Health Care
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First Principle:  Do No Harm

Patient Control and Portability

Improving Quality of Care and Lowering Costs

Funding Medical Research

Protecting Rights of Conscience

Medicare

Medicaid

Building a Health Care System for Future Emergencies


Health Care Reform:  Putting Patients First

Americans have the best doctors, the best hospitals, the most innovative medical technology, and the best scientists in the world.  Our challenge and opportunity is to build around them the best health care system.  Republicans believe the key to real reform is to give control of the health care system to patients and their health care providers, not bureaucrats in government or business. 

There are reasons why American families and businesses are dissatisfied with the current state of health care:

  • Most Americans work longer and harder to pay for health care. 

  • Dedicated health care providers are changing careers to avoid litigation.

  • The need to hold onto health insurance is driving family decisions about where to live and work. 

  • Many new parents worry about the loss of coverage if they choose to stay at home with their children.

  • The need – and the bills – for long-term care are challenging families and government alike.

  • American businesses are becoming less competitive in the global marketplace because of insurance costs.

  • Some federal programs with no benefit to patients have grown exponentially, adding layers of bureaucracy between patients and their care.  

It is not enough to offer only increased access to a system that costs too much and does not work for millions of Americans.  The Republican goal is more ambitious: Better health care for lower cost.

First Principle:  Do No Harm

How do we ensure that all Americans have the peace of mind that comes from owning high-quality, comprehensive health coverage? The first rule of public policy is the same as with medicine: Do no harm.

The American people rejected Democrats’ attempted government takeover of health care in 1993, and they remain skeptical of politicians who would send us down that road.  Republicans support the private practice of medicine and oppose socialized medicine in the form of a government-run universal health care system.  Republicans pledge that as we reform our health care system:

  • We will protect citizens against any and all risky restructuring efforts that would complicate or ration health care.

  • We will encourage health promotion and disease prevention.

  • We will facilitate cooperation, not confrontation, among patients, providers, payers, and all stakeholders in the health care system.

  • We will not put government between patients and their health care providers.

  • We will not put the system on a path that empowers Washington bureaucrats at the expense of patients.

  • We will not raise taxes instead of reducing health care costs.

  • We will not replace the current system with the staggering inefficiency, maddening irrationality, and uncontrollable costs of a government monopoly.

Radical restructuring of health care would be unwise.  We want all Americans to be able to choose the best health care provider, hospital, and health coverage for their needs.  We believe that real reform is about improving your access to a health care provider, your control over care, and your ability to afford that care. 

We will continue to advocate for simplification of the system and the empowerment of patients.  This is in stark contrast to the other party’s insistence on putting Washington in charge of patient care, which has blocked any progress on meeting these goals.  We offer a detailed program that will improve the quality, cost, and coverage of health care throughout the nation, and we will turn that plan into reality.

Patient Control and Portability

Republicans believe all Americans should be able to obtain an affordable health care plan, including a health savings account, which meets their needs and the needs of their families. 

Families and health care providers are the key to real reform, not lawyers and bureaucrats. To empower families, we must make insurance more affordable and more secure, and give employees the option of owning coverage that is not tied to their job.  Patients should not have to worry about losing their insurance. Insurance companies should have to worry about losing patients’ business. 

The current tax system discriminates against individuals who do not receive health care from their employers, gives more generous health tax benefits to upper income employees, and fails to provide every American with the ability to purchase an affordable health care plan. Republicans propose to correct inequities in the current tax code that drive up the number of uninsured and to  level the playing field so that individuals who choose a health insurance plan in the individual market face no tax penalty. All Americans should receive the same tax benefit as those who are insured through work, whether through a tax credit or other means.

Individuals with pre-existing conditions must be protected; we will help these individuals by building on the experiences of innovative states rather than by creating a new unmanageable federal entitlement.  We strongly urge that managed care organizations use the practice patterns and medical treatment guidelines from the state in which the patient lives when making medical coverage decisions.

Because the family is our basic unit of society, we fully support parental rights to consent to medical treatment for their children including mental health treatment, drug treatment, alcohol treatment, and treatment involving pregnancy, contraceptives, and abortion.

Improving Quality of Care and Lowering Costs

While delivering control of health coverage to families and individuals, Republicans will also advance a variety of targeted reforms to improve the quality of care, lower costs, and help Americans – men, women, and children – live longer and healthier lives.

