By Marc Bussanich
Labor Press, Dec. 12, 2013
NEW YORK CITY — U.S. Congressman John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.) introduced a bill in 2009 to establish a single-payer health system in the United States that would provide coverage to every single working American, similar to national health systems in Canada and the United Kingdom. The bill currently has 53 co-sponsors in Congress and Conyers hopes to have 150 on board before the current 113th Session of Congress ends on January 3, 2015.
He recently visited New York City and spoke about the bill’s status, H.R. 676 or commonly known as the Expanded & Improved Medicare for All Act, to single-payer advocates, physicians, union members and the New York City Central Labor Council, which passed a resolution in the summer supporting the legislation.
Conyers said it wouldn’t be easy building the necessary support in the Congress and among the public but that’s not dissuading him. He told participants at the event that it doesn’t matter to him how long it takes. He recalled that four days after Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated, he introduced a bill to make his birthday a national holiday.
“It took 15 years before Congress joined with me to make Dr. King’s birthday a national legal holiday. So I’m in this for the long run,” said Congressman Conyers.
As difficult as it might be to build additional support for a single-payer health system, especially after the implementation of President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act, Conyers said growing labor support for a national health system could be a game changer.
Mark Dudzic, a board member for Healthcare-NOW!, a national organization lobbying for a single-payer health system, said that the city’s CLC support will advance significantly the prospects of a national health care system in the United States.
“This is the largest central labor council in the United States and the fact they are now fully on board for single payer means we are going to win this fight,” said Dudzic.
According to Conyers, H.R. 676 would create a publicly financed, privately delivered healthcare system that uses the already existing Medicare program by expanding and improving it to all U.S. residents. Healthcare services covered include all medically necessary services such as primary care, inpatient care, prescription drugs, mental health services and substance abuse treatment, among others.
Advocates for a single-payer system, such as the Physicians for a National Health Program, say that the United States could realize substantial cost savings by transitioning away from a for-profit to a single-payer health plan. The organization recently cited on its website (http://bit.ly/1e5O3CA) a study by Gerald Friedman, a professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
According to Friedman, $476 billion in savings could be realized in the first-year of operation of a single-payer plan by slashing insurance companies’ administrative waste. A new public system’s sheer size would give it more bargaining muscle to negotiate lower prices for pharmaceutical drugs, yielding another $116 billion in savings.
David Sterrett of Public Citizen asked the Congressman during the event whether progressive members of Congress would recommit to supporting his bill now that the Affordable Care Act is law. Conyers believes so.
“We’ve got to remember that ACA can be changed and improved too. Once that becomes known, I think we’ll get a double benefit—more support for single payer and by doing that we’ll solve the inconsistencies of ACA,” Conyers said.
http://www.laborpress.org/sectors/health-and-safety/3120-rep-john-conyers-building-support-for-single-payer?utm_medium=email&utm_source=LaborPress&utm_campaign=3435253_December+12%2c+2013&utm_content=RepJohnConyersBuildingSupportforSinglePayer&dm_i=1JEK,21MNP,8G9SP9,7DA3O,1
Insurers using high drug cost sharing to scare away patients with expensive chronic disorders
AIDS advocates say drug coverage in some marketplace plans is inadequate
By Ariana Eunjung Cha
The Washington Post, December 9, 2013
The nation’s new health-care law says insurers can’t turn anyone away, even people who are sick. But some companies, patient advocates say, have found a way to discourage the chronically ill from enrolling in their plans: offer drug coverage too skimpy for those with expensive conditions.
Some plans sold on the online insurance exchanges, for instance, don’t cover key medications for HIV, or they require patients to pay as much as 50 percent of the cost per prescription in co-insurance — sometimes more than $1,000 a month.
“The fear is that they are putting discriminatory plan designs into place to try to deter certain people from enrolling by not covering the medications they need, or putting policies in place that make them jump through hoops to get care,” said John Peller, vice president of policy for the AIDS Foundation of Chicago.
As the details of the benefits offered by the new health-care plans become clear, patients with cancer, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis and autoimmune diseases also are raising concerns, said Marc Boutin, executive vice president of the National Health Council, a coalition of advocacy groups for the chronically ill.
“The easiest way [for insurers] to identify a core group of people that is going to cost you a lot of money is to look at the medicines they need and the easiest way to make your plan less appealing is to put limitations on these products,” Boutin said.
Insurers say that such accusations are unfounded, and that the drug coverage is more than adequate, with many plans exceeding the minimum levels required by the Affordable Care Act. But they acknowledge that to keep premiums low, they must restrict the use of some costly drugs if there are alternatives. And they say that when high-priced medications must be used, it’s reasonable to expect patients to pick up more of the cost.
But people who expected the new plans to provide pharmaceutical coverage comparable with that of employer-sponsored plans have been disappointed. In recent years, employers have compelled workers to pick up a growing share of the costs, especially for brand-name drugs. But insurers selling policies on the exchanges have pared their drug benefits significantly more, according to health advocates, patients and industry analysts.
