Cutting Costs and Covering America: A 21st Century Health
Care System
University of Iowa
May 29, 2007
I want to thank the University of Iowa for having us here,
and I want to give a special thanks to Amy and Lane for joining me today to
tell their story.
A few hours north of here, Amy and Lane run a small business
that offers internet service to their community. They were the very first
company to provide broadband access in their remote corner of northeastern
Iowa, and every day, hundreds of people count on the services they provide to
do their jobs and live their lives.
But today they are on the brink of bankruptcy - a bankruptcy
that has nothing to do with any poor business decision they made or slump in
the economy they weren't prepared for.
Lane was diagnosed with cancer when he was twenty-one years
old. He lost a lung, a leg bone and part of a hip. Seventeen years later, he is
cancer-free, but the cost of health insurance for him, his wife and his three
kids is now over $1,000 per month. Their family's premiums keep rising hundreds
of dollars every year, and as hard as they look, they simply cannot find
another provider that will insure them.
Amy and Lane are now paying forty percent of their annual
income in health care premiums. They have no retirement plan and nothing saved.
They can no longer afford to buy new clothes or fill up their cars with gas,
they have racked up more credit card debt then they know what to do with, and
Amy wrote to us and said that the day she heard the loan officer say the word
"bankruptcy" was one of the worst in her life.
"My heart was in pain," she said. "This is
not who we are. We have done everything right. We have done everything we were
supposed to do. This is not who we are."
Amy is right. This is not who we are. We are not a country
that rewards hard work and perseverance with bankruptcies and foreclosures. We
are not a country that allows major challenges to go unsolved and unaddressed
while our people suffer needlessly. In the richest nation on Earth, it is
simply not right that the skyrocketing profits of the drug and insurance
industries are paid for by the skyrocketing premiums that come from the pockets
of the American people.
This is not who we are. And this is not who we have to be.
In the past few months, I've heard stories like Amy's at
town halls we've held in New Hampshire, and here in Iowa, and all across the
country. Stories from people who are hanging on by a thread because of the
stack of medical bills they can't pay. People who don't know where else to turn
for help, but who do know that when it comes to health care, we have talked,
tinkered, and let this crisis fester for decades. People who watch as every
year, candidates offer up detailed health care plans with great fanfare and
promise, only to see them crushed under the weight of Washington politics and
drug and insurance industry lobbying once the campaign is over.
Well this cannot be one of those years. We have reached a
point in this country where the rising cost of health care has put too many
families and businesses on a collision course with financial ruin and left too
many without coverage at all; a course that Democrats and Republicans, small
business owners and CEOs have all come to agree is not sustainable or acceptable
any longer.
We often hear the statistic that there are 45 million
uninsured Americans. But the biggest reason why they don't have insurance is
the same reason why those who do have it are struggling to pay their medical
bills - it's just too expensive.
Health care premiums have risen nearly 90% in the past six
years. That's four times faster than wages have gone up. Like Ami and Lane's
family, nearly half of all Iowans have said that they've had to cut back on
food and heating expenses because of high health care costs. 11 million insured
Americans spent more than a quarter of their salary on health care last year.
And over half of all personal bankruptcies are now caused by medical bills.
Businesses aren't faring much better. Over half of all small
businesses can no longer afford to insure their workers, and so many others
have responded to rising costs by laying off workers or shutting their doors
for good. Some of the biggest corporations in America, giants of industry like
GM and Ford, are watching foreign competitors based in countries with universal
health care run circles around them, with a GM car containing seven times as
much health care cost as a Japanese car.
This cost crisis is trapping us in a vicious cycle. As
premiums rise, more employers drop coverage, and more Americans become
uninsured. Every time those uninsured walk into an emergency room and receive
care that's more expensive because they have nowhere else to turn, there is a
hidden tax for the rest of us as premiums go up by an extra $922 per family.
And as premiums keep rising, more families and businesses drop their coverage
and become uninsured.
It would be one thing if all this money we spend on premiums
and co-payments and deductibles went directly towards making us healthier and
improving the quality of our care.
