SOUTH PORTLAND - The nation's health secretary lobbied Thursday for overhauling the nation's health care system, speaking in the home state of a Republican senator who holds a key vote on a committee that is crafting bipartisan legislation.
Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius told a group of about 70 women that reform is particularly important for them because women are more likely than men to be uninsured or underinsured. Her comments came during a panel discussion with leaders of women's advocacy groups and other invited guests who shared their stories about health care.
The current health-care debate is similar to the back-and-forth discussions over a federal health insurance program for seniors that led to the passage of Medicare in 1965, she said.
"When we made that big step 44 years ago, it was a tough battle," Sebelius said. "Lots of people said, ‘This is a terrible program.' Lots of people called it socialized medicine."
Sebelius has visited at least seven other states since the spring, speaking in support of President Barack Obama's health-care proposals.
Her visit to Maine comes as Obama and White House aides have been talking to Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, in hopes of getting her support. Snowe serves on the Senate Finance Committee that is drafting a plan.
U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-Maine, who was on the panel, said everyone knows Snowe has a key role in helping write bipartisan health-care legislation.
"We hope the secretary's presence encourages her to keep working at it," Pingree said.
Sebelius also participated in a panel discussion in Orono. The two events were closed to the public, but open to the media.
Georgette Kanach of Gray told the gathering at South Portland that she sometimes goes without food or doesn't pay her electric bills so she can buy medication to treat her breast cancer. Even with health insurance, her co-payments eat up most of her limited fixed income, she said.
"If I lose my health insurance, I don't know what I'd do," she said.
Sebelius also announced that Maine has been awarded an $8.5 million grant over five years to expand health-care coverage for uninsured residents. The grant comes from the Health and Human Services' new State Health Access Program.

Skippy, it's not that Sebelius was unable to speak to the general public, it is because it is part of the plan. See, they handpick groups that are desperate and will agree to anything, as they really need help. Then the door is closed to the general public but open to the press, who can only report how wonderful the whole idea is without having to report both sides, and they have some handpicked "soldiers" (attendees) to spread the "good" word. I do sympathize with the attendees problems, don't get me wrong. But the other side of the story needs to be addressed, such as the points you made,.
It is a shame that Secretary Sebelius was only able to speak to a "selected" group of women who want this legislation. She should have been speaking to a group that represents the citizens of Maine at large. Many Maine citizens do not want this reform, at least not what has been hinted at.(No one knows what will eventully come out). The one thing we all have to realize is that as matters now stand there is a shortage of medical personnel and that in the next few years there will be a large number of people turning 65 and eligible for medicare that will swamp the system without adding 50 million new recipients of free insurance so they can dote on every small problem. The health care system in this country is not even ready for the boomers coming of age, how can we ask this system to handle 50 million extra clients? Funding and creating facilities to train medical personnell should be the first step. Then and only then the system should be opened to a larger portion of the population in steps. This way we can grow and expand successfully.
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