PNHP national board member (and PNHP-California president) Dr. Paul Song appeared on “Rising Up With Sonali” on Free Speech TV and Pacifica radio stations on July 28, 2021. Dr. Song discussed a series of nationwide marches for Medicare for All held the previous weekend, the prospects for a state-based single-payer program in California, and the urgent need to get people vaccinated against COVID-19.
Rural Tennessee Is Losing More Hospitals Than Anywhere in the Country, but Covid-19 Isn’t Fully to Blame
Inadequate funding, old and expensive to maintain equipment and dwindling population are all contributing to the crisis. The resulting lack of healthcare access has negative effects across entire communities.
This story was originally published by 100 Days in Appalachia.
“I’m hopin’,” Andrea Haas says with conviction.
The Remote Area Medical clinic has come to Jellico, Tennessee, in Campbell County, on the Kentucky border. It’s offering free health care.
Haas’s hope for today is that her teeth will get pulled. She’s suffered all her life from grand mal seizures, and with each episode she bites her tongue. “They said one wrong, good bite and I could lose my tongue,” Haas says. The plan is to extract her teeth and, later, replace them with better-fitting dentures.
It’s 9:30 a.m. Haas, 31, arrived last night. The gates opened at midnight, the clinic doors at 6 a.m. It’s first come, first served.
All manner of health care services are in limited supply in this part of central Appalachia. In March, Jellico Medical Center, a 54-bed acute-care hospital, officially shut down after not having admitted a patient since November.
It’s an increasingly, depressingly common story. Communities across Appalachia, as across the whole of rural America, are struggling to maintain hospital care. Rural hospitals are closing at an alarming rate – 138 since 2010, according to research from the University of North Carolina, with a record high of 19 in 2020.
There are a number of reasons why: Rural hospitals operate under perilously tight margins; many are in the red. Buildings and equipment are commonly old and costly to maintain. Rural hospitals serve declining populations – young people leave in search of opportunities – populations that are, on average, less healthy and of lower income, with a higher percentage who are under- or uninsured.
Campbell County ranks 93rd worst in health outcomes of Tennessee’s 95 counties and has a poverty rate approximately double that of the nation.
“I’m hopin’,” Haas repeats, this time in reference to the hospital reopening. She worries about those who now must drive almost an hour to Knoxville or across the border to Kentucky to see a doctor, and even more about those with no means to make the trip.
There is some encouraging news. An Indiana-based health care system, Boa Vida Healthcare, has reached an agreement with Jellico’s city council to reopen the hospital, reportedly within the next six months. Still, local residents have been conditioned not to get overly optimistic. The previous owner was around for just two years.
Covid-19 took an incalculable toll on rural communities. In the first months of the pandemic, says Jacy Warrell, executive director of the Rural Health Association of Tennessee, “a lot of rural communities thought it was a bigger-city issue and that they didn’t have to worry about it because they were more isolated.”
But when it did hit, it spread quickly. By September, the death rate in rural America had surpassed that of urban centers.
Tennessee’s hospitals, like those across the nation, experienced a dramatic drop in revenue throughout the pandemic and continue to lose money. A recent American Hospital Association report estimates the pandemic could cause hospitals to lose as much as $122 billion this year.
Tennessee has experienced more rural hospital closures per capita than any state. In 2018, the state legislature passed the Tennessee Rural Hospital Transformation Act to support rural hospitals “in assessing viability and identifying new delivery models, strategic partnerships, and operational changes” to support health care services in rural communities.
Consultants were sent out to meet with rural hospital administrators and other community leaders. Essentially, what they told them, says Randall Rice, board president of the Tennessee Health Care Campaign, was that they needed more money. “That was not a revelation,” he says.
More money is certainly required. So, too, is a more strategic, integrated approach to rural health care. Andrea Haas knows she and her neighbors deserve better.
Reverberating Consequences
The recently departed owner of Jellico Medical Center was Florida-based Rennova Health. Rennova also previously operated Jamestown Regional Medical Center, an hour and a half to the west along Tennessee’s Cumberland Plateau, but shuttered it in June 2019.
A third hospital, Cumberland River, in the Clay County town of Celina, 45 miles northwest of Jamestown, closed in March 2019, temporarily reopened, then closed again last August. (It was not owned by Rennova.)
Rennova Health still operates Big South Fork Medical Center in the Scott County town of Oneida, about halfway between Jellico and Jamestown. The hospital has closed twice in the past decade and is now a shell of what it once was. There’s no longer intensive care, surgery, obstetrics, or geropsychiatric care. For a time, there were no inpatient beds; six have only recently been made available.
Today, the hospital’s only doctor, Deepak Reddy, lives in the facility to be immediately available around the clock.
Big South Fork Medical Center employees recently reported – not for the first time – that the company was behind in issuing paychecks, and that a number of them wouldn’t be returning to work until paid. This follows a pattern from Jellico Medical Center, where in February employees reported being unpaid and quit their jobs, creating a staffing crisis. Ambulances were diverted from the emergency room to neighboring hospitals, 45 minutes to an hour away.
The consequences of a closed or minimally operational hospital reverberate throughout the community. Some of those consequences are immediate.
