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Biggest Shift in US Health Care May Emerge in 45-Day Sprint

June 22, 2009

The largest expansion of US since the creation of in 1965 may emerge from legislation designed to reshape the and change how Americans receive and pay for care. Congress today begins crafting legislation that leaders plan to push through both chambers by their August recess. The measure may require all Americans to get medical insurance, force insurers to accept all patients and end the tax break for employer-paid . These changes may be hammered out with unprecedented speed at the urging of President who, four days ago, said “this is the moment.” Obama has made a health-care overhaul his top domestic priority, using his February budget proposal to call it a “moral” imperative to extend coverage to the country’s 46 million uninsured. Obama also tied the long-term fiscal soundness of the US to controlling medical costs. consumes 18 percent of the US and may rise to 34% by 2040, the Council of Economic Advisers reported June 2. “I don’t think we’ve ever had anything this large in American history aimed to go this quickly that touches everybody’s lives,” said Robert J. Blendon, a professor of health policy and political analysis at in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in a telephone interview. “They’re moving at a pace we’ve never seen before.” The US will spend more than US$2Tthis year on , the Health and Human Services department reported in February. Today, the Senate Health committee will begin debating a bill that includes “gateways” where consumers may compare coverage plans. The Senate Committee later this week will unveil a bill that among its provisions will call for taxes on , and House committees will release a draft of their own comprehensive measure that would create a government-backed plan to compete with private insurance.

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