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"The Cause of My Life"

by: Edward M. Kennedy  |  Newsweek

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U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) writes that the cost of inaction on reforming the health care system will cost far more over the next decade then current legislation. (Photo: Reuters)

    Inside the fight for universal health care. From the magazine issue dated Jul 27, 2009.

    In 1964, I was flying with several companions to the Massachusetts Democratic Convention when our small plane crashed and burned short of the runway. My friend and colleague in the Senate, Birch Bayh, risked his life to pull me from the wreckage. Our pilot, Edwin Zimny, and my administrative assistant, Ed Moss, didn't survive. With crushed vertebrae, broken ribs, and a collapsed lung, I spent months in New England Baptist Hospital in Boston. To prevent paralysis, I was strapped into a special bed that immobilizes a patient between two canvas slings. Nurses would regularly turn me over so my lungs didn't fill with fluid. I knew the care was expensive, but I didn't have to worry about that. I needed the care and I got it.

    Now I face another medical challenge. Last year, I was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor. Surgeons at Duke University Medical Center removed part of the tumor, and I had proton-beam radiation at Massachusetts General Hospital. I've undergone many rounds of chemotherapy and continue to receive treatment. Again, I have enjoyed the best medical care money (and a good insurance policy) can buy.

    But quality care shouldn't depend on your financial resources, or the type of job you have, or the medical condition you face. Every American should be able to get the same treatment that U.S. senators are entitled to.

    This is the cause of my life. It is a key reason that I defied my illness last summer to speak at the Democratic convention in Denver—to support Barack Obama, but also to make sure, as I said, "that we will break the old gridlock and guarantee that every American…will have decent, quality health care as a fundamental right and not just a privilege." For four decades I have carried this cause—from the floor of the United States Senate to every part of this country. It has never been merely a question of policy; it goes to the heart of my belief in a just society. Now the issue has more meaning for me—and more urgency—than ever before. But it's always been deeply personal, because the importance of health care has been a recurrent lesson throughout most of my 77 years.

    Nothing I'm enduring now can compare to hearing that my children were seriously ill. In 1973, when I was first fighting in the Senate for universal coverage, we learned that my 12-year-old son Teddy had bone cancer. He had to have his right leg amputated above the knee. Even then, the pathology report showed that some of the cancer cells were very aggressive. There were only a few long-shot options to stop it from spreading further. I decided his best chance for survival was a clinical trial involving massive doses of chemotherapy. Every three weeks, at Children's Hospital Boston, he had to lie still for six hours while the fluid dripped into his arm. I remember watching and praying for him, all the while knowing how sick he would be for days afterward.

    During those many hours at the hospital, I came to know other parents whose children had been stricken with the same deadly disease. We all hoped that our child's life would be saved by this experimental treatment. Because we were part of a clinical trial, none of us paid for it. Then the trial was declared a success and terminated before some patients had completed their treatments. That meant families had to have insurance to cover the rest or pay for them out of pocket. Our family had the necessary resources as well as excellent insurance coverage. But other heartbroken parents pleaded with the doctors: What chance does my child have if I can only afford half of the prescribed treatments? Or two thirds? I've sold everything. I've mortgaged as much as possible. No parent should suffer that torment. Not in this country. Not in the richest country in the world.

    That experience with Teddy made it clear to me, as never before, that health care must be affordable and available for every mother or father who hears a sick child cry in the night and worries about the deductibles and copays if they go to the doctor. But that was just one medical crisis. My family, like every other, has faced many—at every stage of life. I think of my parents and the medical care they needed after their strokes. I think of my son Patrick, who suffered serious asthma as a child and sometimes had to be rushed to the hospital for treatment. (For this reason, we had no dogs in the house when Patrick was young.) I think of my daughter, Kara, diagnosed with lung cancer in 2002. Few doctors were willing to try an operation. One did—and after that surgery and arduous rounds of chemotherapy and radiation, she's alive and healthy today. My family has had the care it needed. Other families have not, simply because they could not afford it.

    I have seen letters and e-mails from many of these less fortunate Americans. In their pleas, there's always dignity, but too often desperation. "Our school is closing in June of 2010, which means that I will be losing my job and my health insurance," writes Mary Dunn, a 58-year-old schoolteacher in Eden, S.D. "I am a Type I diabetic, and I had heart bypass surgery in 2005. My husband is also a teacher [here], so we will both be losing insurance. I am exploring options and have been told that I cannot stay on our group policy or transfer to another policy after our jobs cease because of my medical condition. What am I to do after 39 years of teaching to acquire adequate health coverage?" Dunn also serves as mayor of Eden, for which she is paid $45 a month with no health benefits.

