By Jeffrey B. Ritterman, M.D.
Editorial, American Journal of Medicine, April 2011
Imagine a microbe that lowers life expectancy. Suppose this microbe also causes increases in obesity, drug use, teen pregnancy, incarceration rates, and homicide rates, and a breakdown of social cohesion.
We would expect pharmaceutical companies and the Centers for Disease Control to engage in a no-holds-barred campaign to develop an antibiotic or a vaccine to do away with the threat and protect public health.
The threat is here. It is real and it is causing untold harm. But the threat is not a microbe. It is us, or more accurately, how we organize our social environment.
The United States is now the most unequal of the rich developed countries in terms of income and wealth. There are now hundreds of papers and an excellent book, “The Spirit Level: Why Greater Equality Makes Societies Stronger,” by Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett (1), which document the health and social costs of rising income inequality. Yet mainstream medicine seems to have hardly taken notice.
Wilkinson and Pickett document a long list of health concerns and social ills that correlate with increases in income inequality. We don’t live as long as our peers in more equal countries, nor do our infants. We’re fatter, more of our teens get pregnant, we incarcerate more of our citizens, our children score worse on math and science tests, we kill one another more often, and we trust one another less. We even recycle less often.
Correlation, however, does not prove causality. Wilkinson and Pickett address this question at some length. They analyze the data on civic trust and conclude that the overwhelming balance of the evidence supports causality. It appears to be the case that the increasing income disparity causes us to trust one another less. The breakdown in trust causes the social fabric to unravel and we begin to experience life as a Hobbesian struggle of all against all. This results in disease in the individual and dysfunction in our society.
Why is this so important? Recently, Professor Emmanuel Saez has looked at income tax data dating back to World War I. (2) What he found is amazing and startling: we are more unequal now than at any time in our history, and significantly so. The last time we were this unequal, the stock market crashed and ushered in The Great Depression.
What has this to do with medicine and health? A generation ago, Sir Michael Marmot and colleagues (3) showed convincingly that social class was a far more important determinant of health outcome than cholesterol level, blood pressure, diet, and smoking behavior combined. The message was clear. The social environment is the major determinant of health outcome.
In the office, we can help one patient at a time. This is worthwhile and important. I have spent my life doing so. But now it is clear that social policies that promote a more equal sharing of the social product greatly improve population health and the social environment. Physicians can help lead society to a more equitable and healthier future by advocating and working toward a fairer distribution of wealth and income.
In Virchow’s day, the great physician advocated for social reforms as the best way to fight a typhus epidemic. Virchow, the founder of Social Medicine, claimed that “physicians are the natural attorneys of the poor, and the social problems should largely be solved by them.”(4) Similarly, in our day, Sir Michael Marmot has called on physicians to lead “the charge for action across a broad front to reduce inequalities in health.”(5) Will you join me in this noble cause?
Jeffrey B. Ritterman, M.D., retired from the Department of Cardiology, Kaiser Permanente in Richmond, Calif., in November 2010.
References
1. Wilkinson R, Pickett K. The Spirit Level: Why Greater Equality Makes Societies Stronger. New York: Bloomsbury Press; 2009.
2. Saez E. Striking it Richer: The Evolution of Top Incomes in the United States (Updated with 2007 estimates) August 5, 2009. Available at: http:// econ.berkeley.edu/~saez/saez-UStopincomes-2007.pdf. Accessed February 11, 2011.
3. Rose G, Marmot M. Social class and coronary heart disease. Br Heart J. 1981;45(1):13-19.
4. Wikipedia. Rudolf Virchow. Available at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Rudolf_Virchow. Accessed February 11, 2011.
5. Marmot M. Status syndrome: a challenge to medicine. JAMA. 2006; 295:1304-1307.
doi:10.1016/j.amjmed.2010.11.021
http://download.journals.elsevierhealth.com/pdfs/journals/0002-9343/PIIS0002934311000039.pdf
Canada’s Health Care: An Alternate Universe
By Elizabeth Rosenthal
CommonDreams.org, April 20, 2011
I recently returned from a visit of several days to an alternate universe: Canadian health care.
As a physician who has practiced in the United States for 44 years, I have experienced many aspects of our health care system, including its terrible inequities.
Although some Americans get very good health care, there are many who get little or none. Then there are others who get too much: tests, procedures and drugs that they don’t need. The whole system is fragmented, chaotic, inefficient and terribly expensive. We are not getting good value for our enormous expenditure on health care.
Some years ago, having come to the conclusion that a single-payer national health program – an improved Medicare for all – is the solution to our problem, I joined Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP). I wanted to help bring about a system that provides comprehensive coverage to everyone, removes the extremely wasteful and intrusive private insurance companies from the doctor-patient relationship, and gives every patient free choice of doctor and hospital.
Our new federal health law, unfortunately, doesn’t achieve these key goals.
Over the years, in my talks about single payer, I have often cited Canada’s system as an example worthy of study, if not emulation. But it wasn’t until earlier this month that I paid a visit to Toronto with the express purpose of learning more about how the Canadian single-payer system actually works. I traveled there as part of an 8-member delegation of physicians, health care advocates and policy experts from New York state.
All of us wanted to see “up close and personal” what their Medicare (the name for the Canadian system) looks like and find out how they manage to provide high-quality care for all Canadians and yet spend only half of what we spend, per capita, doing so.
The trip was an eye-opener. We met with physicians in many specialties — both academics and community-based physicians in private practice — and got to shadow them as they went about their work in their offices. We met with health care administrators. We talked to patients. We learned a lot.
