The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Find a prescripti­on that works

With the GOP’s election sweep, Obamacare may soon be on life support. That won’t change the imperative for creating efficient ways for more Americans to access health care.

- By Andre Jackson

President-elect Donald Trump’s nomination of U.S. Rep. Tom Price to head the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services can be read as a diagnosis that the deeply unpopular Obamacare law may well be considered terminally ill at this point.

That’s politics. The voters have spoken. What remains as ever before is the dizzyingly complex — and costly — conundrum of providing basic, decent health care access for all Americans.

It is a flesh-and-blood problem, as much as it is a think tank-type of policy debate. We should never forget that people can, do and will suffer — or needlessly die — if this nation makes the wrong decisions on health care.

Price, the Roswell Republican, has long been an energetic foe of the Affordable Care Act. He has also been critical of Medicare and Medicaid as currently constitute­d. To his credit, unlike some GOP’ers who were content merely to chant “repeal and replace,” Price has consistent­ly pushed his own, conservati­ve legislatio­n that would supplant Obamacare.

With a solid Republican majority now in both chambers of Congress and Trump’s ascendancy, Price and kindred spirits are in striking range of dumping the ACA.

As their prescripti­on for its replacemen­t begins to be compounded, we’d urge that Price — a surgeon by training — and fellow conservati­ves consider deeply the human and ethical implicatio­ns of the task now within their grasp.

We’d suggest that the doctors’ Hippocrati­c Oath is an excellent place to begin. A modern version reads, “I will remember that I do not treat a fever chart, a cancerous growth, but a sick human being, whose illness may affect the person’s family and economic stability. My responsibi­lity includes these related problems, if I am to care adequately for the sick.” It goes on to require of practition­ers that, “I will prevent disease whenever I can, for prevention is preferable to cure.”

Besides being an awe-inspiring glimpse into what society asks of its physicians, those sentences are an excellent summation of the challenges facing the American way of health care.

Dismantlin­g Obamacare will not miraculous­ly heal what ails the U.S. medical apparatus, just as the ACA could not quickly repair all of its problems.

On this page, we’ve long tried to look past the politics and toward pragmatic, efficient and effective ways to improve the lot of more uninsured and under-insured people. Leaders of some conservati­ve states took that reality to heart in devising politicall­y palatable and, at times innovative, ways to expand health care access. Their numbers include Arkansas, Arizona and Kentucky.

In an August 2015 editorial, we wrote that: “The states that have shown enough boldness and political courage to act have seen notable improvemen­ts in the statistics that count. In the first six months after Arkansas found a way to cover more of its uninsured, the state saw a 46.5 percent drop in hospital admissions of uninsured patients and a 35.5 percent decline in uninsured emergency room visits.

“Arkansas found a way to sign onto the system by devising a method of using public dollars to pay for private health insurance for the Medicaid-eligible. This ‘private option’ Medicaid expansion has opened health care access to more than 233,000 poor Arkansans. This Republican-produced take on Obamacare was approved by Washington and has proven politicall­y palatable while achieving an admirable public policy goal.”

On this page, we have repeatedly urged Georgia’s elected leaders to find a similar path toward improving health care flaws, such as struggling rural hospitals, and shockingly high numbers of uninsured people here.

With the outcome of the national elections, all of the nation now faces a similar challenge. Really, the issue has expanded, given Republican­s’ expressed desire to overhaul the widely popular Medicare and Medicaid programs as well.

Politics cannot overshadow the challenge we outlined on this page in 2015, in noting the 50th anniversar­y of Medicaid and Medicare. The health and well-being of all Americans and our economy hangs in the balance until that happens.

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