Scott County generally has two ambulances in service at a given time. Paramedic Alison Jeffers says that if either has to transfer a patient out of the county, “You’re looking at two and a half hours minimum – and that’s if everything cooperates, there’s beds at the facility, traffic’s good – two and a half hours minimum before we get back into town.”
Moreover, that travel time can be the difference between life and death. For patients in trauma, the first hour is known as the “Golden Hour,” after which the risk of death increases dramatically.
Other consequences have longer-term effects. Pam Thompson is a behavioral-health counselor with Mountain Peoples Health Councils, a nonprofit community health center in Scott County. When she moved back to the county, she considered starting a private practice, but the hospital had shut down. Without emergency services for clients in crisis, she elected not to open her own practice.
Thompson says there are no private-practice therapists in the county.
Challenging Times for Independent Operators
Luke Collins was the first person in his family born in a hospital. He served eight years as mayor of Clay County and last month was elected mayor of the town of Celina. He ran on a platform that advocated the reopening of Cumberland River Hospital.
Collins, like government officials across rural America, knows the economic consequences of a closed hospital. “The ripple effect is huge, and I don’t know how you would even measure it.”
Clay County advertises itself as the “Gateway to Dale Hollow Lake,” an attractive location for a retirement home. The absence of a hospital is a deterrent.
“I love this community and love this hospital,” Collins says. “It’s very, very important that we find a way to get this hospital back open.”
His ally in this effort is Johnny Presley. Presley is determined to reopen the hospital in Celina, and then those in Jamestown, Jellico and beyond.
Presley grew up in Crossville, an hour south of Celina. His passion for health care was sparked in his youth, riding in his dad’s tow truck responding to traffic accidents. He became a volunteer fireman, an EMT, then a physician assistant and health care administrator. He’s now on a mission to restore hospital care to the region. Some consider it a quixotic quest. Presley believes he can succeed.
In fact, he did temporarily reopen Cumberland River Hospital, in April 2020, just as the pandemic hit. There were issues. Presley cites the denial of Covid-19-related financial support from the state, delay in payment from insurance companies and the local EMS opting to transport patients to other hospitals. The hospital closed again in August.
These are challenging times for independent hospital operators. Alan Morgan, CEO of the National Rural Health Association, says federal requirements to “modernize health care and move toward electronic medical records created tremendous cost pressures” on small hospitals. “And those systems have to be updated yearly.”
Larger hospital systems are better positioned financially to access advanced technology. They also have greater purchasing power and the advantages of consolidated administration.
The Affordable Care Act put additional strains on rural hospitals – especially in states that haven’t yet expanded Medicaid – by limiting their ability to write off bad debt. Then came the pandemic, further diminishing at-risk margins.
“The pandemic made it much more difficult to be an independent rural hospital,” Morgan says, “and I think that’s going to be the case going forward.”
Reassessing Needs and Repurposing Appropriately
Twelve states have not yet adopted Medicaid expansion as allowed for under the Affordable Care Act. None of the eight states with the most rural hospital closures has implemented expansion. (Voters in two of those states, Missouri and Oklahoma, last year approved ballot measures to expand.) A 2018 study from the Colorado School of Public Health found that hospitals in non-expansion states are six times more likely to close than those in expansion states.
Six of those non-expansion states are in the Appalachian region, Tennessee among them.
A 2020 analysis of rural hospital financial and operational data by the Chartis Center for Rural Health found that more than half of Tennessee’s rural hospitals are performing at a level similar to that of rural hospitals that have closed since 2010.
“I don’t understand how we can continue to pass up those dollars,” the Rural Health Association of Tennessee’s Jacy Warrell says.
But, of course, Medicaid expansion isn’t a cure-all. Among the other primary issues that must be addressed is a workforce shortage. The average age of clinicians in rural communities is higher than nationally; attracting new providers is difficult. And Morgan says he’s hearing from rural hospital administrators that increasingly more nurses are leaving for higher-paying traveling-nurse positions.
The pandemic worsened the workforce shortage, with older practitioners, at greater risk of contracting the virus, choosing to retire.
In a report titled “The Ambulance Is Our Emergency Room,” the nonprofit Tennessee Health Care Campaign offers several recommendations for bolstering the state’s rural health care workforce. These include providing more state-funded loan-repayment opportunities for recent graduates as incentives to work in rural communities; incentivizing colleges and universities to reserve spots in their programs for rural residents; and expanding the reach of case managers, community health workers and in-home providers.
The THCC report was the outcome of listening sessions with community members throughout the state. Among its other recommendations is helping facilitate free-standing emergency rooms. In Tennessee, freestanding ERs must be hospital owned. The THCC suggests changing that policy, creating more opportunities for ERs to open in areas where hospitals have closed or aren’t financially viable.
And it urges the state to provide grant and investment opportunities to bolster primary, preventive, behavioral and oral care services in communities. Mountain People’s Health Councils, in Scott County, is a model of community-based services. It’s community owned, operating six clinics, including a new facility with pediatric care, behavioral health and dentistry.
