Earlier today, I joined First Lady Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden to  discuss how the Affordable Care Act will give millions of Americans  access to preventive care through their private health insurance.
Today, too many Americans today aren't getting the preventive health  care they need. Right now, for example, 59 million adults and 11 million  children depend on private health insurance that doesn't adequately  cover immunizations. And 12 percent of children haven't visited a doctor  in the last year. 
The statistics are even more troubling in our minority communities.  African-American mothers are 2.5 times as likely as white mothers to  begin prenatal care in the 3rd trimester, or not receive it at all. And  only 37 percent of Latinos were screened for colon cancer in 2007,  compared to 57 percent of whites. 
Our challenge is to remove the obstacles between patients getting the  preventive services that they need to stay healthy. If we fail in this  challenge, we all pay the price. If we succeed -- we are on our way to a  healthier nation. According to one study, if people got just five types  of preventive services when they needed to -- colorectal and breast  cancer screening, flu vaccines, counseling to help them quit smoking,  and regular aspirin use to prevent strokes -- we could avert 100,000  deaths each year. Use of preventive services can also help bring costs  down in a variety of ways. For example, people who are obese have health  care costs that are 39 percent above average, and reducing obesity and  the diseases related to it could lower premiums overall by 0.05 to 0.1  percent. 
Those are just a few of the reasons why President Obama has made  improving access to preventive care a priority from his first day in  office and why we released new rules requiring all new private health  insurance plans with plan years beginning on or after September 23, 2010  to cover recommended preventive services without cost-sharing when  delivered by a network provider. The new rules mean that services like  blood pressure, diabetes and cholesterol tests, cancer screenings,  routine vaccinations, and well-baby visits will be provided without a  deductible, co-pay or co-insurance. 
We know that eliminating these costs for regular preventive services  can ensure more Americans will use these services. And we know these  services can save lives. 
At the announcement yesterday, we met Maggie Roberts from California.  When Maggie's son was just a toddler, he was diagnosed with cancer  during a routine checkup. Because they caught it early, the cancer was  successfully treated, and years later he is still cancer-free. It's a  powerful story of how important preventive care can be. 
You can learn more about the new preventive benefits available under  the law, and get more tips on how to stay healthy by visiting our new  website, www.HealthCare.gov. 
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