But it doesn't. One out of every four dollars we spend on
health care is swallowed up by administrative costs - on needless paperwork and
antiquated record-keeping that belongs in the last century. This failure to
update the way our doctors and hospitals store and share information also leads
to costly errors. Each year, 100,000 Americans die due to medical errors and we
lose $100 billion because of prescription drug errors alone.
We also spend far more on treating illnesses and conditions
that could've been prevented or managed for far less. Our health care system is
turning into a disease care system, where too many plans and providers don't
offer or encourage check-ups and tests and screenings that could save thousands
of lives and billions of dollars down the road.
Of course, the biggest obstacle in the way of reforming this
skewed system of needless waste and spiraling costs are those who profit most
from the status quo - the drug and insurance companies who pocket a growing
chunk of the medical bills that people like Amy and Lane are going bankrupt
trying to pay.
Since President Bush took office, the single fastest growing
component of health care spending has been administrative costs and profits for
insurance companies. Coming in a close second is the amount we spend on
prescription drugs. In 2006, five of the biggest drug and insurance companies
were among the fifty most profitable businesses in the nation. One insurance
company CEO received a $125 million salary that same year, and has been given
stock options worth over $1 billion. As an added perk, he and his wife get free
private health care for as long as they live.
Now, making this kind of money costs money, which is why the
drug and insurance industries have also spent more than $1 billion on lobbying
and campaign contributions over the last ten years to block the kind of reform
we need. They've been pretty good at it too, preventing the sale of cheaper
prescription drugs and defeating attempts to make it harder for insurance
companies to deny coverage on the basis of a preexisting condition.
Look, it's perfectly understandable for a business to try
and make a profit, and every American has the right to make their case to the
people who represent us in Washington.
But I also believe that every American has the right to
affordable health care. I believe that the millions of Americans who can't take
their children to a doctor when they get sick have that right. I believe that
people like Amy and Lane who are on the brink of losing everything they own
have that right. And I believe that no amount of industry profiteering and
lobbying should stand in the way of that right any longer.
That's not who we are.
We now face an opportunity - and an obligation - to turn the
page on the failed politics of yesterday's health care debates. It's time to
bring together businesses, the medical community, and members of both parties
around a comprehensive solution to this crisis, and it's time to let the drug
and insurance industries know that while they'll get a seat at the table, they
don't get to buy every chair.
We can do this. The climate is far different than it was the
last time we tried this in the early nineties. Since then, rising costs have
caused many more businesses to back reform, and in states from Massachusetts to
California, Democratic and Republican governors and legislatures have been way
ahead of Washington in passing increasingly bolder initiatives to cover the
uninsured and cut costs.
We've had some success in Illinois as well. As a state
senator, I brought Republicans and Democrats together to pass legislation
insuring 20,000 more children and 65,000 more parents. I authored and passed a
bill cracking down on hospital price gouging of uninsured patients, and helped
expand coverage for routine mammograms for women on Medicaid. We created
hospital report cards, so that every consumer could see things like the ratio
of nurses to patients, the number of annual medical errors, and the quality of
care they could expect at each hospital. And I passed a law that put Illinois
on a path to universal coverage.
It's a goal I believe we can achieve on a national level
with the health care plan I'm outlining today. The very first promise I made on
this campaign was that as president, I will sign a universal health care plan
into law by the end of my first term in office. Today I want to lay out the
details of that plan - a plan that not only guarantees coverage for every
American, but also brings down the cost of health care and reduces every
family's premiums by as much as $2500. This second part is important because,
in the end, coverage without cost containment will only shift our burdens, not
relieve them. So we will take steps to remove the waste and inefficiency from
the system so we can bring down costs and improve the quality of our care while
we're at it.
My plan begins by covering every American.
If you already have health insurance, the only thing that
will change for you under this plan is the amount of money you will spend on
premiums. That will be less.
