Larson optimistic about health-care reform

WINSTED — Congress will pass a new health-care reform bill by Thanksgiving, according to United States Rep. John Larson (D-1).

Larson held a special health-care forum Sunday, Oct. 25, at Northwestern Connecticut Community College.

During the talk, which also featured a panel of local health-care professionals, Larson said comprehensive reform of the nation’s health-care system is “long overdue.�

“We don’t have the luxury to maintain the status quo, because disease doesn’t know boundaries,� he said.

Currently, both the House and Senate are working to finalize separate health-care reform bills before bringing them to each chambers’ members for a vote.

If and when both bills are passed, the two versions will be reconciled by a special joint committee into one final congressional bill before it goes President Barack Obama for his signature.

Larson said he is confident that Congress will not only have a bill on the president’s desk before the end of November, but that it will also include a government-sponsored public option.

“I am a strong proponent for a robust public option on health care,� the congressman said, adding that the option — if included in the final bill — would help reduce health-care costs.

“It promotes competition,� he said.

Larson said he supports the public option over a single-payer health-care system because the latter would prove to be too costly to implement at this time.

“That creates a hurdle that cannot be passed,� he said, adding that Americans would be “better served� by the public option.

Panel member Dr. William Handelman, a kidney specialist with Charlotte Hungerford Hospital and the president of the Connecticut State Medical Society, said most physicians support health-care reform.

“The majority of doctors are in favor of having universal health care in this country,� Handelman said.

Another panel member, Brenda Kelley, the director of the Connecticut chapter of the American Association of Retired Persons, said while her organization has yet to endorse a particular proposal regarding health-care reform, AARP does believe that “all Americans deserve quality, affordable health care.�

In addition, Kelley said the organization has become increasingly concerned about the growing lack of health-care coverage for those aged 50 to 64.

“They are the ones experiencing tremendous difficulty having their health-care needs met,� she said. “This is a huge problem.�

Larson, who is the chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, said the group has spent some 82 hours discussing and debating the health-care reform bill.

“That’s a lot,� he said.

He repeated, however, that he is confident Congress can pass a bill before the end of the year.

“Now is the opportunity,� Larson said. “And it is in everybody’s interest to make this happen.�

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