home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!concert!samba!usenet
- From: Nigel.Allen@bbs.oit.unc.edu (Nigel Allen)
- Subject: Bill Clinton on Health Care
- Message-ID: <1992Jul31.002311.24781@samba.oit.unc.edu>
- Sender: usenet@samba.oit.unc.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: lambada.oit.unc.edu
- Organization: Echo Beach
- Date: Fri, 31 Jul 1992 00:23:11 GMT
- Lines: 159
-
- Press release from Clinton/Gore Campaign
-
- Text of Clinton's Remarks to National Breast Cancer Organization
- To: National Desk, Political Writer
- Contact: Jeff Eller of Clinton for President, 501-399-3840
-
- LA GRANGE, Ill., July 29 /U.S. Newswire/ -- Following are the
- remarks of Gov. Bill Clinton delivered to the Y-Me National
- Breast Cancer Organization here Tuesday:
-
- Thank you. Thank you very much. I want to thank all of you for
- being here today. I want to say how much I appreciate the warm
- welcome you gave, not only to me, but to Carol Mosley Braun, and I
- hope you elect her to the United States Senate.
- I flew in here today from a long way away. I came all the way from
- northern California and I'm very sorry the plane was a little late,
- and we got here a little late, and I'm grateful that you all
- waited. We're going to have a -- apparently you were supposed to be
- here before I was supposed to be here, so I feel bad about that,
- worse about that.
- Let me talk just a minute about the subject that I came here to
- visit with you about. And then we're going to, kind of, open the
- floor to questions. I don't know exactly how that was worked out,
- but I try to do as many conversations with the American people as
- I can.
- Hillary and I, and Al and Tipper Gore went all across a lot of
- America, including southern Illinois, on our bus tour recently. And
- we had massive crowds of people. But everywhere I went, I tried to
- spend as much time as I could answering questions and shaking hands
- with people in the crowd, and talking to people about their
- concerns.
- But there is an issue that I want to emphasize here today. That's
- why I was so glad to be invited here to this hospital, and to be
- associated with this Y-Me group. And that's women's health. I have
- been very concerned about this issue for a long time.
- For those of you who don't know it, there is a vast inequity
- in our country in the research that's been done, in the way
- it's been done on health issues. And women have had their particular
- concerns grossly underfunded. The research protocols, even on
- illnesses that affect both men and women, have been overly-tilted
- toward tests on men, and as a consequence, there are many areas
- in which women's health concerns have not been adequately addressed.
- Breast cancer is perhaps the most obvious, the most painful, and
- the most sweeping. Those of you watching the Democratic Convention
- heard me say that my own mother has had breast cancer, and is
- recovering from that and, I think, doing quite well.
- But in addition to that, there are problems of ovarian cancer,
- problems of osteoporosis. A whole range of problems that this
- government has not adequately addressed.
- Recently the United States Congress finally passed a bill to do
- that. A bill that was supported, among others, by such conservative
- Republicans as Strom Thurmond, and let me tell you, I just want to
- give you an idea of the broad range of support it had, and Ronald
- Reagan's director of health and human services, who was himself a
- doctor. And Mr. Bush vetoed it anyway, because of the fetal tissue
- research provisions. That bill contained three hundred million more
- dollars for breast cancer research alone. I would have signed it,
- and as President, I'll help Y-Me meet their goal.
- I want to talk to you a little bit about this issue in a broader
- context, because people are always saying, "Well, how are you going
- to pay for these things?" We're spending thirty-five billion
- dollars on defense research and development. We know that's going
- to be reduced. As it is reduced, we should put all of that money,
- all of that money into research and development for building an
- economy and a society for the twenty-first century, and into
- medical research and development into new technologies. We can do
- that. We can do that.
- Beyond that, I have to tell you that having worked as hard as I
- could for twelve years in one of America's poorest states to
- generate new jobs, educate children, solve health care problems, I
- have become absolutely convinced that this country can never be
- what it ought to be, unless we find a way to join the ranks of the
- other advanced nations of the world in controlling health care
- costs and providing a basic package of affordable health care to
- all Americans.