Robert Zirkelbach, a spokesman for American’s Health Insurance Plans, an industry group, said the exchange plans are designed “to try to give consumers better value for their health-care dollars.”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/aids-advocates-say-drug-coverage-in-some-marketplace-plans-is-inadequate/2013/12/09/0fca0fd0-5d18-11e3-95c2-13623eb2b0e1_print.html
Comment:
By Don McCanne, M.D. It is no surprise that private insurers would use every devious trick to try to limit their payments for expensive drugs, including requiring the patient to pay more through higher cost sharing, or by omitting expensive drugs from their formulary altogether. From the insurers’ perspective, that’s just good business. What is really nefarious is that they are now using this to discourage patients with expensive disorders from even enrolling in their plans. Patients with HIV/AIDS, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, cancer, hepatitis C, and other disorders who are on long term therapy with expensive drugs will go elsewhere for their coverage when they find that their current drug regimens would leave them with intolerable costs under these plans. A provision of the Affordable Care Act – guaranteed issue – requires that insurers accept all applicants, no matter how expensive their care is anticipated to be. But Obamacare did not change the nature of the private insurance beast. Insurers will always find more ways to circumvent requirements such as guaranteed issue. Insurers boast to their shareholders about innovation in insurance product design. The problem for us is that the innovations are not designed to improve access and affordability for the insured. The innovations are to improve the bottom line of the insurers. Just think of the innovations we are already seeing – higher deductibles, more limited provider choice through narrower networks, limited benefits within each of the ten categories of required benefits, and greater financial barriers to care such as these outrageous cost sharing requirements for drugs. The insurers are not through. When the insurance lobbyists are saying that they are trying to “give consumers better value for their health-care dollars,” they really mean keeping insurance premiums low enough to compete in the marketplace. They do that by paying as little as possible for health care, shifting ever more of the costs to patients. The sky is the limit on innovations when they are driven by greed. We have the wrong people in charge – the insurers. We need our own public financing system that is designed to help patients get care by removing financial barriers. That’s what an improved Medicare that covered everyone would do for us. Enough of this, “Boy, do we have a plan for you, and it’s cheap, but if you have anything wrong, study this plan carefully since you’ll find that it won’t cover what you need (and then go away kid, you bother me).”
]]>Physician to Martin Luther King slows down to reflect at 90
By Sam Cholke
DNAinfo Chicago, Dec. 11, 2013
HYDE PARK, CHICAGO — At 90, Chicago’s most outspoken and progressive physician, Dr. Quentin Young, is finally starting to slow down and reflect on the neighborhood that gave him his politics.
A lifelong Hyde Parker, Young has been a tireless advocate for a single-payer health care system and counted among his patients Mayor Harold Washington, Martin Luther King Jr. and Barack Obama. [PNHP note: Barack Obama was the patient of Dr. David Scheiner, Dr. Young’s partner in his Hyde Park practice.]
“I grew up in Hyde Park, which was a big step forward,” Young said at a Tuesday reading from the new biography of his life, “Everybody In, Nobody Out,” at the Seminary Cooperative Bookstore, 5751 S. Woodlawn Avenue.
He said the progressive politics that inspired him to work in a Black Panthers clinic and march with King were more a product of geography than a hard-fought revelation.
“I had the good fortune of being surrounded by progressive people,” Young said of growing up in Hyde Park during the Great Depression when there were still more than 100 outspoken communists in the neighborhood.
In 90 years, Young only moved out of Hyde Park once to enlist in the Army during World War II.
Young graduated medical school at Northwestern University after returning from the war. He spent the bulk of his career at Cook County Hospital and running a practice in Hyde Park, where he [sometimes saw] Barack Obama, who he counts as a liberal, but not a progressive politician.
“He’s an unusual person, but I think it’s important to understand he’s not an American black,” Young said of Obama, who grew up in Hawaii the son of a mother from Kansas and a father from Kenya. “I think it’s fair to say he’s a black American, but there’s no slavery in his background — he didn’t have the African American experience.”
Young said his experience at Cook County Hospital from 1947 to 1981 helped him to understand the feeling of being connected to something you can’t claim as your own.
“The county hospital played a pivotal role in the black community, and they really thought it was theirs — it wasn’t theirs, it belonged to the Democratic Party,” Young said.
He said the majority of his patients were African American and Cook County Hospital delivered 95 percent of all African American babies in the city, but claimed it was a tool for the Democratic Party to segregate black patients as much as serve them.
Young has spent the last 25 years fighting for a single-payer health care system and only in the last few years has really begun to reflect on his life.
Sonja Rotenberg, president of the Illinois Single-Payer Coalition, said Young didn’t begin to scale back his role on the board until he turned 88 years old.
“He was still going into the office every day until two years ago,” Rotenberg said.
As Young has more time to reflect, lots of admirers have moved in to collect his stories.
“Being King’s physician when he was in Chicago, he’s really proud of that,” said Allan Nowakowski, who was at the reading shooting a documentary about Young’s life.
