By Margaret Flowers, M.D.
The Indypendent (New York City), Oct. 30, 2013
The battle lines have been drawn and the Inside-the-Beltway media circus is underway.
As the Affordable Care Act (or “Obamacare,” as it is popularly known) gets off to a rocky start, Republicans are bellowing that the new health care law should be jettisoned, even though it is modeled on ideas hatched 20 years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation and originally backed by the likes of Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney.
Meanwhile, the Obama administration insists that once a few computer “glitches” are resolved in the healthcare.gov website by the end of November, everything will turn out swimmingly.
“Don’t worry, these plans will not sell out,” President Obama said in late October. “Everyone who wants insurance in the marketplace will get it.”
Lost amid the noise is the fact that not only could we adopt a simpler, more effective single-payer system that is common to other industrialized nations — more about that below — but also that we are witnessing perhaps the greatest corporate scam ever. Not only did the health insurance corporations write the Affordable Care Act in 2009-2010 to enhance their profits, but now they also have the government and non-profit groups doing the work of marketing their shoddy products.
The foundation of Obamacare, the mandate that uninsured individuals purchase private insurance if they do not qualify for public insurance, goes into effect in 2014. The state health insurance exchanges where people can purchase that private insurance opened on October 1. A new organization called Enroll America was created to organize and train grassroots activists to seek out the uninsured (they even provide maps) and assist them in using the exchanges.
The Uninsured
Can you imagine this scenario with any other industry? Billions of public dollars and tremendous efforts are being spent to create new health insurance markets, advertise them, subsidize their products and actively solicit buyers for them. This is being done with the belief that the solution to our health care crisis is to reduce the number of people who are uninsured. But our health care crisis runs deeper than that. And having health insurance in the United States isn’t the same as having access to necessary care.
Obamacare does not resolve the fatal flaw in our health system — that it is a market-based system rather than a public health-based system, as is the case in all other industrialized nations. Market competition does not improve health outcomes because it consists of health insurance corporations competing for profits by selling policies to those who are the healthiest and denying and restricting payment for care. And regulation of insurers doesn’t work either. Although rules in Obamacare give the appearance of changing insurance company behavior, insurers are already working around them. Remember, the health insurers wrote the rules.
This illusion that the health insurance corporations are regulated under Obamacare is one of the reasons that progressives have been seduced to accept a market- based health system rather than continuing to push for the system most of them desire, a single-payer Medicare-for-all national health program. Defenses of Obamacare ignore the long history of private insurance domination and are based on the hope that this time things will be different. But Obamacare has not changed the fact that private insurance companies view their plans as products and have no more allegiance to human health than does Big Energy, which will stop at nothing to drill, frack and blow up the planet for profits.
Experience at the state level with similar reforms and a look at current health trends show that Obamacare will leave tens of millions without insurance, will increase the percentage of people who are underinsured, will increase financial barriers to necessary care and will further privatize health care. Cutting out the multitudes of insurers and creating a single publicly-financed universal health care system is the only way to solve our health care crisis.
Tweaking the System
During and after the health reform process, the President explained that since most people were happy with their health insurance, we should work with the present health system to improve it. This was the reason given for not enacting a Medicare-for-all system.
From the outset, it is important to realize that 80 percent of the population is generally healthy and that this is the population that private insurers prefer to enroll. People may believe that their coverage is satisfactory, until they have a serious health problem and discover that the out-of-pocket costs and restrictions on their care make necessary care unaffordable.
Is it wise to try to tweak the current system? Will that bring us to universal coverage? The answer is no. About the best that has been achieved by tweaking the present system at the state level is reducing the number of uninsured people by half. That is what happened in Massachusetts, where legislation similar to Obamacare was passed in 2006.
There are currently 48 million uninsured people in the United States. At its best, the Congressional Budget Office estimates that Obamacare will leave 31 million people without health insurance when it is completely rolled out. And even that estimate may be too low. Experience at the state level showed that none of the plans that were similarly hailed as comprehensive met their coverage goals before they failed fiscally. Without effective cost controls, care remains unaffordable.
Shifting the Costs
As health care costs have soared in the United States, the trend in health insurance coverage has been to shift more of the costs onto the individual. This has primarily been done through what are called Consumer-directed Health Plans (CDHPs), which require co-pays, deductibles and co-insurance. This means that patients have to pay thousands of dollars in addition to their premiums before and after their insurance kicks in.
These up-front costs are barriers to care. Considering that 76 percent of Americans are living paycheck to paycheck without significant savings, the money simply isn’t there to pay for visits to the doctor, tests or prescriptions. A health survey by the Commonwealth Fund last year found that 80 million people reported not getting care due to cost, 75 million were having difficulty paying medical bills and four million (over two years) went into bankruptcy as a result.
The result of CDHPs is that patients self-ration by avoiding or delaying necessary care. And so many people are currently self-rationing that the rise in health care spending in the United States has slowed over the past five years. Reducing access to necessary care is not the kind of cost-control that should be promoted, but Obamacare does just that.
The health insurance exchanges sell four tiers of coverage, identified by metals. The lowest levels, silver and bronze, will pay for 70 and 60 percent of covered services once deductibles are met. “Covered services” is the key phrase. Health insurers are restricting their provider networks for plans sold on the exchanges to exclude places where sick people go, large health centers and safety-net hospitals, and to limit the number of doctors. This will force people to go out of the network and bear more or perhaps all of the cost of their care.
The silver and bronze plans have lowered the bar on what is considered coverage. These are levels that will leave people at risk of financial ruin if they have a serious accident or illness. And these are the levels that most people will purchase. Subsidies are available for those who qualify based on the price of a silver plan, and because the subsidies are inadequate, peop
le will migrate to the cheapest plans.
This model means that people will still get the care they can afford rather than the care they need. It means that more people will have insurance but will not be able to afford care. In Massachusetts, eight out of 10 people who see themselves as “sick” report that health care costs are a serious problem for them.
That’s quite a gift to the insurance companies. Millions of new customers will pay premiums, and because of the out-of-pocket costs, may not actually use health services. A cap on out-of-pocket costs was included in Obamacare, but has been delayed for a year because insurers said their computer systems were not ready to manage the caps.
Thousands of Waivers
The delay on out-of-pocket spending caps is one of the tricks that insurers are using to protect their profits. They have used many others, and we can expect more.
Obamacare was written with the help of large insurance corporation lobbyists and others from health industries. The reform process was led in the Senate Finance Committee by Liz Fowler, a former WellPoint executive and Senate staffer. After Obamacare was signed into law, Fowler was transferred to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to oversee the regulations. Insurance representatives have also played an active role at the state level in forming the exchanges. It is no secret that most state insurance commissioners have close ties to the industry.
The effect that this level of industry influence has had is that thousands of waivers have been issued by HHS to water down provisions in the bill and the industry has participated in writing definitions of terms to their advantage. For example, one area of tension concerned the requirement that insurers spend 80 to 85 percent of what they collect in premiums on health care (called the Medical Loss Ratio, MLR). This requirement simply led to a redefinition of care, and the term was interpreted so broadly as to include insurance brokers. Dr. John Geyman of Physicians for a National Health Program writes, “The insurance lobby won a number of concessions, including counting expenses of quality assurance as medical costs, allowance to deduct many of their taxes from their total premiums before calculating their MLR, and the ability to appeal for a lower MLR standard for up to three years in states where ‘there is a reasonable likelihood that market destabilization could harm consumers.’”
Perhaps one of the most egregious examples of insurance company behavior took place six months after Obamacare was signed. At that point, by law, insurers were no longer allowed to deny new policies to children on the basis of pre-existing conditions. Faced with a potential reduction in profit margins, many health insurers simply stopped selling new policies for children. In essence, they pulled the product from the shelf. HHS was able to entice the insurers to sell policies again by offering increased premiums and limiting open enrollment periods.
