Source:
American Legislative Exchange Council
As anti-freedom health policy—such as an
individual mandate, an employer mandate, and the "public
plan"—surface at the state and national levels, ALEC's Freedom
of
Choice in Health Care Act has become an essential tool in securing
the
rights of patients to make their own health care choices.
Ensuring Access to Health Services—Without Waiting
Lists
When consumers control the dollars, they make the decisions. On
the other hand, a single-payer health care system—which forces
patients to enroll in a one-size-fits-all plan with rich benefits and
weak cost-sharing—will cause spending to skyrocket and
policymakers to ration care as a cost-containment measure.
Look at what's happened in New Zealand, where breast cancer patients
were blocked from accessing the lifesaving drug Herceptin—because
it cost too much. Or think about brain injury patients in
Canada—a country that ranks 19th among 26 reporting OECD nations
in access to CT scanners.
Under a socialized medicine scheme, many patients will suffer, and
some will die on a waiting list. Patients don't deserve that kind
of treatment. ALEC's Freedom of Choice in Health Care Act
will prevent patients from being enrolled in a single-payer health
system that will simultaneously pay for everyone's health care and limit
access to it.
Protecting the Doctor-Patient
Relationship
ALEC's Freedom of Choice in Health Care Act ensures a person's
right
to pay directly for medical care. Single-payer systems, like in
Canada, make it illegal for citizens to go outside the government's
health care plan and contract for their own medical services. Cost
overruns require most single-payer plans to restrict patient choices,
and instead mandate an "evidence-based" treatment schedule that
standardizes care.
ALEC's Freedom of Choice in Health Care Act ensures that
patients—not government officials—should decide which doctor
to see, what treatments to get, and whether or not to get a second or
third opinion.
Preventing Costly, "Free" Universal
Coverage
States should heed the painful lessons set by Wisconsin's high-cost
universal health plan. In 2007, that state proposed—and
rejected—a single-payer health plan for its citizens. The
Wisconsin plan would have required all citizens to drop their private
health coverage and instead enroll in a state-administered plan.
Financing the plan would have meant a $15.2 billion dollar tax
increase—the largest tax increase ever enacted by any state.
And the plan would have become more expensive every
year—comprising nearly 40 percent of Wisconsin's budget in the
first year alone.
With ballooning budget deficits, states can't afford costly,
"free"-in-name-only universal health coverage. ALEC's Freedom of
Choice in Health Care Act will save taxpayers from crippling,
health-related tax hikes and budget cuts.
Guarding Against Mandates That Don't Work
ALEC's Freedom of Choice in Health Care Act would block
legislation
that imposes costly, bureaucratic penalties for choosing to obtain or
decline health coverage. This provision strikes at the heart of an
individual mandate—implemented in Massachusetts and
elsewhere—that penalize individuals and businesses for failing to
purchase health insurance.
The Massachusetts example is particularly instructive for states
facing an individual mandate. Three years into the mandate,
Massachusetts still hasn't achieved 100% coverage—in fact, the Bay
State still has more than 200,000 uninsured residents. Many of the
uninsured were exempt from the mandate because coverage was too
expensive. Over half of those who did get insurance got fully- or
partially-subsidized coverage, courtesy of Massachusetts taxpayers.
What's worse, health spending has increased by
42 percent in Massachusetts since the mandate was enacted; taxpayers,
doctors, and hospitals are facing increased taxes and fees; and patients
are finding it hard to see a doctor.
Simply put, ALEC's Freedom of Choice in
Health Care Act would protect against intrusive mandates that just don't
work.
View some of the press coverage
of ALEC's health reform
initiative...
For more information about ALEC's health
reform initiative, contact Christie Herrera, Director of ALEC's Health
and Human Services Task Force, at 202-742-8505 or christie@alec.org.
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