Primary Health Care

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) speaks out for universal single-payer health care at a rally with nurses on May 13, 2009.

Effective primary health care is the foundation of a high functioning health care system. Study after study has shown that access to better primary care results in better health outcomes, reduced health disparities and reduced spending on avoidable emergency room visits and nursing home care. A strong primary care system not only makes Americans healthier, it saves our nation money, especially through prevention and by treating health situations when they arise – rather than waiting until those situations worsen and require more extensive and costly care. As Chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Primary Health and Aging, Sen. Sanders is committed to initiatives and programs that promote primary health care. Sen. Sanders secured $12.5 billion in the Affordable Care Act to increase the number of Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) across the country and to deploy more doctors, dentists and other health care professionals in underserved areas through the National Health Service Corps (NHSC). Expanding the number of places where people can access care and increasing the number of health care providers across the country significantly increases the number of patients who have access to affordable primary medical, dental, mental health care as well as low-cost prescription drugs.

Sen. Sanders released a report titled Primary Care: 30 Million Patients and 10 Months to Go: Who Provide Will Their Primary Care and held a Subcommittee hearing in January 2013 on the profound primary health care access challenges in the United States. In April 2013 and in April 2014, Sen. Sanders held follow-up hearings on programs and policies that seek to address primary care workforce shortages. Sen. Sanders introduced S. 1759, the Teaching Health Center Reauthorization Act, to extend and expand the Teaching Health Center Graduate Medical Education (THCGME) program and S. 2229, the Expanding Primary Care Access and Workforce Act to improve access to primary care by reauthorizing many critical programs and increasing transparency and accountability of graduate medical education funds. In rural areas like Vermont, many people have a difficult time finding a primary health provider. That is why Sen. Sanders has led the effort to dramatically expand the number of health centers in Vermont and around the country. Currently more than 130,000 Vermonters receive primary care, including medical, dental, and mental health and substance abuse services, at FQHCs. Sen. Sanders is committed to expanding the program further and ensuring that every Vermonter and every American has access to quality health care in their community. 

“We’ve got a very very serious problem, truly a life or death problem, and the lives of thousands of people depend upon what we do.”

- Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)