Please help Claire Ayer get UNiversal primary cate bill out of the senate this week
Thanks
Bob
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Begin forwarded message:
From: "Deb Richter, VT Health Care for All" <vthca@sover.net>
Date: February 19, 2018 at 6:44:10 PM EST
To: zeliff@gmavt.net
Subject: S53, the Universal Primary Care bill, needs a show of support this week!
Reply-To: vthca@sover.net
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Dear Friends,
We have an urgent situation in the Senate. S53, the Universal Primary Care bill, needs a show of support this week! Please call or email your senator or senatorsas soon as possible and urge them to support S53. Even those who have signed onto the bill need to hear from you as soon as possible so that it can both pass out of committee and be supported on the Senate floor.
For key talking points, see below. Please also include any personal stories of your own or of people you know who have suffered because of high out of pocket costs and lack of access to primary care. To email or call, please click here.
Senator Claire Ayer, chair of Senate Health and Welfare is trying to get this through committee, so if she is your senator, you can thank her for her hard work and urge her to bring it to vote in her committee.
TALKING POINTS FOR UNIVERSAL PRIMARY CARE BILLS
1. Universal publicly financed primary care would reduce the need for expensive hospitalizations and emergency room visits by preventing disease and treating conditions earlier.2. It would lower health care premiums for all! (Vermont law does not allow premium rates to reflect services private insurers do not pay for).3. Primary care could be financed for relatively little. A state 2016 study estimated it would cost under $175 million per year, and this would include both substance abuse and out patient mental health. That is not much more than the cost of a proposed new hospital building at Fletcher Allen.4. Financing for the bills would be taken up next session, but these bills would create a road map to universal publicly financed primary care. They would keep us on the road to health care as a public good set out in Act 48.5. If we don’t invest in primary care, it won’t be there ten years from now. We will be left with specialists, and this will not only be bad for public health, but also vastly increase costs!
6. Almost 1/3 of all privately insured Vermonters under age 65 are now underinsured. It is even more striking with the young; 63% of those aged 18-24 with private health insurance are underinsured. Underinsurance means people do not access care when they need it due to financial barriers. Primary care for all with no fees at point of service would help ensure access to care.
7. Of Vermonters who went to the doctor once in the previous 12 months, most (61.6%) did not visit a specialist at all. Primary care is where most of us access care most of the time!8. Only about 10% of privately insured Vermonters get their insurance through the Exchange. So, even if we bolster the Exchange, this does nothing for almost 90% of privately insured Vermonters, a substantial number of whom are underinsured, and who would typically access the health care system through primary care.
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