Health Care
Every American should have freedom of choice in health care. Learn More... Statement of Purpose The United States spends $2.1 trillion on health care, roughly 16 percent of the gross domestic product. Additionally, government is responsible for approximately 50 cents out of every dollar spent on heath care because of the huge and rapidly growing government health care programs: Medicare, Medicaid, SCHIP, and state and public health care programs. The result of so much government control is that health care is one of the most highly regulated sectors of the American economy. Government financing means government control, and government control means less personal freedom.

In order to protect individuals and families, we must change laws and regulations at the federal and state level to enable individuals and families to own and control their own health care policies and to take them from job to job without tax or regulatory penalties. Currently, only nine percent of Americans directly purchase their own health insurance. Individuals and families should be able to buy the health care plans they want at the price they wish to pay. Health plans and providers should be forced to compete on a level playing field in a free and open market where government will not be in the business of picking winners and losers. Finally, individuals and families should be free to choose health plans that accommodate their own ethics and morals. This means we must also transform Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP so that those providers are directly accountable to patients for their quality of care.

Featured Research

A Principled Path to Rational Health Care Reform

Congress will soon unveil legislation to reform the health care system. The policies outlined by President Obama during his campaign and those being discussed in Congress would centralize control over the health care system in Washington.

Ensuring Access to Affordable Health Insurance: A Memo to President-elect Obama

President-elect Obama, during the campaign you pledged to build a health care system in which Americans can be assured of access to affordable health insurance. You guaranteed Americans who already have insurance that nothing would change except that their coverage would be less expensive. You pointed to the health system that Members of Congress have as your model for expanding coverage. And you agreed that choice of doctor and care is a basic principle. These laudable themes struck a chord with Americans.

The Obama Health Care Plan: More Power to Washington

Senator Barack Obama's health care plan is laden with new regulations and government authority that would leave Americans with even less control of their health care dollars than they exercise today. A better course would be to transfer control of health care dollars to individuals and families, both to empower individuals to make informed choices and to enable the marketplace to respond rapidly to their needs and wants.

The Obama Health Care Plan: A Closer Look at Cost and Coverage

Barack Obama's health care plan would reduce the number of insured, but it would not control costs in any significant way. In fact, it would require considerable increases in federal expenditures.

Latest Research

A Closer Look at the House Democrats' Health Care Bill

November 6, 2009

A Closer Look at the House Democrats' Health Care Bill

The Pelosi Health Care Plan: Employer Mandate Penalties on Small Businesses

November 5, 2009

The Pelosi health care reform plan would create an employer penalty system that would apply to small businesses--even those with 25 or fewer workers.

Doing Health Care Reform Right: The Empowering Patients First Act

November 5, 2009

The Empowering Patients First Act could accomplish needed reforms while minimizing Washington's role in health care.

Other Publications

Overcoming Health Care Disparities

It is obvious that not all Americans enjoy equal access to affordable and high-quality health care. The problem is particularly acute for ethnic and racial minorities. Portability of health insurance policies-enabling individuals to keep their coverage when they change jobs or maintain coverage throughout life changes-would be key to stabilizing health insurance markets and dramatically reducing the numbers of the uninsured, especially among blacks and Hispanics.

The FEHBP As A Model For a New Medicare Program

The deficiencies of the Medicare program are rooted in its defined-benefit structure and in its use of price controls. Medicare should be transformed into a defined cash contribution made to beneficiaries’ private plans or to the traditional Medicare program. The Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP) is essentially such a system and is a good model for Medicare reform. The FEHBP has been highly successful at holding down costs while offering a wide range of benefits and types of plans. Its features for consumer information and plan standards also would be useful in a reformed Medicare program.

Choice and Consequences: Transparent Alternatives to the Individual Insurance Mandate

The proposal for an individual mandate requiring individuals to buy health insurance has emerged as the most controversial health policy issue in America’s Presidential candidates’ debate, reflecting similar divisions among a broad spectrum of health policy analysts.

