Hillary Clinton Presidential Campaign, 2016#Healthcare

From Ballotpedia

Hillary Clinton announced her presidential run on April 12, 2015.[1]
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Hillary-Clinton-circle.png

Hillary Clinton
Democratic presidential nominee
Running mate: Tim Kaine

Election
Democratic National Convention • Polls • Debates • Presidential election by state

On the issues
Domestic affairs • Economic affairs and government regulations • Foreign affairs and national security • Hillarycare • Tenure as U.S. senator • Tenure as secretary of state • Email investigation • Paid speeches • WikiLeaks • Media coverage of Clinton

Other candidates
Donald Trump (R) • Jill Stein (G) • Gary Johnson (L) • Vice presidential candidates

Ballotpedia's presidential election coverage
2024 • 2020 • 2016


The overview of the issue below was current as of the 2016 election.
A Gallup poll conducted in late August 2016 found that 44 percent of Americans supported Obamacare, and 51 percent disapproved of it. The number of uninsured Americans dropped after the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, commonly referred to as Obamacare, became law on March 23, 2010. In 2016, 11 percent of Americans remained uninsured compared to 16 percent in 2010. Despite this success, health insurers were concerned about Obamacare's financial sustainability and fewer participants were reporting that the law had helped their family. After six years, more than half of Americans said Obamacare had no effect on them or their family.[2]

On October 24, 2016, a government report was released that found that premiums were expected to rise 22 percent in 2017 under Obamacare. Federal subsidies would offset some of the cost.[3] As a result, healthcare became a frequently discussed issue in the final two weeks of the election.

See below what Hillary Clinton and the 2016 Democratic Party Platform said about healthcare.

CANDIDATE SUMMARY
  • Clinton supported permitting individuals to voluntarily pay to join Medicare and receive health coverage at age 55.
  • She said that the failure of healthcare reform in the early 1990s was her biggest political regret.
  • Clinton favored increased funding for autism and Alzheimer's research and treatment.
  • Under Clinton's affordable healthcare and prescription drug plan, a patient would be able to visit a doctor three times without it counting toward their annual deductible, families ineligible for Medicare would receive a tax credit for out-of-pocket healthcare expenses, prescription drugs for patients with chronic or serious health conditions would be capped at $250 per month, and prescription drug imports from Canada would be legal.
  • Democratic Party Clinton on healthcare[edit]