This is one of the ways that insurance corporations cherry pick only the healthiest people. Under Obamacare, some large insurers are avoiding most of the insurance exchanges and are focused instead on offering plans to employers or serving as benefit administrators. Another method is restricting networks to avoid facilities that care for the sickest or by reducing the number of providers in a plan. And the third will be to pull out of geographic areas if they prove to be money-losers.
Insurers are not allowed to charge more for people with pre-existing conditions, but they are allowed to charge more for smokers, up to three times more based on age and more in geographic areas where health care costs are high or the population has greater medical needs. As it is with markets, health insurers will sell their products where they can make the most profit.
We will watch and see what insurers do over the coming years. We can expect them to justify charging higher premiums. In the past, they have reduced premiums temporarily to lure people in or avoid government intervention and then raised them later. We can expect them to push for lower levels of coverage or fewer required services. And we can expect that HHS and state insurance commissioners will be compliant, as they have been.
Towards Greater Privatization
Another myth used to lure progressives to support Obamacare is to say that it is a step in the right direction, meaning towards universal coverage. But Obamacare is actually a step towards greater privatization of our entire health system. It lacks provisions to stop the consolidation of ownership of health facilities by large for-profit entities, something that large insurers are doing more. It cuts funding to safety-net hospitals. And under Obamacare, public insurances are becoming more privatized.
Medicaid is state health insurance for people with low incomes. More states are moving their Medicaid patients into managed care organizations (MCOs). MCOS, such as Amerigroup which was bought by WellPoint after Obamacare passed, are for-profit administrators that compete with each other to cover the healthiest patients and are incentivized to cut care. Currently 75 percent of Medicaid patients are in MCOs and that number is expected to increase further under Obamacare.
Medicare is public insurance for people 65 years of age and older and who are disabled. One of the early goals of Obamacare was to cut back on Medicare Advantage plans, which are essentially private insurance plans paid for through Medicare. The Advantage plans primarily insure the healthiest seniors and cost more than traditional Medicare. Instead of cutting back, the Obama administration boosted payment to the Advantage plans. And enrollment in the plans has increased by 30 percent since 2010.
There is good reason to suspect that Medicare may be completely privatized in the coming years by being turned into a defined premium plan rather than the defined benefit plan that it is now. This means that seniors would receive a certain amount of money each year to purchase private insurance instead of knowing each year that they would have Medicare with its required benefits. This is the plan being pushed by Republican Congressman Paul Ryan. The idea came out of the National Commission for Fiscal Responsibility and Reform created by President Obama in 2010.
Not the Reform We Need
Looking at Obamacare from a distance, it is difficult to see it as anything more than a law designed by and for the health industries that profit from the current health system. The regulations can be circumvented or waived. The insurers can continue to find innovative ways to avoid the sick and not pay for care. And overall the system is becoming more privatized, which is the opposite direction from the real solution, Medicare for all.
Medicare for all, also called single-payer, would create a health system that treats health care as a public good rather than as a commodity. The system would be paid for up front through progressive taxation. There would be no premiums or out of pocket costs, so while taxes would be higher, people would be able to get the health care they need rather than being limited to what they could afford.
In a Medicare-for-all system, every person in the United States would be in the system from birth to death and it would cover all necessary care. It would be much simpler to use because there would be one set of rules and all health professionals would be included. People would have more choices of where to go for care and would be able to change jobs or travel freely without worrying about not being covered. Barriers to receiving care would be removed. There would be no more worries about whether a person qualifies for this or that because everyone would have access to the same standard of care.
Current health care spending in the United States is more tha
n adequate to pay for a Medicare-for-all system. This has been proven time and again in studies at the state and national levels. In fact, a Medicare-for-all system would allow better management of our health care dollars and the ability to negotiate for fair prices for medications and services. And Medicare for all would have a broader impact on our public policy because the bottom line would be public health rather than profits. Clean air and water, access to healthy food and fewer toxins in consumer products would reduce health care spending rather than padding the pockets of the health industry.
The work for Medicare for all continues. There is a bill, HR 676, in the House of Representatives that is collecting co-sponsors and which outlines a Medicare-for-all plan. Single-payer groups throughout the country continue to press forward. And Physicians for a National Health Program will continue to document the problems with our health system and educate about Medicare for all. It’s crucial that single-payer supporters continue to articulate what a real solution to our health care crisis would look like and not silence themselves out of a misguided desire to shield Obama and the Democrats and the poor decisions they have made from attacks by Republican demagogues.
We cannot cross our fingers and hope that Obamacare “works.” That attitude means hundreds of thousands will suffer and die from preventable causes and millions of families each year will continue to go bankrupt because of medical illness and costs. The moral imperative is to realize that health care never has been and never will be a commodity and to stop treating it as such by taking it out of the marketplace altogether.
Margaret Flowers is a pediatrician and co-chair of the Maryland chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program. She serves on the board of Healthcare-Now and of the Maryland Health Care is a Human Right campaign. She is also an editor at popularresistance.org.
https://indypendent.org/2013/10/30/health-care-market-madness
GAO report on fraud and abuse
Health Care Fraud and Abuse Control Program
GAO, September 2013 In fiscal year 2012, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), HHS Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG), and the Department of Justice (DOJ) obligated approximately $583.6 million to fund Health Care Fraud and Abuse Control (HCFAC) program activities. HHS, HHS-OIG, and DOJ use several indicators to assess HCFAC activities, as well as to inform decision-makers about how to allocate resources and prioritize those activities. For example, in addition to other indicators, the United States Attorneys’ Offices use indicators related to criminal prosecutions, including the number of defendants charged and the number of convictions. Additionally, many of the indicators that HHS, HHS-OIG, and DOJ use—such as the dollar amount recovered as a result of fraud cases—reflect the collective work of multiple agencies since these agencies work many health care fraud cases jointly. Outputs from some key indicators have changed in recent years. For example, according to the fiscal year 2012 HCFAC report, the return-on-investment—the amount of money returned to the government as a result of HCFAC activities compared with the funding appropriated to conduct those activities—has increased from $4.90 returned for every $1.00 invested for fiscal years 2006- 2008 to $7.90 returned for every $1.00 invested for fiscal years 2010-2012. GAO report (70 pages): http://www.gao.gov/assets/660/658344.pdf
Comment:
By Don McCanne, M.D. You frequently hear people say that we could control health care costs if we were to get rid of fraud and abuse, as if efforts were not already underway to do so. Our government is spending over half a billion dollars on fraud detection with a recovery of almost eight dollars for every dollar spent. Furthermore, fraud is being detected in earlier stages, preventing further loss, which is more effective than limiting recovery to “pay and chase” approaches (trying to recover losses after the funds were distributed). Also, CMS was able to revoke or deactivate the billing privileges of tens of thousands of providers that did not meet Medicare requirements. The point is that we can’t let single payer opponents dismiss the need for the adoption of more efficient health care financing methods by saying that we merely need to eliminate fraud and abuse. We need single payer if we are going to achieve real savings.
]]>Here’s how GOP Obamacare hypocrisy backfires
GOP base doesn’t understand right wants to turn Medicare, Social Security and more into a very similar program
By Michael Lind
Salon, Oct. 28, 2013
The smartest thing yet written about the botched rollout of the Affordable Care Act’s federal exchange program is a post by Mike Konczal of the Roosevelt Institute at his “Rortybomb” blog at Next New Deal. Konczal makes two points, each of which deserves careful pondering.
The first point is that to some degree the problems with the website have been caused by the overly complicated design of Obamacare itself. Instead of being a simple, universal program like Social Security or Medicare, the Affordable Care Act system is designed as if to illustrate Steven Teles’ notion of “kludgeocracy” or needless, counterproductive complexity in public policy. By using means-testing to vary subsidies among individuals and by trying to match individuals with private insurance companies, the ACA requires far more information about people who try to sign up than do simpler public programs like Social Security and Medicare. If Congress had passed Medicare for All, the left’s preferred simple, universal alternative to the kludgeocratic ACA mess, signing up would have been a lot easier and the potential for website snafus correspondingly less.
