Sanders Applauds New Medicare for All Study: Will Save Americans $450 Billion and Prevent 68,000 Unnecessary Deaths Every Year

Authored by commondreams.org and submitted by Bernie-Standards
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Sen. Bernie Sanders on Saturday applauded a new study published today by a team of epidemiologists in the peer-reviewed medical journal The Lancet, which found that Medicare for All will save Americans $450 billion and prevent 68,000 unnecessary deaths each and every year.

“This study confirms that Medicare for All will save the American people $450 billion on health care costs and will prevent 68,000 unnecessary deaths – each and every year,” Sanders said. “In other words, guaranteeing health care as a human right by creating a Medicare for All system will cost substantially less than our current dysfunctional health care system. It will save working class families thousands of dollars and it will prevent tens of thousands of Americans from dying each year. While the CEOs in the pharmaceutical and health insurance industry may not like it, we will end their greed and enact Medicare for All when I am president.”

A single-payer, universal health care system in the U.S. would save >68,000 lives and more than $450 billion annually, writes YSPH Prof. Alison Galvani and colleagues in the current issue of The Lancet. https://t.co/Ktww0RVcJa @YaleEMD — YaleSPH (@YaleSPH) February 14, 2020

According to the study, by replacing premiums, deductibles, co-payments and out-of-pocket costs with a progressive tax system, Medicare for All will save the average family thousands of dollars each year and will provide lower-income households the greatest relief.

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Struggling hospitals serving low-income communities would be particularly helped by Medicare for All by eliminating uncompensated care, increasing Medicaid reimbursement rates to Medicare levels, and reducing administrative overhead, according to the study.

The study also debunks several attacks on Medicare for All from the private health care industry that made well over $100 billion in profits last year. Doctors and hospitals would see large savings in cost and time from streamlining our bloated and inefficient administrative and billing system, allowing doctors to spend more time with patients, the study found.

The study is the latest in a series of studies conducted over the past three decades that have found that guaranteeing universal health care through a single-payer health care system would not only dramatically improve the health and well-being of the American people, it would cost less than our current dysfunctional health care system that puts profits over people.

Last month, another medical journal found that 19 out of 22 studies done over the past 30 years concluded that moving to a Medicare for All, single-payer health care system would cost less than our current health care system in the first year, and all of the studies showed that it would cost less within a decade of implementation.

Rickard58 on February 16th, 2020 at 03:11 UTC »

The benefits of the Medicare for All single-payer health insurance program:

Healthcare would cost $0 at the point of service.

$450 billion would be saved annually in national healthcare expenditures.

68,000+ lives would be saved every year.

78 million people would no longer be uninsured or underinsured.

500,000 would no longer file for medical bankruptcy every year.

Every single American would have comprehensive, high-quality health insurance coverage (Medical, dental, vision, hearing, and long-term care 100% covered).

There would be no more private healthcare: premiums, deductibles, copays, and out-of-pocket expenses.

Having health insurance would no longer be tied to having a job.

$11 trillion in out-of-pocket healthcare expenses will be put back in the pockets of Americans over the next 10 years.

95% of Americans will save money with the implementation of single-payer.

From 2019-2028, we’re projected to spend $52 trillion on healthcare. The federal government is already projected to account for around $20 trillion of that $52 trillion in spending from 2019-2028. This means single-payer would require $32 trillion in new taxes or spending cuts over the next 10 years to be fully funded. Below I outline where we can cut $7.5 trillion in healthcare spending, redirect $6.1 trillion in current healthcare spending, and raise $18.4 trillion in new taxes to finance the program over the next 10 years.

Here’s how to finance Medicare for All:

Spending cuts: - $2.9 trillion saved by paying hospitals 110% of current Medicare rates and making more payment reforms outlined in the Warren plan.

$1.8 trillion less in spending by mandating 2.3% administrative costs.

$1.7 trillion saved from prescription drug reform (net savings come from a target of 70% below current Medicare prices for brand name prescription drugs and a net 30% reduction in Medicare prices for generic).

$1.1 trillion less in spending due to single-payer having the ability to reduce medical cost growth rates overtime.

Redirected spending: - $6.1 trillion saved by redirecting all existing state and local government spending on health care to the federal government.

New taxes: - $8.8 trillion raised by taxing employers 98% of what they pay for healthcare now.

$4.35 trillion raised from the progressive wealth tax outlined in the Sanders plan.

$3 trillion raised from reversing Trump’s corporate tax cuts and closing major corporate tax loopholes.

$2.3 trillion raised by implementing measures that lower the IRS tax collection gap from 15% to 10%.

Sources:

https://assets.ctfassets.net/4ubxbgy9463z/2Tg9oB55ICu2vtYBaKKcVr/d124e0eeb128ad3a8d8ab8a6ccae44c0/20191031_Medicare_for_All_Cost_Letter___Appendices_FINAL.pdf

https://assets.ctfassets.net/4ubxbgy9463z/27ao9rfB6MbQgGmaXK4eGc/d06d5a224665324432c6155199afe0bf/Medicare_for_All_Revenue_Letter___Appendix.pdf

http://gabriel-zucman.eu/files/saez-zucman-wealthtax-sanders-online.pdf

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(19)33019-3/fulltext#%20

sillyrob on February 16th, 2020 at 01:41 UTC »

I take something to help with my sleep. My insurance covers 100% of this med, even if I don't hit my deductible. I have to see my doctor every 3 months to get a new prescription. This costs me $200 every time if I don't.

This change would be huge to me and my life isn't at risk. Please vote Sanders for the sake of *all* American's health.

bluexy on February 16th, 2020 at 00:51 UTC »

SIXTY. EIGHT. THOUSAND. PEOPLE.

How anyone can argue this isn't necessary, Democrats or Republicans, is unforgiveable. Don't say shit about school shootings. Don't say shit about border deaths. Don't say shit about terrorist attacks. SIXTY. EIGHT. THOUSAND. DEATHS. A. YEAR. People robbed of their lives purely because of a lack of health care -- and all it takes is voting for the right people.