Bold ideas to transform healthcare: the American health reform

Bold ideas to transform healthcare: the American health reform
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According to Harvard, USA, new analysis finds competing visions for health reform, with democratic governors having bold ideas to transform healthcare.

A new analysis published in the American Journal of Public Health finds competing visions for health reform among newly elected governors, including substantial enthusiasm among Democrats for new public health coverage – could this transform healthcare in the US?

Differing visions to transform healthcare

While Republican leaders favour maintaining or shrinking public health insurance programs, Democratic leaders are advancing numerous new proposals to expand public coverage, including ‘public option’ and single-payer health reforms.

Micah Johnson, an author of the AJPH article and M.D. candidate at Harvard Medical School, USA, said: “With a divided government in Washington, states have an opening to provide leadership on health reform in the next two years.

“State efforts to expand public coverage could serve as a model for future national reform, much as the Massachusetts health reform plan in 2006 provided the blueprint for the Affordable Care Act.”

Healthcare platforms of the 72 Republican and Democratic nominees running for governor in the 2018 election was analysed, specifically examining position statements posted on campaign websites.

In order to identify how the differing parties plan to transform healthcare, the researchers identified four major healthcare reform proposals advanced by gubernatorial candidates: introducing work requirements for Medicaid, expanding Medicaid in states that have not yet done so, designing a public insurance option, and transitioning to a state-based single-payer system.

Five Republican nominees proposed adding work requirements for their state’s Medicaid program, of whom one was elected (in Ohio, USA). In the 22 states that had previously expanded Medicaid, no candidate from either party proposed rolling back coverage.

Six Democratic nominees proposed creating a new public insurance option to compete alongside private plans, of whom five were elected. Importantly, a public option was proposed by newly elected governors in Illinois, Colorado, New Mexico, and Maine who will be working with Democratic state legislatures, bolstering the political viability of reform.

Seven Democratic nominees proposed single-payer healthcare plans, of whom three were elected. These newly elected governors, in California, Colorado, and New Mexico, will all be working with Democratic-controlled state legislatures.

All Democratic nominees included healthcare platforms on their campaign websites, but only half of Republican nominees did so. Their omission did not appear to have electoral consequences: 13 of the 18 Republicans offering no healthcare platform won their elections.

Sanjay Kishore, an author of the article and M.D. candidate at Harvard Medical School, added: “At a time when many voters consider healthcare their top priority, it’s remarkable that ten candidates for governor led with a platform of single-payer or a public option, reforms never achieved anywhere in the U.S. This may signal a desire for more progressive health policy.”

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