Felice, Clara and Lambkros, Litsa. “Medical Liability in Three Single-Payer Countries” (2004)
Canadian Malpractice Fee Schedule for 2005, The Canadian Medical Protective Association.
The following text is the testimony that Dr. Margaret Flowers presented to the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform at its June 30 hearing in Washington. Dr. Flowers is congressional fellow for Physicians for a National Health Program.
I am Dr. Margaret Flowers and I am here today on behalf of Physicians for a National Health Program, the leading physician research, education and advocacy organization in support of a truly universal single-payer health system in the United States. I will speak specifically about the contribution of health care costs to our national deficit and the evidence-based remedy to control these costs.
When compared to health care in other advanced nations, the United States excels in only one area – the amount of money spent per capita per year. Despite our high spending, the U.S. leaves a third of the population either uncovered or underinsured and thus vulnerable to financial ruin.
Medical debt is a leading cause of bankruptcy and foreclosure in our nation despite the fact that most families declaring medical bankruptcy had insurance when they began incurring such debt.
Our health outcomes are relatively poor, placing us 37th in the world, and we rank the highest in preventable deaths, over 100,000 preventable deaths per year, when compared to other advanced nations. It is clear that we are getting poor value in return for our health care dollar.
Health care costs, which are rising 2.5 percent faster than our GDP, are a leading driver of our financial deficit. In fact, if our health care costs were comparable to those in other advanced nations, which provide nearly universal health care with better outcomes, we would currently experience a budget surplus.
The recent health legislation, misleadingly titled the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), lacks proven cost controls and is predicted to cause U.S. health care costs to rise faster than if there had been no reform at all (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, April 2010) despite continuing to leave tens of millions out.
Given the impact of health care costs, members of this commission may attempt to decrease the deficit by cutting our public health insurance programs, Medicaid and Medicare; however, doing this would be a mistake because it would increase poverty, worsen health outcomes and increase costs.
Since its enactment nearly 45 years ago, Medicare has substantially lowered poverty among the elderly. Studies show that health disparities in the U.S. start decreasing when our population reaches the age of 65. And the cost of health care per beneficiary is rising more slowly for those on Medicare than for those with private health insurance.
Medicaid and Medicare have not caused our rising health care costs but are victims of our fragmented and failed market-based model of health care financing. Shifting the cost of health care from the taxpayer to the patient will not magically make these health care costs disappear or become sustainable.
The solution to our economic crisis is to jettison the costly failed market model of health care and adopt a publicly financed and independently delivered national improved Medicare for All. This is commonly known as “single payer.” A national improved Medicare for All system has myriad benefits:
* Administrative savings of approximately $400 billion per year, which is enough to provide comprehensive high quality health care to all who are uninsured and underinsured.
* Ability to negotiate for pharmaceutical prices as a monopsony which would lower costs by about 40 percent and bring our prices in line with those of other advanced nations.
* Inherent cost controls of global budgeting for health facilities, negotiated fees, bulk purchasing and rational, rather than profit-driven, allocation of capital expenditures and health resources.
* Ability to identify outliers and develop quality improvement tools.
* Eliminate the burden of rising employee health care costs on businesses.
* Enhance the competitiveness of U.S. products in international markets.
* Liberate our population to pursue advanced education or entrepreneurial enterprises.
* Allow older workers to retire which would increase job opportunities for our younger workers.
* Stimulate the economy because families would have more money for discretionary spending.
* Improve the health, and therefore the productivity, of our workforce.
* Eliminate bankruptcy and foreclosure due to medical debt.
* Eliminate the spend-down required for those who need long-term care funded by Medicaid.
* Provide true health security to our population so that nobody has to choose between necessary medical care and other necessities such as housing, food, education and clothing.
Given these multiple economic benefits – and I have not begun to describe the ways in which national improved Medicare for All would improve patient choice and quality of health care – it is no surprise that the single payer approach is supported by the majority of those in the U.S. and the majority of American physicians. This was evident once again last Saturday in the town meetings sponsored by America Speaks when participants across the nation demanded single payer as an option to solving the health care crisis and 71 percent voted not to cut Medicaid and Medicare.