The THCC report offers sound recommendations, but addressing the rural health crisis requires much more. It requires, first, says Richard Henighan, an east-Tennessee nurse practitioner and THCC board member, reassessing needs and repurposing appropriately.
“Some of these rural counties don’t need an old-fashioned rural hospital,” Henighan says.
The National Rural Health Association’s Morgan agrees: “I think in many communities, the need for inpatient beds is going to be minimal.” More services are now provided on an outpatient basis.
The focus, he says, should be on a 24/7 emergency room, primary care, general surgery and “a high reliance on telehealth,” then determining what else the community most needs – what services they would otherwise have to travel the farthest to receive.
Henighan says an important lesson he learned in conversations held while helping compile the THCC report was that reopening a hospital in a rural community “doesn’t necessarily mean the problem was fixed.” A broader issue, he says, is a failure to integrate services to meet the sum of a community’s health care needs.
A lasting solution requires addressing the social determinants of health, bringing together the hospital, clinics, local government agencies, business leaders, churches, civic clubs – the full resources of a community.
Morgan stresses that a successful rural hospital’s strategy must embrace preventive health and chronic-care management and “empowering the community to take control of their own health.”
‘The Answers Are There’
The federal CARES Act, passed by Congress to financially respond to the pandemic, provided an infusion of money to rural hospitals. Far more assistance is needed.
The THCC’s report asserts that “the state offers no assistance to rural community leaders to discourage hospital owners from closing the facility, finding a replacement administrative structure, or addressing the health needs after the loss.”
For Henighan, “the big disconnect” is that those being most harmed by the current state of health care continue to elect people who are ignoring them.
“Health care has become a political game with the leaders in our state,” says Michele Johnson, co-founder and executive director of the Tennessee Justice Center, referencing the refusal to expand Medicaid. “And the people who’ve paid the price for that are our rural communities.”
More fundamentally, Johnson believes “health care as a commodity violates who we are as a nation.” In her work, she sees firsthand “how that destroys lives and destroys families and communities.”
Robin Feierabend, a retired family physician in Kingsport, Tennessee, is a member of a group called Physicians for a National Health Program. “Our whole health care system is currently so fragmented and so dysfunctional that I don’t think there are any simple solutions,” he says.
“But with a national health care plan, there’s the opportunity for much more coordination and oversight, and for matching of health care needs with populations, as opposed to our current competitive approach to providing services.”
In the meantime, Jacy Warrell remains optimistic. “I think what needs to happen is for policymakers and administrators to really listen to the needs of the community and become partners in solving these issues. I think the answers are there.”
Those who began queuing up before midnight in Jellico for the Remote Area Medical clinic’s offer of free health care would like some hard evidence of those answers. They’d like assurance of sustained hospital care. They’d like to know they haven’t been forgotten.
“Everything gets shut down,” says Charity, 23, of nearby LaFollette, who prefers not to give her last name. She’s the mother of three; she worries about her community’s future. “Nobody wants to come here.” Her concerns are well founded. Without such essential infrastructure as health care, many rural communities will cease to exist.
Andrea Haas is hoping Jellico Medical Center will soon be reopened, that people will no longer have to drive out of county for care, that her aunt can return to her job in the emergency room. “I’m hopin’ and prayin’,” she says.
Specialists Shun People of Color
Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Outpatient Visit Rates Across 29 Specialties, JAMA Internal Medicine Online First, July 19, 2021, by Christopher Cai, et al.
[Using nationally representative data from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey] We tabulated office and outpatient department visits to each physician specialty and calculated adjusted rate ratios (ARRs) for each racial/ethnic minority group (compared with the White population).
Black individuals had low visit rates (vs White individuals) to most specialties (23 of 29 [79.3%]. Among specialties with many visits, Black:White disparities were particularly marked for dermatology (ARR 0.27; 95% CI, 0.21-0.34), otolaryngology (0.38; 95% CI, 0.32-0.46), plastic surgery (0.41; 95% CI, 0.23-0.75), general surgery (0.55; 95% CI, 0.44-0.69), orthopedics (0.59; 95% CI, 0.51-0.69), urology (0.62; 95% CI, 0.50-0.78), and pulmonology (0.63; 95% CI, 0.48-0.81). Black individuals had higher visit rates to nephrologists (2.78; 95% CI, 1.37-5.62) and hematologists (1.65; 95% CI, 1.0-2.70) and similar visit rates to internists, geriatricians, and oncologists.
For Hispanic and Asian/Pacific Islander individuals, visit ratios (compared with White individuals) were … significantly lower for 20 of 29 (69.0%) and 21 of 27 specialties (74.1%), respectively. Similar patterns were present for Native American individuals, although the 95% CIs were wide.
The study findings demonstrate a consistent pattern of racial and ethnic disparities in outpatient care, implicating systemic defects that are best characterized as structural racism.
Figure:
Comment:
By David Himmelstein, M.D. and Steffie Woolhandler, M.D., M.P.H.
This study (disclosure: we’re co-authors) provides yet more evidence of the pervasive effects of white supremacy in medical care. Black, Hispanic, Asian and Native American people get far less care from virtually every medical and surgical specialty than non-Hispanic White individuals.