    How will we, as a nation, answer her? I've heard countless such stories, including one from the family of Cassandra Wilson, a 14-year-old who once was a competitive ice skater. She's uninsured because she has petit mal seizures, often 200 times a day. Her parents have run up $30,000 on their credit cards. They've sold her skating equipment on eBay to pay for her care.

    These two cases represent only those patients who lack coverage. We also need to find answers for the increasing number of Americans whose insurance costs too much, covers too little, and can be too easily revoked when they face the most serious illnesses.

    Our response to these challenges will define our character as a country. But the challenges themselves—and the demands for reform—are not new. In 1912, when Theodore Roosevelt ran for a third term as president, the platform of his newly created Progressive Party called for national health insurance. Harry Truman proposed it again more than 30 years after Roosevelt was defeated. The plan was attacked, not for the last time, as "socialized medicine," and members of Truman's White House staff were branded "followers of the Moscow party line."

    For the next generation, no one ventured to tread where T.R. and Truman fell short. But in the early 1960s, a new young president was determined to take a first step—to free the elderly from the threat of medical poverty. John Kennedy called Medicare "one of the most important measures I have advocated." He understood the pain of injury and illness: as a senator, he had almost died after surgery to repair a back injury sustained during World War II, an injury that would plague him all of his life. I was in college as he recuperated and learned to walk without crutches at my parents' winter home in Florida. I visited often, and we spent afternoons painting landscapes and seascapes. (It was a competition: at dinner after we finished, we would ask family members to decide whose painting was better.) I saw how the pain would periodically hit him as we were painting; he'd have to put down his brush for a while. And I saw, too, how hard he fought as president to pass Medicare. It was a battle he didn't have the opportunity to finish. But I was in the Senate to vote for the Medicare bill before Lyndon Johnson signed it into law—with Harry Truman at his side. In the Senate, I viewed Medicare as a great achievement, but only a beginning. In 1966, I visited the Columbia Point Neighborhood Health Center in Boston; it was a pilot project providing health services to low-income families in the two-floor office of an apartment building. I saw mothers in rocking chairs, tending their children in a warm and welcoming setting. They told me this was the first time they could get basic care without spending hours on public transportation and in hospital waiting rooms. I authored legislation, which passed a few months later, establishing the network of community health centers that are all around America today.

    Some years later, I decided the time was right to renew the quest for universal and affordable coverage. When I first introduced the bill in 1970, I didn't expect an easy victory (although I never suspected that it would take this long). I eventually came to believe that we'd have to give up on the ideal of a government-run, single-payer system if we wanted to get universal care. Some of my allies called me a sellout because I was willing to compromise. Even so, we almost had a plan that President Richard Nixon was willing to sign in 1974—but that chance was lost as the Watergate storm swept Washington and the country, and swept Nixon out of the White House. I tried to negotiate an agreement with President Carter but became frustrated when he decided that he'd rather take a piecemeal approach. I ran against Carter, a sitting president from my own party, in large part because of this disagreement. Health reform became central to my 1980 presidential campaign: I argued then that the issue wasn't just coverage but also out-of-control costs that would ultimately break both family and federal budgets, and increasingly burden the national economy. I even predicted, optimistically, that the business community, largely opposed to reform, would come around to supporting it.

    That didn't happen as soon as I thought it would. When Bill Clinton returned to the issue in the first years of his presidency, I fought the battle in Congress. We lost to a virtually united front of corporations, insurance companies, and other interest groups. The Clinton proposal never even came to a vote. But we didn't just walk away and do nothing—even though Republicans were again in control of Congress. We returned to a step-by-step approach. With Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum of Kansas, the daughter of the 1936 Republican presidential nominee, I crafted a law to make health insurance more portable for those who change or lose jobs. It didn't do enough to fully guarantee that, but we made progress. I worked with my friend Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, the Republican chair of our committee, to enact CHIP, the Children's Health Insurance Program; today it covers more than 7 million children from low-income families, although too many of them could soon lose coverage as impoverished state governments cut their contributions.

