DAVID SCHEINER, MD, SIDNEY WOLFE, MD, http://www.citizen.org
MARGARET FLOWERS, MD,
http://www.md.pnhp.org, http://www.pnhp.org
At a news conference at the National Press Club today, David Scheiner,
who was Obama's personal physician for 22 years, said he would not
support a proposal currently working its way through Congress: "If we
don't go the route of single payer, we're making a terrible mistake."
Asked if he has spoken to the president, Scheiner indicated he was
disinvited from a recent forum that featured Obama. "I would give up my
eyeteeth to speak to him. Perhaps he can invite his old doctor to the
White House for a drink of water."
Speaking on the anniversary of Medicare's enactment 44 years ago,
Scheiner stated that there is a great deal of disinformation about
healthcare reform. He particularly focused on "this myth that the
government would get between a doctor and patient. Medicare never gets
between me and my patients. What does get in the way is the private
insurance companies." Read Scheiner's full statement:
http://www.citizen.org/pressroom/release.cfm?ID=2935
Joining Scheiner was Sidney Wolfe, MD, acting president of Public
Citizen and director of Public Citizen's Health Research Group. Wolfe
indicated that Obama's stated goals of universal coverage and budget
neutrality can only be achieved with a single-payer model: "The private
insurance industry can't exist in a program that is universal and cost
neutral." Wolfe called the current proposal a "false promise" that "is
no longer a bill for national health insurance," adding that "we are
against Obamacare because it is a disaster for the millions left out."
Said Wolfe: "We should be celebrating the 44th anniversary of Medicare
by finally passing legislation that would truly result in everybody in,
nobody out, instead of seriously considering legislation that guarantees
that millions still will be left out just so the private health
insurance industry can stay in. A single-payer system, eliminating the
private health insurance industry, with the resultant $400 billion
annual savings -- that's $4 trillion over ten years -- is the only
realistic way for everybody to be in."
Also speaking at the news conference was Dr. Margaret Flowers, a
pediatrician who is congressional fellow with Physicians for a National
Health Program, which just released a letter signed by over 3,500
doctors, including Scheiner. The letter states: "Mr. President, you once
embraced a single-payer reform that would threaten private insurers, and
foresaw its passage if Democrats regained control of the House, the
Senate and the White House. These conditions have been met. Yet now
Democrats propose diverting additional billions to private insurers by
requiring middle class Americans to purchase defective policies from
these firms -- policies with so many gaps and loopholes that they
currently leave millions of our insured patients vulnerable to financial
ruin.
"Moreover, a 'public plan option' would do little to mitigate the damage
of a reform that perpetuates private insurers’ dominant role. Even a
robust public option would forego 90 percent of the bureaucratic savings
achievable under single payer. And a kinder, gentler public option would
quickly fail in a health care marketplace where competition involves a
race to the bottom, not the top, where insurers compete by NOT paying
for care. But HHS Secretary Sebelius has made clear that any public
option will be far worse than that, specifically crafted to prevent it
from evolving to a single payer. This kind of public option would amount
to a government-run clone of private insurance, reproducing the worst
features of private plans."
Video of the news conference will be posted at:
http://www.singlepayeraction.org
For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167