For Immediate Release
2/12/09

Press Conference VideoPress Conference Audio - Press Conference

Senate Majority Leader Pileggi, Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee Chairman Erickson Visit Crozer-Chester Medical Center to Discuss Plan to Boost Community Health Care

HealthNET PA improves health care access and expands Pennsylvania's health care safety net. 

Harrisburg – Senate Majority Leader Dominic Pileggi (R-9) and Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee Chairman Ted Erickson (R-26) visited Crozer-Chester Medical Center today as part of their effort to improve health care access and expand Pennsylvania's health care safety net through the HealthNET PA legislative package. 

The HealthNET PA plan would expand access to health care and medicine to more than 500,000 uninsured and low-income working Pennsylvanians. It would utilize information technology to control costs and reduce health care-associated infections, and provide expanded insurance options for employers and families, and will incorporate the concepts of disease prevention and wellness. 

"The number of Pennsylvanians who do not have health insurance has increased since 2004, and a bad situation was made worse with the nation's economic struggles. Workers and families who find themselves in a position they did not create need a health care safety net, and that's what HealthNET provides," said Senator Erickson.  "HealthNET PA provides direct care – not simply insurance -- to uninsured and low-income working Pennsylvanians. And it does so more quickly, and at a fraction of the cost, of other state and national proposals." 

The senators discussed the 15-bill HealthNET PA package, which includes legislation that would develop or expand health care clinics across Pennsylvania to provide "medical homes" for 175,000 working-poor clients and ease pressure on hospital emergency rooms. 

"There is a need to expand access to health care in communities across Pennsylvania. HealthNET PA is the most effective and affordable way to provide direct health care to people who otherwise might not have access," said Senator Pileggi. "Increasing support for health care clinics and medical centers means more families will receive health care directly, efficiently, and in community-based settings." 

Features of the 15-bill HealthNET PA package include the following:

  • Improving Access to Health Care and Medicines
    • Establishing the Community-Based Healthcare Program for the expansion and site development of health care clinics across Pennsylvania to provide "medical homes" for 175,000 working poor clients and ease pressure on hospital emergency rooms.
    • Implementing a physician/health care facility volunteer program through which an additional 159,000 uninsured patients would be assigned to a primary or specialty care physician, with access to free specialty care, labs and inpatient hospital care.
    • Creating a registry of free prescription drugs and allowing retail establishment pharmacies to sell prescription drugs at a minimal cost, such as $4.

  • Making Health Care More Affordable
    • Helping hospitals and doctors' offices convert to Electronic Medical Records, boosting evidence-based diagnosis and treatment protocols, and encouraging Telemedicine expansion.
    • Permitting health insurers to withhold payment to providers in the event of a medical error, and allowing employers to establish "Healthy Living Committees" qualifying for insurance discounts.
    • Providing funding of a critical cost-saver – the reduction of health care-associated infections.

  • Expanding Coverage
    • Providing "Mini-Cobra" coverage for small business employers, creating a high-risk pool for individuals who cannot access other coverage, and extending the option of dependent coverage to age 30. (Nearly half of uninsured Pennsylvanians are age 18-34.)
    • Providing $5 million in state tax credits for the use of Health Savings Accounts.
    • Permitting a group of ten or more employers who belong to a nonprofit business coalition to pool their health-related insurance liabilities in order to self-insure. 

HealthNET PA would provide health care directly to the people who are in the greatest need, using existing sources of funds. 

Approximately $225 million is annually deposited into the Health Care Provider Retention Account from the current cigarette tax and the CAT Fund surcharge. An estimated $125 million a year is needed to fully fund the current MCARE abatement, which makes the remaining $100 million available for HealthNET PA.

"Ensuring patient access to healthcare services is vital to our community and our Commonwealth.  In the current economic downturn, more and more of our neighbors are having a difficult time accessing the basic and specialty care they need," said Dr. Chip Hummer, Attending Orthopedic Surgeon at Crozer-Chester Medical Center. "I personally want to thank Senators Erickson and Pileggi for their leadership on this issue.  They are working hard to ensure that families in Delaware County have a healthcare safety net upon which they can rely."

For more information, including statistics, charts and useful links, please visit the HealthNET PA homepage at www.pasenategop.com/healthnet.htm.

Senators and health care professionals will be discussing HealthNET PA at additional news conferences across Pennsylvania in the coming weeks.

CONTACTS:
Erik Arneson (Sen. Pileggi) (717) 787-4712
Tom Golden (Sen. Erickson) (717) 787-1350

More Information:
Healthcare

 

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