Private health insurance is rapidly becoming a thing of the past. There is a steady trend in fewer people being enrolled in employee-sponsored health plans. This is expected to increase under PPACA as businesses have an incentive to drop insurance benefits and pay the lower cost penalty.
There is a steady trend in people choosing high deductible plans which leave them financially vulnerable in their time of need. As people enter the individual market, those with health conditions will find it difficult to afford adequate insurance.
The trends for those who are uninsured and underinsured will continue upward. Under PPACA, billions of public dollars will be used to subsidize rising private insurance premiums for policies that cover fewer and fewer services. The result is a flow of patient and public dollars into the coffers of private insurance corporations with declining return in terms of health care. This trend is not sustainable.
The alternative scenario of a national improved Medicare for All will save lives and save money. National improved Medicare for All will place our nation on the path of becoming one of the best health systems in the world – something of which we can all be proud.
This commission has the ability to recommend creating a financially sustainable universal health system. I urge the members of this commission to recommend addressing the deficit through adopting this most popular approach: national improved Medicare for All. Don’t cut Medicare. Protect it, improve it and expand it to cover everyone.
Why Consumers Disenroll from Medicare Private Health Plans
Medicare Rights Center
Summer 2010
This report analyzes data and case notes from the 475 cases presented in 2009 by consumers who called us about disenrolling from Medicare private health plans.
Reasons for Disenrollment (percentage of calls)
24.8% – Provider access problems
21.5% – Misinformation/marketing abuse
19.4% – Coverage problems for medical services
19.4% – Systems/data transfer problems
8.6% – Cost-sharing too high
7.2% – Part D coverage problems
3.2% – Premium increase
Provider Access Problems
The consumer problems in this category incorporate a wide range of provider access issues. They include general complaints and lack of understanding about the limits on provider access imposed by network-based plans, as well as specific concerns, such as the potential interruption of a valued relationship with a doctor who is being dropped from the plan’s network. Provider access problems are often prompted by an acute episode of illness or diagnosis; consumers seek to disenroll when their current plan will not cover care from a home health agency, skilled nursing or other rehabilitation facility, or from a particular specialist, such as a facility or doctor specializing in cancer treatment. This category also includes cases where consumers were misinformed about the limits on provider access before joining.
Disenrollment Due to Cancer
Cancer diagnoses are implicated in a relatively small percentage — less than 5 percent — of the disenrollments, but these cases are some of the most heart-wrenching and most difficult to resolve for Medicare Rights Center caseworkers.
The majority of cancer disenrollment cases — 63.6 percent — however, involve provider access. The limitations of the private plan networks become apparent after the consumer is referred to a hospital or cancer specialist that is out of network. Treatment of rare or advanced cancers in particular triggers referrals to specialty facilities, such as M. D. Anderson in Houston or Memorial Sloan-Kettering in New York City. During the open enrollment periods, the disenrollments are generally effective the following month. When a person is diagnosed with cancer outside of the open enrollment periods, however, rules that lock consumers into their Medicare Advantage plans for the year generally prevent disenrollment (unless the case also concerns misrepresentation or marketing fraud, as is sometimes the case), and therefore may impede access to the most appropriate cancer treatment facility.
http://www.medicarerights.org/pdf/Why-Consumers-Disenroll-from-MA.pdf
This survey does not quantify the extent of patient dissatisfaction with Medicare Advantage plans since it was limited to individuals calling the Medicare Rights Center to find out about disenrolling from the private Medicare Advantage plans. But it does provide us with an understanding of why patients want out of their plans. First and foremost patients complain of a “lack of understanding about the limits on provider access imposed by network-based plans.”
The second most common complaint was about misinformation and marketing abuse. This was the primary reason for provider access complaints – the Medicare beneficiaries did not understand that their access would be limited to physicians in plan networks.
This has certainly been infuriating for those who have lost their choice of physicians by enrolling in the Medicare Advantage plans, but it has much greater implications under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Virtually all plans will have network-based restrictions.