Prevent Disease and End the “Sick Care” System

Chronic diseases – in many cases, preventable conditions – are driving health care costs, consuming three of every four health care dollars. We can reduce demand for medical care by fostering personal responsibility within a culture of wellness, while increasing access to preventive services, including improved nutrition and breakthrough medications that keep people healthy and out of the hospital. To reduce the incidence of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, and stroke, we call for a national grassroots campaign against obesity, especially among children.  We call for continuation of efforts to decrease use of tobacco, especially among the young.

A culture of wellness needs to include the treatment of mental health conditions.  We believe all Americans should have access to affordable, quality health care, including individuals struggling with mental illness.  For this reason, we believe it is important that mental health care be treated equally with physical health care. 

Empower Individuals to Make the Best Health Care Choices. 

Clear information about health care empowers patients.  It lets consumers make better decisions about where to spend their health care dollars, thereby fostering competition and lowering costs.  Patients must have information to make sound decisions about their health care providers, hospitals, and insurance companies.

Use Health Information Technology to Save Lives

Advances in medical technology are revolutionizing medicine. Information technology is key to early detection and treatment of chronic disease as well as fetal care and health care in rural areas – especially where our growing wireless communications network is available.  The simple step of modernizing recordkeeping will mean faster, more accurate treatment, fewer medical errors, and lower costs.  Closing the health care information gap can reduce both under-utilization (the diabetic who forgets to refill an insulin prescription) and over-utilization (the patient who endures repetitive tests because providers have not shared test results). 

Protect Good Health Care Providers from Frivolous Lawsuits

Every patient must have access to legal remedies for malpractice, but meritless lawsuits drive up insurance rates to outrageous levels and ultimately drive up the number of uninsured.  Frivolous lawsuits also drive up the cost of health care as health care providers are forced to practice defensive medicine, such as ordering unnecessary tests.  Many leave their practices rather than deal with the current system. This emergency demands medical liability reform.

Reward Good Health Care Providers for Delivering Real Results

Patients deserve access to health care providers they trust who will personalize and coordinate their care to ensure they receive the right treatment with the right health care provider at the right time.  Providers should be paid for keeping people well, not for the number of tests they run or procedures they perform.   The current cookie-cutter system of reimbursement needs restructuring from the view of the patient, not the accountant or Washington bureaucrat.

Drive Costs Down With Interstate Competition

A state-regulated national market for health insurance means more competition, more choice, and lower costs.  Families – as well as fraternal societies, churches and community groups, and small employers – should be able to purchase policies across state lines.  The best practices and lowest prices should be available in every state.  We call upon state legislators to carefully consider the cost of medical mandates, and we salute those Republican governors who are leading the way in demonstrating ways to provide affordable health care options.

Modernize Long-Term Care Options for All

The financial burdens and emotional challenges of ensuring adequate care for elderly family members affect every American, especially with today’s aging population.  We must develop new ways to support individuals, not just institutions, so that older Americans can have a real choice whether to stay in their homes. This is true not only with regard to Medicaid, where we spend $100 billion annually on long-term care, but also for those who do not qualify for that assistance.

Encourage Primary Care as a Specialty

We believe in the importance of primary care specialties and supporting the physician’s role in the evaluation and management of disease.  We also encourage practice in rural and underserved areas of America. 

Funding Medical Research

We support federal investment in basic and applied biomedical research.  This commitment will maintain America’s global competitiveness, advance innovative science that can lead to medical breakthroughs, and turn the tide against diseases affecting millions of Americans – diseases that account for the majority of our health care costs. The United States leads in this research, as evidenced by our growing biotechnology industry, but foreign competition is increasing.  One way government can help preserve the promise of American innovation is to ensure that our intellectual property laws remain robust.

Federal research dollars should be spent as though lives are at stake – because, in fact, they are. Research protocols must consider the special needs of formerly neglected groups if we are to make significant progress against breast and prostate cancer, diabetes, and other killers.

Taxpayer-funded medical research must be based on sound science, with a focus on both prevention and treatment, and in accordance with the humane ethics of the Hippocratic Oath. In that regard, we call for a major expansion of support for the stem-cell research that now shows amazing promise and offers the greatest hope for scores of diseases – with adult stem cells, umbilical cord blood, and cells reprogrammed into pluripotent stem cells – without the destruction of embryonic human life.  We call for a ban on human cloning and for a ban on the creation of or experimentation on human embryos for research purposes.

