Today, the President will urge all Americans to exercise their right to vote to decide how best to maintain and build on the progress and prosperity the nation has achieved. He will emphasize that every vote counts because next Tuesday’s election will help decide the future direction of the nation. He will cite the bipartisan Norwood-Dingell Patients’ Bill of Rights as an example of what a difference elected leaders can make. Despite a bipartisan majority of support in the Congress, the Republican Leadership has let another year go by without passing a Patients’ Bill of Rights, refusing to schedule a vote and thus effectively killing this important legislation. Today, the President will take executive action to extend patient protections to 130 million Americans in private health plans by directing the Secretary of Labor to release regulations within the next two weeks that require health plans to provide a fair and unbiased appeals process for patients when coverage has been denied or delayed.
REQUIRING HEALTH PLANS TO PROVIDE FAIR AND TIMELY APPEALS PROCESS. The President will issue an Executive Memorandum to Labor Secretary Alexis Herman directing the Department to release final appeals and consumer information regulations within two weeks. Under current law, health plans making coverage decisions often do not have medical expertise to make such decisions, and appeals of coverage decisions can take as long as 300 days. Consequently, countless patients have been harmed by inappropriate delays and denials of coverage. This new regulation will establish a fair and unbiased process for reviewing medical benefits claims, require timely coverage and appeals decisions, and direct health plans to provide meaningful information to patients advising them of their rights to the appeals process. It will apply to all private Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) health plans sponsored by employers, which cover over 130 million working Americans and their families.
BUILDING ON STRONG CLINTON-GORE PATIENTS’ PROTECTIONS RECORD. The Clinton-Gore Administration has consistently promoted patient protections for all Americans. In 1993, the Administration proposed wide-ranging consumer protections. In 1996, as part of the historic Kennedy-Kassebaum insurance reform law, the President enacted new executive authority for the establishment of privacy protections for medical records. Later that year, he called for the establishment of the non-partisan Quality Commission, co-chaired by Labor Secretary Herman and Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala, which released two seminal reports focusing on patient protections and quality improvement. In November 1997, the President accepted the Commission's recommendation that all health plans should provide strong patient protections and called on the Congress to pass a strong, enforceable Patients' Bill of Rights. Since that time, he and Vice President Gore have been working in the Congress to form a bipartisan majority in both Houses of Congress for the Norwood-Dingell Patients’ Bill of Rights. In the face of Congressional inaction, the President has extended many consumer protections through executive action to the 85 million Americans who get their health care through federal plans - from Medicare and Medicaid, to the Federal Employees Health Benefits Plan (FEHBP), to the Department of Defense and the Veterans Administration. Today represents the latest Administrative action to expand patient protections.
ENCOURAGING AMERICANS TO MAKE THEIR VOICES HEARD ON AMERICA’S PRIORITIES. Today, the President will call on all Americans to fulfill their civic duty and go to the polls on Election Day to make their voices heard. On Tuesday, Americans will cast their votes and decide who they believe will represent their best interest and continue on the path of maintaining fiscal discipline while investing in America’s priorities, such as:
What's New Archives: 1994-1996
Presidential Webcast: Meeting the Challenge of Global Warming
Urging Congress to Keep its Commitment and Complete this Year's Education Budget
Preserving America’s Coral Reefs
Human Rights Day: The Eleanor Roosevelt Award and The Presidential Medal of Freedom
President Clinton Launches New Effort to Increase Immunization Rates Among Children
President Clinton and Vice President Gore: Restoring an American Natural Treasure
Progress in Efforts to Combat International Crime
President Clinton’s New Markets Initiative: Revitalizing America’s Underserved Communities
President Clinton, Vice President Gore, and Congressional Democrats Win a Landmark Budget
Announcing Welfare Reform Achievements and Budget Wins for America’s Families
President Clinton Issues Strong New Consumer Protections to Ensure the Privacy of Medical Records
Enacting a Budget that Invests in Education, Health Care, and America’
The United States on Track to Pay Off the Debt by End of the Decade
President Clinton: Strengthening the Federal Government-University Research Partnership
Keeping the Heat and Lights On During Unusually Cold Weather
Strengthening and Supporting the Military
President Clinton: Strong Action to Preserve America’s Forests
Protecting America’s Natural Treasures
President Clinton: Raising the Minimum Wage -- An Overdue Pay Raise for America’s Working Families
President Clinton Awards the Presidential Citizens Medals
President Clinton Unveils the Completion of the FDR Memorial and Honors FDR’s Legacy
Highlights of the 2001 Economic Report of the President
Prevention Resources For America
President Clinton Honors Martin Luther King Through Words and Deeds
New Efforts to Fight Sweatshops and Child Labor Around the World & Put A More Human Face on the
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