Although some of us thought we were coming to the “promised land” of single-payer health care, where everyone has access to high-quality care regardless of ability to pay, our Canadian counterparts were much more blasé about their egalitarian, publicly financed system. They took it for granted. They don’t know anything else and are mainly focused on what is needed to improve it.
One thing that became clear to us is that figuring out what works and what doesn’t work, and how to make a change, is much easier to do in a unified system like Canada’s. We also saw that the single-payer system in practice is not as simple as we thought and that there are still political realities to deal with that control the funding and who gets what part of the pot.
There are still inequities in the system. There is a shortage of physicians and there can be long waits for elective procedures and non-urgent doctor visits. For most Canadians the cost of drugs, dental care and some psychiatric services is not included in the basic package provided by the government. The benefits vary somewhat by province.
But Canada’s medical outcomes are excellent; urgent needs get urgent care; and Canadians live two years longer on average than we do. Problems like medical bankruptcy are virtually unknown. The overwhelming majority of Canadians, when polled, say they’d prefer their system over ours any day.
We learned that doctors in Canada earn a good income not much different from most of those in the United States. Although most have a good quality of life with adequate free time, some are overworked and a few can’t find positions due to lack of facilities in some specialties. But few Canadian physicians emigrate, and in fact each year since 2004 more physicians have returned to Canada than have moved abroad.
Canadians were totally perplexed as to why Americans have put up with our faulty and expensive system for so long. It was hard for me to explain this as I cannot understand it myself. Although polling shows that two-thirds of American are in favor of Medicare for all, their voices are not heard in the media nor in the halls of Congress. On the contrary, our legislators are now debating whether to end Medicare as we know it.
I am more certain than ever of the truth that a single-payer system, like the Canadian one, is the right solution for us. I am energized to continue advocating for such a system here. Hopefully we can soon bring the United States into this alternate universe.
Elizabeth Rosenthal, M.D., is a dermatologist who resides in Larchmont, N.Y. She is a board member of the NY Metro Chapter of PNHP, www.pnhp.org. She has been a dermatologist in private practice in Mamaroneck, N.Y., for 35 years and on the clinical faculty of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine for 37 years.
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/04/20-0
Spreading the single-payer gospel: Talking health care reform in Summit County
Activist physician Margaret Flowers talks about a universal, single-payer model
By Kathryn Corazzelli
Summit (Colo.) Daily News, April 16, 2011
FRISCO, Colo. — The reason Dr. Margaret Flowers works full-time to advocate a universal, single-payer health care model, she told a packed room Thursday, is because she wasn’t able to provide the quality of care she wanted to as a pediatrician. Flowers said she was pressured to see more patients in less time, and had to compromise her integrity by not being fully honest to insurance companies about patient problems.
Flowers is congressional fellow for Physicians for a National Health Program, a nonprofit research and education organization consisting of health professionals and students who support a single-payer national health insurance model. The former director of the pediatric hospital program and chief of pediatrics at a rural Maryland hospital, she left practice in 2007 to work full-time on health care reform. She is giving her presentation at numerous stops in Colorado, including Thursday’s at the Summit County Community and Senior Center. The event drew a mix of the community — those who agreed, those who didn’t, and some on the fence.
Flowers told the crowd corporate influences from insurance companies — in both the Democratic and Republican parties — have invaded the country, and made it difficult for citizens to get the care they need. She said 51 million Americans have no insurance, and over 10 million became “under-insured” in 2009. She said health administrators have grown faster than physicians in this country, and that currently, we spend one-third of our health care dollars on things that don’t have anything to do with health care.
“We’re already spending enough money to provide quality care to everyone,” she said. “We’re spending more per person, per dollar, than any other nation. We’re not getting a very good value for our dollar.”
Flowers said the single-payer system would free up more than $400 billion per year, allowing all Americans access to quality coverage, and choice of provider.
“There’s no gaps people can fall through,” she said. “We’re told we’re the best. Well, we are the best … if you have the money to pay for it.”
Attendees asked Flowers questions regarding the viability of the plan, including: What would happen to malpractice insurance, wouldn’t care be rationed, and could it ever actually be implemented? Flowers said malpractice insurance would be reduced, care is already rationed through insurance companies (who choose what to cover), and the plan’s execution is feasible — as long as citizens request it and work for it. She said it wouldn’t be a perfect system, but it would be more efficient in dollars and coverage than anything else.
“There’s a lot of propaganda on your side,” one man said. “People have to understand there’s going to be rationing.”
Flowers said needs are met in every similar health care system studied.
“If we continue on the same path, we’re headed down the wrong path,” she said.
Summit resident Emily Tracy said she attended because she’s had a long-term interest in health care, and has seen faults in the current system. She said her son and his wife don’t have health insurance, which worries her.
“I’m just constantly looking for more knowledge and more information,” said attendee Del Bush, who spent 12 years selling group insurance.
“I thought it was pretty interesting,” said Jeff Lynn, who is studying to be a physician’s assistant.
“We’ve been getting a good turnout,” Flowers said of the Colorado tour. “In Fort Collins, we did a reception with small business owners, and this concept was new to a lot of them. I think the discussions have been really great.”
Flowers said a private reception before the presentation — which included community members from both political parties — sparked useful conversation about the status of America’s health care, and what works and what doesn’t.
http://www.summitdaily.com/article/20110416/NEWS/110419844/1078&ParentProfile=1055
Single-payer health care system would save lives, money
By Joseph Sparks
Columbia Missourian, April 15, 2011
The 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center killed 2,751 people. In 2001, it has been estimated that more than 18,300 people died due to lack of health insurance, according to the American Journal of Public Health.
