| HHS Issues Special Report on Health Reform and Launches New healthreform.gov Web Site
 
 American People Say Health Care System is Broken, Highlight Need for
 Action
 This Year on Health Reform
 
 Americans expressed serious concerns regarding health care in a new
 report released today by the Department of Health and Human Services.
 The report, Americans Speak on Health Reform: Report on Health Care
 Community Discussions, summarizes comments from the thousands of
 Americans who hosted and participated in Health Care Community
 Discussions across the country and highlights the need for immediate
 action to reform health care.
 
 The report is available on a new Web site dedicated to health reform:
 www.healthreform.gov. Unveiled today, the Web site will allow Americans
 to view today's White House Health Forum, share their thoughts about
 health reform with the Obama Administration and sign a statement in
 support of President Obama's commitment to enacting comprehensive health
 reform this year.
 
 "This new Web site, www.healthreform.gov and report ensure that when we
 discuss health reform, the American people will have an equal stake in
 the health reform efforts," said HHS Spokeswoman Jenny Backus.
 "Sky-rocketing health care costs are creating enormous pressure on
 families, on businesses and our fiscal future. The Obama Administration
 is committed to taking action this year on health reform and is calling
 on government, business, health care stakeholders and everyday Americans
 to come together to make it happen."
 
 In December, then President-elect Obama called on the American people to
 host Health Care Community Discussions to assess the seriousness of the
 problems and identify solutions. In the last eight years, health
 insurance premiums have grown four times faster than wages and one
 million more Americans have lost their health insurance each year.
 Health care costs have forced small businesses to close their doors and
 compelled corporations to ship jobs overseas.
 
 Over 9,000 people signed up in all 50 states and the District of
 Columbia to host a discussion, and thousands more participated in these
 gatherings. After each Health Care Community Discussion, guests and
 hosts were asked to fill out a Participant Survey and submit a group
 report to the Presidential Transition Team's Web site summarizing the
 group's concerns and suggestions. Group reports from 3,276 Health Care
 Community Discussions as well as Participant Surveys from 30,603
 participants were collected, analyzed, and are summarized in the report.
 
 
 
 
 The cost of health care services and health insurance was the top
 concern about the health care system for 55 percent of discussion
 participants. Participants also cited lack of emphasis on prevention,
 pre-existing conditions limiting insurance access, and the quality of
 care as key concerns. A qualitative analysis found that the Health Care
 Community Discussions focused on concerns about a "broken" health
 system, access to health insurance and services, rising premiums and
 drug costs, medical mistakes and the system not being "for them."
 
 Health Care Community Discussion group participants agreed on the values
 and direction that should guide reform. They called for a system that
 is fair, patient-centered and choice-oriented, simple and efficient, and
 comprehensive. Participants also offered a wide range of specific
 solutions, including making health insurance more accessible through an
 insurance "exchange" or a public plan option, creating scorecards on
 quality and cost, improving the nutritional content of school lunches,
 implementing electronic medical records and creating an AmeriCorps for
 health workers.
 
 Today's report also includes a series of personal testimonials from
 Health Care Community Discussion participants who expressed their
 concern about the state of health care in America. A farmer from Enid,
 Okla., explained, "I have spent my life's savings on [health care], and
 now I am refused care at our local hospital because I cannot pay. I may
 have to file bankruptcy due to this." A report from Missoula, Mont.,
 commenting on policies that allow insurers to deny coverage to Americans
 with pre-existing conditions said, "No mother should have to say her
 daughter is 'uninsurable.'"
 
 President Obama has committed to reforming health care this year and has
 already acted to make health care more affordable and accessible.
 President Obama signed a law to provide and protect health insurance for
 11 million American children through the Children's Health Insurance
 Program. The President also signed into law the American Recovery and
 Reinvestment Act which includes investments in electronic health
 records, prevention, comparative effectiveness research, and health
 workforce training -- foundations for a 21st century health care system.
 Additionally, the President's Budget Blueprint also includes an historic
 commitment to comprehensive health care reform.
 
 A copy of Americans Speak on Health Reform: Report on Health Care
 Community Discussions, group reports filed by participants and hundreds
 of submitted photos are available at www.HealthReform.gov.
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