Local Cancer Advocate Meets with DE Lawmakers

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

Local Cancer Advocate Met with Delaware Lawmakers to Demand Action Now on Health Care Reform

 

Smyrna resident is one of 50 advocates, representing every state, demanding quality health care for all Americans

 

 

SMYRNA -- JULY 21, 2009 -- T.J. Jurgens, a Smyrna, Del. resident, was on Capitol Hill last week meeting with Delaware lawmakers to advocate for health care that is accessible, affordable, available and administratively simple. Jurgens is one of 50 American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network (ACS CAN) volunteers, one from each state, calling for Action: Now Not Later on comprehensive health care reform.

 

Health care reform is about saving lives, and there is no time for delay,” said Jurgens, an ACS CAN volunteer from Delaware. “Congress must take action NOW, not later, on health care reform. We can not reduce suffering and death from cancer if the country does not improve access to quality, affordable health care.”

 

New polling data from ACS CAN, the advocacy affiliate of the American Cancer Society, confirms that lack of access to quality, affordable care is a significant barrier in the fight to defeat cancer. The results showed that one in four families affected by cancer says they have had to put off or delay care in the last year because of cost.

 

People with cancer face enormous challenges finding adequate insurance.  Insurers use pre-existing conditions such as a prior cancer diagnosis as a reason to deny or limit coverage. As a result, a person with a history of cancer who is laid off or has to quit work can find it virtually impossible to find coverage on their own. 

 

According to ACS CAN, two-thirds of cancer patients under age 65 who tried to find insurance outside their employer couldn’t find an affordable plan. And for cancer patients, research shows that being uninsured can worsen your chance of survival.

 

Those who are uninsured are less likely to receive cancer prevention services, more likely to be treated for cancer at late stages of disease, more likely to receive substandard care and services, and more likely to die from their cancer.

 

“ACS CAN believes that if we can improve the health care system for people with cancer, we will improve it for everyone else as well,” said Dan Smith, president of ACS CAN. “By bringing T.J. and other cancer advocates from across the country to D.C. we will make it clear to lawmakers that families affected by cancer cannot afford to wait for health care reform - and that the status quo simply isn’t an option.”

 

 

While in Washington, D.C., Jurgens met with Senator Tom Carper's staff. During the meetings, Jurgens called for a bipartisan and uniquely American solution for fixing the broken health care system that works for families affected by cancer by:

 

o    Refocusing the system to emphasize prevention

o    Ending the practice of denying coverage because of pre-existing conditions

o    Limiting the cost burden on families by providing care that costs less and covers more

o    Ensuring meaningful coverage for all Americans from prevention all the way through quality end of life care

 

“Cancer patients across the country are digging deep into their savings and risking financial ruin to pay for their treatment and care,” said Jurgens. “Too many cancer patients are delaying or forgoing lifesaving screenings and treatments because of problems accessing care. No cancer patient should ever be forced to make a decision between their life or their lifesavings.”

 

In 2009, more than 1.4 million people in the United States will be diagnosed with cancer and more than 562,000 people will die from the disease. Six in 10 of the lives lost to cancer today could be saved with better access to prevention services like cancer screenings, smoking cessation programs, and public outreach and education to improve diet and increase exercise– that translates into nearly 340,000 people each year.

 

For information on ACS CAN’s health care reform campaign, visit www.acscan.org/healthcare.

 

ACS CAN, the nonprofit, nonpartisan advocacy affiliate of the American Cancer Society, supports evidence-based policy and legislative solutions designed to eliminate cancer as a major health problem. ACS CAN works to encourage elected officials and candidates to make cancer a top national priority. ACS CAN gives ordinary people extraordinary power to fight cancer with the training and tools they need to make their voices heard. For more information, visit www.acscan.org.

 

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