Health Care

News Release | Ohio PIRG Students, Demos | Health Care

New Report “Ohioans Lives at Risk” Highlights the Painful Impact of Federal “Regulatory Reform” Proposals

READ THE FULL REPORT HERE

Oberlin – A new report by Demos and Ohio PIRG Students finds that Ohioans’ lives, health and livelihoods would be at risk if so-called “regulatory reform” proposals were to become law, slowing or stopping the regulatory process.  The new report details the number of Ohioans harmed by just a one-year delay in the creation of three popular upcoming rulemakings.

Key findings from “Ohioans Lives at Risk:”

  • As many as 3,194 preventable deaths and 76,314 preventable asthma attacks among Ohioans children for each year the government fails to update the restriction on levels of toxic soot in our air. 
  • As many as 380,000 preventable illnesses from contaminated food for each year the government fails to enact new rules to avoid produce contamination.
  • 65,060 cancer patients at risk of being denied health insurance for each year of delay in creating rules prohibiting health insurance companies from refusing to issue insurance to people with pre-existing conditions. 
  • “This report demonstrates that the ‘regulatory reform’ proposals being considered by Congress are a serious threat to Ohioans,” explained Ilyssa Meyer, Chair of Ohio PIRG Student Chapters. “Policymakers should resist efforts by powerful special interests to weaken public health and consumer safety rules. The need for consumer safety should not be a political question or a partisan issue.”
Report | Ohio PIRG Students, Demos | Health Care

Ohio Lives at Risk

The United States Congress is currently considering so-called “regulatory reform” legislation that would add new bureaucratic hurdles to stall and, in some cases, stop the creation of new safeguards and standards that hold corporations accountable and protect the public. According to our analysis, the result would be demonstrable harm for the people of Ohio.

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Under the federal health care law, young adults have access to new, previously unavailable health insurance options. To make the most of those new choices, you need to learn the facts. This guide is designed to help you do that.

Report | Health Care

The Three Trillion Dollar Question: What Health Care Reform Can Save For Families, Businesses and Taxpayers

Without health care reform, the United States is projected to spend over $40 trillion on health care in the next decade. Experts estimate that thirty percent of that spending – up to $12 trillion dollars – will be wasted on ineffective care, pointless red tape, and counterproductive treatments that can actually harm patients.

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