The inferior insurance coverage (and hence reimbursement to physicians) of Black, Hispanic and Native Americans probably drives much of the disparities for those groups, but people of color had somewhat lower visit rates even after controlling for insurance coverage.
Fixing these inequities in care will require erasing financial distinctions among patients by assuring that everyone’s insurance pays the same fees, and that co-payments and deductibles are banned. Only a comprehensive single payer reform can achieve that. But additional measures will also be needed: e.g. greatly increasing the ranks of minority physicians; offering grants to practices to locate in minority neighborhoods; and changing the racist culture that permeates many medical institutions.
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Patients of Color Less Likely to Get Specialist Care Than White Patients
By Amy Norton
HealthDay, July 26, 2021
People of color are consistently less likely to see medical specialists than white patients are, a new U.S. study finds, highlighting yet another disparity in the nation’s health care system.
Researchers found that compared with their white counterparts, Black Americans, Hispanic Americans and Asian Americans had significantly fewer visits to doctors of various specialties — ranging from dermatology to orthopedics to general surgery.
They were not falling behind, however, in visits to primary care doctors, suggesting that specialist care is the issue.
While the study cannot pinpoint the reasons, there’s a likely a culprit, according to Dr. Steffie Woolhandler, one of the researchers.
“We think disparities in the ability to pay are the main driver here,” said Woolhandler, a professor at City University of New York at Hunter College.
It can be difficult, she said, to find a specialist who accepts uninsured patients or those on Medicaid (the federal insurance program for low-income Americans). And to a disproportionate degree, those patients are people of color.
Other times, Woolhandler said, people have insurance, but their plan requires out-of-pocket costs — such as deductibles and copays — that they cannot afford.
“You could define the system as structurally racist,” Woolhandler said.
She pointed to one finding that supports the importance of insurance coverage in access to specialty care: Black patients were about three times more likely to be seeing a nephrologist (kidney specialist) than white patients were.
That, Woolhandler said, may partly reflect the fact that Medicare — the federal program for older Americans — pays for the treatment of advanced kidney disease, regardless of patients’ age.
That suggests universal health care coverage could go a long way toward erasing racial disparities in specialist care, Woolhandler said.
The study — published July 19 in JAMA Internal Medicine — used data from an ongoing federal survey looking at Americans’ health care use.
Researchers focused on more than 132,000 U.S. adults who responded to the survey between 2015 and 2018.
Compared with their white counterparts, Black respondents had lower visit rates to most of the 29 medical specialties covered in the survey. Some of the biggest gaps were in dermatology, otolaryngology (ear/nose/throat), orthopedics, urology and general surgery — where Black Americans were anywhere from 38% to 73% less likely to have had a visit. That was with factors such as self-reported health, income and insurance taken into account.
Similarly, Hispanic patients and Asian patients had lower visit rates than white patients for the majority of specialties. Several of those gaps persisted once the researchers weighed people’s health ratings, income and other factors.
Frederick Isasi is executive director of Families USA, a nonpartisan consumer health care advocacy group. He agreed that health insurance is probably an important reason for the findings, but only part of the story.
“We know there are implicit biases in health care,” said Isasi, who was not involved in the study. “When people of color walk through the door [of a health care facility], they have a different experience than white people do.”
In this study, respondents of all races were similarly likely to see primary care doctors, who are the providers giving patients referrals to a specialist when needed. What’s not clear is whether referrals might have differed based on patients’ race.
In addition, Isasi said, people of color are more likely to distrust the health care system, based on personal and historical experiences. That, coupled with the dearth of Black providers and Hispanic providers in particular, may make some patients hesitant to see a specialist.
Woolhandler agreed that those factors are likely at work.
There are also practical obstacles, she and Isasi said, such as taking time off work, or needing to travel to a specialist because there are none in the local area.
“And the lower your income, the harder that is,” Isasi pointed out.
The bottom line, he said, is that insurance is a necessary part of the solution, “but not sufficient on its own.”
Even the finding on nephrology care can be seen, in part, as a reflection of how the system fails people of color, Isasi said. Black Americans need that care, because they progress to advanced kidney disease at a disproportionately high rate.
“The best health care system,” Woolhandler said, “is one that coordinates good primary care with specialist care when needed. In the U.S., we’re not providing that on an equal basis.”
On its 56th anniversary, America’s most popular and effective health care program needs an upgrade
By Jessica Schorr Saxe, M.D. and George Bohmfalk, M.D.
NC Policy Watch, July 26, 2021
On July 30, 1965, President Lyndon Johnson signed Medicare, his “number one priority,” into law. On July 1, 1966, using primitive communication techniques such as post cards and door-to-door canvassing, the vast majority of Americans over 65 were enrolled. Today Medicare is our most popular and cost-effective health insurance program.
Medicare has improved health and reduced poverty for tens of millions of older adults, but despite its many strengths, it needs improvements that should be addressed in the budget reconciliation bill being formulated in Congress. While a full-on transition to “Medicare for All” would be the preferred solution, we should make every effort to achieve these improvements as soon as possible. These improvements are particularly critical to Black Americans who have poorer health, more chronic conditions, and more cost-related barriers to care than whites.