Where was the outraged horror that six times as many people died because they lacked health insurance?
Repealing or preventing health care reform will likely kill many more people than terrorist attacks. From 2001 through 2010, about 3,450 people were killed in terrorist attacks that took place in the U.S. or against American targets. A study from the Department of Medicine at Cambridge Health Alliance, based on data from 2007-08, estimated that 45,000 adults died in the U.S. from a lack of health insurance.
Here is the missing headline to celebrate the recent first anniversary of health care reform: “No insurance: 45,000 deaths in first year.”
Since 2001, the U.S. has spent more than $1.2 trillion on the war on terror. From 2001-08, almost nothing was done to address the lack of access to health care. Late in 2008, the health care debate started that led to the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in March 2010. The good news is the act will save lives. According to a Congressional Budget Office analysis, by 2019, the law will reduce the number of uninsured by 32 million. This will save approximately 32,000 lives. The bad news is the act will leave 23 million people uninsured, resulting in approximately 23,000 deaths. So, while the proponents of the act were busy defending the legislation from false charges, such as death panels, they neglected to consider the amount of lives that would be saved and how many will still die.
The outcry would be deafening if the U.S. instituted an anti-terrorist policy that chose to leave more than 15 percent of the population unprotected.
The Protection and Affordable Care Act will not reduce the percent of GDP spent on health care, and this will continue to drag down the U.S. economy. The act will increase GDP spending on health care from 20.8 percent to 21 percent because it will cover more people. In terms of spending, the act is roughly equal to the current system.
What has been lost in the debate over health care reform is that it would be possible to implement a single-payer system that would cover everybody, prevent those 23,000 unnecessary deaths and reduce health care costs by 40 percent. In 2008, France, which has a single-payer system, spent just over 11 percent of its GDP on health care. In the same year, the U.S. spent 16 percent of its GDP on health care. France is ranked first in health care, while the U.S. is ranked at 37.
The difference in per capita spending is even worse for the U.S. While the U.S. spends $7,538 per capita, France spends $3,696. The U.S. spends more than twice as much on a per capita basis to achieve our dismal rank of 37.
Economic efficiency can be defined as allocating resources in a manner that minimizes waste and inefficiency. While some believe private enterprise will always be more efficient than the government, when it comes to health care, they are wrong. In every developed country that has a national health system, the percentage of GDP spent on health care is substantially less than the percentage spent in the U.S.
The tragic truth is terrorists do not have to resort to violent acts against the homeland when the lack of access to health care is so much more effective at killing Americans.
Joseph Sparks is master’s candidate in journalism at Missouri University.
What Happened to Social Justice in Health Care Reform?
By Arthur Sutherland
Tikkun magazine, April 15, 2011
In the wake of Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan’s proposals last week to systematically dismantle Medicare and gut the Medicaid program, steps that would inexorably lead to greater suffering and penury and many thousands of preventable deaths, one is prompted to ask, “Have you no sense of decency, sir?”
Posing as champions of fiscal responsibility, Ryan and his GOP cohorts are unleashing a cruel assault on the health and well-being of our most vulnerable populations: the elderly, the disabled, and the poor. They do this even as they hand out ever more favorable tax breaks to the largest corporations and the wealthiest 1 percent of U.S. taxpayers.
While Ryan’s latest assault is particularly flagrant, it betokens a wider retreat from the goal of a more just and egalitarian society that has been under way for the past three decades. Its effects can be seen in the policies of both major parties.
The mythology of “free market economics” and the pursuit of individual gain have undermined the conception that society has a moral obligation to care for its members. We have been told, in many and various ways, to let the devil take the hindmost.
The casualties of this ideology go far beyond the poor. The victims represent the vast majority of the population, even those considered relatively well-off. Nowhere is this more evident than in health care.
The First Anniversary of Obama’s Healthcare Law
Take the Obama administration’s health care law, for example, whose first anniversary was observed just last month. In view of sharply rising health insurance premiums, co-pays, and deductibles, not to mention special government waivers giving big corporations such as McDonalds the go-ahead to evade standard health policy provisions, the promise of universal, quality coverage looks as remote as ever.
It begs the question: What happened to social justice in health reform?
The short answer is that social justice was not served by the passage of this law. Despite the early rhetoric from President Obama that health reform must cover everyone, control long-term costs, and improve the quality of health care delivery, none of these goals will be met by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA).
I say this with considerable sadness as a physician and as a man of faith. But there is no avoiding coming to terms with the mountain of accumulated evidence and experience, both domestic and worldwide, that achieving social justice in health care is impossible as long as investor-owned health insurance companies dominate the system. And the new law is based on precisely that parasitic and immoral industry.
At the beginning of the reform debate, the president said that all ideas would be put on the table for consideration. But this did not happen. The most rational, proven method of financing comprehensive and affordable health care — single-payer national health insurance, or an improved Medicare for all — was deliberately excluded from the debate.
It took the dramatic civil disobedience and arrest of Dr. Margaret Flowers and other courageous single-payer advocates in Senator Max Baucus’ Senate Finance Committee chambers for single payer to register a tiny blip on the congressional radar. Even then, the Medicare-for-all proposal — which enjoys the support of two-thirds of the American people, according to a panoply of polls — was relegated to the sidelines by Baucus and his colleagues, most of them beneficiaries of private health industry largess.
A Modest Reform that Left the Investor-Owned System in Place
As a result, the bill that Congress fashioned and the president signed is not fundamental reform. It leaves our immoral arrangements essentially in place.
