Kay Bailey’s health care finance confusion

Kay Bailey What exactly is Texas Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison’s political appeal?

She has never seemed to me to have a particularly good grasp of even basic issues. But I never dreamed that she actually supported universal health insurance even while mimicking the GOP party line against such a mandate all these years.

Uwe Reinhardt provides the Senate subcommittee context for Hutchinson’s revelation:

[Hutchison] was proposing that women should not have to decide between spending $250 of their own money to get a mammogram or go without it, and that the key here is to get someone else — either public or private health insurance — to pay for it.

I cannot recall a clearer statement of unreserved support for universal and comprehensive health insurance for America and a more straightforward definition of rationing health care.

I am sure that she would extend her remarkable dictum on rationing to cover routine screening for other cancers as well — e.g., to colonoscopies for colon cancer, to P.S.A. tests and biopsies for prostate cancer or to regular examinations for thyroid cancer.

Furthermore, I would assume that her concern for timely medical attention extends even beyond cancer to the prevention of all serious illnesses — e.g., the control of blood pressure for Americans with hypertension through drug therapy or the prevention of diabetes.

In a nutshell, whether she realized it or not, hers is a clear clarion call for comprehensive, universal health insurance in America.

I don’t agree with Senator Hutchison’s viewpoint regarding universal coverage. However, I understand it and acknowledge that it’s not an unreasonable position. I just don’t think it’s the best way to control the cost of health care services and products.

But why isn’t she honest about her true position?

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