Konczal’s second point is even more important — the worst features of Obamacare are the very features that conservatives want to impose on all federal social policy: means-testing, a major role for the states, and subsidies to private providers instead of direct public provision of health or retirement benefits. This is not surprising, because Obamacare’s models are right-wing models — the Heritage Foundation’s healthcare plan in the 1990s and Mitt Romney’s “Romneycare” in Massachusetts.
This point is worth dwelling on. Conservatives want all social insurance to look like Obamacare. The radical right would like to replace Social Security with an Obamacare-like system, in which mandates or incentives pressure Americans to steer money into tax-favored savings accounts like 401(k)s and to purchase annuities at retirement, with means-tested subsidies to help the poor make their private purchases. And most conservative and libertarian plans for healthcare for the elderly involve replacing Medicare with a totally new system designed along the lines of Obamacare, with similar mandates or incentives to compel the elderly to buy private health insurance from for-profit corporations.
If you don’t like Obamacare, you should really, really hate the proposed conservative alternatives to Social Security and Medicare. Konczal writes:
“Conservatives in particular think this website has broad implications for liberalism as a philosophical and political project. I think it does, but for the exact opposite reasons: it highlights the problems inherent in the move to a neoliberal form of governance and social insurance, while demonstrating the superiorities in the older, New Deal form of liberalism. This point is floating out there, and it turns out to be a major problem for conservatives as well, so let’s make it clear and explicit here.”
Building on an insightful discussion of public policy by means of subsidies or “coupons” published by the New America Foundation’s Next Social Contract initiative, Konczal contrasts the indirect, market-based, state-based neoliberal/conservative approach to social insurance that inspired Obamacare with the kind of universal federal social insurance preferred by liberals in the tradition of FDR and LBJ:
“So this tells a story. Let’s refer to these features of social insurance, which are also playing a major role in the rollout problems, as ‘Category A.’ Now, what would the opposite of this look like? Let’s define the opposite of this as ‘Category B’ social insurance. And let’s take these two categories and chart them out.”
Konczal speculates that the flaws of Obamacare may undermine public support for proposed conservative replacements of Social Security and Medicare:
“However, the smarter conservatives who are thinking several moves ahead (e.g. Ross Douthat) understand that this failed rollout is a significant problem for conservatives. Because if all the problems are driven by means-testing, state-level decisions and privatization of social insurance, the fact that the core conservative plan for social insurance is focused like a laser beam on means-testing, block-granting and privatization is a rather large problem. As Ezra Klein notes, ‘Paul Ryan’s health-care plan — and his Medicare plan — would also require the government to run online insurance marketplaces.’ Additionally, the Medicaid expansion is working well where it is being implemented, and the ACA is perhaps even bending the cost curve of Medicare, the two paths forward that conservatives don’t want to take.”
Will the flaws of Obamacare really hurt the right and help center-left supporters of universal social insurance? I doubt it.
To begin with, this implies a willingness of the right to acknowledge that Obamacare, in its design, is essentially a conservative program, not a traditional liberal one. But we have just been through a presidential campaign in which Mitt Romney, who as governor of Massachusetts presided over the creation of the most important model for Obamacare, rejected any comparison of Romneycare with Obamacare. What is more, instead of agreeing with Konczal that the flaws of Obamacare are shared by most conservative entitlement reform proposals, conservatives are likely simply to denounce Obamacare as “socialism” or “collectivism” while promoting their own, Obamacare-like replacements for Social Security and Medicare, with blithe indifference to their own inconsistency.
Nor are progressives likely to press the point in present or future debates. Unlike conservatives, who are right-wingers first and Republicans second, all too many progressives put loyalty to the Democratic Party — most of whose politicians, including Obama, are not economic progressives — above fidelity to a consistent progressive economic philosophy. These partisan Democratic spinmeisters are now treating Obamacare, not as an essentially conservative program that is better than nothing, but as something it is not — namely, a great victory of progressive public policy on the scale of Social Security and Medicare.
In doing so, progressive defenders of Obamacare may inadvertently be digging the graves of Social Security and Medicare.
If Obamacare — built on means-testing, privatizing and decentralization to the states — is treated by progressives as the greatest liberal public policy success in the last half-century, then how will progressives be able to argue against proposals by conservative Republicans and center-right neoliberal Democrats to means-test, privatize and decentralize Social Security and Medicare in the years ahead?
I predict that it is only a matter of time before conservatives and Wall Street-backed “New Democrats” begin to argue that, with Obamacare in place, it makes no sense to have two separate healthcare systems for the middle class — Obamacare for working-age Americans, Medicare for retired Americans. They will suggest, in a great bipartisan chorus: Let’s get rid of Medicare, in favor of Lifelong Obamac
are! Let’s require the elderly to keep purchasing private insurance until they die!
I’m sure a number of token “centrist” Democrats will be found, in due time, to support the replacement of Medicare by Lifelong Obamacare. And with neoliberal Democratic supporters of the proposal as cover, the overclass centrists of the corporate media will begin pushing for Lifelong Obamacare as the sober, responsible, “adult” policy in one unsigned editorial after another.
Once Medicare has been abolished in favor of Lifelong Obamacare, perhaps by a future neoliberal Democratic president like Clinton and Obama, Social Security won’t last very long.
The conservative Republicans and centrist Democrats will argue that the success of Obamacare, in both its initial version and the new and improved Lifelong Obamacare version, proves that a fee-based, means-tested, privatized and state-based system is superior to the universal, federal, tax-based Social Security program enacted nearly a century ago in the Dark Age known as the New Deal. We will be told that, in a world with computers and globalization and apps or whatever, simple, universal, one-size-fits all social insurance is obsolete. In the “new economy,” public policy needs to offer as many baffling choices as airlines or gyms, like the ridiculous bronze, silver, gold and platinum plans of Obamacare.
At some point in the future, the right will introduce a plan to replace Social Security with a system of individual mandates and fines to compel working-age Americans to invest in for-profit Wall Street mutual funds during one’s working years, and to compel them to buy annuities from for-profit money managers at retirement (which with the help of centrist Democrats will be postponed to 70 or beyond). The genuine progressives will respond with a defense of Social Security. Whereupon the faux-progressives, the neoliberal heirs of Carter, Clinton and Obama, will reject the option of preserving Social Security — why, that’s crazy left-wing radical talk! — but insist that the subsidies for the poorest of the elderly be slightly increased, as the price for their adoption of the conservative plan to destroy Social Security. Throughout the process, the right-wing Republicans and neoliberal Democrats will ask, “How can progressives object to means-testing, privatization and 50 state programs, when those are the very features of the Obamacare system that our friends on the left celebrate as a great achievement?”
Think about it, progressives. The real “suicide caucus” may consist of those on the center-left who, by passionately defending the Affordable Care Act rather than holding their noses, are unwittingly reinforcing the legitimacy of the right’s long-term strategy of repealing the greatest achievements of American liberalism.
Michael Lind is the author of “Land of Promise: An Economic History of the United States” and co-founder of the New America Foundation.
http://www.salon.com/2013/10/28/what_the_tea_party_misses_if_you_hate_obamacare_youll_really_hate_what_the_right_wants_to_do_to_social_security/
Is competition really good for health care?
There’s little evidence to support the model, this author postulates
By Leigh Dolin, M.D.
The Lund Report (Portland, Ore.), Oct. 28, 2013
Competition is supposed to be good for health care. Only with competition, it is said, will we get the highest quality health care at the lowest cost. But is this true? Where’s the evidence?