We believe medicines and treatments should be designed to prolong and enhance life, not destroy it.  Therefore, federal funds should not be used for drugs that cause the destruction of human life.  Furthermore, the Drug Enforcement Administration ban on use of controlled substances for physician-assisted suicide should be restored.

Protecting Rights of Conscience

The health care profession can be both a profession and a calling.  No health care professional – doctor, nurse, or pharmacist – or organization should ever be required to perform, provide for, or refer for a health care service against their conscience for any reason.  This is especially true of the religious organizations which deliver a major portion of America’s health care, a service rooted in the charity of faith communities.

Medicare

We support the provision of quality and accessible health care options for our nation’s seniors and disabled individuals and recognize that in order to meet this goal we must confront the special challenges posed by the growth of Medicare costs.  Its projected growth is out of control and threatens to squeeze out other programs, while funding constraints lead to restricted access to treatment for many seniors.  There are solutions. Medicare can be a leader for the rest of our health care system by encouraging treatment of the whole patient. Specifically, we should compensate doctors who coordinate care, especially for those with multiple chronic conditions, and eliminate waste and inefficiency.  Medicare patients must have more control of their care and choice regarding their doctors, and the benefits of competition must be delivered to the patients themselves if Medicare is to provide quality health care.  And Medicare patients must be free to add their own funds, if they choose, to any government benefits, to be assured of unrationed care.

Finally, because it is isolated from the free market forces that encourage innovation, competition, affordability, and expansion of options, Medicare is especially susceptible to fraud and abuse.  The program loses tens of billions of dollars annually in erroneous and fraudulent payments.  We are determined to root out the fraud and eliminate this assault on the taxpayer.

Medicaid

Our Medicaid obligations will consume $5 trillion over the next ten years.  Medicaid now accounts for 20-25 percent of state budgets and threatens to overwhelm state governments for the indefinite future.  We can do better while spending less.  A first step is to give Medicaid recipients more health care options.  Several states have allowed beneficiaries to buy regular health insurance with their Medicaid dollars.  This removes the Medicaid “stamp” from people’s foreheads, provides beneficiaries with better access to doctors, and saves taxpayers’ money.  We must ensure that taxpayer money is focused on caring for U.S. citizens and other individuals in our country legally.

Building a Health Care System for Future Emergencies

To protect the American people from the threats we face in the century ahead, we must develop and stockpile medicines and vaccines so we can deliver them where urgently needed.  Our health care infrastructure must have the surge capacity to handle large numbers of patients in times of crisis, whether it is a repeat of Hurricane Katrina, a flu pandemic, or a bioterror attack on multiple cities.  Republicans will ensure that this infrastructure, including the needed communications capacity, is closely integrated into our homeland security needs.

The 2008 Platform Committee received public input through a website.  Ultimately more than 13,000 comments were received and considered.  The following is a sampling of those comments:

(Christy - Birmingham, AL)

(Larry - Columbia, SC)

(Ike - Columbia, SC)

(Anonymous)

(Nhpfcd - Portsmouth, NH)

(D - Stuarts Draft, VA)
We have GOT to find a way to make health care more affordable for the citizens and legal immigrants of this country.  The people typically uninsured, or underinsured, are typically those most vulnerable to health issues: the very young and the old.  Health care costs are out of control, so insurance premiums are out of control.  Medicare has become a huge profit machine for many health care providers (Medicare needs to cut out per diems and pay strictly the costs incurred.).  Medicaid's qualifying incomes are completely unrealistic.  There are so many people living in poverty because of the current cost of living as it relates to basics like housing, food, and gas (there are still lots of places without mass transportation available), and yet don't qualify for Medicaid because of income level.

(Jon - Twentynine Palms, CA)
Start by implementing real tort reform.  End federal involvement in health care.  Can anyone really name one thing that government bureacracy has actually handled more efficiently than the private sector?  Eliminate mandating that employers provide health insurance - again let the private sector decide.  Individual health savings accounts and individual heath care insurance are solid approaches to minimizing federal government meddling in health care.

