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Member Since: 2/2008

Cornyn Touts Texas' Failing Health Care System As National Model For Improving Access

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On Tuesday, Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) claimed that "Texas is a national model for improving access to health care because it limited lawsuits against doctors":

We have created greater access to quality health care in Texas…How did we do it? Well, we passed Proposition 12…So, you have to understand what I mean when I say I want to make Washington, D.C., and the rest of our country more like Texas [because], frankly, we know the policies that actually work.

But Texas, which has the highest uninsured rate in the nation, is hardly a model of "quality health care." In fact, if the national rate were the Texas rate, 29 million more Americans would lack health insurance.

As the Houston Chronicle points out, "malpractice issues are a small scab on Texas' ailing health care system. The cancer is the number of uninsured. Increasing the number of doctors and specialties only does so much good when many Texans can't afford to make an appointment."

Indeed, despite assurances that malpractice reform would improve access to health care, after voters approved Proposition 12 in September 2003, little changed:

- 25 percent: or 5.6 million Texans are uninsured, the worst rate in the nation.

- 35 percent: of small businesses in Texas offer health insurance.

- 54 percent: of Texans under 65 have employer-sponsored coverage, "8 percentage points below the national average."

- 48th in health care quality and efficiency: on the Commonwealth Fund's State Scorecard "avoidable health costs" dimension – a measure that speaks to efficiency within the health care system.

- 1.8 percent: increase in direct care physicians between 2004 and 2006, "which is slower than it was pre-Proposition 12."

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{"commentId":2485496,"authorDomain":"njb"}

They got this from the Houston Chronicle--the facts are correct about the rate of uninsured in Texas. Last I checked--couple years ago--Houston leads the nation in per capita uninsured. The Comptroller published a report stating the fastest growing group of uninsured was individuals with incomes over 50K--no blaming this one on poor folks or immigrants, legal or not.

Here is where the original article/source came from:

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/falkenberg/5942610.html

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  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 12:30 AM EDT
{"commentId":2485743,"authorDomain":"CarbonCopy"}

Bushs's Fault!

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    Reply#2 - Mon Aug 18, 2008 1:18 AM EDT
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