Access to health care is a complex matter, ranging from availability of health professionals in one’s community to many barriers to care, such as racial/ethnic, geographic, and literacy factors. But as the costs of health care surge ever higher, the financial barrier to care has clearly become the biggest impediment of all. Having insurance used to offer some protection against this barrier, but does so less all the time as the numbers of uninsured and underinsured grow.
As we saw in our last post, the health insurance industry claims, through AHIP, its national trade group, “to expand access to high-quality, cost-effective health care to all Americans.” Let’s examine how well the industry does in meeting that goal.
For many, it’s hard to imagine that at one time health insurance really did assure access to care. Yet at one time, in the early years of the industry, people were insured without regard to pre-existing conditions or their claims experience. Prior to the 1960s, such medical underwriting practices were considered unethical. Reasonable coverage was provided to all comers for community-rated premiums. Today, most insurers try to select healthier enrollees and avoid exposure to higher-risk enrollees and their higher costs of care. To find the last time Americans could depend on health insurance to assure access to care, one has to go back in history at least 40 years; those days are long gone.
The track record of the industry makes it obvious that it can never expand access to care for all Americans. How can AHIP leaders keep a straight face in continuing to proclaim such a mission in view of these inconvenient facts?
These inconvenient truths expose the industry’s goal of expanding access to care as just one more example of self-serving rhetoric without any basis in fact. Just what do we get for continuing to prop up this industry? That’s the subject of the next post.
Adapted from Do Not Resuscitate: Why the Health Insurance Industry is Dying, and How We Must Replace It, forthcoming, August 2008 by John Geyman. With permission of the publisher, Common Courage Press.
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We at PNHP are terribly saddened to report the sudden and unexpected loss of our senior research associate, Nicholas Skala, who died on August, 8th, 2009. Nick was one of our nation’s most gifted and dedicated advocates for single-payer national health insurance. We invite you to share your memories and experiences of Nick while we redouble our efforts to bring about his vision.