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9/10/09 - Monticello Times: Failure Would mean the status quo - Niel Ritchie

9/10/09

Monticello Times

Failure Would Mean The Status Quo

Oped by Niel Ritchie

<p>Opponents of health care reform have stepped up their threats, alleging that congressional plans&nbsp; madate such things as death panels, forced abortion and rationed care.&nbsp; These charges are over the top and have been so soundly&nbsp; debunked that it's beyond imagining they persist.</p>  <p>The truth is health-care reform does represent a&nbsp; real threat - but only if it fails , which will put additional millions of Americans and thousands more small businesses at risk.&nbsp; And nowhere is that truer than in rural areas.&nbsp;</p>  <p>In nearly every way rural health care lags behind that available in and around US cities.&nbsp; According to the National Rural Health Association, rural residents are twice as likely to die from non-auto-related injury, receive less treatment for chronic disease and report lower rates of overall health.</p>  <p>Rural seniors also are least able to afford life-saving drugs given higher rates of poverty and lower rates of prescription coverage.&nbsp; And private insurance is sparsest in these areas because exploding costs forced many small businesses to drop the benefit.&nbsp;&nbsp; At this point 75 percent of uninsured rural residents own or work&nbsp; in such mom and pop operations.</p>  <p>But it's not just health that's at stake; it's also basic access to care.&nbsp; Over the last 25 years, 470 rural hospitals have closed for lack of funds and thousands more areas - 2,157 at last count suffer from doctor shortages.&nbsp; And these trends show no sign of abating.&nbsp; In hard hit places like Ohio, four of 10 hospital layoffs in the next year are expected in rural communities.</p>  <p>With so much already conspiring against the health of rural Americans we cannot allow lies and deceit to derail much-needed reforms.</p>  <p>There is no truth to the frightening myths being spread by politicans doing the bidding of big insurance companies and their super-wealthy executives (who donate millions to campaigns)&nbsp; What is true is that an industry reaping historic profits will do whatever necessary to maintain their bottom line - and that includes spending millions to scare the wits out of people who have every reason to demand better care.</p>  <p>In 1993, 95 cents of every private health insurance premium dollar were spent on claims; today that's dropped to only 80 cents.&nbsp; Put another way; Asas more Americans fell into the vast pool of uninsured, profits of the nation's 10 largest health insurance companies soared 428 percent between 2000 and '07.&nbsp; And life's been good since.</p>  <p>Last year the CEO o Aetna was awarded a pay package exceeding $24 million.&nbsp;</p>  <p>Wendell Potter understands the tactics at work and the motives behind them as former head of corporate communications at two of the nations' largest health insurance companies.&nbsp; While with Cigna in the 1990s, he was charged with devising a scare campaign to kill the Clinton administration's reform effort, authoring many of the myths being shouted these days at town-hall meetings.&nbsp; Witnessing the catastrophic results of his work in one rural county he recently blew the whistle, and now speaks ut against the industry as senior fellow for&nbsp; health care at the Wisconsin-based Center for Media and Democracy.</p>  <p>What insurance companies do to manipulate public opinion is tell lies and throw off misleading information; fear mongering is a big part of their strategy.&quot; he recently told me. &quot;They've done it every time health care reform was brought up since the 1920s and every time the American people were duped.&quot;</p>  <p>Controlling health care costs is critical everywhere, but that alone won't cure all of our ills.&nbsp; For rural residents driving further for less care at greater cost, only a strong public option will rebuild what's been lost in our communities and reverse other needlessly tragic trends that have brought our system to crisis.</p>  <p>&nbsp;</p>  <p>Niel Ritchie is executive director of the League of Rural Voters, a Minnesota based nonprofit dedicated to strengthening rural communities nationwide.&nbsp; Go to www.leagueofruralvoters.org</p>  <p>&nbsp;</p>  <p>&nbsp;</p>  <p>&nbsp;</p>

9/10/09 - Monticello Times
Monticello Times.pdf

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