistance over the next decade to sustain and strengthen MassHealth programs. We're already seeing the results. Massachusetts has already received nearly $190 million in federal funding to build our health care workforce, crack down on fraud and support public health -- including $73 million in grants to our community health centers. Thanks to the new health care law, over 20,000 young adults in Massachusetts gained insurance coverage because they were allowed to stay on their parent's plan until they turned 26. Nearly 71,000 seniors in the Bay State received help with their prescription drug costs because we closed Medicare's unfair prescription drug donut hole. Because of the law's emphasis on prevention, over 780,000 Medicare beneficiaries in our state received free preventive services -- such as mammograms and colonoscopies -- or a free annual wellness visit with their doctor. And in 2011, 1.3 million Massachusetts residents with private health insurance gained access to preventive services without any out-of-pocket cost.

Two years later, I look back on that vote and I know we did the right thing -- and the proof is in the peoples' lives that are better now and millions more that will be better for it in the years to come. Instead of running away from what we accomplished, we should embrace it. In American politics there's no "way-back machine" -- you can't avoid your way into office. But mainly because we have a great story to tell about making health care better and more affordable, we shouldn't run from the truth, we should run on the truth. Partisan rhetoric and political hyperbole, however untrue, can make great theater and can sway a news cycle or even an election cycle -- but it cannot survive the test of history. Ultimately, it's hard to argue with reality. If you want to see that health reform can work, come to Massachusetts. And if you want to see it work in America, just wait, because the best is still to come.

 

Follow Sen. John Kerry on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnKerry

Two years ago today, President Obama signed into law our landmark universal health care reform. The 24/7 news cycle left little time to provide historical context, but it was a milestone a century in...
Two years ago today, President Obama signed into law our landmark universal health care reform. The 24/7 news cycle left little time to provide historical context, but it was a milestone a century in...
 
 
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grilledturbot
If youve got a business.you didn’t build that
10:58 PM on 03/25/2012
I'm sure Mr Kerry is breathing a sigh of relief that he and his fellow socialists managed to not only waiver their political cronies, but to waiver themselves -our congressional employees- from having to participate in the horrendous Obamacare.
10:46 PM on 03/25/2012
We would have been so much better off if individuals had a right to see prices of MD's and could make an informed decision regarding the worth of a doctors services. As it is coming, uncle sam will decide the price and decide what services are essential. If you don't think rationing is on the menu, you are out of your mind. Why the dems refused to let the market make decisions, I will never understand. All this will do is to motivate MD's to tailor their practices to what the highest fees they can make. This exacerbates the problem with insurance companies now, it does not clarify and simplify.....

And John Kerry, please go away live off your wife's deceased husbands wealth. You weren't smart enough to earn it.
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BOBinPS
Really?
10:41 PM on 03/25/2012
What nonsense. Expanding health care and thinking that it pays for itself is just nuts. Yes, of course we all pay a price for the uninsured taking advantage of the requirement of ERs to provide free care. So, just stop the requirement. The problem is that Americans probably won't tolerate the non-payers dying in the streets! The money that is supposed to pay for health care expansion will never happen. If it does, no MD will care for Medicare or Medical patients. Why would they? The don't get paid. The only way to reduce health care costs and retain quality is making insurance non-profit. Look to Switzerland. Or consider single payer. Both are better than what we have. Single payer is cheeper.
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slowtono
10:17 PM on 03/25/2012
So like Massachusetts let states decide, not feds! Mandate to implement then get out of the way, with 50 plus ideas one may make it!
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deweaver
Scientist, businessman, semi-retired
10:09 PM on 03/25/2012
Has there been a measurable improvement in the "average life expectancy" or even the documented health of the citizens or a decrease in major health problems ranging from diabetes to obesity -- a real measure of "better"? If not, the statement: " the proof is in the peoples' lives that are better now" is just the same kind of political spin that he accuses the GOP of using. Whose lives are better beyond the bureaucrats that are managing the extra paperwork?

Shifting the cost from Peter to Paul doesn't help peoples health, it just rewards the political class who have the power to say who will be Peter. It is good for the political class and their bureaucratic minions, while being detrimental to the average citizen, especially the politically unconnected.

Most of what the government is doing in health care such as the new privacy standards that prevent you and your doctor from sharing information, without a lot of paper work to keep your information private, except from the two groups that you don't want to know the details of your medical conditions -- the insurance companies and the government who are not restricted by the rules. They have full access, but my Dr. and I don't have Internet access to my own records ??????
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Richard Genco
10:06 PM on 03/25/2012
Another one who thinks he knows whats best for us even though he has never been us.
08:24 PM on 03/25/2012
Please note that Kerry is not giving up his healthcare coverage provided by the government.
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andyboy
Little bit Country, little Chicago Blues
09:09 PM on 03/25/2012
Good point. He's a gajillionaire looking down from his ivory tower. It's all so simple to him. Insurance companies and Hospitals and Pill factories still gouge us but it's better now. Sure. I believe you.

