FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 2. 1962 atiiiiiHiii Behind the News iiiiiiiiiiiiiii]||]iimiiiimiiiiiiitmiiiiiiiii£ Two On 5 During the.recent session of Congress, the Kennedy- = 2 endorsed proposals for health insurance for the aged under E 5 social security-Tnade no headway. The defeat of this plan has = = been made a major issue in the ■ current campaign throughout ~ 2 the nation. The Daily Collegian therefore presents a summary E 2 of the plan with two views on the proposal prepared especially EE '2 for this newspaper. tS = Under the proposal, payment on behalf of every eligible = 2 older person would.be made as follows in each spell of illness: S s' • Hospitalization—All costs of in-patient hospital services for ~ = JUP to 50. days, over and above $lO a day for the first 9 days. = 2 with a minimum of $2O. -- 2 • Skilled nursing facility care—All costs for up to 180 davs'E = after, transfer of the patient from a hospital. * = 2 • Hospital/ out-patient diagnostic sendees—All costs above 2 2 the.first $2O for each diagnostic study. 5 = • Home" health care—All costs of up__to 240 home health-care ~ ■ 2 visits, a year by visiting nurses, physical and part- = 2 time homemakers. \ E The Administration 2 Assistant Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare EE 2 Our aged people have, for .the. most part, quit working and = no longer have earnings coming in. They live, on their social 2 5 security, their pensions, savings and the like. On the average, = their incomes drop to approximately half that' of younger EE 2 people. 2 -2 At the same time, their need for hospital care more than 2 = doubles! E 2 These two facts together present the elderly person with EE. 2 an impossible problem. How can he spend substantially' more 2 2 for medical care from substantially less . income while his 2 2 needs for food, clothing and shelter remain .rather constant? E 2j . These facts led President Kennedy to recommend health- E 2| insurance for the aged through social security as the most E , 2' practicable, conservative and effective way i to provide help to 2 2 our old people in obtaining -the medical care -they will in- E . 2 evitably need. 2 2 The addition of health insurance for the aged to our social 2 E security system will deal with the one great remaining threat E 2 to the economic security of old people—the unpredictable E 2 cost of catastrophic illness. - 2 ,2 As thing* stand now, even a retired person of modest 2 E means can be reduced to poverty and lifetime debt by • E 2 severe or long-lasting illness. Social security health insurance. EE ■■ 2 by helping older people get the care they might need, will 2 2 also actfto protect each older person's basic economic secur- 2 E ity— a freedom it took a lifetime of work to build. - E 2 ~ Health insurance of the aged under social security is 2 -2 simply a means of paying for health care and service for the '2 2 aged. Such a program would in no way interfere with the 2 . S practice of medicine or with the operation of our -hospitals.- 2 It -would simply be health insurance for those who need it E .2 most and can least afford it—the older people of America. 2 .£ • E Associate Editor, News Media Relations 2 Advocates for health care for the aged under social se- EE 2 cur ity often confuse the issue by trying to leave 1 with the 2 2 public the impression that those who oppose such legislation 2 E are against health care for the aged. Of course, this is not true. E 2 Doctors and all other socially responsible Americans want our 2 2 elderly citizens to have all the health care they need. The 2 -2 only question'is how to do it; the real issue is how such 2 2 health care should be financed. _ 2 2 The controversy poses a clear question—will the Ameri- EE 2 can—people receive better medical care under the present 2 S system of private health insurance plds federal assistance for E 2 those who need it or under a mammoth new federal program .2 2 based on compulsory higher taxes'that would provide benefits 2 2to all, regardless of need? /. 