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- Andrew B Bindman, Marian R Mulkey, and Richard Kronick.
- Andrew B. Bindman ( andrew.bindman@ucsf.edu ) is a professor in the Departments of Medicine, and Epidemiology and Biostatistics affiliated with the Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies at the University of California San Francisco.
- Health Aff (Millwood). 2018 Sep 1; 37 (9): 1367-1374.
AbstractCalifornia has long sought to achieve universal health insurance coverage for its residents. The state's uninsured population was dramatically reduced as a result of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). However, faced with federal threats to the ACA, California is exploring how it might take greater control over the financing of health care. In 2017 the state Senate passed the Healthy California Act, SB-562, calling for California to adopt a single-payer health care system. The state Assembly did not vote on the bill but held hearings on a range of options to expand coverage. These hearings highlighted the many benefits of unified public financing, whether a single- or multipayer system (which would retain health plans as intermediaries). The hearings also identified significant challenges to pooling financial resources, including the need for federal cooperation and for new state taxes to replace employer and employee payments. For now, California's single-payer legislation is stalled, but the state will establish a task force to pursue unified public financing to achieve universal health insurance. California's 2018 gubernatorial and legislative elections will provide a forum for further health policy debate and, depending on election outcomes, may establish momentum for more sweeping change.
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