News StoriesNational Council on Disability Calls for Health Care Reform for People with DisabilitiesThe National Council on Disability (NCD), Washington, has released a report titled The Current State of Health Care for People with Disabilities, calling for immediate health care reform for people with disabilities, says a statement issued by the organization. NCD Chairman John R. Vaughn said that NCD “undertook this study in 2007 to focus the nation's attention on the health care disparities experienced by people with disabilities, and to provide information and recommendations that can help to eliminate health care inequities for people with disabilities." The report provides a road map for helping to eliminate pervasive barriers to health care for people with disabilities, aiming to improve the quality of life, productivity, and well-being of greater numbers of Americans as the population ages. Some of the recommendations include:
NCD Health Care Committee Co-Chair Anne M. Rader said in the statement that "people with disabilities bear a disproportionate burden of poor health compared with the general population and use preventive services at a lower rate than people who do not have disabilities." For many, health care in the United States is not always available or affordable, and gaps in coverage can present insurmountable obstacles to obtaining appropriate care and maintaining good health, said the statement. Lack of health care provider education and disability cultural awareness and competency also creates significant barriers for people with disabilities when they try to access care, it adds. The root causes of these longstanding health and health care inequities involve multiple, complex factors that are embedded in the historical evolution of the nation's health care structure, and the parallel research and public health emphasis on disability prevention and cure, according to the statement. One especially serious outcome of this evolutionary process is a highly fragmented health care delivery system, which is unable to reconcile the competing interests of cost containment and patient-centered care, which is an important tool for achieving culturally competent care for people with disabilities, it adds. NCD Health Care Committee Co-Chair Victoria Ray Carlson said that “Immediate action must be taken where existing research reveals the clear need for such strategies as enhanced health care provider education, greater clinical research, enhanced payment systems, and the removal of policy and procedural barriers and other physical barriers to receiving quality health care services." There is no simple solution to the complex and entrenched problems people with disabilities experience when they seek health care, says the organization. Key elements of any move toward reform must include action by Congress, Federal agencies that have a role in health care, professional medical associations, organizations of medical educators, accreditation organizations, the public health community, and the disability community. [Source: National Council on Disability] |
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