Opinion
My hope for health care in 2019
As a physician in California, I am so grateful to see preserving people’s access to health care at the top of our state’s New Year’s resolution list. Although a federal judge in Texas has ruled the Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional (in a state where five million people could be directly affected, no less), California is promising to fight back.
Our own Attorney General Xavier Becerra called the decision an “assault… on the 20 million Americans who rely on the ACA for health care.”
I see countless patients whose access to critical medical attention would be non-existent if it weren’t for the ACA.
Also recently, we saw devastating new statistics from the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families about the substantial growth of uninsured children over the past three years. Alarmingly, the number of uninsured children in the United States increased last year for the first time since those numbers have been tracked!
While this is disheartening, I still have hope. The report from Georgetown also shows California’s rate of uninsured children remains below the national average, and was not found to have increased significantly between 2016 and 2017. This may be thanks, in part, to California’s push to ensure ALL children, regardless of immigration status, have access to health care.
I am also encouraged by health care progress in several other states’ where people voted in the recent midterm elections to expand Medicaid, even in several known-conservative states. This tells me that voters are sending a signal to Washington that we need the ACA. As a doctor, I see countless patients whose access to critical medical attention would be non-existent if it weren’t for the ACA.
I believe that here in California, our signal to Washington can be even stronger in the coming year – especially in light of the recent ruling. We have an opportunity to open access to health care even wider, including to our undocumented friends and neighbors.
Undocumented Californians contribute billions of dollars to California’s economy, yet more than a million lack access to affordable health care coverage. If you don’t think this is an issue that affects you – you’re wrong. Access to preventive and affordable care means more kids at school, people at work, and fewer community members relying on costly emergency rooms.
Anyone – at anytime – is at risk of needing to see a doctor because you never know what’s going to happen. Illnesses and accidents do not discriminate, and neither should access to health care.
These past two years have been nothing short of health care chaos, with various policy and legal attempts to undo all the benefits of the ACA. Some of these attempts have even included alleged “promises” to improve health care and increase wealth. In reality, there has yet to be a plan that would improve the health or wealth of Californians and the people of our nation.
It’s clear that this conversation is all too often NOT about what’s best for health care. No, it’s more about how our access to health care can be held hostage by certain individuals who don’t understand – or don’t care – about the affects this has on all of us.
As a physician of 15 years, I practice medicine so I can help individuals live their healthiest life possible. Access to affordable health care should never be in question. It should be a fundamental right for everyone. Perhaps with new leadership in both Washington, D.C. and California, 2019 may be our biggest health care opportunity yet.
—
Dr. Vivi Stafford, a general practitioner, graduated from the University Of Minnesota Medical School and has worked in Los Angeles County, Kings County and Fresno County. She has an Executive Master’s Degree in Health Administration.
Want to see more stories like this? Sign up for The Roundup, the free daily newsletter about California politics from the editors of Capitol Weekly. Stay up to date on the news you need to know.
Sign up below, then look for a confirmation email in your inbox.
My son’s family of four pays $1900.00 PER MONTH for health care and a waitress family pays $140.00 per month with Obamacare. What a unfair system and this physican is delusional. Giving for insurance welfare for virtually fee and putting my son in economic risk is dead anti American. These articles are sickening-
All healthcare in the United States is under the Affordable Care Act (ACA). The ACA is the law. Obamacare and the ACA refer to the same act. The goal of the ACA is greater access to healthcare, decreased costs in healthcare and improved outcomes in healthcare.
The healthcare insurance policy the waitress has is likely not equal to the family’s insurance policy, in terms of choices and options. The insurance monthly payments for the waitress are probably less than the family’s because the waitress has a lower income, because her insurance policy has more restrictions compared to the family, and because of her age.
The issue is presumably about a families healthcare costs for insurance being $1900 per month and less about a waitress having access to healthcare insurance. Meanwhile paying for health insurance at a more affordable rate still might be a financial burden for the waitress and others with similar circumstances. Perhaps families shouldn’t be paying at all for their children’s healthcare or for maternity care.
I have mentioned these topics in discussions over healthcare policy. All people need access to affordable healthcare and most would probably agree. While decreasing access to healthcare is clearly not a goal, decreasing costs should be. Health insurance payments should not be a burden and they too often are.
The goal is hopefully less disparity in healthcare access and costs. Perhaps reaching out to policy makers will bring more focus to the rising costs in healthcare without jeopardizing access or quality.