The Republican Party-“Affordable high quality healthcare”

We must recover the traditional patient-physician relationship based on mutual trust, informed consent, and confidentiality.

To simplify the system for both patients and providers, we will reduce mandates and enable insurers and providers of care to increase healthcare options and contain costs.

I’ve started a series of blog posts that review each major party’s platform on healthcare and related issues. I take this information directly from the website of each party’s platform and include the link so you can read the complete document.

We’ve already looked at the parties’ views on gun violence and control. This post will look at health insurance. This is not a commentary or an opinion piece, you can find that elsewhere. This is information for your decision.

Every office holder or candidate may or may not fully subscribe to their party’s platform. Whether you are registered as a Republican, Democrat, Independent, or some other party, ultimately you will vote for a person. Do your research and learn what that person stands for.

Note: the photos are for illustration, are not affiliated with the party platform, and are not intended to influence your opinion.

The Republican Party Platform

This party platform was adopted in 2016, reffirmed in 2020, with plans for a new platform in 2024.

Restoring Patient Control and Preserving Quality in Healthcare

Any honest agenda for improving healthcare must start with repeal of the dishonestly named Affordable Care Act of 2010: Obamacare. It weighs like the dead hand of the past upon American medicine.

It imposed a Euro-style bureaucracy to manage its unworkable, budget-busting, conflicting provisions. It has driven up prices for all consumers. Their insurance premiums have dramatically increased while their deductibles have risen about eight times faster than wages in the last ten years.

It drove up drug prices by levying a $27 billion tax on manufacturers and importers and, through mandated price cuts for drugs under Medicare and Medicaid, forced pharmaceutical companies to raise prices for everyone else.

Its “silver plans,” the most common option on the government insurance exchanges, limit people’s access to their own doctor through narrow networks and restrict drug coverage, forcing many patients to pay for extremely costly medicines for their chronic diseases.

We agree with the four dissenting judges of the Supreme Court:

“In our view, the entire Act before us is invalid in its entirety.”

four Supreme Court justices

It must be removed and replaced with an approach based on genuine competition, patient choice, excellent care, wellness, and timely access to treatment.

an open paper planner lying on a laptop keyboard; the words HEALTH INSURANCE are spelled out with small tiles on the planner
Photo by Olya Kobruseva on Pexels.com

Congress to repeal the Affordable Care Act

To that end, a Republican president, on the first day in office, will use legitimate waiver authority under the law to halt its advance and then, with the unanimous support of Congressional Republicans, will sign its repeal.

The Supreme Court upheld Obamacare based on Congress’ power to tax. It is time to repeal Obamacare and give America a much-needed tax cut.

 Our goal is to ensure that all Americans have improved access to affordable, high-quality healthcare, including those struggling with mental illness.

a female physician talking to a male patient
FROM LIGHTSTOCK.COM, AFFILIATE LINK

In its place we must combine what worked best in the past with changes needed for the future.

We must recover the traditional patient-physician relationship based on mutual trust, informed consent, and confidentiality.

To simplify the system for both patients and providers, we will reduce mandates and enable insurers and providers of care to increase healthcare options and contain costs.

State regulation of insurance markets

We will return to the states their historic role of regulating local insurance markets, limit federal requirements on both private insurance and Medicaid, and call on state officials to reconsider the costly medical mandates, imposed under their own laws, that price millions of low-income families out of the insurance market.

Medicaid block grants

To guarantee first-rate care for the needy, we propose to block grant Medicaid and other payments and to assist all patients, including those with pre-existing conditions, to obtain coverage in a robust consumer market.

Flexible and portable health plans

We believe that individuals with preexisting conditions who maintain continuous coverage should be protected from discrimination.

Today’s highly mobile workforce needs portability of insurance coverage that can go with them from job to job. The need to maintain coverage should not dictate where families have to live and work.

shallow focus of woman and 2 men working in a call center
Photo by Mikhail Nilov on Pexels.com

We propose to end tax discrimination against the individual purchase of insurance and allow consumers to buy insurance across state lines. In light of that, we propose repealing the 1945 McCarran-Ferguson Act which protects insurance companies from anti-trust litigation.

We look to the growth of Health Savings Accounts and Health Reimbursement Accounts that empower patientand advance choice in healthcare.

exploring the HEART of healthcare

I appreciate your interest in the politics of healthcare, an issue that is vital to all of us every day. These proposals will become more focussed and debated as election day approaches; the national election is Tuesday November 8, 2022. Please exercise your right to vote, I intend to.

