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2.
Fam Med ; 53(1): 48-53, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1038806

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic, together with its resultant economic downturn, has unmasked serious problems of access, costs, quality of care, inequities, and disparities of US health care. It has exposed a serious primary care shortage, the unreliability of employer-sponsored health insurance, systemic racism, and other dysfunctions of a system turned on its head without a primary care base. Fundamental reform is urgently needed to bring affordable health care that is accessible to all Americans. Over the last 40-plus years, our supposed system has been taken over by corporate stakeholders with the presumption that a competitive unfettered marketplace will achieve the needed goal of affordable, accessible care. That theory has been thoroughly disproven by experience as the ranks of more than 30 million uninsured and 87 million underinsured demonstrates. Three main reform alternatives before us are: (1) to build on the Affordable Care Act; (2) to implement some kind of a public option; and (3) to enact single-payer Medicare for All. It is only the third option that can make affordable, comprehensive health care accessible for our entire population. As the debate goes forward over these alternatives during this election season, the likelihood of major change through a new system of national health insurance is becoming increasingly realistic. Rebuilding primary care and public health is a high priority as we face a new normal in US health care that places the public interest above that of corporate stakeholders and Wall Street investors. Primary care, and especially family medicine, should become the foundation of a reformed health care system.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Family Practice , Health Care Reform , Health Care Sector , Healthcare Disparities/ethnology , Primary Health Care , Quality of Health Care , Universal Health Insurance , Economic Recession , Employment , Fee Schedules , Health Facilities, Proprietary , Healthcare Disparities/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Insurance, Health , Medicare , National Health Insurance, United States , Physicians, Family/supply & distribution , Physicians, Primary Care/supply & distribution , SARS-CoV-2 , Unemployment , United States
3.
J Gen Intern Med ; 36(3): 775-778, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-754317

ABSTRACT

In the midst of the COVID-19 outbreak, health care reform has again taken a major role in the 2020 election, with Democrats weighing Medicare for All against extensions of the Affordable Care Act, while Republicans quietly seem to favor proposals that would eliminate much of the ACA and cut Medicaid. Although states play a major role in health care funding and administration, public and scholarly debates over these proposals have generally not addressed the potential disruption that reform proposals might create for the current state role in health care. We examine how potential reforms influence state-federal relations, and how outside factors like partisanship and exogenous shocks like the COVID-19 pandemic interact with underlying preferences of each level of government. All else equal, reforms that expand the ACA within its current framework would provide the least disruption for current arrangements and allow for smoother transitions for providers and patients, rather than the more radical restructuring proposed by Medicare for All or the cuts embodied in Republican plans.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/epidemiology , Health Care Reform/legislation & jurisprudence , National Health Insurance, United States/legislation & jurisprudence , Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Medicaid/legislation & jurisprudence , Medicare/legislation & jurisprudence , National Health Insurance, United States/trends , Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act/trends , United States , Universal Health Insurance/legislation & jurisprudence
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