
“I am trying to save this beautiful program”
Dr. Memtamed Oz, director of medical care and medical services centers (CMS) says that the Trump administration is planning to invest more than 200 billion dollars “more dollars” in the Medicaid program yet The passage of a “beautiful, beautiful draft law”.
“I am trying to save this beautiful program, this noble effort, to help people, and give them his hand.”
“While you gather, if Medicaid is not able to care for the people who were designed for them, young children, and the detonation of their lives, those who are their pity of their lives, the elderly, and those who were disabled in the shadow, as Hubert Humphrey said, then we do not meet the basic commitment of the moral government.”
Oz, the seventeenth official of CMS, said the government wanted a “appropriate return” to the Medicaid investment. The difference in drug costs between the United States and Europe has addressed, adding that the work is being implemented by the administration in an attempt to reduce the prices of drugs.
Last week, the Trump administration announced that it launches a new program that allows Americans to share personal health data and medical records through health systems and applications run by private technology companies, and an promise that this will facilitate access to health records and monitoring wellness.
CMS will take responsibility for maintaining the system, and officials said that patients will need to choose them to exchange their medical records and data, which will be preserved safe.
These officials said that patients will benefit from a system that allows them to call quickly their own records without distinctive difficulties, such as asking for the use of fax machines to share documents, which prevented them from doing this in the past.
“We will have significant progress in how consumers use their own records,” Oz said During the White House event.
CMS already has information on more than 140 million Americans registering in Medicare and Medicaid. Earlier this month, the Federal Agency agreed to deliver its huge database, including home addresses, to deportation officials.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Post Comment