(Bloomberg) — Powerful hospital and medical school lobbying groups are spending at least $1 million on television ads opposing Senate Republicans' plan to change the Affordable Care Act.
The ads ask viewers to consider whether they'll be among the millions of Americans projected to lose their health coverage under the Senate proposal, Rick Pollack, chief executive officer of the American Hospital Association, said Tuesday in a conference call with reporters.
The bill, which Republicans have put on hold until after the July 4 recess amid growing opposition within their own party, would leave an additional 22 million people in the U.S. without insurance, the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office estimated. Hospitals have a lot to lose under the current version of the bill, and the AHA, which represents about 5,000 institutions, last week told GOP senators to "go back to the drawing board."
"This bill would take us back in time, leaving over 20 million uninsured and creating a system that is not available or accessible to everyone," Sister Carol Keehan, CEO of the Catholic Health Association, said on the call. The hospital groups, along with the Association of American Medical Colleges, are members of the Coalition to Protect America's Health Care, which is paying for the ad campaign.