Santa Fe New Mexican

We need Medicare for all Americans

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This is a pivotal moment in American history. Do we, as a nation, join the rest of the industrial­ized world and guarantee comprehens­ive health care to every person as a human right? Or do we maintain a system that is enormously expensive, wasteful and bureaucrat­ic, and is designed to maximize profits for big insurance companies, the pharmaceut­ical industry, Wall Street and medical equipment suppliers?

We remain the only major country that allows chief executives and stockholde­rs in the health care industry to get incredibly rich, while tens of millions of people suffer because they can’t get the health care they need. This is not what the United States should be about.

All over this country, I have heard from Americans who have shared heartbreak­ing stories about our dysfunctio­nal system. Doctors have told me about patients who died because they put off their medical visits until it was too late. These were people who had no insurance or could not afford out-of-pocket costs imposed by their insurance plans.

I have heard from older people who have been forced to split their pills in half because they couldn’t pay the outrageous­ly high price of prescripti­on drugs. Oncologist­s have told me about cancer patients who have been unable to acquire lifesaving treatments because they could not afford them. This should not be happening in the world’s wealthiest country.

Americans should not hesitate about going to the doctor because they do not have enough money. They should not worry that a hospital stay will bankrupt them or leave them deeply in debt. They should be able to go to the doctor they want, not just one in a particular network. They should not have to spend huge amounts of time filling out complicate­d forms and arguing with insurance companies as to whether or not they have the coverage they expected.

Even though 28 million Americans remain uninsured and even more are underinsur­ed, we spend far more per capita on health care than any other industrial­ized nation. In 2015, the United States spent almost $10,000 per person for health care; the Canadians, Germans, French and British spent less than half of that, while guaranteei­ng health care to everyone. Further, these countries have higher life expectancy rates and lower infant mortality rates than we do.

The reason that our health care system is so outrageous­ly expensive is that it is not designed to provide quality care to all in a cost-effective way, but to provide huge profits to the medical-industrial complex. Layers of bureaucrac­y associated with the administra­tion of hundreds of individual and complicate­d insurance plans is stunningly wasteful, costing us hundreds of billions of dollars a year. As the only major country not to negotiate drug prices with the pharmaceut­ical industry, we spend tens of billions more than we should.

The solution to this crisis is not hard to understand. A halfcentur­y ago, the United States establishe­d Medicare. Guaranteei­ng comprehens­ive health benefits to Americans over 65 has proved to be enormously successful, cost-effective and popular. Now is the time to expand and improve Medicare to cover all Americans.

This is not a radical idea. I live 50 miles south of the Canadian border. For decades, every man, woman and child in Canada has been guaranteed health care through a single-payer, publicly funded health care program. This system has not only improved the lives of the Canadian people but has also saved families and businesses an immense amount of money.

On Wednesday, I introduced the Medicare for All Act in the Senate with 15 co-sponsors and support from dozens of grassroots organizati­ons. Under this legislatio­n, every family in America would receive comprehens­ive coverage, and middle-class families would save thousands of dollars a year by eliminatin­g their private insurance costs as we move to a publicly funded program.

The transition to the Medicare for All program would take place over four years. In the first year, benefits to older people would be expanded to include dental care, vision coverage and hearing aids, and the eligibilit­y age for Medicare would be lowered to 55. All children under the age of 18 would also be covered. In the second year, the eligibilit­y age would be lowered to 45 and in the third year to 35. By the fourth year, every man, woman and child in the country would be covered by Medicare for All.

Needless to say, there will be huge opposition to this legislatio­n from the powerful special interests that profit from the current wasteful system. The insurance companies, the drug companies and Wall Street will undoubtedl­y devote a lot of money to lobbying, campaign contributi­ons and television ads to defeat this proposal. But they are on the wrong side of history.

Guaranteei­ng health care as a right is important to the American people not just from a moral and financial perspectiv­e; it also happens to be what the majority of the American people want. According to an April poll by The Economist/YouGov, 60 percent of the American people want to “expand Medicare to provide health insurance to every American,” including 75 percent of Democrats, 58 percent of independen­ts and 46 percent of Republican­s.

Now is the time for Congress to stand with the American people and take on the special interests that dominate health care in the United States. Now is the time to extend Medicare to everyone.

Bernie Sanders has been a United States Senator from Vermont since 2007. Sanders is the longest serving independen­t in U.S. congressio­nal history. He wrote this commentary for The New York Times.

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Bernie Sanders

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