What we have in PPACA is a set of modest restraints on the for-profit health industry that were largely shaped by its medical-industrial lobby. Notwithstanding some beneficial features in the law, such as more funding for community health centers, the ability of young adults to stay on their parents’ plan till age twenty-six, the expansion of Medicaid, or regulations curtailing some of the most outrageous practices of the private insurers, PPACA basically maintains our present system.
The new law does nothing to effectively control rising health care costs, including skyrocketing premiums for individuals and businesses alike.
In short, the new law puts corporate interests over patients’ rights.
Accommodating the wishes of the private health industry may have been the “politically smart” way to get the bill passed, but it left in place our fragmented, chaotic, and costly health care “non-system” — a non-system that is inherently unjust.
I am disappointed that our nation’s religious institutions failed in their prophetic mission to reframe the health reform debate from one of partisan politics to the real moral issue involved here, namely, that “Health care is a human right.”
Nowhere is the immorality of our situation more dramatically illustrated than in the number of the uninsured.
The 2009 census figures show that we had 50.7 million people uninsured — an increase of 4.3 million, or nearly 10 percent, over the previous year. The Congressional Budget Office estimates we’ll have about 50 million uninsured for the next three years. In 2014, when the new insurance mandates and Medicaid expansion go into effect, the number will drop to about 30 million. But even if PPACA works as planned, we will still have 23 million people without insurance in 2019.
45,000 Unnecessary Deaths Each Year
Lack of health insurance is deadly, as numerous research studies have pointed out. An estimated 45,000 annual deaths can be linked to not having insurance and therefore not having access to care, according to a 2009 article in the American Journal of Public Health.
Under the new law we can also see a trend in the type of insurance coverage that will be offered to the public. That trend will be toward offering high-deductible and co-pay policies like the “medical savings account” products. These types of “under-insurance” policies will put more financial burden on the public, and will leave people with less financial security if they contract any major illnesses.
As a consequence, medical bills will continue to be a major contributing factor to personal bankruptcy. Writing in the American Journal of Medicine, researchers in 2009 found that illness and medical bills can be linked to 62 percent of personal bankruptcies in our nation. Significantly, three-quarters of all medically bankrupt persons were insured at the onset of their illnesses. This statistic could become worse.
What we need in America is a national health program that covers everyone — especially the most vulnerable such as immigrants and all those made poor and marginalized in our society.
Even with PPACA, we will still be rationing health care by wealth and position in society. This is not social justice and our faith communities need to speak and demand that the system be changed.
As a member of a church and as a member of Physicians for a National Health Program, I work to share the solid research that shows a single-payer national health insurance program, like an expanded and improved Medicare for all, is a just way to improve our nation’s health and wellness.
With its efficiency, transparency, and enormous clout in the marketplace, an improved and expanded Medicare program could control long-term costs, implement national standards, and p
rovide for regional planning to improve the quality of care we receive. Improved Medicare for all would cover everyone in America — all of our neighbors. This would result in health care justice grounded in the equality of all human persons before God, which is exactly what God demands of us in our scriptures and in our professed religious traditions.
Why can’t we do this?
Arthur J. Sutherland III, M.D., F.A.C.C., of Memphis is coordinator of the Tennessee chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program (www.pnhp.org). He is a retired physician and founder of the Sutherland Cardiology Clinic. He works with The Healthy Memphis Common Table, which is addressing the obesity and diabetes epidemics, health literacy, and efforts to eliminate social and health disparities. Dr. Sutherland is also a member of the Memphis School of Servant Leadership and works with the Memphis Theological Seminary in its urban ministry program.
Dr. David Scheiner on Lou Dobbs Tonight
Lou Dobbs Tonight
Fox News, April 19 2011
Stop the bipartisan assault on Medicare, support the People’s Budget
By Claudia Chaufan
OpEdNews, April 15, 2011
So, folks, what is the greatest danger affecting the nation?
You might think that it is a completely out-of-control military machinery, which has maimed or murdered millions of innocents throughout the world and made a mockery of our so-called American values. Or maybe it is the 8 million families thrown out of their homes over the last three years while bankers sit on big piles of cash and Wall Street gangsters are paid corporate bonuses at taxpayers’ expense. Yet another good candidate for “greatest danger to the nation” would be the 50 million uninsured, many of them lining up in health fairs throughout the country, such as that at the Oakland Coliseum this past week, to receive free medical care from organizations like Remote Area Medical, which conducts medical “expeditions” in the “Third World.”
But then, you would be wrong.
As President Obama announced in his Wednesday evening address, our Greatest Danger is the Federal Deficit. And he said this with a straight face, and to frantic applauses from many Very Important People, including many “progressives.”
Now, you would imagine that, in order to fight this Greatest Danger, the president has proposed to end wars, raise taxes on millionaires or billionaires, or eliminate the cancer of a health care system that spends at least a third of each health care dollar avoiding the sick. And that he’s proposed instead to replace it with a truly universal, comprehensive and high quality Medicare for All, supported by over half of the population and close to 60 percent of U.S. physicians, and possessing the power to reduce the deficit by half a trillion dollars in the first year alone.
But you would be wrong again. Instead, Obama is out to slash domestic spending, increase the military monster until it devours whatever good is left of this nation, and assign an unelected “commission” the power to “overhaul” (“dismantle” in Washington-speak) an American symbol of solidarity: Medicare, or what it’s left of it after years of encroaching privatization.
Granted, the Republican alternative is outright brutal: the latest star in Capitol Hill, Rep. Paul Ryan, has proposed to turn Medicare into an all but worthless voucher program that will send impoverished seniors to comparative-shop for the sort of policies that are leading an increasing number of Americans to bankruptcy when they need serious health care. And it launches an open war on the poor, turning Medicaid (health care for the poor) into confetti, and slashing the food stamps program, support for child care, the environment, and the rest of socially useful services other than the military.
