For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
July 13, 2001
Embargoed
Until Delivery at 10 06 A.M. Edt Saturday, July 14, 2001 Radio Address of the President to the Nation the President Good Morning. This Week in Washington, We Have Turned Our Attention to the Goal of Better Health Care for All Americans. I Have Asked Congress to Send Me a Strong Patients' Bill of Rights; One That Provides Immediate Access to Specialists, and An Immediate Appeal to A Panel of Doctors When An Hmo Denies Care. I Hope to Sign a Bill That Gets People Help When They Need It, Not a Bill Adding Hundreds of Dollars to the
high premiums they already pay.
I am also asking Congress to join me in
modernizing and strengthening Medicare. All of us, young and
old, have a stake in the outcome of this discussion. From
its beginning 36 years ago, Medicare has represented a basic binding
commitment to our seniors. That commitment will always
stand. And as medicine advances and the needs of our seniors
change, Medicare must advance and improve as well.
The most pressing challenge is the lack of
coverage for prescription drugs. To begin solving this
problem, I am proposing a new national drug discount program for
seniors. This is a straightforward, nonbureaucratic program
which can be in place by January. Everyone in Medicare will
be eligible for a drug discount card, costing no more than $1 or $2 per
month. Present this card at a participating pharmacy, and you will
receive a substantial discount -- at least 10 percent. It's
as simple as that, and it's convenient as well.
This program will provide immediate help
to seniors without destabilizing Medicare's finances. Yet,
my prescription drug plan is only a first step. We need
broader reform to bring Medicare into the 21st century. We
need to expand coverage, improve services, strengthen Medicare
financing and give seniors more control over the health care they
receive. And as Congress takes up legislation, they should be guided
by some basic principles.
First, for everyone in retirement or near
retirement, any changes in their Medicare coverage should be up to
them. No senior should have to accept something different if
they like the Medicare program they're on just the way it is.
First, for everyone in retirement or near
retirement, any changes in their Medicare coverage should be up to
them. No senior should have to accept something different if
they like Medicare just the way it is.
Second, all seniors should be offered a
range of new Medicare plans, both government and
private. Every plan offered to seniors should have at least
the same benefits as the government plan. And all plans must
offer prescription drug coverage.
Third, everyone enrolled in Medicare
should have the power to choose which plan works best for him or
her. The plans will compete with each other, forcing them to
offer better service, extra benefits and lower premiums.
Fourth, reform must provide special help
to seniors with low incomes and unusually high medical
costs. We must put caps on the amount any senior can be
asked to pay in a year. And since the reformed Medicare will
cover prescription drugs, low-income seniors will no longer have to pay
for costly Medigap insurance.
And, finally, we must strengthen
Medicare's finances and make sure that the benefits promised to our
seniors will be always there.
Medicine in America is constantly
improving. And Medicare must improve at the same
pace. By these principles, we can assure that Medicare will
always offer seniors the care they need with the quality they deserve.
Thank you very much for listening.
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