In the 1990’s capitated managed care was supposed to prove the benefits of competition. Insurance companies would compete with each other to keep people healthy and by keeping them healthy, they would make money. But unfortunately, the bottom line of the insurance companies was not the health of its customers, but profit. They competed with each other to avoid caring for the sickest patients and to deny coverage for treating illness.
And now we have the Affordable Care Act — Obamacare — which is based on the same principles of competition. To be sure, there are some benefits to Obamacare. More people will have access to health insurance and coverage can’t be denied for preexisting conditions. But once again, the insurance companies are in charge, and we know what their ultimate goal is.
In pursuit of profit maximization, they expend enormous amounts of money on bloated salaries for their executives and on advertising to lure customers from each other. Moda (the insurance company previously known as ODS — how much was spent to have someone think up that more appealing name?) paid $40 million for the naming rights to the Rose Garden. How much medical care could that have paid for? How much was added to the monthly premiums of its customers so that the Rose Garden could be called the Moda Center?
The bronze and silver policies that most people will select under Obamacare have enormous deductibles so that people are discouraged from seeking routine medical care and from getting the companies to provide something in return for the premiums. And the companies will continue their efforts to avoid caring for the sickest patients and to deny coverage whenever possible. The “choice” in the “health care marketplace” is limited to policies of companies whose bottom line is not patient care, but profit. (The “not for profit” companies have the same bottom line as those that are “for profit” — they just have to call it something else.)
Is competition among drug companies a good thing? One would think that “ethical pharmaceuticals” would compete to offer the best products at the lowest prices. But like the health insurance business, the “competition” is only to see who can derive the maximum profit. We get the drugs that are most profitable and most easily marketed, not the drugs we need. And the price of the drugs is whatever the drug companies can get away with.
The business model of competition and profit seeking is even being foisted on doctors. “Pay for performance” is promoted as a way to get doctors to improve the care they provide. What an insult to the medical profession! Doctors don’t need a financial incentive to be motivated to provide quality care for their patients. When pay for performance has been put into effect, doctors and hospitals have shown that they know how to game the system, but there has been no evidence that pay for performance has actually improved patient outcomes.
If competition is so wonderful, why don’t we have competing police departments, fire departments and armed services? Clearly, the business model — competition and making a profit — is not always appropriate. The competitive model for health care is a terrible idea — inefficient, immoral, and colossally expensive. A recent study estimated that a single-payer system would save $592 billion in administrative and pharmaceutical costs. Will we ever get a system whose bottom line is not making money, but caring for patients?
Winston Churchill once said: “You can always count on Americans to do the right thing — after they have tried everything else.” Maybe Obamacare is the last step before we do the right thing — a single-payer system, “Medicare for all.” Let’s hope so.
Dr. Leigh Dolin is a retired internist and past president of the Oregon Medical Association. He is currently an active member of Physicians for a National Health Program, which supports a single-payer system.
http://www.thelundreport.org/resource/is_competition_really_good_for_healthcare>
The other reason for health website chaos
By David Freudberg
The Huffington Post, Oct. 28, 2013
Advocates of a single-payer health system have long touted what they see as its cost-saving advantages. In light of the recent Obamacare rollout, they would be justified in citing another benefit as well: simplified sign-up.
An easy shorthand for single-payer is Medicare for All. The concept is to take a health coverage system that is highly popular and generally works well and just expand it. Without reinventing the wheel, simply lift the age restriction for Medicare eligibility.
Instead of covering only seniors, single-payer champions urge allowing everyone to be covered by a federal system — the way health care is provided in basically every other industrialized nation.
For example, in Canada’s single-payer system, you select your own doctor (and if unsatisfied, you pick a new one). There are some limitations on what services a patient can get when, but they’re apparently not seen as too drastic: A Gallup Poll showed a majority of Canadians to be “satisfied” or “very satisfied” with their system.
And for Americans, of course, there are limits to coverage from private insurers as well. Just ask anyone who has recently braved healthcare.gov and studied the fine print of competing private policies offered on the new exchanges. Or anyone who has had the unpleasant experience of being denied medical care by an American insurer.
I’m not sure which is more incomprehensible: the ham-handed launch of registration for the Affordable Care Act (ACA) or the system’s mind-numbing complexity. But the two are related.
Failing to beta-test a national site with this many moving parts til two weeks before the liftoff date would strike most IT professionals I know as webmaster malpractice or at least dereliction of management at HHS.
But that doesn’t clarify why so many moving parts were needed in the first place. What explains the system’s convolution is the numerous powerful health care industry lobbies. Their behind-the-scenes influence before the ACA was passed by Congress in 2010 produced one of the least healthy foods on the planet: legislative sausage.
With about 50 million Americans, including many children, uninsured at the time of President Obama’s first election, the time had come to do something to foster greater fairness in health care. But the awkward compromise reached, dubbed the Affordable Care Act, left no one fully satisfied.
As the legislative machinery kicked into gear in the spring of 2009, Senate finance committee chair Max Baucus, who led the deliberations, famously declared that single-payer coverage was “off the table.”
On two occasions in March of that year, Baucus even ejected single-payer activists from Senate hearings. Yet single-payer was widely popular. A New York Times poll published the previous month found that “59 percent [of Americans] say the government should provide national health insurance, including 49 percent who say such insurance should cover all medical problems.”
But there is powerful opposition to single-payer from a corporate sector that stands to lose billions — the health insurance industry. Last year health insurers invested $243 million in lobbying.
The ACA, with its individual mandate to buy coverage, was passed by Congress partly because health insurers went along with it. After all, they were eying tens of millions of new customers. And competition for those customers, projected to yield billions in profits, has brought us the new health care exchanges, which are so complicated that the federal ACA website has been unable to put the pieces together, at least thus far.
Imagine what the rollout this month would have looked like if single-payer had carried the day in Washington instead. Undoubtedly, there’d be some computer glitches as happen with all website launches. And Congressional opponents of the law probably would still be griping loudly.
But rather than sorting through a bewildering maze of plans, the burden on health care consumers would likely be a far simpler registration for guaranteed health care. And by many calculations, the economies of scale from including more patients would slash the nation’s per capita health costs, a boon to federal deficit reduction.
Says Marcia Angell, former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, “The underlying problem with our health care system, the thing that makes it such a mess, is that it is based on seeking profits and not on providing health care.”
David Freudberg is host of the public radio series “Humankind.”
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-freudberg/the-other-reason-for-health_b_4169711.html
Konczal and Krugman on the policies and politics of single payer
What Kind of Problem is the ACA Rollout for Liberalism?
By Mike Konczal
Next New Deal, The blog of the Roosevelt Institute, October 23, 2013
Healthcare.gov looks to be having a disastrous launch.
Conservatives in particular think this website has broad implications for liberalism as a philosophical and political project. I think it does, but for the exact opposite reasons: it highlights the problems inherent in the move to a neoliberal form of governance and social insurance, while demonstrating the superiorities in the older, New Deal form of liberalism.
The general problem is that “More than 30 states refused to set up their own exchanges, requiring the federal government to vastly expand its project in unexpected ways.”
Category A Social Insurance
1. is heavily means-tested
2. is provided by private agents to individuals
3. leaves open the possibility of adverse selection because of market segmentation
4. gives discretion to the states to either help or undermine the process
5. is designed to ensure choice and competition
Category B Social Insurance
1. is a program that is universal to all who qualify for it
2. has the government running the system itself
3. uses compulsion to default people into social insurance to prevent adverse selection
4. situates the program at the federal level, to avoid states undermining it
5. does all this to ensure better provisioning outcomes, using government’s scale and efficiency
What we often refer to as Category A can be viewed as a “neoliberal” approach to social insurance, heavy on private provisioning and means-testing. This term often obscures more than it helps, but think of it as a plan for reworking the entire logic of government to simply act as an enabler to market activities, with perhaps some coordinated charity to individuals most in need.