(Paul - Sedalia, CO)           
The Republican Party should stand up for individual rights in medicine and should oppose any move towards Canadian-style “single-payer” plans or Massachusetts-style “mandated insurance”.  These are all just variations of socialized medicine and simply results in rising costs, government rationing of care, and unhappy patients. Colorado Republicans were successful in stopping the Democrats' push towards socialized medicine in 2007-2008, and the national party can learn from them. Paul Hsieh, MD  Sedalia, CO  Co-founder Freedom and Individual Rights in Medicine (FIRM):  www.WeStandFIRM.org

(David - Houston, MN)        
Healthcare and Public Safety  We believe that the only way to reduce healthcare  costs is by introducing genuine market  competition, eliminating government mandates  and allowing people to own and control their own  healthcare. The record shows socialized medicine  and single payer schemes drive up medical costs  and cause rationing of medical care. We believe  that the most fundamental function of government  is preserve and protect our persons and our  property.   

(Rose - Austin, TX)              
Health care needs to stay in the hands of the private sector. Government interference/control would mean disaster for our superb (not kidding) system.  Private sector needs to examine its relationship between doctors/hospitals and insurance companies, but all-in-all, we have an excellent system.  Handing out free health care to any and all illeagals is not helping our system.  Compassion is and always will be important and necessary; however, complete abuse of the system is unacceptable and cannot be tolerated.  No business would survive that, and we can't expect the tax payers to provide that. Our situation with obesity is only going to put more pressure on the system, and so the government might want to spend some part of our tax dollars on educating the public of what life will be like if things do not change for a large portion of our population.  It needs to be drilled into them mercilessly, or it will not change, and the health care system will become more and more strained.  My costs will continue to rise.  This does not make me happy, as I tend to be much more responsible with my health, and that of my family. 

(Gary - Norwalk, IA)           
This really needs to be a separate topic.  Medicare will go negative in cash flow within the next couple of years (if it is not already really there).  Social Security is only a few years behind. These represent bigger problems than is generally perceived because not only will general revenues be needed to make up the shortfall, but the budget will be short already because we are used to spending the “surplus”.  Paying for these two existing programs--supposedly “insurance” programs-- will use up most, if not all, of the revenues people are already talking about spending for additional health care initiatives.

(Jerry - Warrensburg, MO)
We need to make Medicare and medicaid secure.  Seniors who have paid in all of their working lives do not need to be worried about their health care because congress plundered the social security system for many years.  Eliminate waste and fraud by imposing strict penalties on the abusers, and let's see some high profile cases where Medicare abusers wind up in jail.  It's about time we struck a cord of fear into the thieves who plunder the system. We need to control health care costs by prevention, rather than crisis treatments.  Expose the fraud and allow the American people to deal with the unscrupulous characters.  Make fraud cases very high profile.

(Michael - Hillsboro, KS)   
As a physician, Medicare is a good program. All citizens should have Medicare or opt-out with evidence of sufficient private insurance or funds to pay for care. There are so many people who risk and end up going bankrupt because they don't have the discipline to buy health insurance. Large and small companies pay enormus costs on health care for their employees. If the cost of health insurance was shared, business and workers would be healthier. I hate seeing people die from prevenable disease because they are too cheap to spend money on preventive care. If States didn't require liability insurance on automobiles these same people would be driving uninsured.

(Michael - Ellensburg, WA)
Aggressively promote a national campaign so that everyone takes a very cheap vitamin D supplement, at least 1,000 IU/day. This will slash disease costs and much human suffering from cancer, heart disease, autoimmune disease, multiple sclerosis, and osteoporosis. If a government really wants to control health care costs, and not just talk about it, this would be a very good, easy first step towards health promotion. Our health situation is as dire as polio was before the vaccine was introduced in 1955. Aggressively promote the use of intensive lifestyle changes for diabetes and heart disease. Research studies have already shown that this is the most effective way (both in terms of costs and results) to gain health freedom. Small scale lifestyle interventions where people stay in a house for a week and learn a new diet and lifestyle are working miracles for people. Making these lifestyle interventions reimbursable by Medicare would make it possible for people to seriously do this on a much broader scale. It would save a ton of money and a hundreds of thousands of lives every year as well. We pay a lot of money for open heart surgery, which is a very radical procedure, and we won't spend a dime to help people change their diet and lifestyle. We need to change this, as it has been shown to be very effective treatment for diabetes and heart disease. Health care in America needs to be lead by independent scientists and doctors who have a proven track record of integrity, and success in reversing serious health conditions using diet and lifestyle interventions. It is time to stop pandering to drug companies and allowing their money to dictate how we make decisions. It is time for America be given the liberty so that they can be told the truth of what it really takes to be healthy and to avoid sickness and disease. We know the basic answers and we need to speak them loud and clear and over and over and over until people start getting it.