2022 -- H 6646 | |
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LC003539 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2022 | |
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H O U S E R E S O L U T I O N | |
RESPECTFULLY URGING THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS TO PASS LEGISLATION | |
ESTABLISHING AN IMPROVED "MEDICARE FOR ALL" SINGLE PAYER PROGRAM | |
THAT WOULD PROVIDE UNIVERSAL, COMPREHENSIVE AND AFFORDABLE | |
HEALTH CARE | |
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Introduced By: Representatives McGaw, Cassar, Kislak, Morales, Potter, Felix, Ajello, | |
Date Introduced: January 06, 2022 | |
Referred To: House Health & Human Services | |
1 | WHEREAS, Health care is a human right, not a commodity available only to those who |
2 | can afford it; and |
3 | WHEREAS, Although the federal Affordable Care Act (ACA) allowed states to offer |
4 | more people taxpayer-subsidized private health insurance, the ACA has not provided universal, |
5 | comprehensive, affordable coverage for all Rhode Islanders; and |
6 | WHEREAS, In 2019, about 4.3 percent of Rhode Islanders (43,000), had no health |
7 | insurance, causing about 43 (1 per 1,000 uninsured) unnecessary deaths each year; and |
8 | WHEREAS, An estimated 45 percent of Rhode Islanders (450,000) are under-insured |
9 | (e.g., not seeking health care because of high deductibles and co-pays); and |
10 | WHEREAS, COVID-19 exacerbated and highlighted problems with the status quo health |
11 | insurance system including: |
12 | • Coverage is too easily lost when health insurance is tied to jobs - between February and |
13 | May, 2020, about 21,000 more Rhode Islanders lost their jobs and their health insurance; |
14 | • Systemic racism is reinforced - Black and Hispanic/Latinx Rhode Islanders, more likely |
15 | to be uninsured or underinsured, have suffered the highest rates of COVID-19 mortality and |
16 | morbidity; and |
17 | • The fear of out-of-pocket costs for the uninsured and underinsured puts everyone at risk |
18 | because they avoid testing and treatment; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, The existing U.S. health insurance system has failed to control the cost of |
2 | health care and to provide universal access to health care in a system which is widely accepted to |
3 | waste 30 percent of its revenues on activities that do not improve the health of Americans; and |
4 | WHEREAS, Every industrialized nation in the world, except the United States, offers |
5 | universal health care to its citizens and enjoys better health outcomes for less than two-thirds to |
6 | one-half the cost; and |
7 | WHEREAS, Health care is rationed under our current multi-payer system, despite the |
8 | fact that Rhode Island patients, businesses and taxpayers already pay enough money to have |
9 | comprehensive and universal health insurance under a single-payer system; and |
10 | WHEREAS, About one-third of every "health care" dollar spent in the U.S. is wasted on |
11 | unnecessary administrative costs and excessive pharmaceutical company profits due to laws |
12 | preventing Medicare from negotiating prices and private health insurance companies lacking |
13 | adequate market share to effectively negotiate prices; and |
14 | WHEREAS, Private health insurance companies are incentivized to let the cost of health |
15 | care rise because higher costs require health insurance companies to charge higher health |
16 | insurance premiums, increasing companies’ revenue and stock price; and |
17 | WHEREAS, The health care marketplace is not an efficient market and because it |
18 | represents only 18 percent of the U.S. domestic market, and significantly restricts economic |
19 | growth, thus the financial well-being of every American, including every Rhode Islander; and |
20 | WHEREAS, Rhode Islanders cannot afford to keep the current multi-payer health |
21 | insurance system: |
22 | • Between 1991 and 2014, health care spending in Rhode Island per person rose by over |
23 | 250 percent rising much faster than income and greatly reducing disposable income; |
24 | • It is estimated that by 2025, the cost of health insurance for an average family of four |
25 | will equal about one-half of their annual income; and |
26 | • In the U.S., about two-thirds of personal bankruptcies are medical cost-related and of |
27 | these, about three-fourths had health insurance at the onset of their medical problems - in no other |
28 | industrialized country do people worry about going bankrupt over medical costs; and |
29 | WHEREAS, Rhode Island private businesses bear most of the costs of employee health |
30 | insurance coverage and spend significant time and money choosing from a confusing array of |
31 | increasingly expensive plans which do not provide comprehensive coverage; and |
32 | WHEREAS, Rhode Island employees and retirees lose significant wages and pensions as |
33 | they are forced to pay higher amounts of health insurance and health care costs; and |
34 | WHEREAS, Rhode Island’s hospitals are under increasing financial distress – i.e., |
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1 | closing, sold to out-of-state entities, attempting mergers – largely due to health insurance |
2 | reimbursement problems that other nations do not face and are fixed by a single payer system; |
3 | and |
4 | WHEREAS, The state and its municipalities face enormous other post-employment |
5 | benefits (OPEB) unfunded liabilities due mostly to health insurance costs; and |
6 | WHEREAS, The high costs of medical care could be lowered significantly if the federal |
7 | government could negotiate on behalf of all Americans for bulk purchasing, as well as gain |
8 | access to usage and price information currently kept confidential by private health insurers as |
9 | "proprietary information"; and |
10 | WHEREAS, Single payer health care would establish a true "free market" system where |
11 | doctors compete for patients rather than health insurance companies dictating which patients are |
12 | able to see which doctors and setting reimbursement rates; and |
13 | WHEREAS, Single payer would provide comprehensive coverage that would include |
14 | vision, hearing and dental care, mental health and substance abuse services, as well as |
15 | prescription medications, medical equipment, supplies, diagnostics and treatments; and |
16 | WHEREAS, Health care providers would spend significantly less time with |
17 | administrative work caused by multiple health insurance company requirements and barriers to |
18 | care delivery and would spend significantly less for overhead costs because of streamlined |
19 | billing; and |
20 | WHEREAS, There is extensive research that shows an improved Medicare for All single |
21 | payer program will benefit all by providing universal affordable health care coverage and |
22 | establishing a funding system that is public, progressive, sustainable and contains health care |
23 | costs; and |
24 | WHEREAS, A Medicare for All single payer program would, based on the performance |
25 | of existing Medicare, eliminate 50 percent of the administrative waste in the current system of |
26 | private insurance before other savings achieved through meaningful negotiation of prices and |
27 | other savings are considered; now, therefore be it |
28 | RESOLVED, That this House of Representatives of the State of Rhode Island hereby |
29 | recognizes the need for the United States government to implement an improved Medicare for All |
30 | single payer program and hereby respectfully urges Congress to pass such legislation as |
31 | previously introduced in Congress (e.g., Senate Bill 1129 and House Bill 1384); and be it further |
32 | RESOLVED, That the Secretary of State be and hereby is authorized and directed to |
33 | transmit duly certified copies of this resolution to the Clerk of the United States House of |
34 | Representatives, the Clerk of the United States Senate, and to members of the Rhode Island |
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1 | Congressional Delegation. |
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LC003539 | |
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