- Every time I say that, people say, "Oh, that sounds good, but you
- can't do it without a massive tax increase." Your nation today is
- spending thirty percent more than any other nation on earth, as a
- percentage of our income on health care, and getting less for it.
- Because we spend too much money on things that are not related to
- direct health care.
- Ask the people who run this hospital. Ask any doctor. The average
- doctor spends thirty percent of income or more on paper work. The
- average hospital is hiring clerical workers at four times the rate
- of nurses.
- In the United States of America, the insurance companies of our
- country take more in administration and profit than in any other
- country in the world. If we just reach the average that the
- European nations have, we'd have another sixty billion dollars a
- year to put into basic health care for Americans. Sixty billion
- dollars in insurance reform and administrative reform.
- One other thing we've got to do is to provide a basic pattern of
- health education, and primary and preventive health care to all
- Americans where they live--in cities, in rural areas--so that we
- spend more money keeping bad things from happening.
- In the first hundred days of our administration, Senator Gore and
- I will send to the United States Congress a plan to provide basic
- comprehensive health care to all Americans, and to control the cost
- of health care. And we will break the logjam in Congress, and pass
- it.
- But we are not going to do that by putting the brakes on research.
- We should be spending more money in research, more money on breast
- cancer research, more money on osteoporosis research, more money on
- cancer research generally, and a whole range of other areas. We
- should be spending more money to fully fund the Ryan White Health
- Care Act, to deal better with the enormous problem of AIDS.
- Let me say that most Americans still have not come to grips with
- the threat that AIDS presents to all of us as a people. The rate of
- AIDS is growing rapidly among women, at a breathtaking rate. It has
- gone well beyond the traditional population of IV drug users and
- gay men. Over a million Americans are already HIV-positive. And we
- have simply got to try and get ahead of this, not only with
- research, but also with aggressive education and prevention
- strategies. This is a matter of life or death for the children of
- this country, and we have got to do it.
- So I ask all of you who have gathered on this beautiful lawn today
- to think in the course of this election about the health care
- issue, in terms of your loved ones, your family, your friends.
- How many of you are only one illness away from bankruptcy?
- How many people can't change jobs because they've got a pre-existing
- medical condition? We're going to change that, and make it possible
- for people to change their work. How many lives might hang in
- the balance because of inadequate investment and research? We're
- going to change that.
- But you should know also, if you look at the Illinois economy, in
- a larger sense, if you look at the budget problems of your state
- governments and your communities, most of it is still rooted in our
- stubborn refusal to control health care costs, and provide a basic
- package of health care to all Americans.
- We will never make manufacturing competitive in America, unless we
- do that. Every American car has about six hundred dollars more in
- medical costs than their foreign competitors. That is stunning.
- We've got steel mills in this country where the employers are
- paying seven dollars an hour in health care costs for retired steel
- workers. We are going to bankrupt this country.
- The state of California, where I just was yesterday, has an eleven
- billion dollar deficit. And part of it is the explosive costs of
- Medicaid, with more people in poverty and costs going up three or
- four times the rate of inflation.
- So anybody who comes to you and says, "We're going to control the
- deficit. We're going to get this economy going again," and doesn't
- have a plan for health care is not going to do it. This is at the
- core of our national economic discontent, and we had better make up
- our minds in this election to face it, and face it now.
- So, I ask you to support Bill Clinton and Al Gore, because we want
- to put the American people first again, because we want to make
- this government to work for all of you again, and because we know
- that America can never be what it ought to be until we have the
- courage to change. We have got to change the economic, the health
- care, and the educational policies that we're following now, or we
- will not make it. That is the ultimate commitment of this campaign
- to your future. Thank you very much.
- -0-
-
- --
- The opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of
- North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the Campus Office for Information
- Technology, or the Experimental Bulletin Board Service.
- internet: bbs.oit.unc.edu or 152.2.22.80
-