President Obama promised us choice of health plans, but the marketing of his proposal was silent on the fact that virtually all of the plans would have limited access – limited choice of physicians and hospitals – because of provider network restrictions.
With the traditional Medicare program, everyone has free choice of their health care professionals and institutions. That should have been a prime goal of health care reform. It still can be should we decide to enact a single payer national health program – an improved Medicare for everyone.
The video presentation by Dr. Fein is no longer available. It has been removed from the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center’s website.
National Health Insurance for the U.S.: Has its time come?
By Oliver Fein, MD – Weill Medical College of Cornell University
Presented June 11, 2010 at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
The video presentation by Dr. Fein is no longer available. It has been removed from the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center’s website.
National Health Insurance for the U.S.: Has its time come?
By Oliver Fein, MD – Weill Medical College of Cornell University
Presented June 11, 2010 at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
By David Himmelstein, Kip Sullivan & Steffie Woolhandler
PNHP 2010 Spring Newsletter
The single-payer model precludes private insurance that duplicates the public coverage – a measure required both to control costs and to avoid the emergence of two-class care. The question of how to treat nonprofit, staff- and group-model HMOs is complex because they combine a nonprofit provider of care (clearly acceptable in a single-payer model) with a private insurance plan (which is not acceptable). After much debate, PNHP decided to include such organizations in its proposals, but with tight restrictions to minimize the problems inherent in the insurance component of HMOs.
Because the term “HMO” has been used to cover a wide variety of insurers, it is important that legislation clearly define the parameters for HMOs that could participate in a single-payer system, and spell out the restrictions on participating HMOs. Failing this, private insurers would surely exploit any exemption for HMOs to maintain their stranglehold on the health care system.
Both PNHP’s proposals and H.R. 676 (the single-payer legislation sponsored by Rep. John Conyers; you can find the legislation on the PNHP website at: https://pnhp.org) have spelled out the key features that distinguish HMOs allowed to continue under a single-payer system from those that would be proscribed. Specifically, participating plans must:
(1) be nonprofit;
(2) “actually deliver care in their own facilities” through salaried
physicians who are employees (not contractors) of the HMO;
(3) not use their capitation or budget payments to cover hospital services (hospital services would be paid for through a global budget paid directly to the hospital); and
(4) not offer financial incentives based on utilization.
Very few HMOs will qualify under this definition.
When single-payer supporters in California drafted single-payer legislation (the current version is S.B. 810), they inserted language into the bill that was intended to exempt Kaiser Permanente. However, the language used in the bill leaves the door open to many private insurance firms who could label themselves “integrated health care delivery systems,” “independent practice associations,” or “integrated service networks” and hence qualify them to receive global budgets or capitation payments from the single payer.
The potential for confusion was illustrated in Minnesota where legislators introduced legislation (S.F. 2324 / H.F. 2522) modeled on SB 840 (the predecessor to S.B. 810) in May 2007. The drafters stated their intention to exclude private health plans, including HMOs. However, an analysis by the research office for the Democratic Farmer Labor Party caucus in the Minnesota House of Representatives stated that the bill did permit “health plans” to participate.
To avoid confusion, and the possibility that private insurers could slip through a loophole, we recommend that any single-payer legislation that proposes to exempt HMOs use either H.R. 676’s definition of “HMO” or a similarly narrow and specific definition.
By Avery Johnson
The Wall Street Journal
July 1, 2010
Health insurer WellPoint Inc. is backing off its plan to increase prices by as much as 39% for individuals in California, instead seeking rates for this year that it said would result in a $100 million loss for the company there.
On Wednesday, WellPoint’s Anthem Blue Cross unit told the California Insurance Department that it wants to increase prices for individual policyholders by an average of 14%, down from the 25% average it had previously sought.
“The actual rates we would need are higher than this, but we made a business decision to get a rate implemented,” said Brian Sassi, WellPoint’s president and chief executive of its consumer business unit.
