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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!gumby!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: decvax!r-node.gts.org!ndallen@decwrl.dec.com (Nigel Allen)
- Subject: Health Organizations Call for Reform of Delivery System
- Message-ID: <1992Nov10.203421.16389@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: Echo Beach, Toronto
- Date: Tue, 10 Nov 1992 20:34:21 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 63
-
- Here is a press release that may be of interest to some
- readers of this newsgroup.
-
- Health Organizations Call for Reform of Delivery System
- To: National Desk, Healthcare Writer
- Contact: Fred Caesar of Catholic Health Association, 314-427-2500;
- Rick Smith of the Washington Business Group on Health,
- 202-408-9320;
- Jon Ross of the American Hospital Association/Congress
- of Hospital Trustees, 312-280-6342;
- Lisa Wyatt of the American Nurses Association,
- 202-544-4444, ext. 210; or
- Clay Mickel of Blue Cross/Blue Shield Association,
- 202-626-4811
-
- WASHINGTON, Nov. 9 -- A coalition of health
- advocacy groups today urged President-elect Clinton to make a
- commitment to significantly restructure how healthcare is delivered,
- calling that "the central task of real health system reform."
- The organizations, including the Catholic Health Association of
- the United States (CHA), American Hospital Association (AHA),
- American Nurses Association (ANA), Washington Business Group on
- Health (WBGH), Blue Cross/Blue Shield Association, and Congress of
- Hospital Trustees pledged to work with the Clinton administration to
- effect healthcare delivery reform and made public a joint letter to
- the president-elect at a news conference here today.
- The coalition advocates structural changes in the healthcare
- system that would create incentives for employers, insurers,
- physicians, nurses, hospitals, and other health providers to come
- together in integrated, community-based networks. Such partnerships
- would link providers financially and clinically, expand access to
- care for the more than 35 million Americans without health insurance,
- broaden primary and preventive care, and improve the efficiency and
- accountability of the healthcare system, the coalition said.
- The result of increased networks, the coalition's letter to
- Clinton said, "will be real cost containment, better quality care,
- and improved health status for all Americans and the ability to
- support research and medical education."
- Each of the organizations has put forth its own healthcare reform
- proposal, with differences existing among their various plans
- relating to questions of access to care and health financing.
- However, they were drawn together, the letter said, because "all of
- us assign the highest priority to delivery system-based comprehensive
- reform."
- "Healthcare reform must begin by restructuring the delivery
- system," stated Ronald R. Aldrich, chairperson of the Catholic Health
- Association of the United States (CHA), and president/CEO of the
- Franciscan Health System, Aston, PA. "This is necessary to better
- meet the needs and preferences of patients and their families. The
- current fragmented, non-system of healthcare delivery must be
- replaced with a system that offers an integrated continuum of
- services emphasizing prevention and rehabilitation."
- The coalition expressed concern that patchwork alterations to the
- health payment system would fail to control spiraling healthcare
- costs, which some estimates say may double by the year 2000 without
- significant changes to the healthcare system.
- "The way we pay for care should change," said Pat Nazemetz, a
- member of the board of directors of the Washington Business Group on
- Health. "Payment changes should support a delivery system strategy.
- They are not a quick fix that can substitute for fixing the delivery
- system," she said.
- -30-
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