Young was beside Martin Luther King during the 1966 march in Marquette Park where King was struck with a brick.
“I received the honor of looking after King during the march,” Young said. “He took a rock to the head and had to be sewn up.”
Nowakowski said he as 30 hours of footage of Young talking about intimate moments as a physician to some of the biggest names to come out of Chicago, from former Mayor Harold Washington to writers like Studs Terkel and Mike Royko.
“He was always very sarcastic with me and never liked my leftist ideas,” Young said of Royko. “Studs would at least listen to me.”
Young’s biography, written with Steve Fiffer, was released in September and Tuesday was Young’s last night of reflection in Hyde Park before going to visit his children in California for the winter.
Nowakowski shot the final scenes of the documentary of Young at the Tuesday reading and will be editing all winter in preparation for a summer release of the final film on Young’s life.
http://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20131211/hyde-park/physician-martin-luther-king-barack-obama-slows-down-reflect-at-90
Rockefeller’s legacy can be solidified through bill
By Chesley Yellott, M.D., and Lynn Moses Yellott
The Journal (Martinsburg, W.Va.), Letters, Dec. 11, 2013
Despite some good features that will benefit a large number of people, the Affordable Care Act doesn’t go far enough. About 76,000 West Virginians will remain uninsured after the Affordable Care Act is implemented. In addition, people “covered” by health insurance still may not be able to afford the copays and deductibles.
Sen. Rockefeller has been an avid advocate for children’s health and for many other ways to help people improve their health and lives. CHIP, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, is one example.
But the expensive, fractured and piecemeal health care “system” requires a solution that will work for everyone: improved and expanded Medicare for all. People covered by Medicare have many fewer complaints than those covered by private insurance. Medicare is administered with very low overhead. Most importantly, if everyone from conception to death were covered by Medicare, medical costs would decrease because Medicare would negotiate fees with hospitals, pharmaceutical companies and other health care providers.
We applaud Sen. Rockefeller’s legacy of improving health care for West Virginians and others throughout the country. His legacy can be stellar if he stands up for replacing the system that leaves so many unable to afford health care with improved Medicare for all. We ask him to do this by signing on as a cosponsor to a bill that soon will be introduced by Sen. Bernie Sanders: The American Health Security Act of 2013.
Dr. Chesley Yellott and Lynn Moses Yellott reside in Shepherdstown.
http://www.journal-news.net/page/content.detail/id/602155/Rockefeller-s-legacy-can-be-solidified-through-bill.html?nav=5061
19 countries have better health care than America
By J. Mark Ryan, M.D.
Providence (R.I.) Journal, Letters, Dec. 3, 2013
I was amazed to read Jay Ambrose’s Nov. 26 Commentary piece (“Single-payer health insurance a singularly bad idea”) attacking single-payer health insurance, especially given that virtually every argument he makes is not based on fact.
He states unnamed “experts” have shown that single-payer insurance systems reduce quality of care. In fact, quality of care in the United States ranks behind 19 other countries, all of which have some version of single-payer health care.
He claims that “many countries” are allowing more private insurance and care as a result. In fact only one is, England, which has seen massive protests of government efforts to weaken the National Health System. Scotland and Northern Ireland, which have some degree of home rule, have opted out of these “reforms” completely.
If we need to compare the merits of American-style commercial insurance and a single-payer system, probably the best comparison is with Canada. In the United States, the most common cause of personal bankruptcy is health care costs.
In the United States, there are 48 million people uninsured. The death rate that can be directly attributed to the lack on insurance in this country is 1 per 1000 people per year. This means that over the past decade, we have been losing 48,000 Americans annually from a lack of insurance, almost the same number each year as Americans killed during the entire Vietnam War. In Canada no one goes bankrupt because of health-care costs and no one dies because of a lack of insurance.
So who has the better system?
Dr. J. Mark Ryan resides in Providence. He is president of the Rhode Island chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program.
http://www.providencejournal.com/opinion/letters-to-the-editor/20131203-j.-mark-ryan-19-countries-have-better-health-care-than-america.ece
Obamacare set up to benefit insurers
By Jonathan Walker, M.D.
The Journal Gazette (Fort Wayne, Ind.), Dec. 8, 2013
The rollout of the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare, has been anything but auspicious. And, depending on one’s politics, reactions have ranged from despair to vindictive glee. But if you are stuck on the superficial level – watching the president backpedal while wondering about the problems with the online exchanges – you are being misdirected from the real drama.
It all started about 10 years ago. The big for-profit insurance companies – WellPoint, Cigna, United and the others – realized they were heading for trouble. Their business model is simple; they have to put profits over patients in order to survive. But people were starting to get frustrated with how those companies behaved.
There were movies, articles and books calling out the way those companies were denying coverage, throwing people off plans, and hiding behind walls of impenetrable bureaucracy. There were lawsuits accusing them of large-scale fraud, and high-profile news stories implicating them in poor medical outcomes.
Those companies knew they had to improve their reputation before popular opinion came down on them. Their biggest fear was that people might start looking at Medicare – the real public option – as a solution.
