America
Nixoncare vs. Obamacare: The rhetoric and reality

Washington, July 13
To understand health care
policies in the US in a historical perspective rising above political
rhetoric, researchers have sought to compare current President Barack
Obama's Obamacare and former president Richard Nixon's health plan that
was introduced 44 years ago.
Both the Nixon plan and Obama's
Affordable Care Act (ACA), popularly called Obamacare, were driven by a
desire to provide health coverage for the uninsured segment of the
American people and to keep health care costs from continuing to rise
out of control.
"This is a chance to address the appropriate
place of political rhetoric when it comes to improving public health,
and the dangers of elevating blind partisanship over meaningful debate
about important issues for our nation's health," said lead author Gary
Freed, paediatrician and health policy researcher at the University of
Michigan Medical School.
The approach Nixon undertook, which
preserved the insurance industry's role in health care, would have
covered more people than the ACA does, Freed noted in the journal
Paediatrics.
Spelling out the rationale for his plan, Nixon
focused on enhancing the purchasing power of the poor so that they could
get quality services.
"Those who need care most often get care
least. And even when the poor do get service, it is often second rate...
This situation will be corrected only when the poor have sufficient
purchasing power to enter the medical market-place on equal terms with
those who are more affluent," Nixon said.
"It would be a very
different country today if the Nixon plan had passed. We need to put
health care in a historical perspective, and not go to extremes for
political purposes," Freed observed.
"I would hope this history
will help policy-makers think about what the policy is trying to
accomplish for the American people, and not turn a blind eye to
proposals simply because they're proposed by one party or the other,"
Freed said.