    • In response to reports that insurance premiums would rise an average of 22 percent in 2017 under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), Clinton campaign spokesperson Julie Wood released a statement offering Clinton's continued support for the healthcare program on October 25, 2016. "There's a clear choice in this election: either we're going to help American families and tackle health care cost issues, or we're going to throw 20 million people off their coverage and let the insurance companies write the rules again. Hillary Clinton wants to build on the progress we've made and fix what's broken, while Donald Trump would rip up the ACA, reverse the progress we have made and start this fight all over again," she said.[4]
    • Clinton announced a mental health plan on her campaign website on August 29, 2016. A statement from Clinton’s campaign read, “Recognizing that nearly a fifth of all adults in the United States — more than 40 million people — are coping with a mental health problem, Hillary’s plan will integrate our mental and physical health care systems. Her goal is that within her time in office, Americans will no longer separate mental health from physical health when it comes to access to care or quality of treatment. Hillary has been talking about mental health policy throughout her campaign, since hearing directly from American parents, students, veterans, nurses, and police officers about how these challenges keep them up at night.”[5]
    • In a statement on August 24, 2016, Clinton called on the pharmaceutical company Mylan, which makes EpiPens, to reduce their product’s cost after reports surfaced that the price of EpiPens had increased by 400 percent in recent years. “That's outrageous — and it's just the latest troubling example of a company taking advantage of its consumers. I believe that our pharmaceutical and biotech industries can be an incredible source of American innovation, giving us revolutionary treatments for debilitating diseases. But it's wrong when drug companies put profits ahead of patients, raising prices without justifying the value behind them,” said Clinton.[6]
    • At the Borinquen Medical Center in Miami, Florida, on August 9, 2016, Clinton called on members of Congress to return from recess and to pass funding to fight the spread of the Zika virus. Florida Gov. Rick Scott announced shortly before Clinton’s remarks that the 21st case of “locally transmitted Zika” had been confirmed in South Florida. Clinton said, “I am very disappointed that the Congress went on recess before actually agreeing on what they would do to put the resources into this fight, and I really am hoping that they will pay attention. In fact, I would very much urge the leadership of Congress to call people back for a special session and get a bill passed.”[7]
    • Clinton announced in a statement on July 9, 2016, a few changes to her healthcare platform, including offering a public-option insurance plan and allowing Americans to enroll in Medicare when they turn 55. According to the statement, Clinton affirmed “her commitment to give Americans in every state the choice of a public-option insurance plan, something she has supported during this campaign and going back to her 2008 presidential campaign.”[8]
    • Clinton was asked on June 5, 2016, if she still supported a 25 percent sales tax on guns, as she had during a Senate Finance Committee hearing in 1993. She said she was “not going to commit to any specific proposal” and clarified that her position was motivated then by how the U.S. could create more revenue. “What I was saying back then was that we have a lot of public health costs that taxpayers end up paying for through Medicaid, Medicare, through uncompensated care, because that was in the context of the push for healthcare reform and that we needed some way to try to defray those costs,” she said.[9]
    • On May 10, 2016, Hillary Clinton proposed allowing Americans to buy into Medicare before the age of 65. Clinton said, “I’m also in favor of what’s called the public option, so that people can buy into Medicare at a certain age.” She added that “‘people 55 or 50 and up,’ could voluntarily pay to join the program.”[10]
    • When asked about her greatest political regret on January 27, 2016, Clinton identified failing to pass healthcare reform in the early 1990s. She told AOL.com, “Health care is a basic right. We are 90 percent covered, we gotta get to 100 percent, and then we gotta get cost down and make it work for everybody. And even though we didn't get it then, we've got it now and I'm going to defend it and improve it."[11]
    • Clinton unveiled a plan on January 5, 2016, to expand autism insurance and access to early screening. She said that she would also seek to establish the Autism Works Initiative to increase the number of employed people with autism and to launch “the first-ever adult autism prevalence study.”[12]
    • Clinton announced her plan to combat Alzheimer’s disease on December 22, 2015, which included an investment of $2 billion per year in research to find a cure by 2025.[13]
    • On October 21, 2015, Clinton said she had “serious concerns” about Aetna’s planned acquisition of Humana and other mergers between health insurers. "As we see more consolidation in health care, among both providers and insurers, I'm worried that the balance of power is moving too far away from consumers," Clinton said.[14]
    • In an October 19, 2015, letter to the Food and Drug Administration, Clinton encouraged the agency to expedite review of Turing Pharmaceuticals for “artificially” increasing the price of a drug from $13.50 to $750. She also sent a letter to the Federal Trade Commission, writing that although she knew that the agency had “limited authority to address price gouging when it is the result of unilateral action in a market with no competition,” it should examine the issue across the pharmaceutical industry.[15]
    • On September 29, 2015, Clinton appealed to Congress to repeal the Cadillac tax, an excise tax on high-cost employer-based healthcare plans. “Too many Americans are struggling to meet the cost of rising deductibles and drug prices. That’s why, among other steps, I encourage Congress to repeal the so-called Cadillac tax, which applies to some employer-based health plans, and to fully pay for the cost of repeal,” said Clinton.[16]
    • In a Facebook question-and-answer session on September 28, 2015, Clinton said she supported requiring pharmaceutical companies to invest in the research and development of generic drugs.[17]
    • Clinton released her affordable healthcare and prescription drug platform on September 23, 2015. Under her plan, a patient could visit a doctor three times without it counting toward their annual deductible and families ineligible for Medicare could receive up to a $5,000 tax credit for out-of-pocket healthcare expenses. She also said that she would impose a $250 monthly cap on prescription drugs for patients with chronic or serious health conditions. Additionally, her plan would legalize prescription drug imports from Canada. "If the medicine you need costs less in Canada, you should be able to buy it from Canada — or any other country that meets our safety standards,” she said.[18][19]
    • Turing Pharmaceuticals increased the price on Daraprim by 5,000 percent from $13.50 to $700 per tablet in August 2015, but due to public backlash, promised on September 22, 2015, to scale back its price increase. Clinton tweeted, “Good that Turing will lower an essential drug's price. Hillary's plan would prevent price gouging in the first place.”[20][21]
    • The Huffington Post reported in March 2014 that Clinton "supports Obamacare, and opposes single-payer health insurance."[22]
    • According to a February 2014 report titled "The Hillary Papers," Diane Blair, a political science professor and friend of Clinton's, "wrote that Hillary Clinton vouched for a single payer health-care system during a family dinner in 1993."[23]
    • During the 2008 presidential campaign, Clinton introduced a healthcare plan that would mandate insurance coverage for all Americans either through a private insurance plan or employer-provided insurance. She proposed funding the program by repealing the Bush tax cuts. According to Newsweek, "It was Obama who ultimately came around to Clinton's point of view when he included the mandate in his own health care proposal."[24][25]
    • Hillary Clinton was a chief proponent of Bill Clinton's Health Security Act, which proposed "to reform the health care system so that all Americans are guaranteed comprehensive health coverage."[26]
    • Clinton was instrumental in the passage of the State Children's Health Insurance Program, which provides matching funds to states to provide health insurance to children in low-income families.[27]
    • Read what other presidential candidates said about healthcare.

