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Elizabeth Edwards On Health Care: ‘This Is Not A Cheap Shot'

Posted by Elizabeth Edwards at 4:11 AM on April 22, 2008.


Elizabeth Edwards talks back.
edwardselizabeth

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John McCain accused me of taking a “cheap shot” on “This Week with George Stephanopoulos” yesterday for noting that people with preexisting conditions, such as he and I have, would not be able to get health care under his plan –- and that he perhaps was not as sensitive to this problem as he should be since he has been in government health care his whole life.

Sen. McCain noted that he was not receiving government health care for the six years he was in captivity. That is true. But it has nothing to do with my point — which is that the problem with Sen. McCain’s health care plan is not how it affects us –- but how it affects the tens of millions of Americans with preexisting conditions who, unlike Sen. McCain and myself, do not have the resources to pay for quality health care.

That is not a cheap shot, it is a potentially life and death question for tens of million of Americans. And it is a question Sen. McCain must address.

McCain’s health care plan is centered around the idea that we’d be better off if more Americans bought health coverage on their own, rather than receiving it through a job or government program. But maybe since he has never purchased insurance in the individual market, he does not know the challenge it presents for Americans with preexisting conditions.

A recent study showed that nearly nine out of every ten people seeking individual coverage on the private insurance market never got it. Insurers will disqualify you for just taking certain medicines because of the possibility of future costs, including common drugs as Lipitor, Zocor, Nexium, and Advair. People who have had cancer are denied coverage and those who get cancer run the risk of simply being dropped by their insurer for any excuse that can be found. And insurers make it a practice to deny coverage to individuals in high risk occupations, such as firefighting, lumber work, telecom installation, and pretty much anything more risky than working in an office.

McCain opposes universal health care because he claims it represents a “big government takeover and mandates.” But yesterday, he said he would help cover people with preexisting conditions by creating a “special Medicaid trust fund.”

A “special Medicaid trust fund”? Talk about a big government takeover. Tens of millions of Americans have preexisting conditions. If he is going to expand Medicaid to cover Americans with preexisting conditions, he is talking about a massive, massive increase in the Medicaid program. He says he opposes more government involvement in health care, but his idea really would be government-run health care.

My questions is: why is he doing this? If he is so concerned about expanding government’s role in health care, why doesn’t he just tell the insurance industry that they have to cover people with preexisting conditions? Why is he more concerned about protecting the insurance industry –- an industry which, by the way, his corporate tax cut plan gives a $1.9 billion tax cut to –- than the tens of millions Americans with preexisting conditions?

McCain’s advisors still can’t say how this special Medicare trust fund will work. I gather we will find that out when Senator McCain gives a speech on health care later this month. Rest assured, I will be paying attention.

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Tagged as: election, health care


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Thank you for continuing to speak out.
Posted by: kamcguffin on Apr 22, 2008 5:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And for finding ways to get around the main media's refusal to confront the issue. As I type this, my knee is iced and the crutches are beside me. I "wrenched" what is left of my knee on Sunday. It is swollen and won't hold me up. Another chapter in the poor to non-existent health care for much of this country. I apparently need a MRI but that probably isn't going to happen. I was given up for adoption at birth. In 1956. According to Blue Cross that is enough to constitute a "preexisting condition". They refused to cover expenses from a car accident in 1978. And continued to refuse coverage for everything until screaming at me that they are not required by law to cover any procedure on anyone who was given up for adoption, period. I dropped health insurance coverage that very day in 1988. Most places used to take cash. Not to many these days. And with the Bush Regime's religious initiative. Even places around Kansas City like St. Luke's hospital and KU Med Center won't even bother to give me health care when I pay cash. Although they take the money. Through my very kind and young next door neighbors I am on the internet. (Although I am wondering if keeping ice on my knee to keep it cooled is wrong. some sites say ice 15-20 minutes an hour.) And consider myself extremely lucky to have a place to live and food, even though my resources are limited, after surviving a hate crime in 2002 and losing everything.
It is in part who the insurance companies accept, it is also that they actually allow proper care not just something to justify getting paid. They are as parasitic as the medical profession has become. Sorry about the fuzzy brain process today.

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Incidentally Senator McCain
Posted by: JSquercia on Apr 22, 2008 6:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Incidentally Senator McCain I suspect that you WERE covered by Government Health Insurance during those six years . You were unable to avail youself of it but I think your dependents were still covered . You know that wife you abandoned for Cindy you might remember her .

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» RE: Incidentally Senator McCain Posted by: alternetrose
Until we as a nation
Posted by: walldodger1969 on Apr 22, 2008 7:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
demand health care with out a profit motive ..nothing ,nothing will change.

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he's learned how to tap dance
Posted by: cwilsondrum on Apr 22, 2008 7:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
from the deciderer! McWar=Bush,without a nap.