    Incremental measures won't suffice anymore. We need to succeed where Teddy Roosevelt and all others since have failed. The conditions now are better than ever. In Barack Obama, we have a president who's announced that he's determined to sign a bill into law this fall. And much of the business community, which has suffered the economic cost of inaction, is helping to shape change, not lobbying against it. I know this because I've spent the past year, along with my staff, negotiating with business leaders, hospital administrators, and doctors. As soon as I left the hospital last summer, I was on the phone, and I've kept at it. Since the inauguration, the administration has been deeply involved in the process. So have my Senate colleagues—in particular Max Baucus, the chair of the Finance Committee, and my friend and partner in this mission, Chris Dodd. Even those most ardently opposed to reform in the past have been willing to make constructive gestures now.

    To help finance a bill, the pharmaceutical industry has agreed to lower prices for seniors, not only saving them money for prescriptions but also saving the government tens of billions in Medicare payments over the next decade. Senator Baucus has agreed with hospitals on more than $100 billion in savings. We're working with Republicans to make this a bipartisan effort. Everyone won't be satisfied—and no one will get everything they want. But we need to come together, just as we've done in other great struggles—in World War II and the Cold War, in passing the great civil-rights laws of the 1960s, and in daring to send a man to the moon. If we don't get every provision right, we can adjust and improve the program next year or in the years to come. What we can't afford is to wait another generation.

    I long ago learned that you have to be a realist as you pursue your ideals. But whatever the compromises, there are several elements that are essential to any health-reform plan worthy of the name.

    First, we have to cover the uninsured. When President Clinton proposed his plan, 33 million Americans had no health insurance. Today the official number has reached 47 million, but the economic crisis will certainly push the total higher. Unless we act now, within a few years, 55 million Americans could be left without coverage even as the economy recovers.

    All Americans should be required to have insurance. For those who can't afford the premiums, we can provide subsidies. We'll make it illegal to deny coverage due to preexisting conditions. We'll also prohibit the practice of charging women higher premiums than men, and the elderly far higher premiums than anyone else. The bill drafted by the Senate health committee will let children be covered by their parents' policy until the age of 26, since first jobs after high school or college often don't offer health benefits.

    To accomplish all of this, we have to cut the costs of health care. For families who've seen health-insurance premiums more than double—from an average of less than $6,000 a year to nearly $13,000 since 1999—one of the most controversial features of reform is one of the most vital. It's been called the "public plan." Despite what its detractors allege, it's not "socialism." It could take a number of different forms. Our bill favors a "community health-insurance option." In short, this means that the federal government would negotiate rates—in keeping with local economic conditions—for a plan that would be offered alongside private insurance options. This will foster competition in pricing and services. It will be a safety net, giving Americans a place to go when they can't find or afford private insurance, and it's critical to holding costs down for everyone.

    We also need to move from a system that rewards doctors for the sheer volume of tests and treatments they prescribe to one that rewards quality and positive outcomes. For example, in Medicare today, 18 percent of patients discharged from a hospital are readmitted within 30 days—at a cost of more than $15 billion in 2005. Most of these readmissions are unnecessary, but we don't reward hospitals and doctors for preventing them. By changing that, we'll save billions of dollars while improving the quality of care for patients.

    Social justice is often the best economics. We can help disabled Americans who want to live in their homes instead of a nursing home. Simple things can make all the difference, like having the money to install handrails or have someone stop by and help every day. It's more humane and less costly—for the government and for families—than paying for institutionalized care. That's why we should give all Americans a tax deduction to set aside a small portion of their earnings each month to provide for long-term care.

    Another cardinal principle of reform: we have to make certain that people can keep the coverage they already have. Millions of employers already provide health insurance for their employees. We shouldn't do anything to disturb this. On the contrary, we need to mandate employer responsibility: except for small businesses with fewer than 25 employees, every company should have to cover its workers or pay into a system that will.

    We need to prevent disease and not just cure it. (Today 80 percent of health spending pays for care for the 20 percent of Americans with chronic illnesses like diabetes, cancer, or heart disease.) Too many people get to the doctor too seldom or too late—or know too little about how to stay healthy. No one knows better than I do that when it comes to advanced, highly specialized treatments, America can boast the best health care in the world—at least for those who can afford it. But we still have to modernize a system that doesn't always provide the basics.