As a result, they agreed in principle to ignore pre-existing conditions. But they knew that would cost them a lot of money, so they advocated for what became the basic structure of Obamacare: a mandate to gather in healthy customers, the subsidies to help those customers buy their products, and the exchanges to funnel paying customers to their door.
They were so successful in their attempts to co-opt reform that in 2009, Business Week famously announced that they had “won” – that whatever shape reform would take, those companies had been able to get what they wanted from the bargaining table.
Think about that in the context of what you are learning from the news. The new law guaranteed that taxpayers would help those companies by administering the mandate that forces people to buy their product. We also pay for the subsidies that allow people to be able to afford what they are selling. We then have to pay to set up the exchanges so people can easily transfer that money to those companies.
There is even a part of the law that few people are aware of: if those companies have to pay for too many sick people, they can apply to the government to be reimbursed for their losses! One begins to wonder exactly whom the ACA was designed to help.
Given all this, the furor over the exchanges becomes especially grating. Taxpayers are being asked to pay for a shopping site – like Kayak.com, but far more complex. The site is supposed to work with each company’s myriad plans, and it is supposed to make sure those companies get the maximum amount of taxpayer dollars through the subsidies. Yet there is no sign that any of those companies are doing anything to actually help pay for or manage the site – we are stuck with it.
It is mind-boggling that Obamacare has been portrayed as a government takeover; it actually represents a corporate takeover of a good-faith attempt to improve access to health care. There are some really great parts to the ACA, but the fundamental structure perpetuates companies that, by their very nature, have to avoid paying for us when we are sick.
There is another way that avoids all the confusion and complexity. Congress could have simply raised the Medicare tax – far less than what we all pay those companies – and then put us all on a basic level of coverage through Medicare.
A lot of data suggest such a system could be more efficient and far cheaper, and we could always add all the bells and whistles we want on top of that. But that idea has been kept so far off the table that most Americans don’t even realize that it is a possibility.
So whether you are laughing or crying about the Obamacare rollout, recognize that what we are seeing is one industry’s strategic brilliance at convincing us that we have no choice but to work with them. And as you start to see thousands of your own dollars flow into premiums, copays and deductibles, recognize that we are all doing our part to keep those companies alive. Hopefully they will return the favor.
Dr. Jonathan D. Walker is an assistant clinical professor at Indiana University School of Medicine in Fort Wayne and a member of Hoosiers for a Commonsense Health Plan. He wrote this for The Journal Gazette.
http://www.journalgazette.net/article/20131208/EDIT05/312089974/1021/EDIT
Bernie Sanders introduces S. 1782, The American Health Security Act of 2013
S. 1782, The American Health Security Act of 2013
Senator Bernie Sanders
Introduced in the Senate, December 9, 2013
Summary of S. 1782, The American Health Security Act of 2013
The American Health Security Act of 2013 (S. 1782) provides every American with affordable and comprehensive health care services through the establishment of a national American Health Security Program (the Program) that requires each participating state to set up and administer a state single payer health program. The Program provides universal health care coverage for the comprehensive services required under S. 1782 and incorporates Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program and TRICARE (the Department of Defense health care program), but maintains health care programs under the Veterans Affairs Administration. Private health insurance sold by for-profit companies could only exist to provide supplemental coverage.
The cornerstones of the Program will be fixed, annual, and global budgets, public accountability, measures of quality based on outcomes data designed by providers and patients, a national data-collection system with uniform reporting by all providers, and a progressive financing system. It will provide universal coverage, benefits emphasizing primary and preventive care, and free choice of providers. Inpatient services, long term care, a broad range of services for mental illness and substance abuse, and care coordination services will also be covered.
A seven-member national board (the Board) appointed by the President will establish a national health budget specifying the total federal and state expenditures to be made for covered health care services. The Board will work together with similar boards in each of the fifty states and the District of Columbia to administer the Program.
A Quality Council will develop and disseminate practice guidelines based on outcomes research and will profile health care professionals’ patterns of practice to identify outliers. It will also develop standards of quality, performance measures, and medical review criteria and develop minimum competence criteria. A new Office of Primary Care and Prevention Research will be created within the Office of the Director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
The Program is designed to provide patient-centered care supported through adequate reimbursement for professionals, a wealth of evidence-based information, peer support, and financial incentives for better patient outcomes. The Program seeks to ensure medical decisions are made by patients and their health care providers.
The Program amends the tax code to create the American Health Security Trust Fund and appropriates to the Fund specified tax revenues, current health program receipts, and tax credits and subsidies under the Affordable Care Act. While the final structure of the financing component is still under consideration and is subject to change, the tax revenues in the draft include a new health care income tax, an employer payroll tax, a surcharge on high income individuals, and a tax on securities transactions.
The federal government would collect and distribute all funds to the states for the operation of the state programs to pay for the covered services. Budget increases would be limited to the rate of growth of the gross domestic product. Each state’s budget for administrative expenses would be capped at three percent.
