National Nurses Movement Lauds Al Gore For Leadership On Single-Payer Healthcare
Main Category: Health Insurance / Medical InsuranceArticle Date: 22 Oct 2007 - 4:00 PDT
The California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee thanks Al Gore for his forceful new words in support of the kind of universal, non-profit, single-payer healthcare that this country desperately needs-and that is succeeding in nearly every other industrialized democracy.
The statement reflects a growing national consensus that a national, non-profit insurance system would clearly out-perform the private insurance corporations that spend up to one-third of their overhead on overhead and profits ... and that it is long past time to put an end to the nation's healthcare crisis.
On this issue, however, the public is far ahead of most of the political class. A March New York Times/CBS poll found that the vast majority of Americans want a total restructuring of the healthcare system, and preferred a single-payer system to the current private insurance system 47% to 38%. Unfortunately, many politicians continue to accept money from health insurance corporations, and push plans that mandate Americans to purchase expensive and inefficient private insurance products.
"Al Gore has long been a champion of the environment-and now he's a champion of America's patients. There is only one solution to our healthcare crisis, and that is the kind of guaranteed, non-profit, single-payer health insurance that we know works," said Zenei Cortez, RN, a member of CNA/NNOC's Council of Presidents.
Called "Healthcare Is A Right," Gore released the following statement on his Current television channel :
I strongly support universal, single-payer, government-provided-or, government-funded-healthcare. It doesn't mean the government runs it, it has competition among the different providers. But I just think that we've long since reached the stage that its immoral to put people in a situation where they cannot get the medical care they need because their incomes aren't high enough. I think it ought to be a matter of right and our current system just doesn't work, its way too expensive. The quality of healthcare is excellent for those who have enough money to buy the very best, but lower-income and low middle-income Americans are not getting good healthcare and so many now can't afford the private health insurance that they're going without insurance, millions and millions of people. And I think that to eliminate the incredibly ridiculous cost of all this unnecessary paperwork and different standards for different companies, it is time to have universal health insurance.
http://www.calnurses.org
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15 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/86247.php>
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Why I Support Universal Health Care
posted by Beverly Nelmes on 23 Oct 2007 at 11:37 amI am one of the many uninsured souls in the United States who has
"fallen through the cracks", which are actually gaping holes. Although rhematoid and osteoarthritis, as well as a heart condition, prevent me
from easily working outside my home ( I am a telecommuter), and I require a walker to walk any distance at all, I am not considered sufficiently disabled by Pinellas County or the State of Florida for disability assistance. My employer does not provide health insurance
and I make nowhere near enough money to pay for private coverage.
For a month after I was in the hospital in late July for MRSA infected venous stasis ulcers, I was able to get help from the county for outpatient care based on my June income. This did NOT include surgical wound care. But because of some extra money earned in
August to prevent foreclosure on my condominium, I was denied further
county insurance, because here in Pinellas County you cannot make no more than $850 a month. County social workers even suggested I may have to quit my new job.!
Because I didn't get the surgical wound care I needed, I have developed gangrene that is just being kept in check by antibiotics provided for free by a local grocery store pharmacy. I am now on medical leave from my jobs, and if I am lucky, I may get my county insurance restored NEXT WEEK, and surgery sometime thereafter, despite the fact that doctors have told me I need surgery right away.
I am a prime example of the plight of the uninsured, and of the results of grossly inadequate public health programs here in the United States. The consequences of this actually cost the American taxpayer more in the long run than would an efficient, rational, humane, single-payer universal health care system. Such a program is long overdue.
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