Four needed changes stand out:
More forms of healthcare should be covered – Medicare doesn’t cover vision, hearing and dental care, each of which can have a major impact on overall health. According to a 2018 Commonwealth Fund analysis, most people on Medicare who needed a hearing aid didn’t have one, most who had difficulty eating because of their teeth hadn’t seen a dentist in the last year, and almost half of those with vision problems hadn’t had an eye exam in over a year. Medicare should include vision, hearing and dental care.
Out-of-pocket are too high and should be capped – Traditional Medicare pays only 80% of its approved charge for most medical services and has no limit on out-of-pocket expenses. These costs are daunting for many. More than half of people covered by Medicare live on less than $30,000 a year, and many can’t meet their basic needs. The median income for African-Americans covered by the program is only $23,000. At the same time, the average beneficiary spends almost $6000 annually on medical care. It doesn’t take a math genius to figure out that those numbers don’t compute, so it’s no surprise that over half of recipients fear an illness would lead to bankruptcy or debt. Congress should place an affordable cap on out-of-pocket costs.
The age of eligibility should be lowered – Medicare is only available to people over 65 and some with disabilities. Getting adequate healthcare sometimes resembles a game of craps—roll the dice and see if you can wait until you are over 65 to get a serious illness. A recent Stanford University study showed that people over 65 had better cancer outcomes than patients in their early 60’s. One might expect the younger group to do better, but the older group had the advantage of better access to healthcare through Medicare. Lowering the eligibility age to 60 would give 23 million more people the security and better outcomes of Medicare coverage.
Drug prices should be lowered through negotiation – On average, Americans pay more than twice as much for medications than do people in other wealthy countries. Allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices would save hundreds of billions of dollars. These savings could be used to pay for the other improvements.
These proposals are popular. A large majority of seniors want to see coverage of dental, vision and hearing care. Support for lowering the Medicare age is bipartisan, as is support for drug negotiation.
These improvements would also extend beyond individuals. The COVID-19 pandemic has both illuminated and aggravated unconscionable racial and ethnic healthcare inequities, such as a disproportionate death rate which actually widened the gap in life expectancy between Blacks and whites, wiping out years of progress. Improvements to Medicare would not erase all inequities, but they would substantially mitigate many. Businesses would also benefit, as they would no longer bear as large a burden of their employees’ healthcare costs.
More than 150 members of Congress have signed a letter to President Biden requesting that the American Families Plan include an out-of-pocket cap, improved benefits, a lowered eligibility age and prescription drug negotiation for Medicare. If your representative is among them; thank them. If not, ask them to support it. Ask your Senators to support these improvements.
Happy and healthy 56th birthday, Medicare! Short of expanding Medicare to cover everyone, there is no better way to celebrate this milestone than to enhance the physical, emotional, and financial health of seniors by improving and expanding Medicare benefits.
Dr. Jessica Schorr Saxe is a retired family physician and chair of Health Care Justice – NC. Dr. George Bohmfalk is a retired neurosurgeon and chair-elect of Health Care Justice – NC. Contact them at hcjusticenc@gmail.com.
Cherry picking? Lemon dropping? How health insurers weed out sick people.
By Brenda Gazzar
Code Wack Podcast, July 26, 2021
Featuring Dr. Stephen Kemble, psychiatrist, board member of Physicians for a National Health Program and member of One Payer States, discussing tricks health insurers use to increase profits – at our expense – and a common “Trojan horse” found in state single- payer legislation.
Transcript
Welcome to Code WACK!, your podcast on America’s broken healthcare system and how Medicare for All could help. I’m your host, Brenda Gazzar.
How do managed care groups cherry pick and lemon drop their patients? What are the insurance industry’s Trojan horses when it comes to single-payer healthcare proposals? To find out, we spoke to Dr. Stephen Kemble, who practices at a hospital-based primary clinic in Honolulu. Kemble is also past president of the Hawaii Psychiatric Medical Association and the Hawaii Medical Association.
(5-second stinger)
Welcome to Code WACK!, Dr. Kemble!
Kemble: Thank you.
Q: So you recently collaborated on a paper called “Beware of Insurance Industry ‘Trojan horses’ in ‘Single-Payer’ proposals.” What does this mean in layman’s terms?
Kemble: The Trojan horses are ways of organizing health care that turn a supposedly single-payer proposal into a multipayer proposal and sabotage it from achieving any administrative savings, and where this came from, in the single-payer movement, is mainly in California because they have a very large presence of Kaiser and Kaiser is, they get capitated money. You know they’re paid per member, either through premiums from an employer or by the state, if they’re serving the Medicaid or Medicare population. They’re given money per person, and then they have to deliver care within that amount of money so they are the ones taking insurance risk. They then have an incentive to cherry pick and lemon drop. In other words, to hang on to healthy people and get rid of sick people.
So they try to select a healthier than average patient population in order to make ends meet financially. But when you’re in Kaiser, it works pretty well, and it’s popular, so they didn’t want to eliminate Kaiser… Because Kaiser is an integrated system that’s capitated, their proposal is to say, Okay, we’ll pay Kaiser by capitation because that’s what they’re used to, but then you can’t pay their hospital with a global budget because you’ve already paid for it through their capitation budget. You can’t duplicate the payments so you can’t do hospital budgeting if you use capitation payments.