If you are one of the 45 million Americans who don't have
health insurance, you will have it after this plan becomes law. No one will be
turned away because of a preexisting condition or illness. Everyone will be
able buy into a new health insurance plan that's similar to the one that every
federal employee - from a postal worker in Iowa to a Congressman in Washington
- currently has for themselves. It will cover all essential medical services,
including preventive, maternity, disease management, and mental health care.
And it will also include high standards for quality and efficiency.
If you cannot afford this insurance, you will receive a
subsidy to pay for it. If you have children, they will be covered. If you
change jobs, your insurance will go with you. If you need to see a doctor, you
will not have to wait in long lines for one. If you want more choices, you will
also have the option of purchasing a number of affordable private plans that
have similar benefits and standards for quality and efficiency.
To help pay for this, we will ask all but the smallest
businesses who don't make a meaningful contribution today to the health
coverage of their employees to do so by supporting this new plan. And we will
allow the temporary Bush tax cut for the wealthiest Americans to expire.
But we also have to demand greater efficiencies from our
health care system. Today, we pay almost twice as much for health care per
person than other industrialized nations, and too much of it has nothing to do
with patient care.
That's why the second part of my health care plan includes
five, long-overdue steps we will take to bring down costs and bring our health
care system into the 21st century - steps that will save each American family
up to $2500 on their premiums.
First, we will reduce costs for business and their workers
by picking up the tab for some of the most expensive illnesses and conditions.
Right now, two out of every ten patients account for more
than eighty percent of all health care costs. These are patients with serious
illnesses like cancer or heart disease who require the most expensive surgeries
and treatments. Insurance companies end up spending a lion's share of their
expenses on these patients, and not surprisingly, they pass those expenses on
to the rest of us in the form of higher premiums. Under my proposal, the
federal government will pay for part of these catastrophic cases, which means
that your premiums will go down.
Second, we will finally begin focusing our health care
system on preventing costly, debilitating conditions in the first place.
We all know the saying that an ounce of prevention is worth
a pound of cure. But today we're nowhere close to that ounce. We spend less
than four cents of every health care dollar on prevention and public health
even though eighty percent of the risk factors involved in the leading causes
of death are behavior-related and thus preventable.
The problem is, there's currently no financial incentive for
health care providers to offer services that will encourage patients to eat
right or exercise or go for annual check-ups and screenings that can help
detect diseases early. The real profit today is made in treating diseases, not
preventing them. That's wrong, which is why in our new national health care
plan and other participating plans, we will require coverage of evidence-based,
preventive care services, and make sure they are paid for.
But in the end, prevention only works if we take
responsibility for our own health and make the right decisions in our own lives
- if we eat the right foods, and stay active, and listen to our wives when they
tell us to stop smoking.
Third, we will reduce the cost of our health care by
improving the quality of our health care.
It's estimated that poor quality care currently costs us up
to $100 billion a year. One study found that in Pennsylvania, Medicare spent $1
billion a year just on treating infections that patients contracted while at
the hospital - infections that could have easily been prevented by hospitals.
This study led hospitals across the state to take action, and today some have
completely eliminated infections that used to take hundreds of lives and cost
hundreds of thousands of dollars every year.
Much like the hospital report cards we passed in Illinois,
my health care proposal will ask hospitals and providers to collect, track, and
publicly report measures of health care quality. We'll provide the public with
information about preventable medical errors, nurse-to-patient ratios, and
hospital-acquired infections. We'll also start measuring what's effective and what's
not when it comes to different drugs and procedures, so that patients can
finally start making informed choices about the care that's best for them. And
instead of rewarding providers and physicians only by the sheer quantity of
services and procedures they prescribe, we'll start rewarding them for the
quality of the outcomes for their patients.
Fourth, we will reduce waste and inefficiency by moving from
a 20th century health care industry based on pen and paper to a 21st century
industry based on the latest information technology.
Almost every other industry in the world has saved billions
on administrative costs by computerizing all of their records and information.
Every transaction you make at a bank now costs less than a dollar. Even at the
Veterans Administration, where it used to cost nine dollars to pull up your
medical record, new technology means you can call up the same record on the
internet for next to nothing.