This contrasts with the Category B grouping, which we associate with the New Deal and the Great Society. This approach creates a universal floor so that individuals don’t experience basic welfare goods as commodities to buy and sell themselves. This is a continuum rather than a hard line, of course, but readers will note that Social Security and Medicare are more in Category B category rather than Category A. My man Franklin Delano Roosevelt may not have known about JavaScript and agile programming, but he knew a few things about the public provisioning of social insurance, and he realized the second category, while conceptually more work for the government, can eliminate a lot of unnecessary administrative problems.
The choice between Category A and B above will characterize much of the political debate in the next decade. It’s important we get more sophisticated analysis of what has gone wrong with the ACA rollout to better appreciate how utilizing “the market” can be far more cumbersome and inefficient than the government just doing things itself.
http://www.nextnewdeal.net/rortybomb/what-kind-problem-aca-rollout-liberalism
Why Is Obamacare Complicated?
By Paul Krugman
The New York Times, October 26, 2013
Mike Konczal says most of what needs to be said about the underlying sources of Obamacare’s complexity, which in turn set the stage for the current tech problems. Basically, Obamacare isn’t complicated because government social insurance programs have to be complicated: neither Social Security nor Medicare are complex in structure. It’s complicated because political constraints made a straightforward single-payer system unachievable.
It’s been clear all along that the Affordable Care Act sets up a sort of Rube Goldberg device, a complicated system that in the end is supposed to more or less simulate the results of single-payer, but keeping private insurance companies in the mix and holding down the headline amount of government outlays through means-testing. This doesn’t make it unworkable: state exchanges are working, and healthcare.gov will probably get fixed before the whole thing kicks in. But it did make a botched rollout much more likely.
So Konczal is right to say that the implementation problems aren’t revealing problems with the idea of social insurance; they’re revealing the price we pay for insisting on keeping insurance companies in the mix, when they serve little useful purpose.
So does this mean that liberals should have insisted on single-payer or nothing? No. Single-payer wasn’t going to happen — partly because of the insurance lobby’s power, partly because voters wouldn’t have gone for a system that took away their existing coverage and replaced it with the unknown. Yes, Obamacare is a somewhat awkward kludge, but if that’s what it took to cover the uninsured, so be it.
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/10/26/why-is-obamacare-complicated/?_r=0
Krugman elaborates further on the Obamacare kludge: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/28/opinion/krugman-the-big-kludge.html?ref=opinion
One Nation Uninsured
By Paul Krugman
The New York Times. June 13, 2005
The intellectually serious debate is between those who believe that the government should simply provide basic health insurance for everyone and those proposing a more complex, indirect approach that preserves a central role for private health insurance companies.
A system in which the government provides universal health insurance is often referred to as “single payer,” but I like Ted Kennedy’s slogan “Medicare for all.” It reminds voters that America already has a highly successful, popular single-payer program, albeit only for the elderly. It shows that we’re talking about government insurance, not government-provided health care. And it makes it clear that like Medicare (but unlike Canada’s system), a U.S. national health insurance system would allow individuals with the means and inclination to buy their own medical care.
The great advantage of universal, government-provided health insurance is lower costs. Canada’s government-run insurance system has much less bureaucracy and much lower administrative costs than our largely private system. Medicare has much lower administrative costs than private insurance. The reason is that single-payer systems don’t devote large resources to screening out high-risk clients or charging them higher fees. The savings from a single-payer system would probably exceed $200 billion a year, far more than the cost of covering all of those now uninsured.
Nonetheless, most reform proposals out there – even proposals from liberal groups like the Century Foundation and the Center for American Progress – reject a simple single-payer approach. Instead, they call for some combination of mandates and subsidies to help everyone buy insurance from private insurers.
Some people, not all of them right-wingers, fear that a single-payer system would hurt innovation. But the main reason these proposals give private insurers a big role is the belief that the insurers must be appeased.
That belief is rooted in recent history. Bill Clinton’s health care plan failed in large part because of a dishonest but devastating lobbying and advertising campaign financed by the health insurance industry – remember Harry and Louise? And the lesson many people took from that defeat is that any future health care proposal must buy off the insurance lobby.
But I think that’s the wrong lesson. The Clinton plan actually preserved a big role for private insurers; the industry attacked it all the same. And the plan’s complexity, which was largely a result of attempts to placate interest groups, made it hard to sell to the public. So I would argue that good economics is also good politics: reformers will do best with
a straightforward single-payer plan, which offers maximum savings and, unlike the Clinton plan, can easily be explained.
We need to do this one right. If reform fails again, we’ll be on the way to a radically unequal society, in which all but the most affluent Americans face the constant risk of financial ruin and even premature death because they can’t pay their medical bills.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/13/opinion/13krugman.html?hp
Comment:
By Don McCanne, M.D. Mike Konczal’s article makes important distinctions between social insurance along the lines of private market provisioning (neoliberal), as with the Affordable Care Act, and social insurance along the lines of public provisioning (New Deal liberal), as with single payer, and why “utilizing ‘the market’ can be far more cumbersome and inefficient than the government just doing things itself.” Paul Krugman reinforces Konczal’s thesis by saying that the implementation problems are “revealing the price we pay for insisting on keeping insurance companies in the mix, when they serve little useful purpose.” Yet Krugman says liberals were correct in not insisting on single payer, because Obamacare, a kludge, was “what it took to cover the uninsured.” He remains silent on the fact that 31 million will still remain uninsured. Krugman’s statement is a far cry from what he wrote in 2005. He rejected the so-called lesson of the Clinton fiasco – that any reform must buy off the private insurance industry – writing then, “good economics is also good politics: reformers will do best with a straightforward single-payer plan.” Konczal’s astute framing of private social insurance versus government social insurance can be useful in our advocacy work since it makes it very clear why it is imperative that we first get policy right, and then conform the politics to match the policy. The great tragedy of Obamacare is that we strangled the policies in order to protect our terribly flawed politics.
]]>Vermont eyes 2017 launch of single-payer health plan
By Dave Gram
Modern Healthcare, Oct. 26, 2013
(AP) As states open insurance marketplaces amid uncertainty about whether they’re a solution for healthcare, Vermont is eyeing a bigger goal, one that more fully embraces a government-funded model.
The state has a planned 2017 launch of the nation’s first universal healthcare system, a sort of modified Medicare-for-all that has long been a dream for many liberals.
The plan is especially ambitious in the current atmosphere surrounding healthcare in the United States. Republicans in Congress balk at the federal health overhaul years after it was signed into law. States are still negotiating their terms for implementing it. And some major employers have begun to drastically limit their offerings of employee health insurance, raising questions about the future of the industry altogether.
In such a setting, Vermont’s plan looks more and more like an anomaly. It combines universal coverage with new cost controls in an effort to move away from a system in which the more procedures doctors and hospitals perform, the more they get paid, to one in which providers have a set budget to care for a set number of patients.
The result will be healthcare that’s “a right and not a privilege,” Gov. Peter Shumlin said.
Where some governors have backed off the politically charged topic of healthcare, Shumlin recently surprised many by digging more deeply into it. In an interview with a newspaper’s editorial board, he reversed himself somewhat on earlier comments that Vermont would wait to figure out how to pay for the new system. He said he expects a payroll tax to be a main source of funding, giving for the first time a look at how he expects the plan to be paid for.
The reasons tiny Vermont may be ripe for one of the costliest and most closely watched social experiments of its time?
It’s the most liberal state in the country, according to Election Day exit polls. Democrats hold the governor’s office and big majorities in both houses of the Legislature.
It has a tradition of activism. Several times in recent years, hundreds of people have rallied in Montpelier for a campaign advocating that healthcare is a human right.