Each state would have the choice to administer its own program or have the federal Board administer it. The state program could negotiate with providers and consult with its advisory boards to allocate funds. The state program could also contract with private companies to provide administrative functions, as Medicare currently does through its administrative regions. State programs could negotiate with providers to pay outpatient facilities and individual practitioners on a capitated, salaried, or other prospective basis or on a fee-for service basis according to a rate schedule. Rates would be designed to incentivize primary and preventive care while maintaining a global budget, bringing provider, patients, and all stakeholders to the table to best determine value and reimbursement.
Finally, the Program also relieves businesses from the heavy administrative burdens of providing health care coverage, puts all businesses on an even playing field in terms of healthcare coverage, and increases the competitiveness of American companies in the global marketplace. Every other industrialized nation has been able to use the power of a public authority to provide universal health care. The American Health Security Act of 2013 seeks to do just that for all Americans and their businesses.
S. 1782, The American Health Security Act of 2013 (189 pages): http://www.sanders.senate.gov/download/american-health-security-act-of-2013?inline=file
Comment:
By Don McCanne, M.D. Introduction of another single payer bill – S. 1782, The American Health Security Act of 2013 – is very timely. Here’s why. Implementation of the Affordable Care Act is proceeding, and a handful of citizens are pleased to finally gain entrance to an insurance market that they’ve been locked out of. Nevertheless, dissatisfaction is widespread because of a mandate to purchase insurance products that are expensive, that leaves individuals exposed to excessive out-of-pocket costs should they need health care, and that reduces health care choices by reducing the number of providers allowed in the insurance networks. Those with employer-sponsored plans are beginning to see the same changes that reduce both financial security and choices of physicians and hospitals. People are not happy. The rocky rollout of the exchanges created more smoke than fire, but it did cause people to think more about whether Obamacare is a wise solution to the problems with our health care financing system. On the left, there is a loud and clear call to move forward with enactment of a single payer system – an improved Medicare for all. On the right, there is a loud clamor that Obamacare is so bad that we might end up with a single payer system. By some on the right, that’s posed as a threat, but by others it seems to be a dispirited acknowledgement that Obamacare is so bad, and the proposed Republican reforms are so ineffective, that people will demand a system that works – single payer. Because increased awareness of the flaws in Obamacare, and because of the intensification of the national dialogue on single payer, along with the recent endorsement of respected thought leaders, now is the perfect time to introduce a new single payer bill. Sen. Bernie Sanders has introduced S. 1782 in the Senate, and Rep. Jim McDermott is sponsoring the sister bill in the House. Some might be concerned that introduction of another single payer bill into Congress when we already have Rep. John Conyers’ single payer bill – H.R. 676 – could muddle the politics by diverting attention of potential supporters to the two bills, with a contest to decide which is the better legislation. There are differences in the bills, but it is crucial to understand that they are simply two expressions of the one single payer concept. The differences that we should be discussing in public are not the differences in these two bills, but rather the differences between an effective and efficient single payer model that achieves our goals, and our current highly inefficient, dysfunctional multi-payer model that falls far so short – the flawed model that Obamacare perpetuates. When it becomes time to move the legislation forward, the details can be worked out. Proven single payer policies would be inviolate, but the markup would be direct ed more to crafting appropriate legislative language rather than to sabotaging beneficial single payer principles. While there is a lot of noise and dissatisfaction, now is the time to push the single payer message. When we have people like Colin Powell, John Podesta, Steven Nissen and Donald Berwick willing to speak up, then we know it’s time for us to get to work.
]]>Colin Powell pitches single-payer health care in U.S.
By Alex Lazar
ABC News, Dec. 9, 2013
Former Secretary of State Colin Powell has waded into the health care debate with a broad endorsement of the kind of universal health plan found in Europe, Canada and South Korea.
“I am not an expert in health care, or Obamacare, or the Affordable Care Act, or however you choose to describe it, but I do know this: I have benefited from that kind of universal health care in my 55 years of public life,” Powell said, according to the Puget Sound Business Journal, last week at an annual “survivors celebration breakfast” in Seattle for those who, like Powell, have battled prostate cancer. “And I don’t see why we can’t do what Europe is doing, what Canada is doing, what Korea is doing, what all these other places are doing.”
Europe, Canada and Korea all have a “single-payer” system, in which the government pays for the costs of health care.
Some Democrats who strongly advocated for, and failed to get, a single-payer system in the 2010 Affordable Care Act, still believe the current law doesn’t go far enough to reform the US health system.
A retired four-star general and former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Powell told the audience about a woman named Anne, who as his firewood supplier, faced a healthcare scare of her own. Anne asked Powell to help pay for her healthcare bills, as her insurance didn’t cover an MRI she needed as a prerequisite to being treated for a growth in her brain. In addition, Powell’s wife Alma recently suffered from three aneurysms and an artery blockage. ”After these two events, of Alma and Anne, I’ve been thinking, why is it like this?” said Powell.