So you have these single payer bills that instead of budgeting hospitals they budget these multi-hospital, physician hospital organizations like Kaiser, with a separate budget. Now, you have multiple risk-bearing entities competing with each other, trying to avoid sick people and capture healthy people and claim that healthy people are sicker than they are to beat risk adjustment formulas…So you can’t do risk adjustment effectively. So you have all of these problems that are reintroduced into the system that add administrative costs and complexity and prevent you from achieving and saving single payer should achieve.
Q: Uh-uh. Got it. And this sounds like it has an impact on patients who might be denied care. Is that right?
Kemble: Yes, I mean one way a risk-bearing entity like an insurance company weeds out sick people by restricting their formulary and not offering the drugs needed for expensive conditions. So if you have those conditions you get hassled every time you fill your prescription so you quit that plan and go to whatever the public like traditional Medicare that has fewer restrictions or you switch to a different Medicaid Managed Care plan hoping that you’ll do better there but all of them are playing the same game because, you know, it’s musical chairs. Who wants to be stuck with the sick people? They keep trying to find a ways to make it difficult for them, and the result is obstruction and denial of care.
Q: Got it. So why should average people care about this?
Kemble: These things, they directly affect someone who’s got say Medicaid and a serious health condition that’s expensive but they drive up costs for everyone because the cost of these things is spread across the whole population. So all of this makes for a far more expensive healthcare system. Our multi-payer, multiple gaps healthcare system costs twice as much as the average of other industrialized countries, and leaves a large percent of the population out, and it’s getting worse all the time and not better, and until we wake up and stop trying to have the system of competing insurance companies… financing healthcare, we’re not going to solve the problem.
You cannot solve it without taking on the whole insurance business model, which is inappropriate to health care. You know if you have a risk like your house burning down which is presumably infrequent and unpredictable, then you might charge them more if they live in a forest than you would if they live in a city because you can see that’s higher risk, but you’re pretty much spreading it across a whole bunch of people because the risk is unpredictable. In health care, the risk is largely predictable. There’s too many people with preexisting conditions where you know it’s going to be expensive so the whole idea of using the insurance system falls apart because all you’re doing is trying to avoid sick people, which defeats the whole purpose of insurance.
Q: I see. How else do these organizations cherry pick patients? How are they allowed to do that?
Kemble: Well, they market to healthy people. I don’t know about California but in Hawaii Kaiser ads are all about “thrive” and people jogging and they offer fitness clubs as bonuses. If you’ve got a chronic heart condition or dementia or renal failure, that’s not going to appeal to you but if you’re healthy, it will so they market to healthy people, they have restricted formularies that are stacked against people with expensive conditions. They have more prior authorizations for people with complex problems. That’s how they do it, and they’re very good at it. I mean there’s studies that have shown there are big differences in the risk pool for Medicare Advantage Plans compared to traditional Medicare. The Medicare Advantage Plans collect healthy people and push out sick people and there’s lots of evidence that that’s the case. That’s actually happening.
(5-second stinger)
Thank you Dr. Stephen Kemble.
Learn more about One Payer States at OnePayerStates.org and Physicians for a National Health Program at PNHP.org.
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Happy Birthday, Medicare: You Showed That Public, Universal Health Insurance Is Superior
We must immediately end our moral crime of having the greatest health system in the world, but only for those who can afford it.
By F. Douglas Stephenson
Common Dreams,
Fifty-six years ago Congress enacted Medicare to provide health insurance for people ages 65 and older and the disabled regardless of income or medical history. Since 1965, Medicare has become living proof that public, universal health insurance is superior to private insurance in every way. Medicare is more efficient than private health insurance and is administered at a cost of 3% to 4%, as opposed to private, for-profit health insurance, which has administrative costs above 15%. In light of the burgeoning, severe losses of jobs/employment/health insurances caused by the ravages of the Covid-19 pandemic, it’s very Important to remember that Medicare is still providing stable coverage for everyone 65 and older. If the new and improved Medicare for All, as outlined below, were in place today, everyone’s health insurance, in spite of the Covid-19 pandemic, would continue uninterrupted because the Medicare for All insurance system is based on residence, not employment.
2021 is also a very special year in the history of single-payer health insurance and public health in the U.S. because Reps. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) and Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) introduced the modern Medicare for All Act of 2021 (H.R. 1976) in Congress. M4A 2021 is new legislation establishing a cutting edge single-payer national health program in the United States that addresses decades of health/mental health-related injustices that have been made even more painfully apparent by the Covid-19 pandemic.
Medicare for All Means Everybody In, Nobody Out!
