Medicare and Medicaid are essential
for the security of millions of Americans.
Peace
of mind.
That’s
what Medicare and Medicaid mean for nearly one in every three Americans.
Almost
50 million Americans have paid into, and are beneficiaries of Medicare, our
national health insurance program for seniors and people with disabilities. And
almost 50 million Americans — the elderly, low-income adults and their
children, and people with certain disabilities — have access to Medicaid.
Six
million Americans depend on both.
But
now these programs are under siege. Some want to replace guaranteed Medicare
benefits with a voucher. The problem with this approach is twofold. First, it
would require seniors to pay significantly more for basic health care — and
this would drive large numbers of our most vulnerable citizens into bankruptcy.
Second, these are earned benefits that hard-working people paid for most or all
of their adult lives. They are not giveaways.
Others would “block grant” Medicaid to the states, as Rep. Paul Ryan has famously proposed. Under Ryan’s plan, the federal government would give states a fixed amount of money — in lump sums known as block grants. This amount of money would not go up as more people get Medicaid services. The results would be either big cuts in health care services or big tax increases for states or both. Instead, we should keep Medicaid as a system that provides federal funding for seniors and people with disabilities — and for all the families that rely on Medicaid for their health care.
The
debate over Medicare’s and Medicaid’s future is likely to continue throughout
this year and for years to come.
Sometimes
even the most important government functions can come off as abstractions —
decimal points on a budget ledger deciding who is eligible and who isn’t, who
gets cut, and who doesn’t.
So
at USAction, we asked our members what Medicare and Medicaid mean to them and
their families.
Their
responses revealed how deeply and keenly Americans cherish and rely on the
promise our nation made when we established these lifelines in 1965. We’ve kept
this promise so far and Americans demand we keep it in the future.
After
sorting through hundreds of stories, certain themes emerged.
Many
people told us they are alive only because of Medicare or Medicaid. Many others
discussed how these services have enhanced the quality of their lives. Others
still talked about how it brings them retirement security and peace of mind.
We
heard from young people who do not directly receive benefits, but say they are
able to save money they would otherwise spend on aging parents. Debra Pekin in
Wheeling, Illinois, wrote that without Medicare, she would have to quit her job
to care for her 92-year-old mom — Social Security pays for her assisted
community living, but Medicare covers her health care costs.
Many
wrote that without Medicare, they would face financial ruin. A woman noted that
the entirety of her monthly Social Security check would have to go to her
health care costs — nothing left for anything else.
A
number of people wrote that Medicare and Medicaid mean neighbor helping
neighbor — we’re all in this together.
Finally,
a large number of respondents expressed extreme outrage — outrage so extreme
that some comments had to be edited — that a system they paid into all of their
adult lives could be cut. These people clearly felt robbed and violated. “I
paid into Medicare for 40 years,” writes Jim Brady in Rochester, Michigan.
“This is my money I am getting back. It is not charity. No one has the right to
steal my money.”
These
are the Medicare and Medicaid stories of ordinary Americans. They are on the
front lines of the Medicare and Medicaid debates. Whatever policies are
adopted, they are the canaries in the coal mine — they will feel the impact
first.
We
made them a promise.
Will
we keep it?
David Elliot is communications director of
USAction. He edited the report Peace of Mind: Americans Share Their Medicare
and Medicaid Stories. USaction.org
Distributed via OtherWords (OtherWords.org)
Distributed via OtherWords (OtherWords.org)