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Talk about cheap shots, Sen. McCain
Posted by: kabac55 on Apr 22, 2008 8:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I did happen to see the "This Week w/ GS" interview on Sunday with John McCain. The senator did not allow George to ask his questions, let alone any follow ups. He seemed argumentative, manic and undoubtedly out of touch with the problems of health care in this country for many people without it.

And he made an unsubstantiated claim of the quality of health care in Canada and the UK so often used by the opponents of universal health care. They say its bad but never give specifics as to why these systems are bad.

My sister and her family live in the UK and have always had their medical needs taken care of efficiently. While pregnant, her prenatal care was superior. After delivery and for the next few months, she had several home visits from nurses to ensure the health of both the mother and the baby. My mother, who was visiting from the States, was impressed.

Elizabeth Edwards made excellent and in this piece specific points about preexisting conditions and health coverage. As an asthmatic, I could easily be rejected--never mind that it is well under control with medication. So many of us could be with such common medical problems as hypertension, diabetes, obesity, epilepsy, stomach ulcers, irritable bowel syndrome,...

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» Excellent Canadian health care Posted by: puddytat
justnow
Posted by: justnow on Apr 22, 2008 8:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With all of the nonsense partisan self -praise and oppostion bashing, a reasonable and logical meassage stands out like a spring day. No, this isn't a cheap shot, any more than a monkey of a politician is good guy. Keep up the reasonableness, Elizabeth, and, especially, good luck with you personal issues.

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McCain is out of touch -
Posted by: carolc on Apr 22, 2008 8:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Who is our favorite political figure and was in 2004? Perhaps the man who would spit out the worst epithet he could imagine at his wife is one who just couldn't understand the warmth, trust, friendship, and understanding people feel for Elizabeth Edwards.

I only hope she hasn't written with such restraint that her evaluation is ignored. McCain is...very out of touch with ordinary American life.

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Call Republican contributor Rite Aid Pharmacies at 800 325 3737
Posted by: www.dmocrats.org on Apr 22, 2008 8:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Call Republican contributor Rite Aid Pharmacies at 800 325 3737 and tell the person that you want the Rite Aid CEO to get the congress and the President to enact HR 676 single payer universal health care and repeal Medicare Part D and place the drug benefit in Medicare Part B covering 80% of the cost of drugs with no extra premiums, no extra deductibles, no means tests, no coverage gaps, and remove the means test for Medicare Part B and until that happens, you won't buy ANYTHING from Rite Aid.

Call Republican contributor Wendy's restaurants at 614 764 3553 and tell the person in that you want their CEO to get the congress and the President to enact a $10/HR MIN. WAGE into law and until this happens you will not go to a Wendy's Restaurant.

Call your local Exxon/Mobil gas station and tell the manager that you will not get your car repaired there, nor will you buy gasoline there until their parent company sets their price so that they can sell you gasoline for $1.75 a gallon. Then only do business with other gas stations. We will no longer stand for $3 a gallon gasoline.

Call GOP contributor and war contractor General Electric Corporation at 800 386 1215 and tell the person, that you want the GE CEO to get Bush to end the war in Iraq and then Bush resign with Cheney and until that happens you will not buy any GE products and that you will tell your friends. Then call a local appliance store that sells GE products and tell the person you will not buy any GE products from their store until they can convince the GE CEO to convince George W Bush to end the war.

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Right on Elizabeth Edwards
Posted by: CJC on Apr 22, 2008 2:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In Massachusetts where I live I believe health insurers cannot refuse or drop coverage because of preexisting conditions. I don't think, however, they are unable to raise rates.

Life is the fundamental preexisting condition. If you don't die when you're very young you're bound to have some kind of preexisting condition. If you're female you're going to need gyn and maybe OB care. If you're male you're at high risk for all kinds of accidents and injuries. And the older you get the more likely you are to need health care. The insurance companies often behave as though it's an outrage that a customer should make a claim.

The only way around all this nonsense is universal health care provided through tax dollars.

Anyone, which should be everyone, interested in this problem should make sure to see Michael Moore's "Sicko."

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Pre-existing Conditions
Posted by: asjogren on Apr 22, 2008 7:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have friends back at my last employer who MUST continue working until age 65 only because of health insurance. They cannot purchase their own policy, regardless of cost, due to medical histories of heart attack, cancer, and others.

One of these fellows had a heart attack earlier in life. He runs over 6 miles a day. And I mean runs! I cannot keep up with him for even a mile of his 6.

Another has MS. She should have worked towards a disability pension. But, she quit instead.

The taxpayer is already stuck with the most expensive health care risks. Why is it that the taxpayer cannot afford the lower risks?

The health insurance industry is skimming. Why do we need them at all?

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Keep speaking out - we're listening
Posted by: Gracews on Apr 23, 2008 10:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Elizabeth, I'm so pleased that you continue to promote the voice of reason and responsibility. I'm still sad that John is no longer in the presidential race because I don't feel any of the current candidates will represent the people of this country rather than the corporations.

Count me a fan for life.

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