Health Reform Debate Heats Up During August Recess

Health Reform Debate Heats Up During August Recess

As protesters continue to advocate against Democrats' health reform proposals at town-hall meetings nationwide, lawmakers are using the August recess to dispel misinformation circulating about their health reform plans and introduce reform-related legislation.

Although both chambers of Congress are quiet during the August recess, the volume of the health reform debate has increased nationwide. Protesters have swarmed town-hall meetings arranged by congressional lawmakers, loudly advocating against Democratic reform plans. Democrats have responded by meeting with key White House aides to develop strategies to handle the opposition.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) “barnstormed” through California on Monday to rally support for health reform. Pelosi’s tour, amid “friendly crowds and political allies,” came one day after she and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) wrote in a USA Today opinion piece that protesters who shout down lawmakers attempting to explain facets of the reform proposals are “simply un-American.”

Another lawmaker who has been quite vocal over the previous few weeks is Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.). In an opinion piece, Rockefeller advocated for an Independent Medicare Advisory Council, saying IMAC would be empowered to make Medicare decisions that “have become increasingly complex” and would help control overall health costs.

Rockefeller also took advantage of the relative silence of his fellow lawmakers by introducing two bills that tackle health reform in piecemeal fashion. The Medicare Prescription Drug Coverage Improvement Act, introduced Thursday, would allow the HHS secretary to negotiate directly with drugmakers on behalf of Medicare. The following day, Rockefeller introduced the Affordable Access to Prescription Medications Act of 2009, which aims to reduce U.S. residents’ prescription drug spending by placing a cap on out-of-pocket spending.

On the other side of the aisle, Senate Budget Committee ranking member Judd Gregg (R-N.H.) noted in a release (.pdf) that the federal deficit hit $1 trillion in July for the first time ever and asserted that nothing is being done to address the shortfall. Gregg writes that Democrats instead are “forging ahead with wildly expensive health care reform proposals.”

The volume of the reform debate might be escalating because lawmakers are unsure of what details are in health reform legislation. According to a pair of studies appearing on the Health Affairs Web site, research on health reform is “too often flawed and poorly targeted toward the questions that are most important to decisionmakers.” One study suggests that “policymakers and the public do not always know what to believe” because of flawed research, while another says that researchers and policymakers have different priorities.

While you attempt to hear your own thoughts on health reform above the din, here is a recap of the major events of the past week related to a health system overhaul.

Administration Message

Town-Hall Meetings

Interest Groups

Coverage Expansion

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