So it is really not hard to score political points if you spend at least half an hour denouncing the Republicans’ plan, as Obama self-righteously did, because whatever you do will look good by comparison.
Yet if you set aside the hype and look at the details of Obama’s plan (or listen carefully to the candid comments offered to Fox News by White House political strategist David Plouffe), parts of the Republican plan for Medicare are already part of “Obamacare.” After all, Obamacare builds upon the Republican idea of a mandate to purchase commercial insurance, and the Medicare “improvements” it envisions will soon become a very real part of the New American Nightmare.
Should we be surprised? I don’t think so. After all, the president’s call to, yet again, “make sacrifices” and “learn to live within our means” is in line with last Saturday’s weekly Internet/radio address, in which Obama suggested that the proposed $38 billion slash in the federal budget was an instance of “cooperation” between “the two parties” to “invest in our country’s future while making the largest annual spending cut in our history” — and all in one and the same breath.
If you are still desperately trying to find a silver lining in Obama’s by now well-established Orwellian double-speak, get it over with: there is none.
So what to do?
First, we need to act quickly. Before John Boehner’s House Republicans succeed in ramming through this Friday their right-wing budget for 2012, which would destroy Medicare and Medicaid to pay for tax cuts for millionaires and billionaires, we need to demand that legislators, if they have any decency left, vote for the “People’s Budget,” fought and won by the 80-member Congressional Progressive Caucus (CPC).
In a nutshell, the CPC People’s Budget reduces the deficit by 2021 without devastating Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, and targets the true drivers of the deficit: the Bush tax cuts, the wars overseas, and the causes and effects of the recent recession. It restores the nation’s economic health by building roads and bridges, training more and better teachers, and supporting community colleges. Last, it ensures that the banks that wrecked our economy pay a modest financial responsibility fee, that exotic trading by Wall Street traders is taxed, and that oil companies making record profits from price gouging at the pump no longer receive taxpayer charity. And it taxes U.S. corporate income as it is earned, in much the same way working Americans are taxed.
There is no time to lose. Tell your representatives to vote for the CPC People’s Budget.
Claudia Chaufan, M.D., Ph.D., is assistant professor at the Institute for Health and Aging at the University of California, San Francisco. She teaches sociology of health and medicine, sociology of power, public health, comparative health care systems and sociological theory. Dr. Chaufan is also vice president of Physicians for a National Health Program-California (http://pnhpcalifornia.org/).
http://www.opednews.com/articles/Stop-the-Bipartisan-Assaul-by-Claudia-Chaufan-110415-369.html
Medicare for All Is the Solution
Mr. President: Why Medicare Isn't the Problem, It's the Solution
By Robert Reich
Reader Supported News, Robert Reich’s Blog, 13 April 2011
I hope when he tells America how he aims to tame future budget deficits the President doesn’t accept conventional Washington wisdom that the biggest problem in the federal budget is Medicare (and its poor cousin Medicaid).
Medicare isn’t the problem. It’s the solution.
The real problem is the soaring costs of health care that lie beneath Medicare. They’re costs all of us are bearing in the form of soaring premiums, co-payments, and deductibles.
Americans spend more on health care per person than any other advanced nation and get less for our money. Yearly public and private healthcare spending is $7,538 per person. That’s almost two and a half times the average of other advanced nations.
Yet the typical American lives 77.9 years – less than the average 79.4 years in other advanced nations. And we have the highest rate of infant mortality of all advanced nations.
Medical costs are soaring because our health-care system is totally screwed up. Doctors and hospitals have every incentive to spend on unnecessary tests, drugs, and procedures.
You have lower back pain? Almost 95% of such cases are best relieved through physical therapy. But doctors and hospitals routinely do expensive MRI’s, and then refer patients to orthopedic surgeons who often do even more costly surgery. Why? There’s not much money in physical therapy.
Your diabetes, asthma, or heart condition is acting up? If you go to the hospital, 20 percent of the time you’re back there within a month. You wouldn’t be nearly as likely to return if a nurse visited you at home to make sure you were taking your medications. This is common practice in other advanced countries. So why don’t nurses do home visits to Americans with acute conditions? Hospitals aren’t paid for it.
America spends $30 billion a year fixing medical errors – the worst rate among advanced countries. Why? Among other reasons because we keep patient records on computers that can’t share the data. Patient records are continuously re-written on pieces of paper, and then re-entered into different computers. That spells error.
Meanwhile, administrative costs eat up 15 to 30 percent of all healthcare spending in the United States. That’s twice the rate of most other advanced nations. Where does this money go? Mainly into collecting money: Doctors collect from hospitals and insurers, hospitals collect from insurers, insurers collect from companies or from policy holders.
A major occupational category at most hospitals is “billing clerk.” A third of nursing hours are devoted to documenting what’s happened so insurers have proof.
Trying to slow the rise in Medicare costs doesn’t deal with any of this. It will just limit the amounts seniors can spend, which means less care. As a practical matter it means more political battles, as seniors – whose clout will grow as boomers are added to the ranks – demand the limits be increased. (If you thought the demagoguery over “death panels” was bad, you ain’t seen nothin’ yet.)
Paul Ryan’s plan – to give seniors vouchers they can cash in with private for-profit insurers — would be even worse. It would funnel money into the hands of for-profit insurers, whose administrative costs are far higher than Medicare.
