Democratic Presidential Candidate Clinton Says She Would Improve Health Care Quality, Affordability
Main Category: Health Insurance / Medical InsuranceArticle Date: 28 Aug 2007 - 19:00 PDT
Presidential candidate Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) on Thursday in Lebanon, N.H., announced a proposal to improve health care quality, the AP/Washington Times reports. During a speech at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Clinton said that the proposal would increase Medicare reimbursements for physicians who participate in certification programs.
The proposal also would increase reimbursements from all federal programs for physicians who use teams to provide coordinated care and would end payments for preventable conditions that occur in hospitals, Clinton said. She added that the proposal would provide $300 million to increase enrollment in nursing schools, establish mentor programs for recent graduates and recruit more minorities into the profession. In addition, Clinton said that the proposal would expand and improve the information available to help patients make informed health care decisions.
She said, "Too often, and in too many places, our health care system hurts us instead of helps us," adding, "It hurts doctors, who aren't rewarded for providing the best care and are often punished for it financially. It hurts nurses, who are asked to work longer hours, caring for more patients with fewer resources. And it hurts patients, who are forced to make complicated medical decisions without basic information about their conditions and options" (AP/Washington Times, 8/24).
In addition, Clinton said, "Everyone tells me the same thing. Our health care system isn't working, and what can we do about it? The cost is too high and the coverage too thin, the care is not what it should be." In May, Clinton announced a proposal to reduce health care costs during a speech at George Washington University (Zuckman, Chicago Tribune, 8/24). She plans to announce a proposal to expand health insurance to more U.S. residents next month (AP/Washington Times, 8/24).
Biden, Richardson Speak to Nevada Union Workers
In related news, presidential candidates Sen. Joe Biden (D-Del.) and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson (D) on Wednesday in Reno, Nev., told union workers that as president, they would end the war in Iraq and spend some of the billions of dollars in savings on health care, the AP/Contra Costa Times reports.
At a convention of the Nevada State AFL-CIO, Biden said that the U.S. could provide health insurance for all U.S. children for $28 billion and could provide catastrophic coverage for all adults for the same amount. Biden said, "You can do this if you end the war and take away" tax cuts proposed by President Bush and approved by Congress for households with annual incomes more than $200,000. Richardson said that he would reduce the age of eligibility for Medicare from 65 to 55 (Sonner, AP/Contra Costa Times, 8/23).
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14 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/80651.php>
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Hillary Clinton's Medical Plan
posted by GinnyLambert on 29 Aug 2007 at 4:21 pmAs I understand it, Senator Clinton at the behest of her Husband who was President of the United States, submitted an excellent plan for Medicare Revisions and for insuring Health Care overage for needy children. Further: Her plans were never considered by the U. S. Congress because of political considerations. - like she didn't ask the permission of the proper people and solicit their input before she even started her research for "Health Care Reform. Mrs. Clinton was not a United States Senator then. She has much more influence now and I'm sure she will have even more when she is elected President. I should like her to start with the onerous Drug Plans now in force. I have been assigned to one which I will never use - and I have been billed for medications that I've not ordered nor do I know about the (alleged)medical condition they are intended to treat. Thank you for your consideration.
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