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Friday, December 18, 2009

Is this Healthcare Reform

It appears that at this late date that the reform currently being considered in the US Senate would better be titled Health Insurance Reform. I for one have to wonder if anyone in the Republican Party that is in Congress either knows or has a person with a very expensive chronic illness in their family or circle of friends. I would say not. For the GOP to have had the Presidency and Congress for six of the past nine years and to have done nothing about the ever increasing cost of healthcare and the insurance necessary to pay for it, to now put up every roadblock and to obstruct the process is not to be believable. Not one GOP member of Congress has stood up for the needs of the chronically ill in this country. There is a quote attributed to Roy Cohn "That America is no place for the infirmed." I believe that the GOP believe this with all of their hearts or that organ that pumps ice water around their cold blooded bodies.

It is impossible for a person with a very expense health condition like Christmas Disease to be self employed or to work for a small start up company even if they are very well educated. There just are not enough bodies to spread the cost of $250,000 annual for factor replacement therapy around to in a company that does not employee thousands of workers. Given this most have to work for large companies or organization that can absorb these cost for a few years and even then the cost of premiums continually spirals upwards for everyone in the health insurance plan. The alternative is for that person not to make much of a living so that they can qualify for the States Medcaid program. Here too that person is faced with various challenges to optimal healthcare. The use of emergency rooms rather then a home healthcare company to provide nursing services.

Without a strong Public Option for the Chronically ill our fate will always be in someone else's hands. We will never be able to work where we want to and for whom we want to if the system remains the status quo. The current bill in the Senate allows insurance companies to charge a person with an expensive chronic illness three times the standard premium rate. How much would you have to make to turn over to the insurance company for this policy? Why should the cost of your health insurance exceed the cost of your mortgage? This bill will continue to lock the chronically ill out of the America dream. Why can't the riches nation on the planet look out for its fellow citizens that just happen to have at no fault of their own a chronic illness without forcing them to be bankrupt or live in poverty?