H.R. 1976 upgrades Medicare with a 21st century modern and improved “Medicare for All” health insurance system that covers all age groups, cradle to grave. Newborns will leave the hospital with their new Medicare card, and drop it off years later at life’s end. Benefits of H.R. 1976 health insurance include the following new items and services if medically necessary or appropriate for the maintenance of health or for the diagnosis, treatment, or rehabilitation of a health condition:
- Hospital services, including inpatient and outpatient hospital care, including 24-hour-a-day emergency services and inpatient prescription drugs;
- Ambulatory patient services;
- Primary and preventive services, including chronic disease management;
- Prescription drugs and medical devices, including outpatient prescription drugs, medical devices, and biological products;
- Mental health and substance use treatment services, including inpatient care;
- Laboratory and diagnostic services;
- Comprehensive reproductive, maternity, and newborn care;
- Dentistry/oral health, audiology, and vision/ophthalmology services;
- Rehabilitative and habilitative services and devices;
- Emergency services and transportation;
- Early and periodic screening, diagnostic, and treatment services;
- Necessary transportation to receive health care services for persons with disabilities, older individuals with functional limitations, or low-income individuals (as determined by the secretary);
- Hospice care; and
- Services provided by a licensed marriage and family therapist or a licensed mental health counselor. (In addition to psychiatrists, licensed clinical psychologists, licensed clinical social workers, psychiatric nurses.)
Co-payments and deductibles paid at health professionals’ offices are ended because payment for health insurance is fully prepaid directly into Medicare, just like pre-payment into Social Security, and covered at first dollar amounts. This means the obsolete 80%/20% payment split between private health insurance companies and Medicare is eliminated, with Medicare for All 2021 covering 100%.
All residents are guaranteed access to quality healthcare while achieving significant overall savings compared to our existing Medicare system by lowering administrative costs, controlling the prices of prescription drugs and fees for physicians and other health-/mental healthcare professionals and hospitals, reducing unnecessary treatments, and expanding preventive care.
Good healthcare is established as a basic human right, as in almost all other advanced countries. Nobody would have to forego needed treatments because they didn’t have insurance or they couldn’t afford high insurance premiums and co-pays. Nobody would have to fear a financial disaster because they faced a healthcare crisis in their family. Virtually all families would end up financially better off and most businesses would also experience cost savings compared to what they pay now to cover their employees. Health insurance is based on residence, not employment.
With M4A, citizens are guaranteed access to healthcare while achieving significant overall savings compared to our existing obsolete system. This is accomplished by lowering administrative and eliminating profiteering Big Insurance costs, controlling Big Pharma prices of prescription drugs, fees for physicians, and other healthcare professionals and hospitals, reducing unnecessary treatments and expanding preventative care.
Co-payments and deductibles paid at health professionals’ offices are ended because payment for health insurance is fully prepaid directly into Medicare, just like pre-payment into Social Security, and covered at first dollar amounts. This means the obsolete 80%/20% payment split between private health insurance companies and Medicare is eliminated, with Medicare for All 2021 covering 100%.
We finance our new and improved Medicare for All system by eliminating profiteering by the private health insurance industry and slashing the system-wide administrative waste they generate, with a single streamlined, nonprofit public payer health insurance system. Such savings, estimated in 2017 to be about $500 billion annually, would be redirected to patient care.
More than two dozen independent analyses of federal and state single-payer legislation by agencies such as the Congressional Budget Office, the General Accountability Office, the Lewin Group, and Mathematica Policy Research Group have found that the administrative savings and other efficiencies of a single-payer program would provide more than enough resources to provide first-dollar coverage to everyone in the country with no increase in overall U.S. health spending.
According to a 2016 study in the American Journal of Public Health, tax-funded expenditures already account for about two-thirds of U.S. health spending. That revenue would be retained and supplemented by modest progressive taxes based on ability to pay, taxes that would typically be fully offset by ending today’s very high premiums paid to the for-profit private insurance industry and out-of-pocket expenses for care. The vast majority of U.S. households—one study says 95%—would come out financially ahead. The system would reap savings by dealing with drug and medical supply companies for lower prices.
M4A is a solid investment in our country because it promotes a social service for universal access to affordable health insurance for everyone. The USA is a country where health insurance for medical and mental healthcare is a function of socio-economic status. Everyone knows that this inhumane system should have been corrected long ago, but the death and illness ravages of the pandemic crisis makes it impossible to any longer avoid reality. We must immediately end our moral crime of having the greatest health system in the world, but only for those who can afford it.
When Medicare was enacted 56 years ago, following a broad grassroots campaign, many believed the dream of a full national health insurance system was right around the corner. Five decades later, Medicare still has not been expanded. Most of the changes have been contractions with higher out-of-pocket costs for beneficiaries and repeated attempts at privatization by Big Pharma, the health insurance industry, and its champions in the White House and Congress.
It’s time to end inadequate and dangerous health insurance programs. Insist on real health insurance reform essential for individuals and families. American history is filled with examples of fundamental, democratic change brought about by successful mass action and public pressure against the counseling of the go slow, vested interest crowd. No more waiting! Ask your legislators to fully support Medicare For All. A majority of Americans support Medicare and want expansion of this program to provide health insurance for all. Write to your senators and representatives and let them know how you feel about expanding Medicare. The very best way to cope with the vast dangers of Covid-19 to everyone is to immediately implement improved Medicare for All 2021 with H.R.1976. By making health insurance available to all age groups, we can enjoy and celebrate Medicare’s 56th birthday with the assurance that this life-saving health insurance program will continue.
