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Health Care

There is no question in my mind that our current health care system cannot be sustained and must be improved. Click Here to read why I voted yes on the health care reform legislation.

Before entering Congress, I spent 23 years of my life working as a health care professional. As a clinical psychologist, I specialized in working with brain injury, stroke, and cancer patients and their families. I also worked in VA hospitals, outpatient clinics, child and adolescent treatment centers, and a number of other clinical mental health settings.

I believe we must comprehensively reform the health care system in order to lower skyrocketing costs and expand coverage to the nearly 47 million Americans who are currently uninsured. 

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Click here to read the 2010 health care reform act: The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of H.R. 3590.

Click here to read my Seattle Times Op Ed on health care.

Click here to read Congressman Brian Baird's Statement Regarding his vote on 2009's H.R. 3962 – The Affordable Health Care for America Act.

 

Additional Health Care Resources: 

Kaiser Family Foundation 
AARP 
American Medical Association


Reading the Bill: 

No member of Congress has worked harder or taken a stronger lead than Congressman Baird to assure that not only representatives, but the public and media have time to read legislation before it is voted on.  It was at Congressman Baird's request that House Democratic leadership offered a unprecedented five hour long briefing on the health care legislation, so that Members of Congress could discuss the legislation in detail and ask questions.  More than 170 members attended this briefing.

Congressman Baird's effort began several years ago after a nearly half-trillion dollar Medicare prescription drug bill was passed by the House with less than 30 hours to read the bill and no chance to amend it.  So too, major "Omnibus" appropriations bills, some more than a thousand pages long and spending hundreds of billions of dollars, were regularly brought to a vote with even less time to read.

To remedy this, Congressman Baird has introduced legislation that would require that any bill be available online to Members of Congress, the public, and the media for at least 72 hours before it can be voted on by the House of Representatives. 


Addressing Rising Medical Malpractice Insurance Costs

The problem of rising medical liability insurance costs is complex, and many have come to believe that the current situation is undermining our health care system, demoralizing health care professionals, costing billions of dollars per year, failing to substantially reduce medical errors, and still leaving many patients with legitimate claims unsupported. Faced with these concerns, Congressman Baird acknowledges that common sense, balanced reform is both essential and imminent. Reform should constrain the cost of medical liability insurance and reduce unwarranted litigation, protect the rights of patients who have been harmed to received compensation, and improve the quality of health care in this country.

Congressman Baird introduced the Comprehensive Medical Malpractice Reform Act which will:

  • Regulate and reform the medical malpractice insurance industry
  • Provide alternatives to litigation through the promotion of successful mediation practices to improve the quality of health care in this country
  • Reduce frivolous lawsuits and sets reasonable limits on non-economic damages
  • Exclude medical devices and pharmaceuticals from the cap on non-economic damages

Congressman Baird believes this approach is likely to improve patient care, reduce medical errors, lower the costs of litigation, and still provide avenues for patients who have been harmed to receive compensation and support. He is strongly committed to a bipartisan and practical approach to medical malpractice reform, taking into consideration the views and concerns of all persons affected by the outcome. He will continue to work with his colleagues in Congress and with the Administration to achieve this common goal.


Ensuring Fair Pay for our Doctors

Many doctors in our region are forced to turn Medicare patients away because Medicare payments don't cover the cost of care. Some have even moved their practices to other states where they will receive a higher per-patient reimbursement from Medicare. For example, Florida receives 28 percent more funding per Medicare patient than Washington. Essentially, our state receives less per patient because our health care system is efficient and cost-effective. Every one of our seniors has paid the same percentage of their income towards Medicare as seniors in other states and they deserve to receive the same treatment regardless of where they live. It is time to stop penalizing seniors who live in the Northwest.

Congressman Baird has worked closely with the rest of the Washington delegation and a bi-partisan coalition of Representatives and Senators to resolve this inequity. Together, they helped include some improvements in the Medicare Prescription Drug and Modernization Act. Unfortunately, the changes do not fully establish equity for our region, so Congressman Baird will continue to fight for fair rates and equal treatment access.

