Draft GPUS Platform Amendment Health Care
Section title: Health Care
Section subtitle: Universal health care now
Our position: Greens support universal health care and preventive care for all.
Health care is a right, not a privilege. The Green Party supports a wide range of health care services, not just conventional medicine. The cost of our healthcare system is crippling our economy and restricting economic growth within the U.S.
The United States is the only industrialized nation in the world without a national health care system. The current system's high costs and widely recognized failures demand that bold steps be taken. Greens support a universal, comprehensive, national single-payer health insurance program as the only solution to the current disastrous for-profit system.
Under a universal national single-payer health care system, the administrative waste of private insurance corporations would be redirected to patient care. If the U.S. were to shift to a system of universal coverage and a single payer plan, as in Canada, the savings in administrative costs would be more than enough to offset the cost. Expenses for businesses currently providing coverage would be reduced. State and local governments would pay less because they would receive reimbursement for services provided to the previously uninsured, and because public programs would cease to be the "dumping ground" for high-risk patients and those rejected by HMOs when they become disabled and unemployed.
Most importantly, the people of America will gain the peace of mind in knowing that needed health care will always be available to them. No longer will people have to worry about facing financial disaster if they become seriously ill, are laid off their jobs, or are injured in an accident.
Green Solutions
1. Universal, comprehensive, national single-payer health plan that will provide the following with no increase in cost:
a. A publicly funded health care insurance program, administered at the state and local levels;
b. Lifetime benefits for everyone;
c. Freedom to choose the type of health care provider, with a wide range of health care choices;
d. Decision-making in the hands of health providers and their patients;
e. Comprehensive benefits, as good or better than existing plans, including dental, vision, mental health care, hospice, long-term care, substance abuse treatment and medication coverage;
f. Participation of all licensed and/or certified health providers, subject to standards of practice in their field;
g. Portability regardless of geographical location or employment;
h. Primary and preventive care as priorities, including wellness education about diet, nutrition and exercise;
i. Greatly reduced paperwork for both patients and providers;
j. Fair and full reimbursement to providers for their services;
k. Preservation of all health care services currently available;
l. Cost controls via streamlined administration, national fee schedules, bulk purchases of drugs and medical equipment, and coordination of capital expenditures. Prices of medications must be publicly supervised;
m. Hospitals that can afford safe staffing levels for registered nurses;
n. Establishment of national, state, and local Health Policy Boards consisting of health consumers and providers to oversee and evaluate the performance of the system, expand access to care, and determine research priorities; and
o. Establishment of a National Health Trust Fund that would channel all current Federal payments for health care programs directly into the Fund, in addition to employees' health premium payments.
2. Holistic health including naturopathy, homeopathy, traditional chinese medicine, ayurveydic medine, and herbalism.
3. Hospice care
4. Medical marijuana
5. More comprehensive services for those who have special needs: the mentally ill, the handicapped and those who are terminally ill.
6. A better mental health care system that safeguards human dignity, respects individual autonomy, and protects informed consent.