    I've heard the critics complain about the costs of change. I'm confident that at the end of the process, the change will be paid for—fairly, responsibly, and without adding to the federal deficit. It doesn't make sense to negotiate in the pages of NEWSWEEK, but I will say that I'm open to many options, including a surtax on the wealthy, as long as it meets the principle laid down by President Obama: that there will be no tax increases on anyone making less than $250,000 a year. What I haven't heard the critics discuss is the cost of inaction. If we don't reform the system, if we leave things as they are, health-care inflation will cost far more over the next decade than health-care reform. We will pay far more for far less—with millions more Americans uninsured or underinsured.

    This would threaten not just the health of Americans but also the strength of the American economy. Health-care spending already accounts for 17 percent of our entire domestic product. In other advanced nations, where the figure is around 10 percent, everyone has insurance and health outcomes that are equal or better than ours. This disparity undermines our ability to compete and succeed in the global economy. General Motors spends more per vehicle on health care than on steel.

    We will bring health-care reform to the Senate and House floors soon, and there will be a vote. A century-long struggle will reach its climax. We're almost there. In the meantime, I will continue what I've been doing—making calls, urging progress. I've had dinner twice recently at my home in Hyannis Port with Senator Dodd, and when President Obama called me during his Rome trip after meeting with the Pope, much of our discussion was about health care. I believe the bill will pass, and we will end the disgrace of America as the only major industrialized nation in the world that doesn't guarantee health care for all of its people.

    At another Democratic convention, in arguing for this cause, I spoke of the insurance coverage senators and members of Congress provide for themselves. That was 1980. In the last year, I've often relied on that Congressional insurance. My wife, Vicki, and I have worried about many things, but not whether we could afford my care and treatment. Each time I've made a phone call or held a meeting about the health bill—or even when I've had the opportunity to get out for a sail along the Massachusetts coast—I've thought in an even more powerful way than before about what this will mean to others. And I am resolved to see to it this year that we create a system to ensure that someday, when there is a cure for the disease I now have, no American who needs it will be denied it.

    --------

    This story was written with Robert Shrum, Senator Kennedy’s friend and longtime speechwriter.

  

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Comments

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Truly inspiring...and full

Truly inspiring...and full of hope! Let it just materialize.

IF Congress refuses to

IF Congress refuses to listen to the will of the people and if our Congress sides with the pharma and the insurance industries, beholden to their contributions, I believe the health insurance coverage WE provide them as a benefit to their employment should be rescinded. Let them pay for their own health expenditures. Let them experience what paying for, finding and keeping health care feels like for nearly one half of the citizens of our country.

The American people should

The American people should have the same type of coverage members of Congress have, and vice versa.

Sorry, as passionate as

Sorry, as passionate as Senator Kennedy may be, I don't agree that everyone is working together and if they are, it is only because the parties breathe the same Beltway air. I don't buy for a minute that the pharmaceutical companies will do anything to cut into their profits not will insurance. If they have to give something up you can bet they will be getting something in return. The only hope I see is that Dennis Kucinich's bill makes its' way through Congress and the states decide that single-payer is best for all. You can bet I will be looking closely at a way to move to one of the current ten states which already have legislature pending.

"I believe the bill will

"I believe the bill will pass, and we will end the disgrace of America as the only major industrialized nation in the world that doesn't guarantee health care for all of its people." A disgrace it is, and those who stand in the way of bringing this country into the ranks of civilized nations are a disgrace themselves. It takes a tremendous lack of patriotism to work against the common good because it cuts into your profits. Insurance companies are the middlemen. We would be better off getting rid of them entirely.

almost a Canadian, eh?

almost a Canadian, eh?

Senator: I proposed to Then

Senator: I proposed to Then Senator Obama a health care plan that was free of insurance companies because no on should profit from the poor fortune of others in health. My grand daughter had to stop her medicine and drop out of College because of the costs. My wife is paying $850 a month-$10,000+ a year for Cobra, after losing her job. That is ridiculous. I can present an Insurance Company free plan, funded by heavily Taxing outsourcing Publicly traded companies and use the tax to support a medicare like policy for ALL Americans of every age. It will also bring jobs back to America. It is odd to me that we call murder a crime and not Avarice. Avarice is the worst crime it ribs the heart and soul of a people. Every person should have cost free and complete health care coverage. If we can afford trillions to kill people when can afford trillions to save people's lives.