Wellpoint had been hammered for months by the Obama administration and consumer advocates over the size of its initial rate proposal. Angela Braly, its chief executive, and other insurance executives contend that the rising cost of care and demands for higher reimbursement from providers are driving premiums—and that the federal health-overhaul law didn’t do enough to control costs.
WellPoint plans to file 2011 rates in California that do cover costs, they said.
Len Nichols, a health economist at George Mason University, said that WellPoint has “been asserting the point that, ‘You’ve got to understand we can’t control costs.’ And that point has been made, and the message has been heard.”
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704334604575339284211797328.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
Don McCanne, MD
After withdrawing a request for an average 25 percent increase in premiums for individual health plans in California, Anthem Blue Cross is now asking for an average 14 percent increase, which they claim will result in a loss that they will make up with 2011 premium increases. With medical inflation, a further increase in adverse selection, and an adjustment to eliminate losses, next year’s premium increases will be even more intolerable.
The Obama administration and members of Congress are critical of these increases, blaming Anthem Blue Cross for excessive profits – as if a $100 million loss in this market somehow reflects egregious profits (though, of necessity, they are profitable in other markets).
Obama and Congress are totally off target when they blame the private insurers. The private insurance model does not and cannot work to control costs and insure everyone, no matter how much market advocates wish it could. It is Obama and Congress who bear much of the blame because they were the ones who decided to keep the private insurers in charge.
Although we can blame our elected leaders now, if we don’t communicate to them clearly that they must bring us the reform that we need – a single payer national health program – then we will be left with only ourselves to blame.
By Katie Robbins
The following text is the testimony that Katie Robbins, national organizer for Healthcare NOW (www.healthcare-now.org), presented to the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform on June 30 in Washington.
Thank you for this opportunity to testify. My name is Katie Robbins and I am here on behalf of Healthcare NOW, an organization founded in 2004 to support bill H.R. 676, “the U.S. National Health Care Act” or Expanded and Improved Medicare for All. With membership in 50 states, Healthcare NOW has broad support for single-payer health care.
Healthcare NOW opposes any consideration of cutting, privatizing or raising age eligibility for Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.
We seek to strengthen, not weaken, our social safety net. If passed, H.R. 676 would establish a national single-payer Medicare for All system granting everyone in the United States access to comprehensive, high-quality health care using our existing privately run infrastructure and a progressive financing that will guarantee coverage for all necessary medical care without financial or other barriers.
According to Harvard University studies, eliminating the waste of the multi-payer private insurance industry and moving to a single-payer system will save $400 billion a year. More savings are found in cost controls that a single-payer system can provide such as negotiating drug costs and medical equipment, and global budgeting for hospitals.
Since H.R. 676 was introduced in 2003, it has received tremendous support including endorsements by 582 union organizations in 49 states, the U.S. Conference of Mayors, 63 local governments which include 10 of the nation’s 30 largest cities, the Episcopal Church, the United Methodist Church, the Presbyterian Church, the Unitarian Universalist Church, the Union for Reform Judaism, the United Church of Christ, and the Buddhist Peace Fellowship, and the majority of nurses, patients, and physicians.
Broad support for a single-payer Medicare for All system continues even after the new health law has passed. For example, this past Saturday, June 26, America Speaks, a privately run company, organized “town hall meetings” in 20 cities across the country to discuss the nation’s deficit. America Speaks received funding linked to the Peter Peterson Foundation; the same foundation which is also funding staff to this Fiscal Commission. (Peterson is known to be vocally in support of cutting and privatizing Social Security and Medicare.)
America Speaks claimed that all options would be considered, yet the materials distributed at the events did not include an option to support single-payer health care as a means of controlling health care costs. Despite efforts to silence support for single payer, many participants demanded the option to vote on a single-payer type health care system, which would ultimately reduce costs by making health care more efficient rather than just cutting services in Medicare and other public sector programs. Participants also voted overwhelmingly for defense cuts and for progressive taxation.
