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Secretary
Thompson Promotes Medicare Modernization FT.
LAUDERDALE - HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson toured a Florida nursing and
rehabilitation center to urge support of Medicare reform and President Bush's
Immediate Helping Hand prescription drug proposal. During
his visit to the Manor Pines Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Wilton Manor,
Secretary Thompson commended the Medicare program but said that it can no longer
meet the needs of seniors in today's health care environment. "When
the system was created thirty-five years ago, prescription drugs were not the
integral part of health care that they are today. Consequently, drug coverage was not included in the Medicare
package," Secretary Thompson said. "Today,
no one would purchase health care coverage without prescription drugs, and we
shouldn't expect our seniors to accept a health care plan without access to
prescription drugs." As
a first step toward improving and modernizing the Medicare program, President
Bush has put forward an Immediate Helping Hand (IHH) prescription drug proposal
that would provide for immediate funding to states to allow for interim
prescription drug coverage for those beneficiaries who need it most. This
immediate assistance will give states the temporary financial support they need
to protect beneficiaries with limited incomes or very high drug expenses and no
other alternative for drug coverage until Medicare reform is achieved. The
IHH proposal is a temporary plan to help the nation's seniors who most need
assistance with their prescription drug costs.
The Bush Administration believes that comprehensive Medicare reform must
be enacted at the same time as a prescription drug benefit.
In support of this, President Bush's budget calls for a commitment of
$153 billion over the next 10 years for Medicare modernization to help improve
the financial health of the program and to add a prescription drug benefit for
all Medicare beneficiaries. The
budget blueprint that President Bush released on February 28 proposes new and
innovative solutions for meeting the challenges that face the nation.
It seeks to enhance the groundbreaking research conducted at the National
Institutes of Health through a funding increase of $2.75 billion, the largest
increase in research funding ever. This
commitment will support research into discovering cures for diseases like
Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, heart disease and stroke that afflict millions of
seniors and other Americans. The
budget also seeks to strengthen the health care safety net of those most in need
by proposing an increase in funding for community health centers of $124 million
this year - a first installment in a goal to increase the number of these
centers by 1,200 and double the number of people served by the year 2006. The
proposals in the President's budget reflect the Administration's commitment to a
balanced fiscal framework that puts discretionary spending on a reasonable and
sustainable growth path while protecting Social Security and other priority
programs, paying down the national debt, and providing tax relief for all
Americans. |