Fear! Fear! Fear! It works

Fear! Fear! Fear! It works soooo well, doesn't it. I'm a Canadian, 66 yr-old, and let me tell you, good Americans, that in spite of the fear tactics used by your heath care opponents, I've always had the BEST care available on the globe. My brother-in-law had a heart attack and after open-heart surgery was back n his feet a very short time later, and it hadn't cost hi as much as the price of a meal! Do not fear the fear mongers. GO! DO IT, for God's sake!!

What I find so disturbing is

What I find so disturbing is the tone of so many critics of health care reform, including Republicans, the media, and many Democrats. It is always so negative, always citing all the obstacles, especially the costs of reform. No one, except progressives (and even they complain when they learn they will have to purchase health insurance) ever talks about the moral imperative, the disgrace of leaving tens of millions uninsured and threatening virtually everyone else with at least the possibility of losing their coverage during critical times in their lives, like after getting sick or losing their jobs. Whenever the CBO issues another depressing projection of costs, the media and Republicans seize on it, trumpet it with obvious relish, as if to say, "See? We were right all along. We can't reform the system. It's too expensive." Which of course is code for the fact that the haves will have to pony up for the have-nots. How can we afford useless, wasteful wars, but not health care for our people? It is appalling. Our national attitude should be such as it was with the Apollo moon landing program, that we can do it, that we will do it, and we will sacrifice to do it. There is nothing like that with this effort, no spirit or drive among our leaders and people to finally get it done and get this horrible national shame off our backs. On the contrary. Except for a few, the attitude is one of looking for an excuse, any excuse, to continue our current system and push our obscene failure to treat all citizens fairly and compassionately away from our collective consciousness. I just don't get it. What has happened to us as a nation in the last thirty years?

Let's face it. The

Let's face it. The pharmaceutical and the health insurance industries view us citizens the way the oil, logging and mining industries view our national parks and nature preserves--opportunities for profit which they are determined to exploit. Does anyone really believe that they are motivated by anything except profit? Remember, capitalism is the American way. Take me--I'm 73. Statistically, I'm almost guaranteed to develop the lucrative sort of medical condition on which their profits depend. Thus, I see the vultures clustering in the trees around my house. Can they harvest me before I die and access my resources before my children can inherit them? Will their business plan work the way its supposed to? Who do you think is going to win this? 1) the citizens of the United States, or 2) the corporations that own the United States Congress

I tend to agree with the

I tend to agree with the idea that the pharmaceutical and insurance companies will do anything to resist cutting into their profits. The propaganda and fake news is already airing on cable news stations and in commercials. If they have to give something up,they will want to get something in return. A single-payer Plan is best for all. Private plan options need to be carefully evaluated, to lower and eliminate the rising copay costs, doughnut holes, and other insupportable fees.

This remarkable man has

This remarkable man has worked his entire life for a just society and I, as one of the 4 out of 5 women in this country who shall die in poverty, totally and most passionately support him and the president to reform our health care system. I watched with horror, up close and very personal as a health care administrator as costs began to rise and HMO's took over the industry. There aren't even private practice docs anymore, the ones who have offices THEY pay for and nurses that THEY pay for, and Mal-practice insurance that THEY pay for, and income that THEY earn. Now we have insurance company employees who we call doctor, and who are nothing more than puppets of the insurance company that dictates doctors' every move. What's American about that? Nothing in my book. We need to end the greed and avarice that was so celebrated by the incompetent cronies of those horrific 8 years of GW, and move forward as a country into the light of day where every American has expert health care treatment.

States already have

States already have bureaucracies in place to deal with Medicare and Medicaid. In Oregon, we have a health plan. If it were allowed to pick up modest-income healthy people with an array of plans similar to what the privates offer, many people would go with it and willingly help subsidize poorer, less healthy people, and the state plan could allow the naturpaths and other practitioners people want to be part of the mix. Physician plans won't allow the other trades on until a younger group has more clout. That's fine with me. It costs more to do illness maintenance, and there are still a lot of people who want that. Leave them with their own private, exclusive, expensive choices. Our former governor Kitzhaber bravely worked to get us waivers and things for our plan, to keep it do-able. I want evidence-based care. Acupuncture and many other practices count even with enlightened M.D.'s. We need to get more people on board than the usual, conventional suspects.