It’s small. With a population of about 626,000 and just 15 hospitals, all nonprofits, Vermont is seen by policy experts as a manageable place to launch a universal healthcare project.
“Within a state like Vermont, it should be much more possible to actually get all of the stakeholders at the table,” said Shana Lavarreda, director of health insurance studies at the University of California at Los Angeles’ Center for Health Policy Research.
Vermont’s small size also is often credited with helping preserve its communitarian spirit. People in its towns know one another and are willing to help in times of need.
“The key is demography,” said University of Vermont political scientist Garrison Nelson. Discussions about health policy “can be handled on a relative face-to-face basis,” he said.
And, for better or worse, Vermont has little racial or income diversity, Nelson pointed out.
Then there’s the fact that Vermont is close to universal healthcare already. Lavarreda noted that the state became a leader in insuring children in the 1990s. Now 96 percent of Vermont children have coverage, and 91 percent of the overall population does, second only to Massachusetts.
At this stage, no one knows whether state-level universal healthcare will succeed, and it’s an open question as to whether Vermont can work as a model for other states.
“Developing a single-payer system for Vermont is a lot easier than in California or Texas or New York state,” said U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders. The independent, frequently described as the only socialist in the Senate, has been pushing for some form of socialized medicine since he was mayor of Burlington 30 years ago.
Vermont’s efforts have largely gone unnoticed as the nation focuses on the rollout of the state-based health insurance marketplaces and the disastrous unveiling of healthcare.gov, said Chapin White, a researcher with the Washington-based Center for Studying Health System Change.
“Vermont’s thinking about 2017, and the rest of the country is just struggling with 2014 right now,” White said.
Even with years to go before Vermont’s single-payer plan will be in place, several obstacles remain.
The largest national health insurance industry lobbying group, America’s Health Insurance Plans, has warned that the law could limit options for consumers and might not be sustainable.
“The plan could disrupt coverage consumers and employers like and rely on today, limit patients’ access to the vital support and assistance health plans provide, and put Vermont taxpayers on the hook for the costs of an unsustainable healthcare system,” said AHIP spokesman Robert Zirkelbach.
And questions have also arisen about the expected cost savings of eliminating multiple insurance companies and their different coverage levels and billing styles.
Much of a hospital’s billing process is coding to ensure that the right patient is billed the right amount for the right procedure, said Jill Olson, vice president of the Vermont Association of Hospitals and Health Systems. That would continue in a single-payer system.
Vermont also has yet to answer how it will cover everyone. The post-2017 system is not envisioned to include federal employees or those with self-insured employers that assume the risk of their own coverage and are governed by federal law, including IBM, one of the state’s largest private employers. It also may not include residents who work for and get insurance through companies headquartered out of state, Olson said.
At least one resident, 73-year-old Gerry Kilcourse, has little patience for the naysayers.
Kilcourse said that when he and wife Kathy bought a hardware store in Plainfield in the early 1980s, they struggled for years to find good, affordable health insurance coverage.
In retirement, Kilcourse has schooled himself on health policy and advocates for universal coverage. He sees healthcare as a public good and likens the current campaign to the 19th-century push in the United States for public schools.
“It should be similar to education, which is publicly funded,” Kilcourse said of healthcare. “If we did the same thing for education (as in healthcare), you’d have a number of people being excluded” from public schools.
Shumlin has made it clear the status quo can’t hold. As a part owner himself of a small business — a student travel service based in Putney — he has spoken often of the burden that employee health coverage is to such business owners.
At a Chamber of Commerce forum in September, he called the federal health overhaul “a great improvement over the past” but added it “is not the silver bullet that will … provide universal access and quality healthcare for all Vermonters.”
That, he appears to hope, will come in 2017.
http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20131026/INFO/310269893/vermont-eyes-2017-launch-of-single-payer-health-plan
Group marches for health care for all
Participants rally to promote single-payer system
By Andrea K Walker
Baltimore Sun, October 26, 2013
The federal Affordable Care Act is expected to provide access to medical coverage to hundreds of thousands of Maryland’s uninsured, but one group said that doesn’t go far enough.
The group, Healthcare is a Human Right-Maryland, led a rally Saturday in Baltimore to push for single-payer coverage similar to that in countries such as Canada and Sweden, where the government runs most of the health system and there are no insurance companies.
The health reforms widely known as Obamacare require most people to get insurance. The uninsured will be able to buy from private insurers on a state exchange. Low-income people will qualify for plans under expanded Medicaid.
Healthcare is a Human Right-Maryland said that while health reform will expand coverage to many of Maryland’s 800,000 uninsured, many people still won’t qualify, including immigrants in the country illegally who can’t get insurance under the law.
Others still won’t be able to afford adequate coverage or coverage at all, members of the group say. Health reform creates a tiered system where people who have more money can buy better plans, the group said. For example, people who buy insurance on a state exchange in Maryland can choose between bronze, silver and gold plans. The bronze plans have less costly premiums but higher deductibles.
“Although the Affordable Care Act has helped some people get insurance, it doesn’t solve the problem,” said Roxanna Harlow, a member of the organization’s Carroll County chapter.
Maryland Health Secretary Dr. Joshua M. Sharfstein said he agrees that the ultimate goal is for everyone to be insured. But he said the access Marylanders will have to insurance under reform shouldn’t be underestimated.
Obamacare will also create a system that focuses on preventive care and keeping people out of the hospital. This will help create a healthier population and curb health care costs, he said.
“I think we’re engaged in the task at hand right now, which is making progress in the areas that we can,” he said. “We can help a lot of people through what we’re working on now,” he said.
Harlow was one of many who shared their experiences of living without insurance during Saturday’s rally. When she left a full-time job to start an education nonprofit, Harlow said, she didn’t make enough to pay for insurance. Under Obamacare, she will qualify for Medicaid. But she said that is only because Maryland chose to expand Medicaid under reform. The law gives states the choice to opt out of Medicaid expansion, which many states chose to do. Because of this, many people will remain uninsured.
In addition to Medicaid expansion, federal subsidies will also be offered to help people who fall under certain incomes pay for insurance.
That won’t help everyone, those at the rally said. They believe that under health reform, deductibles, co-pays and other out-of-pocket medical expenses will continue to keep health coverage out of reach for some. They also say people will still be in danger of falling into debt or medical bankruptcy because of health costs they can’t afford.
Raquel Rojas Rojas knows what it’s like to incur exorbitant medical fees. She didn’t have health insurance when she recently contracted pneumonia and landed in the hospital for two days. It cost her $12,000, and she said she feels that she’ll be paying that off for the rest of her life.
Rojas now has a job as a cook at a restaurant that provides health benefits, but she said she knows many others who don’t have insurance and have gotten stuck with hefty medical bills.
“As someone who has been uninsured, I really understand the importance of fighting for this,” she said.
Rojas and a large group marched from Highlandtown to the Canton waterfront and the offices of CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield.
Healthcare is a Human Right-Maryland believes that insurance companies such as CareFirst cause many of the problems with access to coverage. CareFirst officials could not be reached for comment Saturday.
Margaret Flowers was a pediatrician until 2007, when she said she became fed up with the insurance industry. She said insurers don’t pay for much-needed tests and drugs. She also had a hard time getting paid for services, she said.
“The system is not about health,” she said. “It is about profit. I decided I would quit and fight for health care.”
Sergio Espana, the statewide organizer for Healthcare is a Human Right-Maryland, said he hopes the rally brings more attention to the need for a better health care system.
“What we have now is not enough,” he said.
http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2013-10-26/health/bs-md-health-care-march-20131026_1_health-reform-medicaid-expansion-health-coverage
Amid tangle of Obamacare, consider single-payer health care
By Jack Bernard
The Augusta (Ga.) Chronicle, Oct. 26, 2013
With private insurance covering most of the employed and 48 million uninsured, the United States has seen health care costs skyrocket for many decades. Something had to be done, so Congress passed the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) in 2010. Apparently, the House suddenly awakened to that fact and wanted to shut down the government to reverse history to when George W. Bush was president.