Because cost controls are notably absent from the new health law, the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform should listen to what the public is urging them to do, and address meaningful cost control in our health care system, which only a single-payer system can provide, as a means to balance the nation’s budget.
We urge you to address cost controls immediately. Healthcare NOW and our network of supporters and allied organizations urge Congress to work to defeat any bill to cut, privatize or dismantle our social safety net – Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. We demand the enactment of an expanded and improved Medicare for All, H.R. 676, to fix our economy and our (still) broken health care system.
By Katie Robbins
The following text is the testimony that Katie Robbins, national organizer for Healthcare NOW (www.healthcare-now.org), presented to the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform on June 30 in Washington.
Thank you for this opportunity to testify. My name is Katie Robbins and I am here on behalf of Healthcare NOW, an organization founded in 2004 to support bill H.R. 676, “the U.S. National Health Care Act” or Expanded and Improved Medicare for All. With membership in 50 states, Healthcare NOW has broad support for single-payer health care.
Healthcare NOW opposes any consideration of cutting, privatizing or raising age eligibility for Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.
We seek to strengthen, not weaken, our social safety net. If passed, H.R. 676 would establish a national single-payer Medicare for All system granting everyone in the United States access to comprehensive, high-quality health care using our existing privately run infrastructure and a progressive financing that will guarantee coverage for all necessary medical care without financial or other barriers.
According to Harvard University studies, eliminating the waste of the multi-payer private insurance industry and moving to a single-payer system will save $400 billion a year. More savings are found in cost controls that a single-payer system can provide such as negotiating drug costs and medical equipment, and global budgeting for hospitals.
Since H.R. 676 was introduced in 2003, it has received tremendous support including endorsements by 582 union organizations in 49 states, the U.S. Conference of Mayors, 63 local governments which include 10 of the nation’s 30 largest cities, the Episcopal Church, the United Methodist Church, the Presbyterian Church, the Unitarian Universalist Church, the Union for Reform Judaism, the United Church of Christ, and the Buddhist Peace Fellowship, and the majority of nurses, patients, and physicians.
Broad support for a single-payer Medicare for All system continues even after the new health law has passed. For example, this past Saturday, June 26, America Speaks, a privately run company, organized “town hall meetings” in 20 cities across the country to discuss the nation’s deficit. America Speaks received funding linked to the Peter Peterson Foundation; the same foundation which is also funding staff to this Fiscal Commission. (Peterson is known to be vocally in support of cutting and privatizing Social Security and Medicare.)
America Speaks claimed that all options would be considered, yet the materials distributed at the events did not include an option to support single-payer health care as a means of controlling health care costs. Despite efforts to silence support for single payer, many participants demanded the option to vote on a single-payer type health care system, which would ultimately reduce costs by making health care more efficient rather than just cutting services in Medicare and other public sector programs. Participants also voted overwhelmingly for defense cuts and for progressive taxation.
Because cost controls are notably absent from the new health law, the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform should listen to what the public is urging them to do, and address meaningful cost control in our health care system, which only a single-payer system can provide, as a means to balance the nation’s budget.
We urge you to address cost controls immediately. Healthcare NOW and our network of supporters and allied organizations urge Congress to work to defeat any bill to cut, privatize or dismantle our social safety net – Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. We demand the enactment of an expanded and improved Medicare for All, H.R. 676, to fix our economy and our (still) broken health care system.
WellPoint Scales Back Rate Increases Sought in California
By Avery Johnson
The Wall Street Journal
July 1, 2010
Health insurer WellPoint Inc. is backing off its plan to increase prices by as much as 39% for individuals in California, instead seeking rates for this year that it said would result in a $100 million loss for the company there.
On Wednesday, WellPoint’s Anthem Blue Cross unit told the California Insurance Department that it wants to increase prices for individual policyholders by an average of 14%, down from the 25% average it had previously sought.
“The actual rates we would need are higher than this, but we made a business decision to get a rate implemented,” said Brian Sassi, WellPoint’s president and chief executive of its consumer business unit.
