http://www.idahostatesman.com/2010/03/23/1127733/a-historic-look-at-health-care.html

Pivotal moments in American health care history capped by President
Barack Obama's health care law:

-1798: The Act for the Relief of Sick and Disabled Seamen in 1798
marks the beginning of federal involvement in health care.

-1854: President Franklin Pierce vetoes a national mental health bill
on the basis that it would be unconstitutional to regard health as
anything but a private matter in which government should not become
involved.

-1912: Former President Theodore Roosevelt campaigns as the
Progressive Party candidate on a platform calling for a single
national health service.

-1920: The Snyder Act of 1920 is the first federal legislation to deal
with health care for Native Americans, setting up the beginnings of
what became the Indian Health Service.

-1921: The Maternity and Infancy Act of 1921 (Sheppard-Towner Act)
provides grants to states to plan maternal and child health services.
The legislation serves as a prototype for federal grants-in-aid to the
states in the area of health.

-1924: The Veterans Act of 1924 codifies and extends federal
responsibilities for health care services to veterans, who receive aid
if they are injured in the line of service.

-1932: The Committee on the Costs of Medical Care report is published
and raises concerns about the costs of health care and the number of
people lacking medical services.

-1935: The Social Security Act, providing pensions and other benefits
to the elderly, is signed into law by President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt. National health insurance is left out of the final Social
Security bill because of the opposition of organized medicine and its
allies.

-1937: The Technical Committee on Medical Care, a group of federal
agency representatives, is convened to advance health care reform.

-1938: A national health Conference proposes federal aid to the states
to expand public health, maternal and children's services and hospital
facilities.

-1939: The Wagner National Health Act of 1939, FDR's second push for
national health insurance, fails as Southern Democrats align with
Republicans to oppose government expansion.

-1943: The National War Labor Board declares employer contributions
for health insurance to be tax free, which encourages companies to
offer health-insurance packages to attract workers.

-1943: The Wagner-Murray-Dingell bill is introduced, calling for broad
additions to the Social Security Act, including health insurance
measures. The bill never came to a vote in Congress. A revised version
was introduced in May 1945 but was never acted upon.

-1945: President Harry Truman recommends a national health insurance
program during a special address to Congress. The McCarran-Fergurson
Act of 1945 exempts the insurance industry from federal antitrust
legislation

-1946: The National Health Policy Hospital Survey and Construction Act
of 1946 provides grants to states to inventory and survey existing
hospital and public health care facilities in each state and to plan
for new ones.

-1948: Truman's National Health Insurance Initiative fails after the
American Medical Association criticizes it, and some Republicans
compare it to communism.

-1951: Truman creates, by executive order, the President's Commission
on the Health Needs of the Nation. The commission was to determine the
nation's health requirements, both immediate and long-term, and to
recommend courses of action to meet those needs.

-1952: Republican presidential candidate Dwight D. Eisenhower
campaigns against national health insurance.

-1954: President Dwight Eisenhower, with the objective of enabling
private insurance companies to broaden their coverage, proposes a plan
of federal reinsurance for any private company as protection against
heavy losses resulting from health insurance. After the first five
years, the program would become self-financing with money derived from
premiums paid by the insurance companies. The House soundly rejects
the plan. Eisenhower calls a conference to try to salvage it and is
told the Senate can't fit the plan into its agenda.

-1959: A bill is introduced by Rep. Aime J. Forand, D-R.I., to provide
hospital, surgical and nursing home benefits for old-age and survivors
insurance beneficiaries using the Social Security administrative
mechanism. The program is to be financed by an increase in the Social
Security tax. The bill fails.

-1960: Legislation is enacted establishing limited medical assistance
for the aged through the Social Security program. The act also
provides aid to the states to help "medically indigent" people 65 or
older. Participation by states is optional; 25 take part.

-1962: President John F. Kennedy renews his 1961 request that the
old-age, survivors and disability provisions of the Social Security
Act be amended to provide health insurance protection for the aged.

-1965: President Lyndon B. Johnson signs into law the landmark federal
health insurance programs known as Medicare and Medicaid.

-1971: Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., offers his national health
insurance plan. The "Health Security Act" calls for a universal
single-player plan to be financed through payroll taxes. President
Richard Nixon later advances his own version of a bill, the National
Health Insurance Partnership Act. It would preserve private insurance
but require businesses to provide coverage to employees or make
payments to a government-run fund. It also endorses the concept of
health maintenance organizations. The bill fails.

-1973: Legislation is enacted to encourage development of health
maintenance organizations.

-1974: Nixon proposes his Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan calling
for universal coverage, voluntary employer participation and a
separate program for the working poor and the unemployed, replacing
Medicaid. Organized labor lobbied successfully to kill the plan,
hoping get a better deal after the next elections. That didn't happen.

-1977: The Health Care Financing Administration is created to manage
Medicare and Medicaid separately from the Social Security
Administration.

-1979: Sen. Kennedy proposes that private insurance plans compete for
customers who would receive a card to use for hospital and physician's
care. Employers would bear the bulk of the cost for their workers,
with the government picking up costs for the poor. President Jimmy
Carter's plan, released a month later, proposes that businesses
provide a minimum package of benefits, that public coverage for the
poor and aged be expanded and that a new public corporation created to
sell coverage to everyone else. Neither proposal makes it through
Congress.

-1985: The Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985
(COBRA), signed into law by President Ronald Reagan, mandates an
insurance program giving some employees the ability to continue health
insurance coverage from their workplace after leaving the job. In
addition, hospice care is made a permanent part of Medicare and
extended to states for Medicaid.

-1988: The Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act provides the largest
expansion of benefits since the creation of the program and increases
premiums. But act causes dissension, in part because long-term
services are not covered and more affluent beneficiaries don't need
the expanded coverage. The act is repealed before provisions go into
effect. The McKinney Act is signed into law, providing health care to
the homeless.

-1990: The Americans with Disabilities Act provides a broad range of
protections for the disabled.

-1993: President Bill Clinton proposes the most ambitious reworking of
the health care system since Medicare and Medicaid, aiming squarely
for universal coverage. But he cannot persuade fellow Democrats in
control of Congress to adopt it. The proposals drew strong opposition
from the health care industry and employers. The Childhood
Immunization Act supports the provision of vaccines for children
eligible for Medicaid, children without health insurance, and Native
American children.

-1996: The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
improves continuity of health insurance coverage in group and
individual markets for people who lose their job. The act also
promotes medical savings accounts and improves access to long-term
care services and coverage.

-1997: The State Children's Health Insurance Program is established to
help provide medical care to children in low-income families that are
not poor enough to qualify for Medicaid.

-2003: President George W. Bush signs a law adding prescription drugs
to Medicare.

-Jan. 19, 2010: Republican Scott Brown's upset in the Massachusetts
Senate seat opened by Sen. Kennedy's death deprives Democrats of the
60 votes needed to move legislation forward. The effort to reconcile
health overhaul bills passed by the House and Senate is stalled.

-March 2010: Democratic leaders in Congress employ parliamentary
maneuvers in hopes of enabling passage of Obama's plan with a simple
majority in the Senate.

-March 21, 2010: On a 219-212 vote, House passes landmark legislation
aimed at extending insurance to 32 million people and achieving nearly
universal coverage.

-March 23, 2010: President Barack Obama signs the legislation into law.

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