Contrary to the social media hysteria being sent out, the ACA is not a left-wing socialist program. It is built on a flawed conservative Heritage Foundation proposal that was the basis for Romneycare in Massachusetts. As opposed to what the demagogues spout, the ACA simply expands the private insurance system to cover everyone, a right-of-center concept. Until relatively recently, that was exactly what the Republican Party was advocating, per Bob Dole when he ran for president.
Regardless of the hypocrisy, the pundits are correct that the ACA will increase total costs; fail to cover tens of millions of people (partly because of the refusal of many red states to expand Medicaid because of party politics); and perpetuate the self-interested stranglehold that private insurance companies have on our health care system. And the delays in implementation, many because of politics, should tell all of us how hard it will be to install.
So what is the best alternative?
Medicare is a well-established program beloved by most Americans – Republican, Democrat or independent. It is easy to understand why that support is so strong. Go back and look at what existed before it was enacted: the free market, with older Americans thrown to the wolves.
The Darwinian notion that we simply can return to the bad old days is out of touch with modern society. The radical philosophy of Ayn Rand, formed as a reaction to the communist threat nearly a century ago, is behind the Paul Ryan/GOP health care proposals of today.
In the 1960 presidential debates, Richard Nixon called national health insurance for the elderly “socialism.” Right or wrong, even our right-leaning seniors now love it. Remember the Tea Party placards in 2009 at town hall meetings – “Keep the government out of my Medicare”?
There is tremendous voter resistance to cutting entitlements (earned benefits, say some) via a Ryanesque Medicare voucher program that takes away the government guarantee of health insurance for the elderly. Having an inevitably decreasing federal ‘‘premium support,” which will
be tied to Washington partisan budget politics, should give few citizens younger than 55 little comfort.
I am a capitalist and a former Republican elected official, but we are going in the wrong direction with the simplistic Ryan approach. Health care is different than other economic markets. The “rational economic man” theory, wherein the buyer can evaluate quality and costs in a perfect world of readily available data, is just not applicable.
We should be setting up regulatory mechanisms to control costs, as other developed countries with more effective national health care systems do. That includes universal budget-setting with control of payments to providers, ensuring that compensation is equitable but not excessive.
The most efficient way to accomplish this goal is single-payer Medicare for all, funded primarily via payroll tax shared by employers and employees. The best place to find out more about single payer is from the Physicians for a National Healthcare Program:
• Private insurance companies have 31 percent administrative and marketing costs vs. 3 percent for Medicare;
• Medical bills are a major cause of bankruptcies in the United States, although most folks going broke had health insurance;
• The current breakdown of payers is not what you might think – 60 percent government; 20 percent private; and 20 percent out of pocket;
• We currently pay more per capita in taxes for government health care (Medicare/Medicaid/Veterans Administration and so forth) than most nations, but we still have tens of millions uninsured.
Let’s ask our politicians to finally put their ideologies aside and do what works for many other developed nations: single payer, universal Medicare.
The writer is a retired senior health care executive with several national for-profit firms, and was the state of Georgia’s first director of health planning. He lives in Monticello, Ga.
http://chronicle.augusta.com/opinion/opinion-columns/2013-10-26/amid-tangle-obamacare-consider-single-payer-health-care
New Mexico is 44th state AFL-CIO to back H.R. 676
By Kay Tillow
Single Payer News, Oct. 24, 2013
On October 17, 2013, the Executive Council of the New Mexico Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO, endorsed H.R. 676, national single-payer health care legislation sponsored by Congressman John Conyers (D-Mich.), reports Jon Hendry, president.
New Mexico is the 44th state AFL-CIO federation to take such action.
President Hendry stated, “We are huge believers in single payer here. There is absolutely no dissent from this unanimous support.” He said he was surprised to learn that formal action to support H.R. 676 had not been taken earlier. “We are not late,” he said, because “we have been big proponents of single payer for a long time.” He noted that his union, IATSE, is a leader in single-payer efforts nationally and that commitment was reaffirmed at their recent national convention.
The New Mexico Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO, is the state federation of labor representing over 170,000 members counting the families, retirees, and community affiliates throughout New Mexico, said Hendry.
Prior to the endorsement, James Besante, a third-year student at the University of New Mexico School of Medicine, spoke to the council about H.R. 676 and single-payer health care. In 2012 Besante received the Nicholas Skala Student Activist Award from Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP), the 18,000-member organization of doctors that leads in research and advocacy for single payer.
In most states PNHP is able to provide speakers to union organizations that are interested in learning how single payer works. info@pnhp.org (312) 782-6006.
**
H.R. 676 would institute a single-payer health care system by expanding a greatly improved Medicare to everyone residing in the U.S.
H.R. 676 would cover every person for all necessary medical care including prescription drugs, hospital, surgical, outpatient services, primary and preventive care, emergency services, dental (including oral surgery, periodontics, endodontics), mental health, home health, physical therapy, rehabilitation (including for substance abuse), vision care and correction, hearing services including hearing aids, chiropractic, durable medical equipment, palliative care, podiatric care, and long-term care.
H.R. 676 ends deductibles and co-payments. H.R. 676 would save hundreds of billions annually by eliminating the high overhead and profits of the private health insurance industry and HMOs.
In the current Congress, H.R. 676 has 51 co-sponsors in addition to Conyers.
H.R. 676 has been endorsed by 609 union organizations including 146 Central Labor Councils/Area Labor Federations and 44 state AFL-CIO’s (KY, PA, CT, OH, DE, ND, WA, SC, WY, VT, FL, WI, WV, SD, NC, MO, MN, ME, AR, MD-DC, TX, IA, AZ, TN, OR, GA, OK, KS, CO, IN, AL, CA, AK, MI, MT, NE, NJ, NY, NV, MA, RI, NH, ID & NM).
For further information, a list of union endorsers, or a sample endorsement resolution, contact: Kay Tillow, All Unions Committee for Single Payer Health Care–HR 676, c/o Nurses Professional Organization (NPO), 1169 Eastern Parkway, Suite 2218, Louisville, KY 40217. Phone: (502) 636-1551. E-mail: nursenpo@aol.com. Website: http://unionsforsinglepayer.org
UnitedHealth’s Simon Stevens to head NHS England
UNISON responds to appointment of Simon Stevens as NHS chief executive
UNISON, October 24, 2013 Responding to the announcement that the president of Global Health and group executive vice-president at UnitedHealth, Simon Stevens, will take on the role of chief executive of NHS England in April next year, UNISON Head of Health Christina McAnea said: “The NHS is facing its first serious crisis for the best part of the decade, and it is critical that Simon Stevens respects and shares the values of our NHS – universal healthcare that is free at the point of need. “It is surprising that no one within the NHS has been found to take on this position. We sincerely hope this is not a sign that the government wants to import America-type values into the NHS and look at ways of developing healthcare through an insurance model. If this is the intention there will be massive opposition. “Mr Stevens will have his work cut out for him right from the start. Far from being protected from government cuts, the NHS is being starved of the funds it needs. Thousands of jobs are under threat and accident and emergency departments are creaking under the pressure of cuts, privatisation and upheaval.” (UNISON is a UK trade union of public employees) http://www.unison.org.uk/news/unison-responds-to-appointment-of-simon-stevens-as-nhs-chief-executive
Simon Stevens, new head of NHS England, is in for a rude awakening
Under Labour, Stevens began the culture of competition in health. He will now find out just how perverse this has become
By Polly Toynbee
The Guardian, October 24, 2013
As he sowed, so shall he reap. Simon Stevens will get his just deserts as he takes up the reins of NHS England, only to find this horse has no bridle or bit, galloping out of anyone’s control. That was, of course, precisely the explosive “creative destruction” Andrew Lansley intended. Stevens returns from the biggest US health company to an NHS whose current path he designed as Tony Blair’s adviser. Now he must piece together some coherence from the fragments of what Sarah Wollaston, MP and GP, called “a grenade” tossed into the NHS.