Wow- that image of the

Wow- that image of the vultures clustering in the trees outside Mary (age 73)'s home, waiting to harvest what they can before her children get it - that should penetrate the consciousness of every American. So true, so chillingly apt. Truly, it seems that it is preferable to trust that staying healthy should be as far removed from doctors, hospitals and "health care" as touted by Big Pharma as possible. Save that insurance premium money for if you break a bone. And if you have cancer, diabetes, any of the dread chronic diseases, work on them as though they were part of you, accepting that you are the only person that can heal you. There ARE other options, if one can let go of the fear. Illness and death are as much a part of life as birth and health. I heard about a friend of a friend who had only her heart and brain function left, all else had shut down due to years of severe alcoholism and runaway cancer. Fifty five thousand dollars a day for over a month in the ICU to keep her alive. Why do we allow things like that? We all need to take more responsibility for the reality of illness, why it occurs, how it can be prevented, and how to treat people who need medical care, Just hearing a grave diagnoses in a hospital corridor can kill off a fragile soul, just as true compassion and caring can save the same.

I know by personal

I know by personal experience that the for-profit medical system looks for new ways to make money while all the time protecting itself from accountability. Nobody begrudges the doctors and especially the nurses who provide such valuable services. But there are people in between us and our doctors who are not accountable or answerable to anyone. I want a system that keeps medical decisions between me and my doctor, and gives the money that is diverted to these parasites to the people who most deserve it - the caregivers. I want that system available to all Americans. Everybody has to pay for it regardless of their need. Therefor, it is socialized medicine. Get over it. We have seen quite a lot of socialism in the taxpayer bailouts of major corporations lately. Things that are as fundamental to the functioning of any country, education and health, have to be provided without risk of denial. Yet people have to be held accountable, not for genetic predispositions, but for behavior. If you choose to smoke, take drugs, consume alcohol, then you should pay more. Health should be managed by families and doctors with the emphasis on healthy living practices and preventative measures. Thanks to Ted Kennedy for his lifelong effort on our behalf.

why are the pharmaceutical

why are the pharmaceutical companies so much more powerful in the United States than in say Cuba, Canada, France, England, Taiwan, Norway, Sweden, Denmark...?

Dr. Richard Carmona, the

Dr. Richard Carmona, the 17th Surgeon General of the United States, will tell you that 75% of the 14% of the GDP spent on healthcare claims can be averted by prevention! Stop smoking, wear a seat belt, exercise and lose some weight. American children today have a shorter life expectancy then their parents! This is a main contributor to the current health care system, the personal choices we all make. The second reason has to do with the vast majority of uninsured Americans...they choose not to buy health insurance. Then when they have a claim, they are dependent on their savings to pay it. Not a good strategy. It doesn't work if you choose not to buy home insurance and your home burns down, or car insurance and someone steals you car, you can't just walk down to the auto dealer and pick out a new one for free. Poor choices! Thinking that by having the federal government run the health insurance system will help people make better choices is foolish. According to the Congressional Budget Office, it will cost more! We as Americans need to take responsibility for ourselves and the personal actions we take! If you are healthy, buy a policy; if you are overweight, exercise; stop smoking; feed your children more nutritious meals with less high fructose corn syrup. Make better choices America!

I got out some really old

I got out some really old bills from the health care system in Hudson County, NJ at a period when I didn't have insurance and found this: 1965: A visit to the emergency room of North Hudson Hospital for a gash in my leg: $7. Obstetrician in 1967: $150 and hospital stay of 5 days in Margaret Hague Hospital, Jersey City: $400. Obstetrician in 1968: $200 and hospital stay of 4 days in Christ Hospital, Jersey City: $390. That was when public health was not controlled by hospitals for profit and insurance companies who profit off the sickness and death of Americans. The only item I see as not correct in Sen. Kennedy's article is this: "Today the official number has reached 47 million." this is only 2 million more uninsured than quoted in the 2004 election. With the loss of jobs and high rate of insurance today, that number should be much much higher. It also included me who, for the past 4 years, had no insurance and was never asked for this information by anyone in order to be put into that 47 million statistic.

We need a single payer plan,

We need a single payer plan, like those that are successful in other countries. Requiring everyone to buy health insurance just gives windfall profits to the already vastly wealthy insurance industry, even if there is a public option. A single payer plan cuts out the parasites who have positioned themselves between the health care providers and the patients -- for no other reason that to feed off us all and make big profits. Eliminating insurance companies entirely is the only way to keep costs down and reclaim the decision making power for doctors and patients. Secondly, we need assurance that in any new plan we have the freedom to choose the kind of health care we want. I am uninsured - mostly because insurance does not cover what I choose, which is alternative methods like acupuncture, homeopathy and nutritional supplements. Remember it is these very modalities that can provide the preventative care we need to keep costs down.

