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Partnership for Quality Care: Statements
Statements

  • Statement from the Partnership for Quality Care on the Census Bureau Report

    Statement from the Partnership for Quality Care on the Census Bureau Report

    Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2006

    The U.S. Census Bureau report released today contains truly sobering data on the number of Americans without health insurance. The report found that, from 2005 to 2006, the number of uninsured Americans grew from 44.8 million to 47 million, a 5% increase. The news was even worse for kids: 8.7 million American children were uninsured in 2006, a staggering 8% increase from 2005. In just one year, the number of uninsured kids in the U.S. grew by over 600,000.

    These alarming numbers confirm what healthcare providers and workers see every day -- America's healthcare system is failing more and more Americans.

    Children and adults without insurance lack access to primary and preventive care, and miss vaccinations and checkups. Far too many end up in emergency rooms for expensive treatment of conditions that could have been far more effectively treated, at far less cost, had they received care sooner.

    Today's Census Bureau report affirms the dire need for reliable and affordable access to health care coverage for all Americans within a reformed health care system that aggressively promotes improved quality and efficiency. The Partnership for Quality Care will continue to advocate for efforts, such as the renewal and expansion of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program and an increased tobacco tax, that promote affordable access to the highest quality healthcare.

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    About the Partnership for Quality Care

    Launched in May 2007, the Partnership for Quality Care is a unique nationwide organization, a labor-management partnership of healthcare providers and healthcare workers. It includes more than 1 million workers, as well as public, private, religious, teaching and nonprofit hospitals and integrated health systems caring for more than 45 million patients annually.

    Click here to read the PDF.

  • PQC Statement on Healthcare Costs

    For Immediate Release Contact: Kate Navarro-McKay
    February 26, 2008 (646-246-5906)

    We must reform our health care system to ensure the highest quality care is affordable and accessible for all Americans

    Washington, DC – The report issued today by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) on projected health expenditures contains critically important macroeconomic data for anyone concerned about the long-term affordability of high quality health care in the United States. While health care spending projections are lower than in previous years, the current trajectory is clearly one of increasing, rather than decreasing, costs.

    What the CMS report does not address is how much of current health care spending represents "dollars well spent" on health interventions that maximize the value of our health care dollars. As an organization of one million front-line health care workers, as well as public, private, religious, teaching and nonprofit hospitals and integrated health systems caring for more than 50 million patients annually, the Partnership for Quality Care (PQC) is committed to building a health care system in which every American has affordable access to the highest quality care. To reach that goal, we must control costs to ensure that every health care dollar is a dollar well spent.

    PQC believes there are major opportunities to improve quality while containing costs right now. Every day we delay addressing this challenge, the more challenging it becomes to achieve universal coverage in the United States. And as the number of uninsured grows, the goal of containing costs while improving quality will grow more elusive.

    To demonstrate the opportunities that can be found in a health care reform process that is driven by quality, PQC will first tackle the problem of chronic care. At a March 19 summit in Washington, DC, leading health care providers and caregivers will discuss real-world initiatives that have succeeded in restraining costs and increasing the quality of care for more Americans. Because chronic disease accounts for 75% of health care costs, achieving greater value in our treatment of these diseases will have an immense impact on the efficiency and quality of our health care system.

    About the Partnership for Quality Care

    Launched in May 2007, the Partnership for Quality Care is a unique national organization, a labor-management partnership of healthcare providers and healthcare workers. It includes more than 1 million workers, as well as public, private, religious, teaching and nonprofit hospitals and integrated health systems caring for more than
    50 million patients annually.


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