Wellpoint had been hammered for months by the Obama administration and consumer advocates over the size of its initial rate proposal. Angela Braly, its chief executive, and other insurance executives contend that the rising cost of care and demands for higher reimbursement from providers are driving premiums—and that the federal health-overhaul law didn’t do enough to control costs.
WellPoint plans to file 2011 rates in California that do cover costs, they said.
Len Nichols, a health economist at George Mason University, said that WellPoint has “been asserting the point that, ‘You’ve got to understand we can’t control costs.’ And that point has been made, and the message has been heard.”
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704334604575339284211797328.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
After withdrawing a request for an average 25 percent increase in premiums for individual health plans in California, Anthem Blue Cross is now asking for an average 14 percent increase, which they claim will result in a loss that they will make up with 2011 premium increases. With medical inflation, a further increase in adverse selection, and an adjustment to eliminate losses, next year’s premium increases will be even more intolerable.
The Obama administration and members of Congress are critical of these increases, blaming Anthem Blue Cross for excessive profits – as if a $100 million loss in this market somehow reflects egregious profits (though, of necessity, they are profitable in other markets).
Obama and Congress are totally off target when they blame the private insurers. The private insurance model does not and cannot work to control costs and insure everyone, no matter how much market advocates wish it could. It is Obama and Congress who bear much of the blame because they were the ones who decided to keep the private insurers in charge.
Although we can blame our elected leaders now, if we don’t communicate to them clearly that they must bring us the reform that we need – a single payer national health program – then we will be left with only ourselves to blame.
By Kay Lazar
The Boston Globe
June 30, 2010
The number of people who appear to be gaming the state’s health insurance system by purchasing coverage only when they are sick quadrupled from 2006 to 2008, according to a long-awaited report released yesterday from the Massachusetts Division of Insurance.
The result is that insured residents of Massachusetts wind up paying more for health care, according to the report.
“The active members subsidize some of the costs tied to those individuals who terminate within one year,” the report says.
Report:
http://www.mass.gov/Eoca/docs/doi/Companies/adverse_selection_report.pdf
By Don McCanne, MD
During the reform process the concern was expressed repeatedly that an individual mandate – requiring individuals to purchase their own health insurance – would result in gaming the system. People would enroll when they needed expensive care, and then drop out after the care was completed. The experience in Massachusetts has demonstrated that it did not take long for the public to learn this game, for this is precisely what has happened. Nevertheless, the individual mandate is now the law of the land.
Options being considered to reduce this form of adverse selection include, as examples, allowing open enrollment for only one month per year, or increasing the penalty for remaining uninsured. Although such measures might reduce this tendency to game the system, they will not eliminate it.
It is the structure of the financing system that is fundamentally flawed. It cannot be fixed merely by tweaking the mandate, nor by tweaking the thousands of other provisions in this dysfunctional system. It needs to be replaced with a structurally sound system.
With a single payer national health program the issue of an individual mandate would be moot since everyone would be enrolled, automatically, throughout life.
By HELEN REDMOND
Counterpunch, June 29, 2010
Liberals are on a mission to convince a skeptical public the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (known by the last three letters, ACA) should not only be supported, it’s actually a good piece of legislation, a step in the right direction. Nothing could be further from the truth.
In their article on the website Salon.com last month titled “A Practical Guide Forward for Progressives on Health Care,” authors Ellen R. Shaffer and Judy Norsigian admonish health care activists, particularly supporters of single-payer, for not enthusiastically promoting the ACA. Then they warn if we don’t stop “simmering” because we’re “convinced that it [the ACA] did too much for private insurers and too little for average Americans,” we’re playing into the “right’s hand.”
It is incomprehensible how two long-standing feminists, articulate champions of a women’s right to control their bodies, Norsigian’s Our Bodies Ourselves — a seminal book that launched the movement for women’s rights in health care — could compromise away their core values and beliefs and shill for a piece of legislation that further restricts women’s reproductive rights. The Stupak-Pitts Amendment should have been an automatic deal breaker for anyone pro-choice. In a second slap in the face to women, President Obama signed an executive order ensuring no federal money could be used for elective abortions even though the Hyde Amendment already guarantees it. Shaffer and Norsigian should have been outraged at Obama’s placating of anti-abortion fanatics. These fierce advocates for women’s health should have publicly denounced and withdrawn their support for the misogynist legislation. Instead, they supported the Democrats who bargained away a woman’s right to control her own body to rabid Blue Dogs and religious plankton, thus eroding abortion rights even further.
