WASHINGTON
(By Ben Evans, AP)
June 10, 2009 —
Black, Hispanic and
Asian lawmakers
warned Democratic
leaders that any
health care overhaul
that ignores health
gaps between whites
and minorities will
face stiff
opposition.
The lawmakers said
they would be
hard-pressed to
support a bill
without a new
program providing
access to health
care for all
Americans.
"The public health
option has to be
there," Rep. Mike
Honda, a California
Democrat who chairs
the Congressional
Asian Pacific
American Caucus,
said at a news
conference. "If we
don't have a public
option, there's no
discussion."
Republicans are
resisting a
government health
insurance program
that would compete
with private
insurance companies,
arguing that the
companies would be
put at a competitive
disadvantage.
Members of the Asian
caucus, along with
the Congressional
Black Caucus and the
Congressional
Hispanic Caucus,
said they plan to
introduce
legislation this
week that includes
their wish list for
broadening health
care overhaul beyond
various plans
floated in the House
and Senate. The
three minority
caucuses have a
total of 91 members,
most of them
Democrats and enough
to help shape the
final legislation.
Citing federal
research showing
higher rates of
cancer, diabetes,
heart disease and
infant mortality
among minorities,
they said they would
seek more funds for
community health
centers that provide
care in poor
neighborhoods.
The lawmakers also
called for expanding
a National
Institutes of Health
center that focuses
on minority health
concerns, works to
improve work force
diversity in the
medical industry and
collects more data
to better track
disparities in
health care.
They said the costs
of reaching into
low-income, minority
communities to
improve upfront
health care would be
more than offset in
the long run by
preventing expensive
procedures and
hospital stays.
"Believe me, a
comprehensive health
care reform bill
without the aspects
that we're
discussing today
will be set for
failure," said Rep.
Nydia Velazquez, a
New York Democrat
who chairs the
Hispanic caucus.
Later, at a
discussion of
minority health
issues at the White
House, Health and
Human Services
Secretary Kathleen
Sebelius said the
Obama administration
is committed to
addressing the
"alarming disparity
in the delivery of
quality health
care."
Doing so, Sebelius
told officials, is
critical to lowering
health care costs.
Sebelius noted that
75 percent of the
nation's $2.2
trillion health care
expenses go toward
treating chronic
diseases, referring
to far higher rates
of such diseases
among minorities.
She said the rising
rates of HIV/AIDS
among
African-Americans is
among "the most
troubling"
developments in U.S.
health care.
"Minority Americans
not only are more
likely to be
uninsured, so they
don't have
preventative care,
don't have early
intervention, but
are less likely to
have quality care
when they come to
seek the care that
they need," she
said.
The White House
issued a summary
report on minority
health care showing
African-Americans
are seven times more
likely as whites to
have HIV/AIDS,
blacks and Hispanics
have diabetes rates
nearly twice as high
as whites, and black
men are 50 percent
more likely than
whites to have
prostate cancer. The
report said more
than one in three
Hispanics and
American Indians,
and about one in
five
African-Americans,
are uninsured. That
compares to one in
eight whites lacking
coverage.