“We are a wealthy enough country with the capacity to make sure that every one of our fellow citizens has access to quality health care,” Powell. “(Let’s show) the rest of the world what our democratic system is all about and how we take care of all of our citizens.”
Powell, who has taken heat from Republicans for twice endorsing President Obama’s election and reelection bids, said he hopes universal healthcare can one day become a reality in the U.S. ”I think universal health care is one of the things we should really be focused on, and I hope that will happen,” said Powell. ”Whether it’s Obamacare, or son of Obamacare, I don’t care. As long as we get it done.”
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2013/12/colin-powell-pitches-universal-healthcare-in-us/
Single Payer Is Getting a Second Life as Obamacare Frustration Peaks
Could anger at the Obamacare rollout make Americans more receptive to a kind of Medicare-for-all system? That’s what activists are hoping—and they’re plotting a state-by-state fight.
By David Freedlander
The Daily Beast, December 10, 2013
As the rollout of Obamacare clunks forward, activists who opposed the law from the beginning say it is time to seize the moment, to tear down the current health-care edifice and start anew, especially now as frustration with the law’s implementation is reaching a peak.
These are not Tea Party activists but advocates for a single-payer health-care system who say some of the problems with the launch of the Affordable Care Act—in addition to built-in problems with the law itself—have made the American public more receptive than ever to a Medicare-for-all kind of coverage system.
On Monday, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) introduced the American Health Security Act, which would require each state to set up a single-payer health-care system and would undo the exchanges that have plagued Obamacare. Meanwhile, various state-led efforts are under way that advocates hope will sweep the country statehouse by statehouse, as soon as lawmakers see the advantage of a single-payer system. In Vermont, for example, lawmakers have set aside the financing and are already preparing to adopt a single-payer system when the federal government permits it, which according to provisions of the Affordable Care Act will be in 2015. In Massachusetts, Don Berwick, a former top Obama administration health official, is basing his campaign for governor on bringing a single-payer system to the commonwealth. And advocates in New York, Maryland, Oregon, and around the country say they see new energy around their cause.
“As the president fully understands, the rollout has been a disaster, the website has been a disaster,” said Sanders in an interview moments after his bill was introduced in the Senate. “But the truth is, even if all of those problems were corrected tomorrow and if the Affordable Care Act did all that it was supposed to do, it would be only a modest step forward to dealing with the dysfunction of the American health-care system. When you have a lot of complications, it is an opportunity for insurance companies and drug companies and medical equipment suppliers to make billions and billions of profits rather than to see our money go into health care and making people well.”
Democrats conceded that Republican efforts to sabotage Obamacare with endless lawsuits and by declining to set up state-run exchanges have damaged the law’s popularity, but they say the confusion will lead the public inevitably to conclude that a simple single-payer system, one that avoids malfunctioning websites and complicated gold/silver/bronze options, is preferable. Advocates pointed enthusiastically to a tweet last month from John Podesta, the former Clinton White House chief of staff who isjoining President Obama to help with health care—“Just applied online for Medicare. Took 5 minutes. Single payer anyone?”—calling it proof that wild-eyed radicals are not the only ones supporting single payer. The notion is gradually becoming more mainstream among the Democratic establishment, advocates said.
“I think the thing that is most interesting about government is that populism gets its biggest support not from Democrats but from what Republicans do,” said former Pennsylvania governor Ed Rendell, who stressed that he did not count himself among the populist members of the Democratic Party. “They torpedo the Affordable Care Act, and I believe we will now have single payer in this country within the next 15 years.”
Opponents to single payer certainly have reasons to believe the momentum is on their side. Further meddling with the American health-care system, after not just the botched rollout of the Affordable Care Act but also the grueling five-year fight to get there, seems unlikely. But proponents of single payer pointed to polls that show a majority of Americans want some version of Medicare for all. It is up to Democratic pols to show leadership on the issue and risk defying the powerful health-care industry, advocates said.
“It is not possible to put together a good program unless you antagonize the powers that be,” said Dr. David Himmelstein, one of the leaders of Physicians for a National Health Program. The White House, he added, “largely played an inside-the-Beltway game in passing Obamacare. They refused to rally the American people for something truly radical which every poll shows that the American people really want.”
Sanders joked that he expected to have his bill passed by chambers of Congress and ready for President Obama’s signature by the time he returns from Nelson Mandela’s funeral in South Africa, but few proponents see much hope of gaining traction for single-payer health care in a Congress that has struggled to pass a routine budget.
Instead they are turning to a legislature-by-legislature fight in statehouses across the country. Advocates in New York and California said they were counting on labor unions’ opposition to the Affordable Care Act—some labor leaders have feared that their members may pay higher premiums under the law and have pushed for exemptions. In Vermont, a single-payer bill passed in 2011, and Dr. Deb Richter, the president of Vermont Health Care for All, said that if anything, the passage of Obamcare slowed the group’s work there.
“We had all the momentum going on the single-payer side, and it was really slowed by the Affordable Care Act,” she said. A state measure similar to Obamacare faltered, she added, because it lacked the appropriate enforcement mechanisms. Now, with the law set to take effect in 2015, advocates are working to calm fears among Vermonters who have been scared off by talk of “socialized medicine.”