F. Douglas Stephenson , LCSW, is a retired psychotherapist and former instructor of social work in the University of Florida Department of Psychiatry. He is a member of Physicians for a National Health Program.
Over 100 people march in support of Medicare for All downtown
To view full video from the rally at Chicago’s Federal Plaza, click HERE (video queued to start with Dr. Pam Gronemeyer’s remarks at 33:40).
By Jenna Barnes
WGN-TV,
CHICAGO — More than 100 people marched from Maggie Daley Park to the Federal Plaza to draw attention to their fight for Medicare for All.
“John Lewis said if you see something is not right, not fair and not just, you have a moral obligation to do something about it,” registered nurse Martese Chism said.
The rally was part of rallies in more than 50 other cities across the United States in support for a single-payer health care system.
“Are we so star-spangled awesome that we can’t figure this out and everybody else can?” protester Tim Lively said.
Advocates for Medicare for All are calling for zero copays, zero deductibles, full dental and vision coverage and no out-of-network restrictions.
“If you get injured outside of your predetermined health care network, you have to pay for it all. Where’s the freedom in that?” Lively said.
A Gallup poll earlier this year found that one in five Americans are unable to afford the care they need. A Pew Research Study last year found that 63 percent of American adults said the government has a responsibility to provide health care coverage for all, something proponents said we’ve seen glimpses of during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“You show them your ID, you get your vaccine, you’re done. That’s the universal health care they always say can’t work here, but it did work here,” Cook County Green Party member Troy Hernandez said.
Critics of the proposal say the federal government can’t afford it, requiring a tax hike and eliminating all private insurance.
For protester Georgette Druck though, that doesn’t compare at all to what Americans are missing out on in health coverage.
“I think we can be number one. We used to be number one in everything in America, I don’t see how we can’t be number one in health care outcomes too,” Druck said.
Dr. Steve Auerbach rallies in NYC
PNHP New York Metro board member Dr. Steve Auerbach addressed a Medicare-for-All rally in New York City on July 24, 2021, alongside members of Students for a National Health Program (SNaHP). He reminded the crowd, “There is no policy debate anymore. There is no economic debate anymore. Single payer is the way to go.”
Video courtesy of Larry Melnicker.
Demonstrators in Louisville join nationwide ‘Medicare for All March’
By
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Dozens of people took to the streets of Louisville and marched demanding better access to Medicare. Louisville joined 55 other cities across the country in a march for Medicare for All.
Kay Tillow helped organize Saturday’s rally and said she felt very passionately about the cause.
“All of us know that we are one serious illness away from bankruptcy because we have a system where people pay too much and are not covered and people go without care because of deductibles and copays,” said Tillow, the chair for Kentuckians for Single Payer Healthcare.
Tillow joined others in calling health care a human right and demanding that Congress take action to pass a national single payer improved Medicare for All plan.
Bob Brown said he felt the need to attend the march because he recently turned 65 and understands the benefits a single payer pan can provide.
“The single payer plan has been wonderful. I have been lucky and have had insurance all my life through my occupations. This plan, as a retired man, is as good or better than any insurance I’ve ever had,” he said.
Dr. Garrett Adams, who has worked at the UofL School of Medicine, said there are many Kentuckians who are just a year or two away from hitting the key age of 65, who have limited finances and often put off seeking care until they qualify.
“People that are 63, or 63 and a half, or 64 can’t wait because they are working on hurt knees that they can’t do anything about. They can’t afford their medicine. They need advanced treatment for their congestive heart failure and they can’t wait for their 65th birthday so they can go on Medicare,” Dr. Adams said.
Tillow said the nationwide movement also calls for improvements to cover vision, hearing, dental, and long-term care. Demonstrators also want some barriers removed like copays, deductibles and forms they described as confusing. Tillow will continue to work organizing these events until lawmakers take action.
“It is going to take a few million people in action to persuade Congress that this is the right thing to do. But, we have to make it happen and we won’t stop until we have everyone covered under single payer,” said Tillow.
21 organizations participated in the Louisville Rally and March. They marched a half mile from the Romano L Mazzoli Federal Building to Jefferson Square Park to place flowers at the Breonna Taylor memorial.
Dr. Garrett Adams and Kay Tillow on Spectrum News
PNHP part president Dr. Garrett Adams and PNHP board adviser Kay Tillow spoke with Spectrum News on July 24, 2021. They discussed the urgent need for single-payer reform as part of a segment covering a Louisville, Ky. march for Medicare for All; the Louisville action was part of a series of nationwide marches taking place that same day.
Dr. Pam Gronemeyer on Hard Lens Media
PNHP-IL Co-President (for Southern Illinois) Dr. Pamella Gronemeyer addressed a Medicare-for-All rally in Chicago on July 24, 2021. The rally was part of a series of nationwide marches taking place that same day, and was covered in Chicago by Hard Lens Media, WGN-TV, and others. Dr. Gronemeyer assured the crowd that physicians support, and that patients urgently need, single-payer reform.