Medical stethoscope and heart on a textured background

Dr Aletha

Dr. Aletha

President Joe Biden’s Plan for Healthcare-a review

In 2021, Joseph Biden became the 46th US President, succeeding Donald Trump. In his 2023 State of the Union Address, he addressed healthcare, proposing reforms like Medicare expansion and lower drug costs. His campaign focuses on affordable, quality healthcare, pharmaceutical regulation, reproductive rights, mental health support, and personalized community health plans, with future plans for specific communities.

updated February 10, 2023

Joseph Robinette Biden, Jr., was inaugurated as the 46th President of the United States on January 20, 2021. As the Democratic candidate and former Vice President, Biden defeated incumbent president Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election.

On February 7, 2023 President Biden gave the annual State of the Union Address to Congress and the nation. In it, he discussed several healthcare issues, including Medicare, drug costs, premiums for the ACA, veterans’ toxic burn pits exposure, and injuries due to gun violence.

Here is a review of what he proposed in his campaign for President three years ago.

This post was originally published August 18, 2020.

Due to the pandemic caused by the SARS-CoV2 virus, health has been a major topic in both world and national news this year and will continue to be so for months if not years. And health is a major issue in this year’s United States’ presidential election in November 2020.

Health care was a major issue in the 2008 election and proved to be momentous. In his campaign, the Democratic candidate, Barack Obama, promised health care reform and as President he delivered with the passage of the Affordable Care Act, (ACA) the first time Americans have had universal health care.

The ACA sparked heated debate in the 2016 election with the Democratic candidate pledging to build upon it and Republican candidate vowing to dismantle it . This year the debate continues.

Healthcare and the Presidential campaign 2020

In this and a previous post, I review and list what I think are some of the most important points in the health care philosophy of each major party candidate, according to information on their official websites.

I am not endorsing either of the candidates, their party,or their healthcare plans. My intent is to present a non-partisan look at what they have done and propose. If it sounds otherwise, that is unintentional. I’ll give you the links to their sites and encourage you to read them for yourself.

You should also review my post about the Democratic Party healthcare platform.

The challenging candidate-Democrat-Joe R. Biden

Joe R. Biden was a US. Senator from Delaware for 36 years. He served as the 47th Vice President of the United States. He was born November 20, 1942. Mr. Biden is married to Jill Biden and has had 4 children, 2 of them deceased.


The Biden Plan for Healthcare

Access to affordable insurance

  • create a public health option like Medicare
  • increase value of tax credits to lower insurance premiums .
  • expand coverage to low income Americans
  • premium-free access to the public option for those 4.9 million individuals who would be eligible for Medicaid 
  • opposes every effort to get rid of the Affordable Care Act

Affordable, quality healthcare, less complex system

  • Middle class families will get a premium tax credit to help them pay for coverage.
  • Stop surprise billing: bar health care providers from charging patients out-of-network rates when the patient doesn’t have control over which provider the patient sees (for example, during a hospitalization)
  • Lower costs and improve outcomes by partnering with the healthcare workforce .

Stop “abuse of power” by pharmaceutical companies

  • Repeal the law allowing pharmaceutical companies to avoid negotiating with Medicare over drug prices
  • Limit launch prices for new drugs facing no competition and limit price increases for existing drugs to no higher than general inflation
  • Allow consumers to buy prescription drugs from other countries
  • Stop drug companies’ tax break for advertising
  • Improve the supply of generic drugs.

Make healthcare a right for all, not a privilege for a few

  • Expand access to contraception and protect the constitutional right to an abortion
  • Restore federal funding to Planned Parenthood
  • Reduce the high maternal mortality rate, which especially impacts women of color
  • Defend health care protections for all regardless of gender, gender identity, or sexual orientation.
  • Double federal investment in community health centers
  • Improve access to mental health care and remove the stigma

“In the months ahead, Biden will put forward additional plans to tackle health challenges affecting specific communities, including access to health care in rural communities, gun violence, and opioid addiction.”

Oval Office replica
replica of the Oval Office at the Reagan Presidential Library, photo by Dr. Aletha

Exploring the HEART of healthcare politics

Thanks for reviewing this overview of Mr. Biden’s health care proposals. I hope you will take the time to review his website for yourself. In another post I reviewed the views of the incumbent Republican President, Donald Trump.

a group of lapel buttons, red, white and blue, saying VOTE

This photo and the cover photo of the White House are from the media site Lightstock.com, an affiliate which pays this blog a commission for purchases made from this link

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Dr. Aletha