As Lansley outlined his scheme in 2010, Stevens wrote a paean of praise in the Financial Times. It reads as a touchingly optimistic vision, where choice and competition in a perfect market deliver everything a patient or GP could desire. When he sees what he’s inherited, he may get a rude awakening. But he shares the blame, claiming authorship: “What makes the coalition’s proposals so radical is not that they tear up (our) earlier plan,” but “move decisively towards fulfilling it – in a way that Mr Blair was blocked from doing by internal opposition”.
He lists the plan’s glories: in “the new model NHS, patients are rightly being promised that ‘no decision will be made about me, without me'”. No sign yet of that. He praises “the severing of day-to-day political control of the NHS”, but now he’ll find his own control severed. How will he marry his vouchers for pregnant women with wildly unpopular maternity closures? His hope that “patient power will become real, GP commissioners will fire on all cylinders and hospitals will be liberated to innovate” is a world away from today’s NHS.
But his greatest regret may be his praise for “the decision to extend competition law across the health sector and treat the NHS as a regulated utility, with an economic regulator – Monitor”. Faith in competition fills his writings – but reality is biting back. Monitor, engine of NHS competition, has only just understood its destructive force: its chief executive, David Bennett, recently recoiled, saying Monitor would be “mad” to enforce the Lansley competition rules leaving commissioners to “spend all their time running competitive processes because they’re terrified they’re going to get in trouble if they don’t”. Too late now.
So far, 63% of contracts have been put out to tender by clinical commissioning groups (CCGs), now run by just a few GPs. The 211 CCGs are widely regarded as no match for the private sector in writing complex contracts. Section 75 of the Health and Social Care Act forces them to put all but a few services out or risk any putative bidder challenging them in court. Bringing competition law into the NHS means no one can control these unleashed forces.
Watch Stevens demand more changes to the law if he’s to control the unfolding chaos. Half of NHS trusts have announced a deficit for this year – that’s unprecedented – yet by 2017 the NHS must “save” £30bn. The Care Quality Commission says one in four hospitals are a safety risk, but their inspections aren’t allowed to count numbers of staff: the NHS has haemorrhaged 6,000 nurses since 2010. Many CCGs that control NHS funds are chaotic, with services falling between gaps, no one paying for them. Privatisation rushes on, at least £11bn so far, but private providers escape the NHS duty of openness or freedom for whistleblowers. Waiting times are rising, ambulance and A&E times growing, as the social care crisis blocks NHS beds with winter approaching.
Stevens will find many perversities in the competition culturre. He said top-down control was a disaster – but he may find fragmentation and lack of strategic control far worse. Can he make his perfect market work – or admit he might have been wrong?
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/oct/25/simon-stevens-nhs-england-rude-awakening
Comment:
By Don McCanne, M.D. The National Health Service in England currently exemplifies the greatest problem with publicly-administered and publicly-financed national health programs: They become subject to privatization efforts whenever conservatives gain control of the government. Selecting UnitedHealth’s Simon Stevens as chief executive of NHS England surely advances Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron’s privatization scheme. When do you suppose UnitedHealth will put in a bid to purchase the NHS? It would be great for Cameron’s budget, though the people would lose out.
]]>Glitches
By Andrew D. Coates, M.D., F.A.C.P.
WAMC Northeast Public Radio, Oct. 25, 2013
When I was young I worked as a carpenter’s helper here in rural upstate New York. The man I worked for, a treasure of local lore, is someone who possesses generous good humor and a gift for analogy. On ladders and roofs, in the back-road truck journeys to our jobs, and at the sawhorses we would debate the big questions of life and also share the most pedestrian observations about farm and family life.
One day, trying to describe how someone had taken a narrow view of a much larger question, he took a dime out of his pocket and held it at arms length. “Imagine that dime is a hole and all you can see of the world is what you can see through that hole,” he said. “If that’s all you can see, you’ll miss out.”
This week “glitches” in signing up for private health insurance through the Affordable Care Act website conquered the news cycle. The gathering storm of weekend talking heads prompted President Obama to summon a Rose Garden press conference on Monday.
In turn the talking heads grew even louder all week long, although the amount of the world their debate illuminated now seems smaller than that dime-sized hole.
On “The Daily Show,” Jon Stewart lanced the President’s Rose Garden performance, calling it a deal-closing speech from “Glengarry Glen Ross,” David Mamet’s award-winning play and film about failing real estate salesmen who are driven to desperate indignity by their corporate bosses.
On Wednesday the House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee took testimony about the website “glitches.” As the information technology subcontractors — ironically the two major firms involved are owned by a Canadian firm and a major U.S. insurance company — passed the buck and pointed fingers at public servants, the Republicans’ talking points seemed absurdly hypocritical.
The notion that government intervention is always a bad thing seems a bit silly if the point is made while grilling private subcontractors.
Tea Party criticizing the White House for website “glitches” seems even more silly, if we recall that the health care proposal put forward by Wisconsin Republican Paul Ryan would dismantle Medicare and set up a “Medicare Exchange” where seniors would log into websites to purchase their Medicare benefits from private insurance companies.
The day the House Committee deliberated the White House hosted a meeting with over a dozen top leaders of private insurers. The stated purpose of the meeting was to establish ways of working even more closely with the lucrative corporations to implement the Affordable Care Act. With a parade of insurance company CEOs at the White House against the background of Republican calls to dismantle all public programs in favor of a health care finance system even more dominated by private interests, should we laugh or cry?
Finally, by the end of the week Democratic Party supporters of the Affordable Care Act recalled that the Medicare Part D rollout — in which seniors and the disabled were enrolled in private prescription drug plans — was also characterized by a period of “glitches.” But comparing the problems with the president’s program to a bad public policy also seemed a strange talking point.
Stunningly, throughout the week, those who keep a keen eye on health policy and politics began to hear that the solution is single payer. While some of the far-right imagine a conspiracy led by the president, most people in the United States know that it doesn’t have to be this way in our wealthy country. Medicare was rolled out in 1965 with typewriters and telephones, not websites. Enrolling everyone over age 65 in one program offered simplicity.
The “glitches” in purchasing private health insurance arise from the complexity and bureaucracy of our private insurance system — with hundreds of insurers, thousands of plans, state-by-state as well as federal regulation and the need to mine new databases in order for the federal government to subsidize premium payments for Americans who have incomes below 400 percent of poverty.
In reviewing this week’s events in Washington, I am reminded of a view through a hole the size of a dime held at arms length, instead of the world around us.
Every day in the hospital I meet patients who can’t afford prescription drugs. Every day in the hospital I work with patients who can’t get timely specialty care, who are on waiting lists. Every day in the hospital we learn about new bottlenecks that deny or delay necessary care, problems caused by private insurance.
It is true that it is better to be insured than uninsured and we know this intimately, for every day at the hospital we help uninsured patients find out how to enroll in insurance and apply for charity care. Yet in the big picture private insurance has already failed us, individually and as a nation. It is beyond repair.
We stand on one side of a chasm. We stand amid a dysfunctional health system that fails to serve tens of millions of people. On the other side of the chasm, in this wealthy country, another world is waiting.
Signing people up for private insurance incrementally will not get us across that chasm. If we relax our focus from the narrow, dime-sized view and look around us, we will realize that we can’t leap that chasm in several jumps. We need fundamental change.
Dr. Andrew Coates practices internal medicine in Upstate New York. He is president of Physicians for a National Health Program.
You can listen to Dr. Coates’ radio broadcast here: http://wamc.org/post/andrew-coates-glitches