So what’s the answer? For starters, allow anyone at any age to join Medicare. Medicare’s administrative costs are in the range of 3 percent. That’s well below the 5 to 10 percent costs borne by large companies that self-insure. It’s even further below the administrative costs of companies in the small-group market (amounting to 25 to 27 percent of premiums). And it’s way, way lower than the administrative costs of individual insurance (40 percent). It’s even far below the 11 percent costs of private plans under Medicare Advantage, the current private-insurance option under Medicare.
In addition, allow Medicare – and its poor cousin Medicaid – to use their huge bargaining leverage to negotiate lower rates with hospitals, doctors, and pharmaceutical companies. This would help move health care from a fee-for-the-most-costly-service system into one designed to get the highest-quality outcomes most cheaply.
Estimates of how much would be saved by extending Medicare to cover the entire population range from $58 billion to $400 billion a year. More Americans would get quality health care, and the long-term budget crisis would be sharply reduced.
Let me say it again: Medicare isn’t the problem. It’s the solution.
Robert Reich is Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton. He has written thirteen books, including “The Work of Nations,” “Locked in the Cabinet,” “Supercapitalism” and his latest book, “AFTERSHOCK: The Next Economy and America’s Future.” His ‘Marketplace’ commentaries can be found on publicradio.com and iTunes.
http://www.readersupportednews.org/opinion2/272-39/5605-medicare-for-all-is-the-solution
Medical marvel: A U.S. doctor discovers Canadian health care
By Lisa Priest
The Globe and Mail, Apr. 13, 2011
Eight doctors from the U.S.-based Physicians for a National Health Program visited Toronto’s Women’s College Hospital for an inside look at Canada’s single-payer health care system. Hosting the trip was family physician Danielle Martin, chair of Canadian Doctors for Medicare.
New York dermatologist Elizabeth Rosenthal, board member of the New York metro chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program, spoke to The Globe and Mail about what she learned during her visit.
Your association of 18,000 physicians has long advocated for a single-payer health care system in the United States. Canadians cherish medicare but are mindful of its limits. What are your thoughts?
You think there are all these things wrong, and we’re all sitting here drooling. This is our ultimate universe. Any time doctors mention anything, they say it’s all covered and patients don’t have to worry about paying for it. That’s why I’m drooling.
What is the most surprising thing you have learned so far?
I learned that doctors are compensated much better than what we presumed they were here and their work lives are very nice. In the U.S., most doctors are afraid of two things with a single-payer system: they will lose money – of course, they won’t say that – and that they are going to lose autonomy.
What is work life like for an American doctor?
You spend so much time hassling with insurance companies, you just can’t imagine. You have to fight with them to get paid.
How about your patients? Do they seem in favour of a single-payer system?
I go on about it to my patients, saying, “We should have what Canada has and they say, ‘You mean we have to cover the illegal immigrants? What about that person over there, he’s fat and he smokes, I should pay for his health insurance?” Things happen to people, it’s insurance and the only way we will be able to afford health care is if everybody chips in.
You sound like a renegade. What’s your story?
I grew up in a family of doctors. My father was a general practitioner, my father-in-law was a doctor, my husband’s a doctor, about a dozen first cousins are doctors, as was my grandfather and great uncle. It’s like the family business. Most of our politics were towards the left. I grew up in New York City and I’m Jewish. I’ve seen medicine change a lot.
How is medicine different today than it was when you began practising in 1967?
I am 68 years old. When I started, it was much less expensive and doctors didn’t advertise. The business side of medicine is taking over like a creeping eruption. I’m not an entrepreneur and I didn’t go into medicine to run a business. I wanted to take care of people.
How does a doctor deal with the delicate issue of payment?
The first thing a patient does is show me their insurance card. If I’m not in their plan, I won’t get paid, unless the patient pays me.
The U.S. system spends twice as much as other industrialized nations on health care, yet it still leaves more than 50 million without health coverage. Why has reform been so difficult?
We’re always racking our brains and always bemoaning the fact that it shouldn’t be so hard. Part of it is cultural. With Canadians, it’s a community – we’re all in this to help each other. In the U.S., it’s the frontier – I’m going to take care of myself and you can’t tell me what to do.
The new U.S. health care bill – the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act – has been described by your group as using an aspirin to treat cancer. Isn’t it an improvement?
There’s lots of ways to improve the health care system. The first thing we have to do is get rid of the private health insurance industry because the administrative costs that they entail, we say it adds costs but no value to the system. We don’t think health care should be an opportunity for profit, we think health care is a human need, like the fire department. But in our country, it’s treated as how you make a buck. And we will be mandated to buy their lousy health insurance.
This interview has been edited and condensed
The holes in the health care law
By Helen Redmond
The Socialist Worker, April 13, 2011
“HAPPY BIRTHDAY, Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act!” read the enthusiastic subject lines on millions of e-mails sent out last month by the union-backed Health Care for America Now coalition.
In Illinois, the Campaign for Better Health Care wrote in its celebratory statement: “It’s been a year since the historic vote that made the Affordable Care Act a law, putting America on the path towards a system of quality, affordable health care for all. From birth to death, Americans now enjoy health care security and protection in new ways.”
But is the one-year anniversary of PPACA, the health care law that President Barack Obama signed a year ago last month, something to celebrate? Is the U.S. really on the path to affordable health care for all?
Susan Aarup didn’t celebrate last month–and she has to have doubts about whether she’s on the path to quality affordable health care.
Aarup works as an employment advocate at Progress Center for Independent Living in Illinois and has been uninsured for eight months. Her job doesn’t provide health coverage because she works part time, although she often puts in close to 40 hours a week. Aarup has cerebral palsy and uses a power wheelchair for mobility. She has two personal assistants who help her with everything, from bathing and cooking, to getting into and out of bed.