No mention of the restriction on abortion in their article (except to say they were “disappointed”), or the life changing impact it will have on women, especially poor women. Instead they recommend: “Progressives should appreciate that he [Obama] overcame obstacles that have sunk every reform effort over the past 10 years and managed to sign a bill into law.”
Shaffer and Norsigian, in one of America’s longest and most politically toxic traditions aimed exclusively at the left, tell us to suck it up, stop criticizing the president, the Democratic Party and inadequate legislation no matter how disgusted or disappointed you feel. Or else! Or else you, yes you the two women write, are “… handing control of the country back to the most extremist Republican Party in history.”
Really? More extreme than Reagan or the Bushes?
When Democrats in power sell out to corporate interests, pass legislation that falls far short of campaign promises and their populist rhetoric resonates less and less with an angry electorate, “progressives” in the Democratic Party set themselves two tasks: scare and spin. They create panic and fear of the Republican Party regaining congressional seats, the presidency and exaggerate, lie (or lies of omission) about the effects of reform legislation.
The passage of the ACA is a classic example. In the end, desperate for a victory no matter how hollow, establishment liberals were willing to concede anything in order to pass anything.
Norsigian and Shaffer assert the insurance industry is “predatory, dishonest and parasitic” and admit “we would be better off without it.” They’re right, but they don’t believe it’s possible to put them out of business. Instead, we must always and everywhere be vigilant, forever engaged in thousands of battles against every insurer, in every state, as well as ready to fight with employers who eliminate benefits, increase cost sharing, discriminate against women or drop coverage.
These separate battles have been going on for decades. It’s a divide and conquer loser strategy. The predatory, dishonest and parasitic insurance industry has to be eliminated. That is the lesson we have learned the hard way over decades in this country and that is the prerequisite to create the health care system Norsigian and Shaffer say they want. Yet the authors were not active in the nation-wide, grassroots single-payer movement. Instead they supported the public option: another dead end proposal and diversion from the struggle for single-payer.
Their article struggles unconvincingly and in a patronizing tone to convince those of us who wanted fundamental change (single-payer) to abandon that goal and work to improve the ACA.
Norsigian and Shaffer tell us there are four myths about the legislation that have duped us into less than sanguine support of ACA.
Myth: “Progressive activists should ignore or undermine the new law which will get us to single payer more quickly.”
Single-payer activists aren’t ignoring the new law, we are vocal critics of it. We unapologetically opposed the passage of the ACA because it enriches and further entrenches the insurance industry. Our mission is to continue exposing insurance company abuses. It’s not hard to do because of their sheer audacity. A few days after the bill was signed, insurers argued coverage of children with disabilities wouldn’t begin immediately as President Obama had publicly announced. In Massachusetts, the predators tried to increase premiums up to 30 percent. This month Obama summoned the parasites to a private meeting at the Whitehouse and warned them not to use the bill “as an opportunity to enact unjustifiable rate increases that don’t boost care and inflate their bottom lines.” Does anyone believe the insurers won’t?
Ron Pollack of Families USA, Kathleen Sebelius, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the remnants of Health Care for America Now (HCAN) have launched a national campaign to sell the bill to the public. Single-payer supporters need to be similarly engaged but in the opposite direction, to expose and explain the not-so-fine print of the ACA: no caps on premiums; allows for gender rating in large group plans with more than 100 hundred employees; permits employers and insurers to charge three times more based on age and certain health conditions; Stupak-Pitts anti-abortion amendment; and millions of undocumented immigrants denied health care.
Myth: “The new law won’t save money because the insurance industry is still standing.”
