While Tom Coburn plays his procedural games, veterans are dying at the rate of six per day, according to a research team from Harvard Medical School.
[A]n estimated 2,266 veterans under the age of 65 died last year because they did not have health insurance. That "translates to six preventable deaths per day" and more than twice the number killed in Afghanistan since the war began in 2001.
Being uninsured raises a person’s odds of dying prematurely by 40 percent. The researchers found that 1.46 million veterans between the ages of 18 and 64 lacked insurance in 2008. While most veterans are eligible to receive excellent care from the Veterans Administration, those who were not injured in combat and whose income is above a certain threshold are often ineligible. Others are assigned low priorities, providing them with less consistent and more expensive access to care:
"Like other uninsured Americans, most uninsured vets are working people – too poor to afford private coverage but not poor enough to qualify for Medicaid or means-tested VA care," said Dr. Steffie Woolhandler, a professor at Harvard Medical School. [...]
Dr. David Himmelstein, the co-author of the analysis and associate professor of medicine at Harvard, commented, "On this Veterans Day we should not only honor the nearly 500 soldiers who have died this year in Iraq and Afghanistan, but also the more than 2,200 veterans who were killed by our broken health insurance system. That’s six preventable deaths a day."
The bill Coburn is blocking, the Caregiver and Veterans Services Act, only goes part of the way toward helping, but it's critical help for those who need it most, focusing "on caregivers of veterans injured in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. It would provide caregivers with health care, counseling, support and a stipend. The legislation would also expand services in rural areas and ensure that veterans who are catastrophically disabled or who need emergency care in the community are not charged for those services."
Of course, comprehensive healthcare reform would also help, and it's also being held up by the Republicans and those ConservaDems who had no problem at all sending all these now-disabled veterans off to fight, and telling the rest of us that if we didn't support the war and wanted to end funding for it, we "didn't support the troops." So their "fiscal concerns" when it comes to the measely $3 billion in this bill rings pretty fucking hollow now.
It's bad enough that in this country 45,000 people die every year because they are uninsured. It's criminal that 2,266 of them are veterans, the men and women who sacrificed so much.
As one of the study's authors pointed out, the current healthcare reform efforts will fall short.
Dr. David Himmelstein, the co-author of the analysis and associate professor of medicine at Harvard, commented, "On this Veterans Day we should not only honor the nearly 500 soldiers who have died this year in Iraq and Afghanistan, but also the more than 2,200 veterans who were killed by our broken health insurance system. That’s six preventable deaths a day."
He continued: "These unnecessary deaths will continue under the legislation now before the House and Senate. Those bills would do virtually nothing for the uninsured until 2013, and leave at least 17 million uninsured over the long run. We need a solution that works for all veterans - and for all Americans - single-payer national health insurance."
A public option, however, is a start. And the House bill that creates a high risk pool immediately would help a large number of those veterans right away. But the Senate ConservaDems and Republicans are still dragging their feet, proud that they "supported the troops," but giving them the back of their hand now that they're home.