Last year I had to go

Last year I had to go through several tests that amounted to not much wrong with me, thank goodness, but I met my deductible plus the 30% co-cay up to $7,000. Between the premiums and the deductible I spent half of my income that year. As a result, I had to cancel my insurance in January, and now I wonder if the knots in my stomach from worry are making me sick from worry. No one is considering the possible savings that might occur from people feeling unstressed and not worried that they would lose the roof over their heads.

Thank you Mr. Kennedy, God

Thank you Mr. Kennedy, God Bless and live long!!

Senator Kennedy is real,

Senator Kennedy is real, honest, and human. The tragedies he has experienced have been harsh, his hope for better health care for all of us is a noble cause. This issue is not about politics, it is about life and death and the lessening of fear for those who have gone through the medical health institution and found it impossible to deal with financially. I hope that Obama and Kennedy can indeed change this situation for the betterment of all.

It seems that the whole

It seems that the whole insurance industry is corrupt with greed as are the banksters. Notice that during our working years/youth/health we pay premiums and rarely if ever use the sickness care industry. Ah, but when we turn 65 we are dumped on the government and the tax payers to support our health care. This is not correct. It is time that Ins Companies set aside a portion of their profits from the years of our youth/health and use those to support us during our dotage. If they get lucrative benefits from us they should carry us throughout our lives not just until age 65. Make it mandatory that Insurance Cos carry people throughout retirement IF they have benefitted during a person's youth.

to make better choices, do

to make better choices, do you have police insurance? how about fire department insurance? the wealth of this country was made on the back of working people and those working people deserve health care, pull your head out of the sand and look around. as for Kennedy, just another person from a rich family trying to feel good about themselves. pheewwyy

"All Americans should be . .

"All Americans should be . . REQUIRED . . to have insurance". That is what Mr. Kennedy said. Health insurance is not health care, its a for proffit buiseness that has nothing to do with a persons health and everything to do with enriching the same kind of corporate greed that was afforded the private banking system, thanks to Obama and the lobbyists (congress and senate). Come on people, can't you see, here we go again, another crises that is going to be fixed in a flash by the same people that brought you Iraq (1,000,000 DEAD), Torture (we don't Torture), Afghanistan (endless ware), Bank bailout, (not citizen bailout). The banks lost your money, and they want you to pay them back. Does that make sense to you, whats wrong here. So, its happening again, oh my God, our health care system is broken. Thanks in part to Michael Moore we all learned that awhile back, and we also learned that SINGLEPAYER is the answer. Thats right, SINGLEPAYER, just like the SINGLEPAYER Senator Kennedys family enjoys and the Presidents too. Who is the SINGLEPAYER ? YOU ARE! You pay for their health care. We can all pay for our own health care too, but not through a for profit insurance system, its not going to happen . . . or is it. If the smartest people in the room get their way, Mr. Obama and Mr. Kennedy will make it happen . . . . Sorry.

Oh I bet there is a CIA file

Oh I bet there is a CIA file on this one. He was the Kenendy that survived that decade.

Further evidence why we must

Further evidence why we must have single payer; Myth: Taxes in Canada are extremely high, mostly because of national health care. In actuality, taxes are nearly equal on both sides of the border. Overall, Canada's taxes are slightly higher than those in the U.S. However, Canadians are afforded many benefits for their tax dollars, even beyond health care (e.g., tax credits, family allowance, cheaper higher education), so the end result is a wash. At the end of the day, the average after-tax income of Canadian workers is equal to about 82 percent of their gross pay. In the U.S., that average is 81.9 percent. Read more here: http://www.denverpost.com/opinion/ci_12523427 There’s a reason GM and Chrysler are bankrupt. They were known as healthcare companies who happened to make cars, while GM in Canada made cars for $3000 less per unit due to their single payer healthcare. The old Wall St. saw was “What’s good for GM is good for America”. Senator Kennedy, I consider your advocacy of the Massachusetts mandated extortion of residents to be unconscionable. And please don’t cite all the poor in MA.who’ve been enrolled for very expensive “free” care. I’m paying their bills which would be a small fraction under a single payer system that I would gladly then foot. Additionally, any 8 year old could have taken the state checkbook and enrolled the entire free care pool. There's a reason the state calls their top tier healthcare policies "Gold"-as it is a gold mine for insurers siphoned straight out of residents finances.

