Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Jay Paul Gumm
Assistant Majority Leader
Senate District 6
Bryan, Johnston, Atoka, Coal and Marshall Counties
Print Article
For Immediate
Release: December 14, 2006
Senator Jay Paul Gumm
Gumm Re-Files Measure to Protect Women
OKLAHOMA CITY – A bill by Senator Jay
Paul Gumm would give
the Oklahoma Legislature another chance to protect women left out
of a state law governing small group health insurance policies.
Under current Oklahoma law, every health insurance
policy – no
matter how small the group – must cover prostate examinations
for men. There is, however, no requirement that obstetrical/gynecological
examinations for women be covered by health insurance group policies
with 50 or fewer members.
Gumm, a Democrat from Durant, has – for the second year – introduced
legislation to strike that inequity from the law. Senate Bill 11
would, if passed, ensure Oklahoma’s women covered by small
group health insurance policies are treated fairly under state
law.
“A conservative businessman in my district – a business owner who
would be affected by this change – brought this to my attention,” said
Gumm. “He and I share the unshakable belief that this statute is fundamentally
unfair to Oklahoma’s women.”
That unfairness could lead to unnecessary suffering and death.
The kind of early detection state law mandates for men – but
not women – is considered the key to beating cancer, he said.
“If the bill passes and all policies are required to cover these examinations
for women, we give them a chance detect life-threatening cancer and begin early
treatment to defeat the disease,” Gumm said.
"Ultimately, I believe
this change would reduce medical costs to women and their insurers
and – more
importantly – save lives, which is good news for everyone.”
Conversely, Gumm said, failure to pass the measure
would keep Oklahoma’s
women and their families at risk unnecessarily. “Any cancer
that strikes a woman has more victims than just her,” he
said.
"Children could face a future without a mother, and a father
may have to raise his children alone. A woman fighting cancer is
someone’s daughter.
She is a sister, a wife, a mother and a friend. We certainly owe
Oklahoma’s
families better than what current law provides.”
In 2006, Gumm introduced an identical bill. After passing the Senate
on a bipartisan vote, the measure died in the Republican-controlled
House of Representatives without so much as a hearing in committee.
The lawmaker said he simply fails to understand why anyone – regardless
of party affiliation – would not enthusiastically support
a bill to give a majority of the population the same protection
men have. Census figures indicate women comprise 50.6 percent of
Oklahoma’s population.
“Ensuring state law is fair to a majority of our population should not
be a partisan issue – and it certainly wasn’t a partisan issue
in the Senate,” said Gumm. “We have a responsibility to do the
right thing, and passage of this legislation is the right thing.”
For more information, contact:
Senator Gumm's Office: (405) 521-5586

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