Tag: cabinet
It’s doctors who usually know what’s best for your health. When President-elect Donald Trump nominated Rep. Tom Price (R., Ga.), an orthopedic surgeon, to head the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), he must have thought the same thing. Trump is hoping that Price takes a doctor-oriented approach to reforming the nation’s healthcare system.
And that reform begins with repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act (ACA), or Obamacare. To Trump, Price is the man to get the ball rolling. Not only is he a licensed and trained physician, but he’s also been a fierce critic of Obamacare and an advocate for overhauling the nation’s entitlement programs.
During his time in Congress, Price has been a leader on both projecting the disastrous impacts of Obamacare and developing positive solutions for improved access to healthcare for all Americans. He was one of the first representatives to draft his own plan to replace Obamacare, the Empower Patients First Act. After refining his plan, Price introduced it as a bill, which has been co-sponsored by several other representatives.
Price’s plan focuses on reforms that doctors care about. During his 12 years in Congress, he consistently argued for limited government and less spending. His legislation will likely mirror his actions as HHS Secretary: removing governmental red tape from doctors and giving Americans more control over their health care.
“As a physician,” he said in the House in 2007, “I know oh so well how the intervention of the state and federal government into the practice of medicine destroys the ability to take care of people. It makes it so you can’t provide quality health care for children and moms and dads.”
According to some, Price’s proposed replacement for Obamacare will offer tax credits to everyone, regardless of income, and help develop health savings accounts for beneficiaries who are not covered by their employers, Medicare, Medicaid, or other sources.
“We wanted to get away from the connection to income,” Price said in 2015. “I’ve become convinced over the past three to four years that it’s much more wise to relate the tax credits to age.” The legislation proposes tax credits of $1,200 per year for people aged 18-35, $2,100 for those aged 35-50, and $3,000 for those over 50.
Besides designing an innovative replacement for Obamacare, Price also wants to rework Medicaid and Medicare. Instead of entitlements, Price wants to convert Medicaid into block grants to states and require “able-bodied” applicants to meet work requirements to receive healthcare benefits. Regarding Medicare, Price supports the idea of moving from a “defined benefit” to a “defined contribution,” where the government would give older or disabled Americans financial help for them to buy private insurance policies.
While it’s still unclear whether Price’s ideas and legislation will receive the bipartisan support to become viable replacements for Obamacare, it’s clear that the nominated HHS Secretary has some thoughtful and innovative ideas on how to improve the nation’s healthcare system.
“There is much work to be done,” Price said in November, “to ensure we have a health care system that works for patients, families, and doctors; that leads the world in the cure and prevention of illness; and that is based on sensible rules to protect the well-being of the country while embracing its innovative spirit.”
To learn more about nominated HHS Secretary Rep. Tom Price and his doctor-oriented approach to reforming the nation’s healthcare system, visit mymedicareplanner.com and contact Tommy Chamouris. Tommy and his staff are committed to protecting senior citizens and helping them navigate through the “Medicare maze”—at no additional cost. See our ad on page 1 of Boomer magazine.