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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ColtonGang who wrote (45647)10/12/2000 6:22:30 PM
From: Ish  Respond to of 769670
 
<<You're wasting my time. BTW, Isreal is spelled Israel. >>

Check my post, it's one thing we agree on.

<<You're wasting my time. >>

You're wasting your own time.



To: ColtonGang who wrote (45647)10/12/2000 9:22:25 PM
From: haqihana  Respond to of 769670
 
DK, you waste so much of your own time, that it is impossible for anyone else to waste it. Why don't you do a good deed without sending a bill for it?? ~H~



To: ColtonGang who wrote (45647)10/12/2000 9:31:06 PM
From: Colleen M  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Doctor, I hope that you spend as much time and energy attending to your patients as you do to these message boards.



To: ColtonGang who wrote (45647)10/13/2000 2:53:46 AM
From: Gordon A. Langston  Respond to of 769670
 
Texas does the good deed for Ish.

 
By Naomi Lopez
Bauman and Devon M.
Herrick

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 4.8 million of the 19.6 million
Texas residents - about one in every four - are not covered by health
insurance. Moreover, the proportion of uninsured has changed little in
the past 10 years. However, in many cases the uninsured are
uninsured by choice. And lacking health insurance does not mean
lacking health care in Texas.

The primary reason so many Texans lack insurance is that
government policies encourage people to be uninsured. Although
both state and federal policies contribute to the problem, the federal
government probably bears the bulk of the blame.

Who Is
Uninsured?

Wherever they live, young adults, single people, Hispanics and
noncitizens tend to remain uninsured in higher proportions than the
overall population - and Texas has greater numbers of each than most
states. According to the Texas Health and Human Services
Commission:

42 percent of Texas adults age 18 to 24 and 32 percent of
those age 25 to 34 - a total of 1.8 million - are uninsured.

23 percent of the uninsured (1.1 million) are single and have
never been married.

50 percent of the uninsured (2.4 million) are Hispanic.

19 percent of the uninsured are noncitizens.

Free Care for the
Uninsured

Another reason why Texas has so many uninsured is that lack of
insurance is no barrier to health care. There are more than 40 federal
health care service programs that fund health services for the
uninsured in Texas. The largest single program - spending more than
$1.5 billion dollars a year - is the disproportionate share hospital (DSH)
payment program, designed to compensate hospitals that serve a
larger than average number of indigent patients. There are also
programs for public housing residents, seasonal farm workers, legal
immigrants and even undocumented immigrants. A 1985 federal law
made it illegal to turn away hospital emergency patients in every state.

Further, Texas counties are required by state law to have programs to
serve the medically indigent. They usually fulfill this requirement by
forming hospital districts, which have taxing authority. Texas also
requires nonprofit hospitals to provide indigent care equal to 5
percent of their revenue. In addition, state and local governments,
charities and nonprofit providers run numerous other health care
programs.

According to a recent report by the Texas Comptroller, public and
private organizations spend approximately $1,000 per uninsured
individual per year, on the average, on charity care. That equals $4,000
for a family of four - an amount that would buy adequate private
insurance in almost all Texas cities [see the figure]. Although
technically "uninsured," Texans without health insurance receive
care worth almost two-thirds as much as is spent on Medicaid
recipients each year.

Free Care vs.
Government
Insurance

In Texas, state officials estimate that as many as 1.6 million people
may be eligible for Medicaid but not enrolled. In addition, hundreds of
thousands of children are eligible for but are not enrolled in the State
Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP). Why? Because the
benefits of enrolling do not appear to be worth the bureaucratic
hassles of doing so. In all major Texas cities, Medicaid patients and
the uninsured enter the same emergency rooms, see the same
doctors and are admitted to the same hospital rooms. Those who
have signed up for government insurance do not get more care, faster
care or better care.

Government
Insurance vs.
Private
Insurance?

Texas has been criticized for not having more people enrolled in
Medicaid and CHIP. But is this criticism valid? National studies show
that the expense of public programs increases the taxpayer burden
without actually reducing the number of uninsured. For example,
recent research by the Center for Studying Health System Change
found among those children in families earning less than 200 percent
of the poverty level - the group targeted by CHIP - Medicaid and other
state coverage increased from 29 percent to 33 percent from 1996-97
to 1998-99. Meanwhile, the rate of private coverage fell from 47
percent to 42 percent. Overall, public merely substituted for private,
leaving the percent uninsured virtually unchanged.

Impact of
Unwise Federal
Policies

Federal policies affect the uninsured in Texas in several important
ways. Although federal tax subsidies for employer-provided insurance
total about $125 billion per year, most of the uninsured get no tax
relief when they purchase insurance on their own. And although much
of the free care for the indigent is subsidized through federal
programs, in most cases the money cannot be used to purchase
private insurance instead.

The Impact of
Unwise State
Policies

Texas has approximately 43 health insurance mandates -- the fourth
highest number of any state in the nation. Under these laws, insurers
are required to cover everything from drug and alcohol abuse to in
vitro fertilization. And with every mandated benefit, the cost of
insurance rises - making it less attractive to people who are
otherwise uninsured.

Conclusion

The availability of health care with or without insurance is a major
reason why 24 percent of Texans do not have insurance. This is
especially true of healthy young adults, many of whom prefer to spend
their disposable incomes on other things, knowing they can get health
care if they need it. However, government policies could reduce the
number of uninsured, simply by subsidizing private insurance as
generously as it subsidizes free care to the uninsured.

Naomi Lopez Bauman is director of the California-based
Pacific Research Institute's Center for Enterprise and
Opportunity and a San Antonio native.

Devon M. Herrick is research manager at the Dallas-based
National Center for Policy Analysis.

Wow, possibly we've found another non-issue.