But because we haven't updated technology in the rest of the
health care industry, a single transaction still costs up to twenty-five
dollars.
This reform is long overdue. By moving to electronic medical
records, we can give doctors and nurses easy access to all the necessary
information about their patients, so if they type-in a certain prescription, a
patient's allergies will pop right up on the screen. This will reduce deadly
medical errors, and it will also shorten the length of hospital stays, ensure
that nurses can spend less time on paperwork and more time with patients, and
save billions and billions of dollars in the process.
Finally, we will break the stranglehold that a few big drug
and insurance companies have on the health care market.
We all value the medical cures and innovations that the
pharmaceutical industry has developed over the years, but it's become clear
that some of these companies are dramatically overcharging Americans for what
they offer. They'll sell the same exact drugs here in America for double the
price of what they charge in Europe and Canada. They'll push expensive products
on doctors by showering them with gifts, spend more to market and advertise
their drugs than to research and develop them, and when a generic drug maker
comes along and wants to sell the same product for cheaper, the brand-name
manufacturers will actually payoff the generic ones so they can preserve their
monopolies and keep charging the rest of us high prices.
We don't have to stand for that anymore. Under my plan, we
will make generic drugs more available to consumers and we will tell the drug
companies that their days of forcing affordable prescription drugs out of the
market are over.
And it's not just the drug industry that's manipulating the
market. In the last ten years, there have been over four hundred health
insurance mergers. Right here in Iowa, just three companies control more than
three-quarters of the health insurance market. These changes were supposed to
increase efficiency in the industry. But what's really increased is the amount
of money we're paying them.
This is wrong, and when I'm President, we're going to make
drug and insurance companies compete for their customers just like every other
business in America. We'll investigate and prosecute the monopolization of the
insurance industry. And where we do find places where insurance companies
aren't competitive, we will make them pay a reasonable share of their profits
on the patients they should be caring for in the first place. Because that's
what's right.
We are a country that looks at the thousands of stories just
like Amy and Lane's - stories we have heard and told for decades - and realizes
that our American story calls on us to write them a hopeful, happier ending.
After all, that's what we've done before.
Half a century ago, America found itself in the midst of
another health care crisis. For millions of elderly Americans, the single
greatest cause of poverty and hardship was the crippling cost of their health
care. A third of all elderly Americans lived in poverty, and nearly half had no
health insurance.
As health care and hospital costs continued to rise, more
and more private insurers simply refused to insure our elderly, believing they
were too great of a risk to care for.
The resistance to action was fierce. Proponents of health
care reform were opposed by well-financed, well-connected interest groups who
spared no expense in telling the American people that these efforts were
"dangerous" and "un-American," "revolutionary"
and even "deadly."
And yet the reformers marched on. They testified before
Congress and they took their case to the country and they introduced dozens of
different proposals but always, always they stood firm on their goal to provide
affordable health care for every American senior. And finally, after years of
advocacy and negotiation and plenty of setbacks, President Lyndon Johnson
signed the Medicare bill into law on July 30th of 1965.
The signing ceremony was held in Missouri, in a town called
Independence, with the man who issued the call for universal health care during
his own presidency - Harry Truman.
And as he stood with Truman by his side and signed what
would become one of the most successful government programs in history - a
program that had seemed impossible for so long - President Johnson looked out
at the crowd and said, "History shapes men, but it is a necessary faith of
leadership that men can help shape history."
Never forget that we have it within our power to shape
history in this country. It is not in our character to sit idly by as victims
of fate or circumstance, for we are a people of action and innovation, forever
pushing the boundaries of what's possible.
Now is the time to push those boundaries once more. We have come so far in the debate on health care in this country, but now we must finally answer the call issued by Truman, advanced by Johnson, and pushed along by the simple power of stories like the one told by Amy and Lane. The time has come for affordable, universal health care in America. And I look forward to working with all of you to meet this challenge in the weeks and months to come. Thank you.