We need to build resilience together, rooted in religion, rooted in schools, rooted in our health care institutions.

Health care is a human right, and single-payer health care will deliver quality, affordable care to every Illinoisan.

I am hopeful for the American people that we can actually improve the outlook for bringing down costs in health care.

Health care costs blunt the competitive edge of American entrepreneurs, from the auto industry to internet start-ups.

When enacted, health care reform provides generous tax credits to help people afford their health insurance premiums.

We need to have our conservative version of what health care looks like, and that will include a repeal of Obamacare.

The basic right to quality and affordable health care is under assault by Donald Trump and Republicans in Washington.

Health care in Denmark is universal, free of charge and high quality. Everybody is covered as a right of citizenship.

The cellphone is humanity's biggest platform. If we can't use it to change education or health care, then shame on us.

We believe in government involvement that leads to independence: good schools, quality roads and the best health care.

President Obama's health care law raided Medicare in the tune of five hundred million dollars to create a new program.

We are a system where I can tell you that nobody is doing more for behavioral health care in this country than the VA.

I don't support ObamaCare and see it as a step backward that entrenches the power of the private health care industry.

Health care needs are paramount after a disaster, and medical personnel fight against time to reach and assist victims.

Forty states have sued tobacco companies over the costs of health care for residents on Medicaid and public assistance.

I will continue to work to maintain Planned Parenthood's ability to provide excellent health care to millions of women.

Rising health care costs make it impossible to plan for the future, and that means it's impossible to hire more people.

Hillary Clinton wants to see that all Americans have the right to choose a public option in their health care exchange.

Part of me thinks that innovation, real innovation in health care delivery, needs to happen from the bottom to the top.

The world cannot continue to build larger health care systems where you just sit around and wait for people to get sick.

Whatever we do, it is definitely time that we reboot the health care reform attempt. It's time to completely start over.

No mother, or father, should despair over whether or not they can afford - or access - the health care their child needs.

Women are half the population and they know how to take care of themselves, if they are only given access to health care.

I believe health care is a right, not a privilege, not something only the wealthiest 1 percent can afford it should have.

Obama had the wherewithal to muscle through an entire health care reorganization, right? Like it, don't like it, whatever.

I don't think it's government's job to find health care for people. I think it's the individual's job to find health care.

The simple truth is that the implementation of Obamacare has hurt Americans and their health care more than it has helped.

A considerable share of the world's population still cannot afford comfortable housing, education and quality health care.

Let's make health care a meritocracy. Access to the best care goes to people who did what they could to avoid becoming ill.

Nigeria has moved into low-middle-income, but their north is very poor, and the health care systems there have broken down.

Single payer means something different to everyone. The way I define it is that health care is a right and not a privilege.

In health care, the biggest imperative is: Fix those who cannot get insurance without changing the world for everyone else.

I'm intending to work on juvenile justice reform, sentencing reform, reentry, drug treatment, access to mental health care.

I call this 'boss Obamacare.' The only health care that citizens of this country can access are those approved by the boss.

Governor Kasich and I won't agree on everything, but agree we've got to control the rise in health care costs on all levels.

Like health care, education is something worth spending on and worth investing in, but we're spending more and getting less.

To ensure a bright and healthy future for hardworking Georgians, we must increase access to quality, affordable health care.

In health care today, we spend most of the dollars - in terms of treating disease - in the last two years of a person's life.

Quality health care services must be accessible and affordable for all - not just those in certain ZIP codes or tax brackets.

When I was a single, working mom with a newborn, I learned just how vital it is to have comprehensive, affordable health care.

I'm against the president's health care law because I don't agree that it's going to achieve its goals. I believe in the goals.

It is, I guess, politically correct, widely believed, that to say that American health care is the best in the world. It's not.

I don't want to suggest that controlling pharmaceutical costs is the answer to what ails the U.S. health care system. It isn't.

If Charlton Heston can have a constitutional right carry a rifle, why can't grandma have a constitutional right to health care?

For most women, including women who want to have children, contraception is not an option; it is a basic health care necessity.

The myopic obsession of the Tea Party with destroying health care reform and wounding the president has led Republicans astray.

My legacy is going to be in affordable health care. I am willing to invest in developing that model and the policies around it.

Everyone knows that my key drivers to moving health care policies is improving access and reducing costs and improving outcomes.

Progressive activists are angry that a Medicare-for-all single-payer approach was totally ignored during the health care debate.

The subsidy for employer-sponsored coverage has tethered health care to employment in a way that virtually no economist endorses.

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