New York, NY, October 7, 2011—A new set of strategies released today by the Commonwealth Fund Commission on a High Performance Health System claims it could dramatically improve how the U.S. health care system serves vulnerable populations—those in the U.S. who are uninsured, low-income, or members of racial and ethnic minority groups. If you believe the only reason the unemployment rate is not 15% is thanks to the efforts of Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama, this report is for you.
According to their latest effort at nationalizing health care, Ensuring Equity: A Post-Reform Framework to Achieve High Performance Health Care for Vulnerable Populations, closing the health care divide simply takes a three-pronged policy framework that can ensure adequate access to health care and financial protection, strengthens the health care system's ability to serve vulnerable populations, and supports coordination between the traditional health care system and the resources outside of the health care system that vulnerable groups rely upon.
The report makes note of the divide between vulnerable populations and their more secure counterparts - namely public sector employees, since virtually no one else in America is secure - in rates of receiving recommended screening and preventive care, control of chronic diseases, and hospital admissions for conditions that may be preventable with good primary care and community health outreach. For example:
"Our current economic situation has increased the number and proportion of people who are vulnerable, leaving even more families at risk of suffering from our health care system's inequities," said Commission Chair David Blumenthal, M.D., Samuel O. Thier Professor of Medicine and Professor of Health Care Policy at Massachusetts General Hospital/Partners HealthCare System and Harvard Medical School. They can't blame George Bush for that any more so the recession squarely falls at the feet of over-spending, including on health care that is tied up in the Supreme Court.
The authors claim that Affordable Care Act provisions targeted at vulnerable populations will go a long way toward improving health care for these groups, primarily through expanded health insurance, increased financial support for community health centers, and reforms that should improve health care quality and allow for people in vulnerable groups to receive better coordinated health care. However, vulnerable groups will remain at risk for poor health outcomes unless crucial issues beyond health insurance coverage like access to health care, affordability, care coordination, and the financial stability of safety-net hospitals are addressed. In other words, unless we find a way to provide unlimited doctors everywhere people live.
A Policy Framework for Vulnerable Populations
In the report, the 17-member Commission lays out a policy framework that builds on Affordable Care Act reforms to create a more equitable health care system. The Commission comprises experts and leaders representing every sector of health care, as well as the state and federal policy arena, the business sector, professional societies, and academia.
The framework's overarching strategies revolve around ensuring adequate access and financial protection, strengthening the care delivery systems serving vulnerable populations, and coordinating the traditional health care system with outside resources also affecting vulnerable groups. Highlights of the framework include:
"This policy framework builds on the great strides we expect to be made for vulnerable populations once the Affordable Care Act takes full effect in 2014," said Commonwealth Fund Executive Vice President for Programs Anthony Shih, M.D. "By addressing crucial issues like access to care, affordability, quality improvement, and better coordinated care, these recommendations seek to assure that the uninsured, those with low incomes, and racial and ethnic minorities see the full promise of health reform and experience a truly equitable health care system."
"The Affordable Care Act is a big step forward in terms of addressing the significant needs of vulnerable groups and the health care providers who serve them," said Commonwealth Fund President Karen Davis. "However, the inequity in our health care system is significant and—as laid out in the Commission's new report—more work must be done in order to close that gap and assure that we have a health care system that provides all of us with access to high quality health care."
Health care will never be
Health care will never be solved the way they are doing it now. Obamacare has set back our healthcare system and it may never recover. I have written one side of this on my blog: http://www.kellywsmith.com/obamacare-good-or-bad-for-america.html
Will Obamacare spend $1 Billion on anyone? If so, how can they afford it? How many people could they pay before they run out of funds? There is no such thing as unlimited funding of medical care, not from insurance companies OR the Fed.
If they will spend $1Billion on anyone, how will that do anything to reduce healthcare costs when doctors now know that they can milk the system for as long as they want. It will all be paid for.
Free enterprise is the only way to reduce healthcare costs and the Fed needs to get OUT of healthcare in order for that to happen.
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