The Massachusetts Approach: A New Way To Restructure State Health Insurance Markets

 

A Federalist Approach To Health Reform: The Worst Way, Except For All The Others

Support for state action should be part of any strategy to expand health insurance coverage. Decades-long political deadlock in Washington has frustrated national efforts to expand coverage. Some states have already undertaken to do this; others show a determination to do so. Regulatory and legislative flexibility would trigger widespread state action. Whether one thinks that ensuring coverage requires a unified national approach or that diverse conditions require different methods in different states, the likelihood of progress will be advanced if states test out various ways to expand coverage.

How Federalism Could Spur Bipartisan Action On The Uninsured

A way to end the political impasse and make progress on covering uninsured Americans.

Evolving Beyond Traditional Employer-Sponsored Health Insurance

For most working-age families, health insurance coverage is directly connected to the workplace. But because of structural weaknesses in this traditional form of coverage, it is steadily eroding, especially for workers in the small business sector. The health insurance system needs to evolve along a different path if it is to adapt to the goals and needs of today’s workforce. Unfortunately, existing laws and insurance arrangements obstruct that evolution. Three key steps are needed to achieve a gradual transformation without disrupting the successful parts of the system.

Building Public Support for Slowing the Growth of Health Care Spending

The task of moving from policy proposal to successful legislation means navigating the waters of public opinion that influences practical politics. This is true of all areas of policy, of course, but health care waters are especially turbulent. Health care is intensely personal and costly for families, and even small policy changes have potentially huge financial implications for them as well as other stakeholders. If successful ways of addressing the health spending challenge are to be devised, it is critical to reflect on the underlying values and moral choices associated with any policy approach.

Perspectives on an Individual Mandate

An individual mandate is a legal requirement that every person have health insurance coverage. In 2008, debate over individual mandates has figured prominently in presidential and congressional politics. In contrast to many of today’s left/right, red/blue divides, supporters and opponents of individual mandates cut across partisan and ideological lines.

Latest Commentary

A Healthy Reaction: Voters Say No to Big Government

November 6, 2009

"Contain the scope of the debate": This has been a key element of the Democratic strategy to enact Big Government health reform. As long as voters perceive the issue as a nice, neat, four-cornered proposal to expand health coverage, the liberals who control Congress will win.

Barack Obama: Media Sweetheart and Golf Addict

November 3, 2009

Barack Obama enjoys wide support from his liberal friends in the media. That allows them to ignore the growing discontent average Americans hold toward a leader who promised so much and has delivered so little.

Baucus Health Insurance Excise Tax Misses the Mark

October 29, 2009

The Senate Finance Committee proposes to substantially raise taxes on middle- and low-income taxpayers through a misguided excise tax on insurance plans in order to pay for a portion of its healthcare bill. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that this tax hike would cost taxpayers more than $200 billion over 10 years, about a quarter of the bill's $829 billion cost.

Another Broken Promise

October 21, 2009

Shortly after being sworn in as the 44th president, Barack Obama said, "Let me say it as simply as I can. Transparency and the rule of law will be the touchstones of this presidency."

The Power of the Plaintiffs' Bar: Why Democrats are avoiding medical-malpractice reform at all costs

October 20, 2009

The health-care bill the Senate Finance Committee approved makes a lot of promises. It will cost American taxpayers $829 billion, on top of an already out-of-control federal budget, as well as guarantee an increase in their individual medical expenditures.

Campaign Stops Blog

Stuart M. Butler - NYTimes.com

Health Care Experts Blog

Stuart M. Butler - National Journal Online

The Massachusetts Approach: A New Way To Restructure State Health Insurance Markets And Public Programs

In April 2006, Massachusetts enacted legislation to reorganize both its health insurance markets and a large portion of its health care subsidy system. In this paper we consider how the Massachusetts approach differs from most previous state health reform efforts, while also noting its antecedents. We examine the policy implications of the legislation’s key elements and discuss how other states might consider altering the scope and specifics of those components. We conclude that both parts of the Massachusetts reform strategy merit consideration by other states and together hold promise for expanding coverage, particularly by addressing the problem of coverage discontinuity.

Yes, $2.6 Trillion! A Closer Look at the Full 10 Years of Spending in the House Health Bill

11/06/2009

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the House Democratic leadership are frantically trying to find enough votes to pass their giant 2,032 page health care legislation this weekend. But before Speaker Pelosi and liberals in Congress pass their big bill, the American taxpayers should be fully aware of the full price tag of this monster. As Heritage   Read More...

