My Spin: The healthcare election
What's the number one issue concerning people right now? Yes, folks are concerned with pocketbook issues like the price of groceries, housing and utilities, and some are concerned with immigration, but KFF (the
When
As a result, premiums for some 24 million Americans (7.2%) with ACA marketplace insurance have more than doubled beginning in January, from
Two in five people are covered by government insurance — Medicare (19%) or Medicaid (17.6%). Another 54% are covered by employer-sponsored insurance plans. Larger firms, those typically with 100 or more employees, pick up about 75% of the cost of their employees' insurance premiums; the employee contributes 25%.
Over the past five years, the premiums for family health coverage have increased by a whopping 26%, now amounting to some
A December Gallup poll further makes the case. Seventy% of those polled say the US healthcare system is in a state of crisis. Eighty-one% of
It is obvious that healthcare and healthcare costs are on voters' minds and promise to be an election issue in the November midterms.
I don't pretend to be an election campaign strategist, but if I were working for a candidate, here is some advice I would offer, especially to
Stop constantly railing about what a terrible person
Running against Trump is a losing hand.
Instead, my advice would be to find issues that concern large numbers of people, keep those issues constantly present on the minds of voters, and offer solutions to them. Healthcare looks like a winner.
My healthcare election strategy would begin with this question: Is healthcare a privilege or a right in this country? Is it something only rich people can afford, or should all people be afforded basic healthcare?
Despite some rhetoric to the contrary, our country obviously thinks everyone is entitled to some basic healthcare. Consider the EMTALA act, a federal law passed in 1986. EMTALA, the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, states that any hospital accepting Medicare must treat anyone coming to their emergency department requesting evaluation or treatment. If they have an emergency condition, the hospital must provide treatment, regardless of the patient's ability to pay.
Now part of the imperative in passing the Affordable Care Act was that increasingly large numbers of patients without insurance were showing up to emergency rooms, overwhelming the ERs and slowing down healthcare delivery for other patients needing urgent care.
ACA and Medicaid expansion allowed large numbers to obtain health insurance, thereby establishing relationships with a care provider. When our state finally decided to expand Medicaid, some 600,000 citizens obtained health insurance, taking pressure off our overcrowded emergency rooms.
That care has now been eliminated or restricted by three things. First, the inaction of
And third, since our legislature has failed to pass a budget for this current year that started
If you were a candidate, do you think you could make healthcare, especially healthcare costs, a significant campaign issue? Seems like a winner to me!



COLUMN: Working to lower the cost of care for Kentucky families
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