President Bush laid out his prescription for what ails the nation's health care system on a trip to Dublin, Ohio, Wednesday. The president made his case for health savings accounts at Wendy's International Inc., where 9,000 employees have signed up for the accounts since the hamburger giant began offering them last year. "After more than five years of health care costs going at double-digit rates, Wendy's overall health care costs rose only by 1 percent last year," Bush said. In pushing health savings accounts, Bush said people will become more responsible shoppers because they'll pay more of the initial costs of their health care. But there's a catch: To qualify, a person also must buy a separate health insurance policy with a high deductible. Such policies require individuals to pay the first $1,050 in medical expenses a year; families have to pay the first $2,100. Some policies carry higher deductibles. Bush wants to let consumers put enough money in their health savings accounts to cover all their health insurance costs, not just the deductibles, as provided by current law. This would allow them to set aside more money tax-free.