“We have all of the right ingredients, but there is a lot of room for mischief. You can confuse people, freak them about rationing and all of that stuff,” said Richter. She said she thought Obamacare’s failure to deal with the spiraling cost of health care would lead more and more people to see the logic of single payer.
“I think that eventually most states will recognize this,” she said. “We keep talking about how the health-care system is unsustainable. We haven’t reached that point yet, but when health care starts eating up 25 percent of GDP and you have hospitals failing, they will look for guaranteed financing, and the only way you get there is through a single-payer system. It is not a matter of if but of when.”
]]>MedPAC conflicted between fiscal neutrality and paying private programs more
Public Meeting of the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (Medpac)
November 7, 2013
From the transcript:
MR. [GLENN] HACKBARTH [CHAIR, MEDICARE PAYMENT ADVISORY COMMISSION]: Okay. It is time to begin….
Our first topic today is synchronizing Medicare policy across the options that Medicare beneficiaries will face in the future….[Medpac staff] Julie [Lee] is going to lead the way on this topic. Julie, it is all yours.
DR. LEE: Good morning. In recent months, the Commission has been thinking about the relationship between … ACOs, Medicare Advantage plans, and traditional fee-for-service….
In the past, the Commission has expressed a general desire to “move away from fee-for-service.” In today’s presentation, we want to clarify what you mean by “moving away” and by “synchronizing” Medicare policy across delivery systems…. [pp 3-4]
The title of this presentation says, “Synchronizing Medicare policy across delivery systems,” but we haven’t defined what we mean by “synchronizing.” Does it mean payment neutrality across delivery systems? In other words, would Medicare pay the same amount for the same beneficiary whether she gets her Medicare through fee-for-service, ACO, or MA? …. Alternatively, if not neutrality, does synchronizing mean moving toward one system over another? For instance, would Medicare policy create incentives to move away from traditional fee-for-service? If so, what would that entail? ….[pp 13-14]
DR. [MICHAEL] CHERNEW [VICE CHAIR]: My view is that we have to start with fiscal neutrality…. [p 62]
DR. CHERNEW: I’ve heard … broad consensus [from other commission members] around the notion of some type of fiscal neutrality…. [p 72]
[MEDPAC STAFF] MS. [KATELYN] SMALLEY: … CMS reported [ACO Pioneer] program savings of about 0.5 percent…. The ACOs we spoke with confirmed that the cost of running the ACO was about one to two percent….[p 164]
MR. HACKBARTH: If your ultimate goal is to try to move everybody
or a high percentage of care delivery into this new [ACO] model,
then I think … you’ve got to have a clear, explicit strategy for how you’re going to make fee-for-service increasingly uncomfortable. [p 222]
http://www.medpac.gov/transcripts/11_13_transcript.pdf
Comment:
By Kip Sullivan
The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (Medpac) has set an impossible task for itself. Even though the traditional fee-for-service (FFS) Medicare program is indisputably less expensive than the Medicare Advantage (MA) program and probably less expensive than the new ACO pilot programs, the commission wants to move doctors and patients out of the FFS program and into the MA and ACO programs while still maintaining “fiscal neutrality,” that is, while paying the same amount per beneficiary regardless of whether the beneficiary is enrolled in the FFS, MA, or ACO program.
Medpac has been weaving the intellectual trap it now finds itself in for many years. On the one hand, Medpac has been urging Congress for decades to honor the rule of fiscal neutrality in deciding how much to pay MA plans vis a vis the FFS program and, specifically, to stop paying MA plans more per beneficiary than it pays for FFS beneficiaries. As the excerpts above indicate, there appears to be a consensus among commission members to make fiscal neutrality a fundamental criterion in deciding how much to pay ACOs as well.
On the other hand, over the last decade Medpac has taken the position that Medicare’s FFS program encourages unnecessary services and must either be shrunk (“moved away from”) or transformed from a “volume-based” program to a “value-based” program by somehow subjecting doctors to the managed care methods – the financial incentives, report cards and third-party oversight – used by MA insurers and ACOs.
The statements by commissioners Chernew and Hackbarth, quoted above, capture the tension created by Medpac’s conflicting goals. Dr. Chernew notes a consensus among commission members that Medicare should not pay more per beneficiary to the ACO program than it pays to the FFS program, but Mr. Hackbarth, a former HMO executive, argues that unless Medpac is prepared to recommend making doctors in the FFS program “uncomfortable,” that is, make them suffer financially for staying in the FFS program, doctors won’t migrate into ACOs.
To sum up Medpac’s dilemma: They want to “move away from the FFS program” and “toward” the ACO and MA programs, and they know they can’t do that unless they starve the FFS program and fatten the ACO and MA programs, but they don’t want to starve FFS and fatten the ACO and MA programs because that would violate fiscal neutrality.
