Posted on 07/10/2007 10:01:01 AM PDT by Eric Blair 2084
HARRISBURG, Pa. Gov. Edward G. Rendell, an unapologetic big-city liberal who campaigned as a health care reformer, might have been expected to propose a plan to cover the 900,000 Pennsylvanians who are uninsured.
And he did so, after winning reelection last year in a landslide. But like other governors in the vanguard of health policy, Mr. Rendell also concluded that such a move would be unaffordable, and perhaps politically unattainable, without serious efforts to control costs.
As a result, Mr. Rendells Prescription for Pennsylvania included a ban on smoking in public places, a reduction in the rate of hospitalization for chronic diseases and an expansion of the role nurses play in treating patients. He even framed his proposal to provide universal access as a form of cost containment, emphasizing that 6.5 percent of every health-insurance premium in Pennsylvania went to subsidizing care for the uninsured, often in emergency rooms.
Mr. Rendell is learning, however, that to contain costs is eventually to pluck dollars from someones pocket. His plan has incited protest from hospitals, doctors, insurers and small businesses, each of them finding something to detest.
Mr. Rendell seems to be facing an uphill task. Once confident that his package would win quick approval, he now puts the odds of success at 50-50. Mr. Rendell says he is calling for shared sacrifice. Everyones ox gets gored a little bit in this, he said in an interview here. If were ever going to have accessible health insurance for all Americans, we have to begin by containing costs. If costs continue to spiral out of control, there is no way the government can afford to pay for it.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
Oh! Not my beer??
There, I fixed it, Ed.
Don’t give them any ideas. Please. Any suggestions to steal citizens’ freedoms to save the State money will be greatly appreciated.
Don't worry -- wait'll they make it a "mandated benefit"! :-)
If Corzine's entourage wanders into PA, Rendell should have his state troopers escort him back to NJ immediately, removing an expensive health care risk from the PA taxpayers' shoulders.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.