Editorial: Uninsured America
Saturday, Sept. 1, 2007 | 8:01 a.m.
More than 47 million people lacked health insurance last year, an increase of 2.2 million since 2005 , according to a Census Bureau report that will frame the debate over insurance when Congress returns after Labor Day.
Congress is locked in a struggle with the Bush administration over a program that provides health insurance for low-income children. The House and Senate are trying to reconcile competing bills that would boost the program by $50 billion over the next five years to increase the number of children on the plan. The White House wants no more than a $5 billion increase, and President Bush is threatening a veto of anything more.
The administration's plan falls far short of what is needed. The Census Bureau found that 1 in 5 children living in poverty lack health insurance.
Unfortunately, some on the far right are trying to poison the debate by branding this an "entitlement" or saying it competes with private insurance. Those are ridiculous arguments. The reality is those affected by the plan have no ability to afford private health insurance, which has become a luxury for many Americans.
The percentage of uninsured people in America is the highest in eight years, according to the Census Bureau. There has been a decrease in the percentage of people who receive insurance from their jobs. The Census also found an increase of 1.3 million in the number of people who had jobs but didn't have insurance.
People are turning down coverage because premium s are rising far faster than wages. Premiums rose 7.7 percent last year, more than twice the rate of inflation, according to a study by the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Critics complain about the costs of expanding the children's health insurance program, but the costs of treating the uninsured won't go away if the program is not expanded. When people without insurance need medical care , they usually go to a hospital emergency room, which is expensive. The cost of those visits is typically borne by taxpayers, who pay for public hospitals and indigent care.
Providing affordable medical care is the right thing to do. The plan in Congress is a good start toward addressing this problem.
- Most Read
- Discussed
- Most E-mailed
- Conventions
- ‘Stripper-mobile’ with live dancers raises safety, decency concerns
- Manny Pacquiao, Miguel Cotto arrive at MGM Grand
- Report: State’s economy worse off than any other
- Encore, M Resort added to Forbes Travel list
- Rebels survive scare from Division-II Washburn
- Study cites challenges of Nevada’s financial problems
- Dispute over casino baccarat systems prompts lawsuit
- Tourism companies embrace social media strategies
- Fans float replacement for UNLV football coach
Blogs
Now and Then
Antoine Walker doesn't know when to hold or fold 'em
TUF Heavyweights
Episode 9: Funky chickens
Shark Bytes
Players on championship team always worked hard (8 Comments)
Sports: Upon Further Review
Fight snapshot: Predictions for Pacquiao-Cotto (1 Comment)
The Kats Report
A lesson in information dissemination, with a little Twitter and a lot of Agassi
Now and Then
Ichabods were tougher than they sound (4 Comments)
Politics: Ralston's Flash
I shudder to think what the “amazing door prize from the governor” might be (8 Comments)
Calendar »
- 12 Thu
- 13 Fri
- 14 Sat
- 15 Sun
- 16 Mon
-
Las Vegas Wranglers vs. Utah Grizzlies
Orleans Hotel-Casino
-
Lily Tomlin at the Hollywood Theatre
Hollywood Theatre at MGM Grand
-
Leonard Cohen at The Colosseum
The Colosseum | 8 p.m. to 11 p.m.
-
Football specials at Diablo's
Diablos Cantina
The Sun
Locally owned and independent for more than 50 years.
Technorati











Post a comment
Commenting requires registration.
Comments are moderated by Las Vegas Sun editors. Our goal is not to limit the discussion, but rather to elevate it. Comments should be relevant and contain no abusive language. Full comments policy.