    Recent news[edit]

    The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms Hillary Clinton Healthcare. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

    Hillary Clinton presidential campaign, 2016/Healthcare - Google News

    See also[edit]

    • Hillary Clinton
    • Hillary Clinton presidential campaign, 2016

    Footnotes[edit]

    1. CNN, "Hillary Clinton launches second presidential bid," April 12, 2015
    2. Gallup, "More Americans Negative Than Positive About ACA," September 8, 2016
    3. NPR, "Rates Up 22 Percent For Obamacare Plans, But Subsidies Rise, Too," October 24, 2016
    4. CNN, "Republicans go on offense over Obamacare," October 25, 2016
    5. HillaryClinton.com, "Hillary Clinton’s Comprehensive Agenda on Mental Health," accessed August 29, 2016
    6. The Hill, "Clinton calls for EpiPen maker to lower price," August 24, 2016
    7. The Atlantic, "Hillary Clinton to Congress: Come Back to D.C. and Fund Zika Research," August 9, 2016
    8. CBS News, "Hillary Clinton to back public option for health care," July 9, 2016
    9. ABC News, "Hillary Clinton Weighs in on Gun Tax, Stops Short of Endorsement," June 5, 2016
    10. 'The New York Times, "Hillary Clinton Takes a Step to the Left on Health Care," May 10, 2016
    11. AOL.com, "Hillary Clinton opens up about her greatest political regret and her first goal if elected," January 27, 2016
    12. AL.com, "Hillary Clinton to unveil autism plan Tuesday," January 5, 2016
    13. The Huffington Post, "Hillary Clinton Reveals Plan To Battle Alzheimer's Disease," December 22, 2015
    14. Reuters, "Clinton has 'serious concerns' about Aetna-Humana, Anthem-Cigna mergers," October 21, 2015
    15. Newsweek, "Hillary Clinton Calls for Regulators to Look into Daraprim Price Increase," October 19, 2015
    16. Bloomberg Politics, "Hillary Clinton Joins Growing Chorus Against Obamacare's 'Cadillac Tax,'" September 29, 2015
    17. TIME, "6 Things We Learned From Hillary Clinton’s Facebook Q&A," September 28, 2015
    18. U.S. News & World Report, "Clinton proposes a series of steps to curb high out-of-pocket healthcare costs," September 23, 2015
    19. Huffington Post Canada, "Hillary Clinton Calls For Legalizing Prescription Pill Imports From Canada," September 26, 2015
    20. CBS News, "Hillary Clinton rolls out drug price plan as one drug cost rises 5000%," September 22, 2015
    21. Twitter, "Hillary Clinton," accessed September 22, 2015
    22. Huffington Post, "Hillary Clinton Likes Obamacare, And Opposes Single-Payer Health Insurance," accessed February 2, 2015
    23. The Washington Post, “The four most notable nuggets from ‘The Hillary Papers,’" February 10, 2014
    24. Fox News, “Sen. Hillary Clinton Unveils $110 Billion Universal Health Care Plan," September 17, 2007
    25. Newsweek, "Hillary Clinton Promises to Fix Obamacare," accessed February 2, 2015
    26. Dayton.edu, "Description of Health Security Act," accessed February 2, 2015
    27. Fact Check, “Giving Hillary Credit for SCHIP," March 18, 2008
    28. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
    29. Democratic Party, "The 2016 Democratic Party Platform," accessed August 23, 2016



    Categories: [Hillary Clinton] [2016 presidential election, Healthcare]


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