Health Care Reform: The House Republican Alternative

11/06/2009

House Minority Leader John Boehner and his House Republican colleagues have just unveiled a 230 page “Amendment in the Nature of a Substitute” to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s massive 2032 page health care bill (H.R. 3962). Voting on the substitute and the main bill in the U.S. House of Representatives could begin as early as   Read More...

Obamacare’s Biggest Victims: The Young

11/06/2009

Cato Adjunct Scholar Aaron Yelowitz reports: Health care proposals moving through Congress would force most or all Americans to purchase health insurance (an “individual mandate”) and would impose price controls on health insurance (“community rating”) that would limit insurers’ ability to offer lower premiums to low-risk enrollees. Those provisions would drive premiums down for 55-year-olds but would   Read More...

Heal the Economy, Start Over on Health Care Reform

11/06/2009

As the economy sputters and falters the questions coming up time and again are: What should Obama do? What can Congress do? They’ve tried spending their way to prosperity and as today’s jobs numbers show, 3.5 million jobs lost since Obama took office and an unemployment rate that shot up to 10.2 percent is   Read More...

House Democrat: Pelosi Plan Raises Taxes And Funds Abortion

11/06/2009

Rep. Dan Boren (D-OK) tells the New York Times: The worst thing we could do in a recession is raise taxes, and this bill does just that. … Finally, I do not believe that the possibility for taxpayer-funded abortion has been clearly and emphatically removed from this legislation. Boren is dead on. The House bill raises taxes   Read More...

Health Care Plan 'Crowds Out' Family Coverage

October 03, 2007
Health care plan 'crowds out' family coverage
  • Health Care Plan 'Crowds Out' Family Coverage
  • Percentage of Children with Private Health Insurance
  • SCHIP Distribution of Children by Income Level
  • SCHIP Eligibility Above 200 Percent of Federal Poverty Level
  • SCHIP: No Child Left Off Welfare
  • State Children's Health Insurance Program Plan Activity as of January 18, 2007
  • States Exceeding 50 Percent Medicaid Threshold
  • States that Cover Adults Under SCHIP
  • The 'SCHIP Plus' Alternative: An 8-to-1 Win for Kids
  • U.S. on collision course to 'socialized medicine'

Health CareFix Health Care Policy
President Obama and members of Congress want to solve America's health care problems by centralizing decisions in Washington. A better approach would make individuals and families the key decision makers in their health care.

Read more on FixHealthCarePolicy.com

Another Round in the National Debate on Health Care Reform


While Americans are eagerly awaiting the details of President-Elect Barack Obama's health care reform proposal, it is well to recall the last national debate on health care reform: the debate over the 1993 Clinton Health Plan. While many of the issues are strikingly similar- rising costs, large numbers of Americans without health insurance and gaps in coverage- today the circumstances are different. One thing that has not changed is that popular support for broad goals- a slowing of health care costs and an expansion of health insurance coverage- does not automatically translate into popular support for specific health policy measures, particularly when the trade-offs embodied in those health policy measures are made transparent to the millions of Americans who would be affected by them. It is not "bumper sticker" slogans, but crucial details, that matter. Check out the Heritage Foundation's analysis of the 1993 Clinton Health Plan and its leading alternative, The Consumer Choice Health Security Act, based on major changes in the tax code, the insurance markets and principles of personal choice and competition.



Recent Heritage Testimony

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Heritage Experts on Health Care

Media Information Line: (202) 675-1761

Robert

Robert A. Book Ph.D.

Senior Research Fellow in Health Economics , Center for Data Analysis

Stuart

Stuart M. Butler Ph.D.

Vice President, Domestic and Economic Policy Studies , Domestic Policy

Greg

Greg D'Angelo

Policy Analyst , Center for Health Policy Studies

Edmund

Edmund F. Haislmaier

Senior Research Fellow in Health Policy Studies , Domestic Policy

Robert

Robert E. Moffit Ph.D.

Director , Center for Health Policy Studies

Nina

Nina Owcharenko

Deputy Director , Center for Health Policy Studies

Dennis

Dennis G. Smith

Senior Fellow in Health Care Reform , Center for Health Policy Studies