What about our

What about our "representatives" making good on the tiresome promise that we are all "entitled to the same health care benefits as we in Congress have" ? I want single payer. I don't want to be shackled to an HMO, HMOs limit choice of physician, and by keeping workers in close proximity to the HMO network of physicians, they even limit what community we can live in! But with the list of congress people taking millions from insurance and drug companies, we really are dead in the water. (John Kerry being at the top of that list really surprised me. I don't know why. . . )

I'm thankful for Sen.

I'm thankful for Sen. Kennedy's advocacy; but we really need a single-payer system. The comment about the insurance industry (as well as other companies that profit on the poor health of our community members) being like extractive industries was right on. Why should these companies be able to make such obscene profits on what should be a basic right (to decent health care)? Our society pays an enormous tax on lack of basic health care in terms of poor health outcomes, disability, inability to work, inability to learn, and poverty and excessive incarceration.

There are many people

There are many people posting here who are very angry at insurance companies and others who make a profit from illness. Are all of you attending health care rallies? Are you taking to the street and letting your voices be heard publicly? (Yes, I do.) This is what is needed to make Congress act. We must act first and very vocally. We must shout "single payer" until we can no longer be ignored by the inept media. Nothing changes until we demonstrate for it. The Civil Rights Act came as a result of demonstrations. Vietnam finally ended because of demonstrations. If you want single payer, fight for it!

Until the for profit health

Until the for profit health insurance industry is removed from the health care system, and both the insurance and pharmaceutical industries are required to operate as closely regulated non-profits, the cost of "sick care" will continue to rise and Americans will continue to be eliminated from the system and forced to resort to the "emergency room" for acute care (which dramatically accelerates the cost of medical care not to mention the deterioration in health care quality). Lest one believes that Medicare is a boon for senior citizens or that it encourages health care, each recipient (on Medicare B - physician benefits) ispermitted one (1) well-being health care visit to their primary care physician for the rest of life. Otherwise one better have a diagnosed condition or wait until they have a diagnosable condition that requires treatment! That is NOT health care. This costs a significant monthly deduction from their SS check. Any attempts I make to maintain relatively good health are NOT covered and come out of my pocket, making it necessary to have secondary insurance to cover Medicare shortfalls. The only people who benefit from "insurance" are the health insurance and pharmaceutical executives. They are robbing us, our children and our grandchildren - unfortunately with the help of many members of the Congress and the Senate. Personally, I would look to the French solution which has long since replaced the US system for quality and effectiveness. Health care professionals get paid, Well-being is emphasized, patients get cared for and the economic system is able to handle it. Thank you, Senator, for your commitment.

Thank you Senator Kennedy

Thank you Senator Kennedy for being my voice. Yours is loud and clear. You are a true inspiration because of your strength and determination to get this passed. Be well.

I spent 14 years dealing

I spent 14 years dealing with a "good" insurance policy and ended up with no husband, post traumatic stress syndrome and no money. My husband was a NASA engineer who died of chronic progressive multiple sclerosis. I will now work until I die because his disease wiped us out financially. As I listen to all the talk about "health care reform", I am simply depressed. There is only one way to reform health care and that is to completely get rid of the insurance companies, all of them, and have a system like Canada. I have now lived in Canada for nine years and their care is so far ahead of the U.S. and so much more compassionate. Until someone is brave enough to get rid of insurance companies and put pharmaceutical companies in their place, there will be no reform. All that is being discussed now is just further pandering to the insurance companies and really, no change will happen at all. I will never live in the U.S. again, because I will never, never pay for health care insurance again. I so hope the U.S. looks carefully at Canada's system, or France's and just copies it. They have done the work now the U.S. needs to just admit they were wrong in their entire approach to health care and regroup. If this is not addressed soon I firmly believe the health care issue will bring the U.S. to it's knees.

The insurance companies are

The insurance companies are now making record profits. Basically profits before health care. Just doesn't seem right.

Thank you Lion of the

Thank you Lion of the Senate. With your passion and fighting spirit I almost you would defy the odds. Please rest in peace. Not to worry though. I bet you're still fighting.