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A Memphis RxPublished: 2009-12-29 07:20:52By: Jim Bailey | Memphis Flyer | December 17, 2009 Americans deserve a health-care system that embodies fundamental American values. What would such a system look like? The answer, surprisingly, could be very close to home — in the "HealthCARE" principles advocated by a local group called the Healthy Memphis Common Table. The group was incorporated here in early 2000, when concerned consumers, providers, and health-care leaders began meeting monthly to discuss ways to fix our region's broken health-care system. This group saw as its first purpose the identification of shared health-care values. A conference of 450 health-care leaders met in Memphis in 2003 to adopt these basic principles. Today more than 1,000 individuals and 200 organizations locally have signed onto this agenda as partners. These are the HealthCARE principles: Health:We must seek to reorganize our health system to promote health as its primary goal. Health-care organizations should serve health first, not profits. Although profits may be necessary, patients suffer when making money is the top priority. Who stands to gain from the health-care reforms being proposed in Washington? Will the reforms promote health over profit? Choice:We must choose the best value in health-care providers and treatments. Americans value choice, but most don't care who their insurance companies are as long as they get to choose their doctors, nurses, and hospitals. Americans currently pay about one in seven of their health-care dollars to an insurance company. Americans spend almost one in three health-care dollars on administration and billing, more than any country in the world spends on bureaucracy. We actually pay insurance companies to limit our choice of doctors and hospitals! Will the proposed "health insurance exchanges" allow us to choose best value providers and treatments for ourselves? Access:We must provide care according to need for all people. People need access to basic primary care. People without insurance have more difficulty getting needed primary and preventive care and as a result are more likely to die. Lack of insurance, inability to get needed health care, and premature death are shockingly common. It is unconscionable for insurance companies to drop paying customers when they become ill. This is not acceptable in the United States. We need insurance reform to prohibit insurance companies from excluding people because of pre-existing conditions or from dropping people when they become sick and need care. |
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