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Articles of Interest

A doctor’s view: getting to real health care reform

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By Peter Mahr
The Oregonian
February 26, 2010

The Oregonian’s recent editorial on the president’s health care proposal is off base. The editorial board states that Barack Obama’s plan “includes essential elements of reform.” But there is no discussion of what elements are indeed essential when analyzing health care reform.

T.R. Reid, a one-time correspondent for The Washington Post and chief of its London and Tokyo bureaus, explored health care systems around the world in his book “The Healing of America.” He found that health care systems vary greatly but all wealthy industrialized countries build their systems on three essential elements. First, there is one system for everyone, regardless of age, wealth, employment, race or health status. This results in administrative efficiency, cost control and fundamental fairness. Second, all other developed nations have health care financing that is not-for-profit. Their health insurance systems are not allowed to profit in the provision of necessary health services. This eliminates the fundamental conflict of interest that insurance companies face in our system: In order to profit, they deny access to care, bar sick members or refuse payment of services. Finally, the third basic principle is that all other developed nations with health care systems provide true universal access to health care services. Nobody is uninsured. Nobody is denied access if unable to pay.

Obama’s health care proposal does not include any of the basic principles for true reform. Our inefficient, expensive patchwork system of health insurance would be maintained. For-profit financing would continue in the private insurance market while individuals and employers would be forced to buy it. Finally, there is no guarantee of universal coverage. Millions would be left without insurance and millions more would face financial hardship in payment of their premiums, deductibles and out-of-pocket payments.

The Oregonian has a responsibility to its readers to provide factual and analytical information. Since all other industrialized countries provide true universal access to necessary health services at roughly half the cost than we do, it is common sense to tease out common principles that make their systems work. T.R. Reid has done this for us and clearly exposes great problems with Obama’s proposal. It is The Oregonian’s responsibility to inform it’s readers of these weaknesses and suggest alternatives.

One alternative that includes all three elements of reform is single-payer national health insurance — Medicare for all. By scrapping our patchwork system and improving and expanding Medicare to all, administrative costs would plummet due to increased efficiency of the payment system, the conflict of interest between paying for medical services and making a profit would be eliminated and everyone, all Americans, would have access to all necessary medical services regardless of ability to pay. The Oregonian has a responsibility to make this known to its readers. In blindly supporting a reform that lacks any of the basic components required for a functioning health care system while ignoring a reform that includes all of these elements, The Oregonian has failed to truly inform the public.

Peter Mahr is a Portland physician and a member of Physicians for a National Health Program.

http://www.oregonlive.com/opinion/index.ssf/2010/02/a_doctors_view_getting_to_real.html

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