Hey there are some kids who can't get a job due to the economic meltdown government caused that can stay on Mommy and Daddy's insurance for a while longer. Oh boy that makes it all worthwhile. BS.
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Richard Genco
10:07 PM on 03/25/2012
Keep in mind that this is the same guy who went to war with a camera man.
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demisfine
Often correct, NEVER right.
07:59 PM on 03/25/2012
Wouldn't it be wonderful if, two years in, the DNC had a message machine that worked?
If the benefits of the ACA were visible, because Americans KNEW about what our Congress had passed, and what our president had signed, into law????
The DNC will be the ones to blame if the GOP takes over the WH and Congress.
The message machine is broken, and no one seems to notice or care.
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teardownthiswallst
Only Truth will set us Free
07:28 PM on 03/25/2012
I hope it works John, I really do. The Supreme Court test is just the beginning of a laundry list of vicious attacks to come on every single piece of the bill. Boehner swears they’ll take it down one piece at a time. They can at least stall things for decades. Frankly, all the insurance companies probably need is a good stall tactic. I recently read an article projecting yearly healthcare premiums would exceed the average salary by 2030 I think it was. I’d have to look up it up again, but this point has already been made with the outrageous premium increases we’ve seen of late. What good is an affordable care act if it turns out only rich people can afford it; we already had that.

The biggest mystery of all is the nonexistent defense of the bill by Democrats.

A class act would allow their opponent to save face when they have an honest difference of opinion that actually has some facts supportive of their views. But a class act would never allow vicious, thieving, lying, pirating, thugs to run roughshod over the nation destroying millions of peoples lives and still leave them any chance of retaining any respectability. There is only one solution to this type; expose them for the liars and cheats they are and destroy them.

If anyone should know this it’s you John. The GOP swiftboats every truth in town. Turn that boat around, and load the guns with the truth.
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andyboy
Little bit Country, little Chicago Blues
09:21 PM on 03/25/2012
I wouldn't hold my breath on that one. The reason the defense of the bill is non-existent is because it's indefensible. It was a transparent sell-out to big Insurance. A guarantee of massive profits ad-infinitum. Instead of a new way forward it's become a death-rattle as we succumb to the crushing weight of the greed of the Insurance/Pharma/Hospital/Doctor/Lawyer cabal. They are like the Mafia. Organized crime parading around in white and projecting the image of saviour while ravaging our future. Does John mention the thousands of waivers being granted to big, hugely profiitable businesses so they can still hire people and pay them minimum wage and not provide them any healthcare benefits? I could go on but I don't want beat up the poor out of touch rich guy.
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tnkeating
Dyslexic agnostic insomniac
07:20 PM on 03/25/2012
Don't make me laugh, the new CBO report puts it at 1.67 trillion, not 938 billion as originally projected. Nothing in life is free but where exactly is there any savings, that almost double.
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rda1911a1
God Bless John Browning
07:08 PM on 03/25/2012
I always love when liberal millionaires tell me what I need
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inthedesert
Those who never question will fall for anything.
07:08 PM on 03/25/2012
There's a great article in today's LA Times about a family who took their daughter to the ER because she had a "tummy ache" and wound up with a $5,000 bill. This is "affordable healthcare"?
06:21 PM on 03/25/2012
no thanks.....as if the State of Mass is an example of Obama care success
06:19 PM on 03/25/2012
classic out of touch rich liberal on the take from the government ! does he have a clue what it costs small business owners & employees for health care ????? my son's visit to the emergency room that billed us $850.00 for a quick x-ray and stint ... does he know what small business employees pay in monthly premiums while forking out $5,000 yearly deductibles ????? he really thinks premiums & deductibles will fall ??? i won't hold my breath.
this is all a scam ..... it's very simple, eliminate the 25 to 30% that the insurance business scams in profit , remove all the pen pushers from doctors offices & hospitals ..... cap what they can charge for ER visits .. sorry folks, Obama sold us out. wake up.
06:16 PM on 03/25/2012
I now pay 45$ copay to see a doctor. Last year it was 10$ That is almost half a days pay. The other half I lose in pay since I have to take time from work. Then you have the half the time the doctor doesn't even know WTF theyr talking about anyways. Now the insurers are colluding with the providers on the preventive benefits. So the insurance company doesnt' have to pay for preventive care, they have the doctors find anything. Anything at all so they can change the benefit to the patient/ victim deductible. Ok so thats they way it is. You ask the doctor how much would it cost then should the doctor find that little "nugget" for the insurer. They always say" o we cant tell you that you have to wait for the bill! BUT they expect you to sign on the dotted line swearing the house and your childrens future!! U know?? WTF is insurance for if I am required to write out blank checks?? I cannot do that. This does me NO good. No peace of mind. & usually no care.
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jsgaetano
Legum servi sumus ut liberi esse possimus
06:55 PM on 03/25/2012
Co-pays should be eliminated. Their ONLY intention is to "ration" care, putting it out of the reach people who can't afford the additional expenses.
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rda1911a1
God Bless John Browning
07:10 PM on 03/25/2012
don't worry under obamacare your bank account routing and account number is part of the electronic records. the HHS will take care of debiting your account no check to bother with