The reality is the legislation cannot control costs. The cost drivers of the current system remain in place: no regulation on insurance premiums; excessive and wasteful administrative costs; Medicare forbidden to negotiate drug prices; and outrageous insurance and pharmaceutical profits.
Myth: “The insurance industry is still standing because President Obama made a backroom deal.”
Norsigan and Shaffer argue Obama made transparent-to the-public deals with the insurance and drug industries. What planet are they on? The fact is Obama, Kennedy, and Baucus met privately and made deals with America’s Health Insurance Plan’s (AHIP) CEO Karen Ignagi and Billy Tauzin, the former CEO of PhRMA. C’mon. The health industry spent $3 billion lobbying members of Congress from 2008-2009. That money buys behind the scenes access, influence and agreements. Like a thief in the night, Tauzin went to the Whitehouse and demanded and got from President Obama the extension of patents for biotech drugs to 12 years; no drug reimportation from Canada; and no negotiating for drug prices in the Medicare program. I don’t recall the health care summit at the Whitehouse with all the “players” at the table, cameras flashing and videos recording when that billion dollar deal
went down.
Myth: “The country is ready to go for a Medicare-for-all single-payer system, run by the government.”
The authors believe the public has “mixed feelings about the government.” Not according to numerous polls.
A Kaiser Poll in July, 2009 found 58 percent of Americans support “A national health plan in which all Americans would get their insurance through an expanded, universal form of Medicare for all.” Another Kaiser poll found 49 percent of Americans support “Having all Americans get their insurance from a single government plan.” Doctors want single-payer, too. In 2008, a survey of physicians in the Annals of Internal Medicine found 59% agreed either “strongly” or “generally” with the statement: “In principle, do you support or oppose government legislation to establish national health insurance.”
The authors have “mixed feelings” about a single-payer, government-run health system, it’s not the American people.
At the end of the article the authors assert, “With the new law, we have won policy space to further challenge corporate control, including control of the health care system.” Again, what planet are Shaffer and Norsigian on? How does giving the predatory, dishonest and parasitic insurance industry $447 billion in taxpayer money and a mandate to punish those who don’t buy their defective product help our side to challenge or control them?
John Nichols, a liberal writer for The Nation and some time supporter of single-payer, engages in scare and spin, too. In his article titled, “The Unexpected Winning Issue for Democrats: Healthcare,” he warns Republicans are gearing up to repeal the ACA. Nichols reports Republican Senate candidate Carly Fiorina still has a “Repeal It!” petition on her campaign website. We’re supposed to be afraid of that? Republican nutjob Ron Johnson who is challenging Russ Feingold is a credible threat to overturning the legislation because he asserts, “The health care bill is the greatest assault on our freedom in my lifetime. It must be repealed.” Please! LOL.
Scare tactics applied, Nichols goes on to celebrate a recent poll showing increased support for the ACA, “as imperfect as it may be.” Imperfect is an understatement. Moreover, he’s happy 51 percent of Americans trust Democrats to do a better job [than Republicans] of responding to health care issues. Should undocumented workers, women who want abortions and the 23 million who still won’t be insured in 2019 trust the Democrats?
Nichols counsels, “Smart Democrats will run as savvy backers of reform who talk about it as a first step…” The legislation is not a first step, it is a step backwards and to argue otherwise is simply dishonest.
Millions of Americans don’t support the bill because they don’t understand its implications (it’s 2000-pages and regulations are still be written), or they flat out reject the ACA because it doesn’t go far enough; it’s not change they can believe in. And those who oppose the bill are not all Teabaggers, either.
Ultimately for liberals like Shaffer, Norsigian and Nichols the reelection of Democrats trumps the needs of Americans literally dying for fundamental health care reform. Years from now when the ACA is completely discredited and understood as yet another failed attempt to reform the health care system, liberals that engaged in scare and spin tactics and provided cover for a very bad bill that betrays the majority of people will have much to answer for.
Helen Redmond is a single-payer activist with the Chicago Single-Payer Action Network. She can be reached at: redmondmadrid@yahoo.com