The problem is not just regional. The reimbursement formula utilized by the federal government for Medicare recipients is inherently flawed. Congressman Baird is working to ensure Medicare adequately reimburses physicians nationwide who treat Medicare recipients. For years, our physicians have subsidized the treatment of Medicare patients because government reimbursements failed to cover their costs. Sadly, many physicians are now financially unable to accept new Medicare patients. Congressman Baird has supported the bipartisan Preserving Patient Access to Physicians Act. This legislation would repeal the current reimbursement formula and replace it with a more sensible rate that better accounts for increasing health care costs.

Ensuring Equal Access to Mental Health Services

As a mental health professional, and one of only two clinical psychologists serving in Congress, Congressman Baird has firsthand knowledge of the impact and importance of mental health treatment and the inequities that often exist in funding and consideration for mental health treatments. In order to correct this imbalance Congressman Baird was a leading advocate of the bipartisan Paul Wellstone Mental Health and Addiction Equity Act which became law on October 3, 2008. The law prohibits health plans from imposing time limits and similar restrictions on the treatment of mental health disorders, if similar restrictions are not imposed on medical and surgical benefits. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) reports that this will lead to less than a two percent increase in premiums, and it will remove one of the barriers that keep millions of Americans from receiving the mental health care they need. 

Providing Options to Small Businesses

With almost 47 million uninsured Americans, access to affordable health care is one of the most challenging problems facing America today. Because of the high cost of health care coverage, many small businesses simply cannot afford to provide insurance to their employees. Small business owners have expressed support for Small Business Health Plans, which allow businesses to join together to provide coverage to their employees. By banding together to purchase insurance, businesses and employers share the costs and reduce the individual financial burden that can keep companies from offering coverage to workers.

While Congressman Baird initially had reservations about Small Business Health Plans, he met repeatedly with local business leaders to learn more about the obstacles they encounter and the benefits of cost-sharing associated with these health plans. Although there is certainly room for further improvements in the area of solvency and viability of the insurers and protections for mental health and other benefits, Congressman Baird believes that - in the end - it is far better for employees and businesses to have insurance they can afford and has voted in support of Small Business Health Plans.


Preparing for Avian Flu and Other Infectious Diseases

We tend to take for granted that we are now safe from infectious diseases. We believe that infectious disease pandemics are relics of the past or tragedies that affect other parts of the world. And we wrongly trust that science and medicine will protect us if a new infectious disease were to arise. Unfortunately, human history shows us that at least once a century, and sometimes more often, a global or regional disease can kill thousands or hundreds of thousands of people or more. In this day and age, increased air travel helps disease spread even faster. We must acknowledge and recognize that we are not safe and that we must protect ourselves from the inevitable.

Despite these stark realities, there is every disincentive preventing companies from investing in the research, development, and manufacturing of treatments for these infectious diseases. The disease we most often hear about is Avian Flu, but just a few years ago it was SARS, and before that, the Ebola virus. These pandemics can do great harm - for instance, the 1918 pandemic flu killed 675,000 Americans.

More routine infectious diseases can also have an impact. One and a half million people contract drug resistant bacterial infections in our hospitals annually. Drug resistant pathogens currently cost the country $5 billion annually, and this cost would skyrocket if a pandemic broke out among humans. The Institute of Medicine has identified drug resistance as an increasing threat to our public health.

Congressman Baird has introduced the bipartisan Beating Infections through Research and Development (BIRD) Act. The bill would create new incentives for companies to invest in research and development to help diagnose and treat infectious diseases. Specifically, the bill would allow fast track FDA review, patent extensions, and tax credits on infectious disease research and manufacturing.


 

Washington State Department of Health (DOH)

Department of Social and Health Services, DSHS, Washington State

  Food and Drug Administration
  United States Department of Health & Human Services
  The Veterans Health Administration (VHA)