A month ago, a severe pain in her leg forced Aarup to the emergency room at Northwestern Memorial in Chicago. She was admitted to the hospital and diagnosed with a blood clot. Doctors said if she’d waited much longer, she could have died.
Why did she wait as long as she did? “Because I don’t have insurance, and I don’t have any money, I wait and I wait, and I hope it’s not that bad,” Aarup said. She didn’t want to incur thousands of dollars in medical bills from an ER trip–which is exactly what happened. So far, Northwestern has billed her for more than $60,000.
Aarup is one of the tens of millions of uninsured in the U.S. who organizations like HCAN say will finally be covered because of last year’s health care law.
But the insurance exchanges that are supposed to be a place to buy health coverage for those who don’t have employer-based insurance won’t phase in for several years. In the meanwhile, people like Aarup are supposed to be able to qualify for so-called “high-risk insurance pools” established as a temporary stopgap under the PPACA. The Illinois Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan (ICHIP) is the Illinois high-risk pool.
But Aarup can’t afford ICHIP. Because the interim plans are still gender-, age- and smoking status-rated, Aarup was told she would have to pay a monthly premium of $575–only slightly less than the unaffordable $600 a month Aarup was paying for COBRA coverage before she become uninsured eight months ago.
Aarup applied for Medicaid, too–but was rejected. “I make too much money, and I work, so they don’t think I’m disabled,” she said, her voice full of frustration. “I’m caught in the cracks.”
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
MEDICAID, THE federal government’s health care program for the poor, is another aspect of health care in the PPACA era that should inspire not celebration but fear and doubt.
Under the health care law, Medicaid is to expand in 2014 to cover people with incomes up to 133 percent of the official poverty level. Currently, the poverty line for a family of four is $22,350 a year, so four-person households with an income of up to $29,725 a year would qualify.
The expansion of Medicaid is the health care law’s solution for providing coverage for low-income people who won’t be able to afford plans offered by private companies through the insurance exchanges. Medicaid will become the de facto insurer of millions of people–its expansion accounts for almost half of the projected increase in health coverage under the PPACA.
But the obvious problem is that the Medicaid program is full meltdown right now as state governments cut away at spending in order to balance huge budget shortfalls.
Arizona under Republican Gov. Jan Brewer has gotten some notoriety for eliminating Medicaid coverage for organ transplants–two people have died since the cut went through. Brewer plans to ax up to 120,000 current Medicaid recipients and introduce mandatory co-payments and benefit limits.
But Republicans aren’t alone in going after Medicaid. New York’s new Gov. Andrew Cuomo pushed through a state budget that slashes Medicaid–which serves about one in every four residents in the state–by $2.1 billion.
At the federal level, the Obama administration not only isn’t defending Medicaid–White House officials are helping the states figure out how to cut. In a letter to state governors, Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius assured them that the health care law will allow states to reduce Medicaid rolls if they face budget deficits. Sebelius suggested a range of cuts to “optional” benefits such as physical therapy, dental care, eyeglasses and prescription medications.
Compounding the funding problems are physicians who refuse to see Medicaid patients–in particular, specialists–because payment rates have been reduced, and further cuts are being proposed. A New York Times article interviewed a Louisiana nurse, Nicole Dardeau, who needs surgery for herniated discs, but can’t find anyone who will perform it. “My Medicaid card is useless for me right now, it’s a useless piece of plastic,” Dardeau said. “I can’t find an orthopedic surgeon or a pain management doctor who will accept Medicaid.”
States seeking to cut costs are also privatizing Medicaid by forcing recipients into managed care HMOs. In Illinois, Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn wants to transfer half of beneficiaries into plans run by Aetna and Centene–even though managed care HMOs have a notorious track record of restricting access to care.
And this is all happening now. How will Medicaid handle an influx of 16 million people in 2014 if state governments can cut benefits and change eligibility rules at will, and doctors are refusing to accept patients?
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MEDICAID EXPANSION is only one aspect of the health care law where problems are beginning to show up.
Another is the lobbying of federal agencies to “interpret” the provisions of the PPACA on terms that are most generous to insurers and Corporate America. For example, more than 1,000 corporations are still able to offer employees so-called “mini-med” health plans–stripped-down coverage that is inexpensive for workers to purchase, but that have benefits caps which would be easily used up by one hospital or even emergency room visit.
A provision of the PPACA requires insurers to gradually eliminate these kinds of annual caps on payments. But thanks to the Obama administration, giant corporations like McDonalds and Disney World are off the hook for now, because of waivers from HHS. “We don’t want to take away people’s health insurance before they have some realistic other choices,” explained Sebelius.
Liberal Democratic Rep. Jan Schakowsky of Illinois skipped over another flaw in the PPACA at a celebration of the one-year anniversary last month.
Schakowsky told the crowd, “Raise your hand and give a shout out if you are a woman!”–before explaining that under the PPACA, being female was no longer a pre-existing condition and that inequality in coverage was a thing of the past.
What Schakowsky didn’t mention was the provision in the law that will lead insurers to drop coverage for abortion procedures–a dramatic restriction on women’s right to choose.
At the urging of anti-abortion Democrats, the health care law contains a provision that requires companies to separate coverage for abortions under policies they sell through the
insurance exchange set up by the PPACA. Women will have to pay separately to be covered for abortions.
This arrangement is illogical because women don’t plan to have abortions or complicated pregnancies that result in termination–but if they don’t go along with the restricted coverage, they won’t be covered when they need it.