2 2. Opponents of the social Security approach favor voluntary E 2 health insurance for those able to purchase it and the federal- 2 = stale Kerr-Milli program far helping those who need help in 2 2 paying for medical care. j 2 2 They oppose overburdening the social • security system -E 2 with an' extremely expensive program outside ’the original .2 2 concept of social security. They oppose! taxing the nation's 2 E workers to pay for the hospitalization of persons who are able E 2 to pay their own way, just because those people h’ave passed E 2 their 85th birthdays. ! E E They favor giving complete medical care under the Kerr- 2 s Mills program to all who are unable to meet the cost other- E 2 wise. .2 2 One of the major fallacies of providing health care for 2 E the aged under social security is that it is based on the false E 2 assumption that a majority of the aged are in. need of .medi- E 2 cal care and are unable to meet the cost. ;On the contrary, the 2 E majority of the nation’s. 17 million aged are in relatively good 2 2 health and financially able to take care of their medical costs. E 2 True, the cash income of older persons often is not as E 2 large as that of younger people. But neither are their financial 2 = obligations and needs. 2 2. A second way proponents of the social security approach E 2 becloud the issue Is by attempting to delude older personr, 2 2 into believing that all their health care problems would be 2 E solved by such a program. The -fact is that less than 25 per 2 5 cent of the cost of a typical illness would' be covered. E 2. .Voluntary health insurance .is doing a remarkable job. 2 S The growth of coverage for the elderly now is leading • all~ 2 E other areas of health insurance. More than 53 per cent of E 2 persons 65 and over already have health‘insurance. More ind 2 2 more private health insurance companies are offering more 2 E and better policies to older persons. The Blue Cross (hospi- 2 E talization) and Blue Shield (medical care) plans are offering E 2 special coverage to the aged. 2 2 ~ Advocates of the social security approach deny that their 2 2 current -proposal has any resemblance to socialized medicine. E 2 However, there ,is no denying that it is a compulsory govern- E 2 ment health program for one segment of the' population and 2 2 a step—a big, irreversible step—in the direction of the com- 2 E plete. socialization of medical care in this country. ’ E niuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimHiiiHimiiiiiiiiiiuilifiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiHiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiß Viewpoints Medicare By WILBUR J. COHEN The AMA By DAYTON MOORE American Medical Association THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA i Today is the final day for filing a ! conflict in final exams. The list of final exams is available at the Scheduling Office in Willard. ! Maryland Students :An information table for the convenience s of Maryland students Visiting Penn State for the week end will be set up next to the HUB desk from 8:30 a.jn. to 5:30 p;m. V.|, v., • .. 'i i„. ji tj As tha Generation of leaves, t ! ] i | so is that of men. ? —Homer ' f WOMEN’S DEBATE 1 HAVE YOU BEEN TO DEAN'S WALK-IN (Corner of Pugh tc Beaver) IT NOT . . . LOOK HAMBURGERS 15c THICK SHAKES 2Dc FRENCH FRIES 10c i We Cash Student Checks *9 there can be no doubt that Art and Culture is art criticism of a very j high order —the highest, I should say, in our time."* CLEMENT GREENBERG on Modern Art Sunday, November 4, 1962 8:30 P.M. ; Schwab Auditorium j TICKETS AT HUtf •Kramer, Hilton, in Oct 1962 NOV. 2. 9-5 Students and Sales Arts Magazine, writing of Presented by the school of the arts. a late Greenberg book 1 i * : \i Sund TODAY ON CAMPUS Conflict Exams Penn State Jazz Club Workshop 1 Ken Kuhn 1 V on l Drums \N %Carl Lindsay Junior Prom The Junior Prom, featuring Ronn Metcalfe and his orchestra, will be held from 9 p,m. to 1 a.m. in the HUB ballroom. Tickets for the semi-formal dance are on sale at the booth outside the Lion’s Den for $5 per couple. Leviathan The Leviathah, publication of the Liberal Arts Student Council, will be distributed in residence halls: Copies will also be available Cosmopolitan Club Trip To U.& NOV. 18-19 To Attend General Assembly Number Is Limited To 29 Persons Sign Up At International Student Attain Office ! on or before Nov. 2 AWS Applications lor Commuting Students'Chairman Are Available at the HUB Desk -.Deadline for returning forma to the HUB desk U noon of Saturday, November 3 Any Questions? Call —UN 5-44 SS Enjoy the exciting jazz of Ken Kuhn Quintet Bob Streeter f Nov. 4 1-5 p.m. HUB Ballroom at the Helzet Union desk. j Other Events American Society of Agricultural Engineers registration. 11 a.nv 2 p.m.. HUB first floor; meeting, 12-5 p.m., HUB assembly room, Presbyterian University Fellow ship. 7:30 p.m. Presbyterian University Center. 132 W Bea ver Ave. UCA. 9am, HUB ballroom. New College Diner Downtown. .tho/Moyic* LAST TVfp P'YS TWIMIIT AT (INTER 9TA4R Ty Brown & / ° n m Alto Sax Is X/ | : V/ .1 Don Krebs on Vibes PAGE FIVI