To those who are unfamiliar with the groupthink that currently dominates the debate about the American health care crisis, this dilemma seems unnecessary, even nonsensical. It would seem that Medpac has it backwards – that Medpac should support “moving away from the MA and ACO programs” and “toward” the FFS program unless and until the MA and ACO programs can demonstrate they cost no more than the FFS program. If Medpac were to adopt this goal, it could also honor the fiscal neutrality rule. That is, Medpac could simply recommend fiscal neutrality and know that fiscal neutrality would bankrupt all or most MA insurers, and would probably bankrupt all or most ACOs, and thereby “move Medicare toward” the FFS program.
But Medpac gives no sign of taking that position despite decades of evidence indicating MA insurers are less efficient than FFS providers, and a small but growing body of evidence that ACOs are also less efficient than FFS providers. As the excerpt above indicates, Katelyn Smalley, a member of the Medpac staff, reported to the commission that the latest results from the Pioneer ACO program indicate ACOs raise rather than lower health care spending. Ms. Smalley said CMS reported last summer that the 32 ACOs participating in the Pioneer ACO pilot cut total spending by Medicare by half a percent but expenditures by the ACOs rose by one to two percent. Neither Ms. Smalley nor any commission member pointed out the obvious: While Medicare may have saved a half percent, the health care system as a whole suffered an increase in total spending on the order of half to one-and-a-half percent.
Medpac appears to suffer from a split personality. One personality has the integrity to follow the evidence wherever it leads. It is this personality which constantly calls on Congress to stop overpaying MA plans. But Medpac’s other personality suffers from two delusions that afflict much of the US health policy establishment: (1)the delusion that volume, not price and the administrative waste which contributes to high prices, is the main cause of the US health care crisis; and (2) the delusion that the managed care tools pioneered by HMOs will someday demonstrate their ability to reduce volume and thereby lower medical costs more than the managed care tools themselves cost.
Medpac is an influential voice in the US health policy wars. We must hope that Medpac will soon recognize that the evidence does not support an endless experiment with managed care and that what America really needs is to move Medicare “toward” a true single-payer system, not just for the elderly and the disabled but for all Americans.
Colin Powell calls for a universal, single payer system
Gen. Colin Powell calls for universal health care in the U.S.
By Valerie Bauman
Puget Sound Business Journal, December 5, 2013
Former Secretary of State and longtime Republican Colin Powell is calling for a universal health care solution in the U.S.
“We are a wealthy enough country with the capacity to make sure that every one of our fellow citizens has access to quality health care,” he said Thursday at a Seattle fundraiser for prostate cancer. “(Let’s show) the rest of the world what our democratic system is all about and how we take care of all of our citizens.”
The retired four-star general, a prostate cancer survivor, spoke at the Prostate Cancer Survivors Celebration Breakfast, organized by UW Medicine and the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
Powell took the opportunity to share some of his own experiences and to publicly call for a health care solution similar to those in Canada, Japan and other countries that have a universal, single-payer system.
“I am not an expert in health care, or Obamacare, or the Affordable Care Act, or however you choose to describe it, but I do know this: I have benefited from that kind of universal health care in my 55 years of public life,” Powell said. “And I don’t see why we can’t do what Europe is doing, what Canada is doing, what Korea is doing, what all these other places are doing.”
http://www.bizjournals.com/seattle/blog/health-care-inc/2013/12/colin-powell-calls-for-universal.html?page=all
Comment:
By Don McCanne, M.D. Colin Powell’s is a very welcome voice in the groundswell of support for single payer. As people better understand single payer, that support will grow until we reach a threshold where even Congress will join in.
]]>Cleveland Clinic’s Steven Nissen supports single payer
10 Questions: Steven Nissen, MD
By Todd Neale
MedPage Today, December 5, 2013
What’s the biggest barrier to practicing medicine today? That’s just the first of 10 questions the MedPage Today staff is asking leading clinicians and researchers to get their personal views on their chosen profession. In this series we share their uncensored responses. Here, answers from Steven Nissen, MD, of the Cleveland Clinic.
There, Nissen is chair of the Robert and Suzanne Tomsich Department of Cardiovascular Medicine. A past president of the American College of Cardiology and former chair of the FDA’s Cardiovascular Renal Drugs Advisory Committee, he has had a leading role in highlighting potential risks associated with certain drugs, including rofecoxib (Vioxx) and rosiglitazone (Avandia). In 2007, Nissen was included on Time Magazine’s list of “100 men and women whose power, talent, or moral example is transforming the world.”
1. What’s the biggest barrier to your practicing medicine today?
The lack of a single-payer system. We waste enormous amounts of time and energy dealing with insurance companies, whose major goal is figuring out how not to cover patients.
http://www.medpagetoday.com/PracticeManagement/PracticeManagement/43257
Comment:
By Don McCanne, M.D. A couple hundred thousand physicians are closet single payer supporters. If only we could get more of them to out themselves, as Cleveland Clinic’s Steven Nissen has done here, maybe the public would understand that we really could have an improved Medicare for everyone since so many doctors agree.
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