Currently, 87 percent of private health insurance plans offer abortion coverage, but thanks to the Democrats’ health care law, that percentage is bound to fall. “The PPACA extends the damaging effects of the Hyde Amendment into all health plans and will limit access to abortion for millions of middle class women,” said Dr. Diljeet Singh, co-director of the Northwestern Ovarian Cancer Early Detection and Prevention Program and a member of Physicians for a National Health Program. “It further institutionalizes into national health policy the religious ideology and moral views of the minority.”
Supporters of genuine health care reform are uncovering more holes in the health care law. For example, the PPACA doesn’t forbid insurers from raising premiums–it only demands that they show that increases are deemed “reasonable” by state regulators. But in California, even if a rate hike is deemed “unreasonable,” regulators don’t have the power to block or modify it.
The truth is the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act will not end the crisis in health care–far from it. Millions of people will be forced to buy “unaffordable underinsurance” from profit-hungry insurers who will receive billions in taxpayer subsidies. When they get sick, they will face the same nightmares–like being bankrupted by high premiums, deductibles, co-pays, gaps in coverage and uncovered services–that this law was supposed to end.
Meanwhile, Susan Aarup had to go to the ER again. This time she didn’t wait. She thinks the American health care system is “insane.”
http://socialistworker.org/2011/04/13/holes-in-the-health-care-law
Physicians still pushing for health care for all
By NCBR staff
Northern Colorado Business Report, April 12, 2011
FORT COLLINS — Even as a bill that would create health insurance exchanges for Colorado is set for a crucial vote on Wednesday morning, Margaret Flowers, M.D., is bringing the case for a single-payer health care system to the state.
“Physicians for a National Health Program supports work on systems at the state level, but we think it’s important to keep pushing at the national level as well,” she told about 50 health professionals and community members at Poudre Valley Hospital Tuesday afternoon. “The only model we had (during the debate over the federal Affordable Care Act in 2009) was Massachusetts; we need a better model than Massachusetts.”
That model might be evolving in Vermont, where during the last gubernatorial race, candidates ran on who supported a single-payer system more, she said. But even there the effort is running into problems, since federal waivers are required to implement state programs.
Senate Bill 200, co-sponsored by Rep. Amy Stephens, R-Monument, and Sen. Betty Boyd, D- Lakewood, would create an Internet portal where Colorado individuals and small businesses could shop for health coverage. It has received support from business groups including the Colorado Association of Commerce and Industry, NFIB, the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce and others, but an amendment proposed last week in a Senate committee that would only allow it to be enacted if the state rejected all provisions of federal health-care legislation.
SB 168, sponsored by Sen. Irene Aguilar, M.D., which would create a Colorado Health Care Cooperative, is currently stalled in the Senate.
Flowers is a pediatrician who left her Baltimore practice in 2007 to work on health-care reform full-time. When efforts to include a single-payer option in the federal health care debate were unsuccessful, she and seven others confronted the Senate Finance Committee in May 2009 and was arrested. She testified before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee in June 2009.
Flowers told the group at PVH that House Resolution 676, which has been introduced every year since 2003, has 37 co-sponsors this year, less than half of the 80 it attracted in 2009 while the reform debate raged. She said it would provide automatic, universal coverage for everyone living in the United States — regardless of immigration status — in an expanded, improved Medicare for all. Everyone is in a unified risk pool and pays based on ability. All medically necessary care is covered, everyone has a choice of physician, and by getting private insurance companies and employers out of the picture, saves about $400 billion in administrative costs each year.
“Any increase in a progressive income tax to fund the system would be offset by individuals no longer paying co-pays, premiums and the cost of care,” Flowers said.
The reason she keeps working for a single-payer plan, she told the health professionals, is that even a year into reform, “health care is headed in the wrong direction in this country,” she said. “We’re essentially paying for universal coverage (through emergency room care) but we aren’t getting the benefits. People look to us as health professionals for information and guidance, and we can help turn it around and put it on the right track the same way we treat patients — one on one.”
As congressional fellow for the 18,000-member PNHP, she travels throughout the United States, spending four or five days in each state, making the case for a national single-payer plan.
“People in Colorado are more fired up than I expected,” she told the Business Report Daily. “They really want to do something.”
Flowers has two more talks scheduled in Fort Collins today. At 5 p.m., she will speak at a reception at the Rocky Mountain Innosphere, 320 E. Vine Drive, and then again at 7:30 p.m. at Colorado State University in Yates Hall, Room 104. She has already appeared in Denver, Pueblo, Boulder, and has additional appearances scheduled for Denver and Frisco.
For more information, go to Health Care for All Colorado, http://heatlhcareforallcolorado.org
http://www.ncbr.com/article.asp?id=57089
Medicare-for-all plan would unite U.S. workers
Letters, Lexington Herald-Leader, March 11, 2011
The goings on in Wisconsin should be of interest to all of us. The battle between the “public” worker versus the rest of us, those who work for a nongovernmental entity, the huge majority of Americans, is now grabbing the headlines.
As I interpret the events, “the rest of us” are jealous of the more generous benefits the public sector may enjoy. And by benefits, I believe we are mainly talking about health insurance.
It seems to me the rest of us should demand and strive for the same benefits the public sector enjoys, not demand that government workers be dragged kicking and screaming down to our level.
Health insurance benefits could easily and affordably be provided by adopting a Medicare-for-all plan.
The enormous savings of a single-payer health insurance program would finance plans superior to what the public worker now enjoys without increasing the premiums for the nongovernmental sector.
We can and should do it. The current health reform law will not.
Ewell G. Scott, M.D.
Morehead, KY
Read more: http://www.kentucky.com/2011/03/11/1666252/letters-to-editor-march-11.html