Health Care Terror
These days terrorism is the first refuge of scoundrels. So when British authorities announced that a ring of Muslim doctors working for the National Health Service was behind the recent failed bomb plot, we should have known what was coming.
"National healthcare: Breeding ground for terror?" read the on-screen headline, as the Fox News host Neil Cavuto and the commentator Jerry Bowyer solemnly discussed how universal health care promotes terrorism.
While this was crass even by the standards of Bush-era political discourse, Fox was following in a long tradition. For more than 60 years, the medical-industrial complex and its political allies have used scare tactics to prevent America from following its conscience and making access to health care a right for all its citizens.
I say conscience, because the health care issue is, most of all, about morality.
That's what we learn from the overwhelming response to Michael Moore's "Sicko." Health care reformers should, by all means, address the anxieties of middle-class Americans, their growing and justified fear of finding themselves uninsured or having their insurers deny coverage when they need it most. But reformers shouldn't focus only on self-interest. They should also appeal to Americans' sense of decency and humanity.
What outrages people who see "Sicko" is the sheer cruelty and injustice of the American health care system - sick people who can't pay their hospital bills literally dumped on the sidewalk, a child who dies because an emergency room that isn't a participant in her mother's health plan won't treat her, hard-working Americans driven into humiliating poverty by medical bills.
"Sicko" is a powerful call to action - but don't count the defenders of the status quo out. History shows that they're very good at fending off reform by finding new ways to scare us.
These scare tactics have often included over-the-top claims about the dangers of government insurance. "Sicko" plays part of a recording Ronald Reagan once made for the American Medical Association, warning that a proposed program of health insurance for the elderly - the program now known as Medicare - would lead to totalitarianism.
Right now, by the way, Medicare - which did enormous good, without leading to a dictatorship - is being undermined by privatization.
Mainly, though, the big-money interests with a stake in the present system want you to believe that universal health care would lead to a crushing tax burden and lousy medical care.
Now, every wealthy country except the United States already has some form of universal care. Citizens of these countries pay extra taxes as a result - but they make up for that through savings on insurance premiums and out-of-pocket medical costs. The overall cost of health care in countries with universal coverage is much lower than it is here.
Meanwhile, every available indicator says that in terms of quality, access to needed care and health outcomes, the U.S. health care system does worse, not better, than other advanced countries - even Britain, which spends only about 40 percent as much per person as we do.
Yes, Canadians wait longer than insured Americans for elective surgery. But over all, the average Canadian's access to health care is as good as that of the average insured American - and much better than that of uninsured Americans, many of whom never receive needed care at all.
And the French manage to provide arguably the best health care in the world, without significant waiting lists of any kind. There's a scene in "Sicko" in which expatriate Americans in Paris praise the French system. According to the hard data they're not romanticizing. It really is that good.
All of which raises the question Mr. Moore asks at the beginning of "Sicko": who are we?
"We have always known that heedless self-interest was bad morals; we know now that it is bad economics." So declared F.D.R. in 1937, in words that apply perfectly to health care today. This isn't one of those cases where we face painful tradeoffs - here, doing the right thing is also cost-efficient. Universal health care would save thousands of American lives each year, while actually saving money.
So this is a test. The only things standing in the way of universal health care are the fear-mongering and influence-buying of interest groups. If we can't overcome those forces here, there's not much hope for America's future.
Paul Krugman is Professor of Economics at Princeton University and a regular New York Times columnist. His most recent book is The Great Unraveling: Losing Our Way in the New Century.
© 2007 The New York Times
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32 Comments so far
Show AllWe have traveled to Europe several times most and as long ago as 2000 in conversations with people there about health care, they would ask us, "Why do Americans put upwith their health care system?" All we could say, is that our government is controlled by the insurance, pharmaceutical industries, the AMA and people don't care.
Americans have been thoroughly brainwashed into believing we are the absolute BEST country in the world in everything! Long ago that may have been partially true, but today it is abundantly clear this is absolutely not true and health care is only one of the reasons!
'Canadians wait longer than insured Americans for elective surgery'. That depends on the type of surgery and it is caused principally by a shortage of specialists. That shortage, in turn, is caused by a medical community and a system that places near-impossible barriers to entry for immigrant doctors --- all the better twist arms for higher remuneration. Plus the U.S. is there with its high salaries to soak up immigrant doctors refused entry into the Canadian system. Mind you, those $$$ are mighty attractive, too. However, if a resident of Canada needs URGENT surgical attention, I can assure you he/she will get it immediately. In Canada you will never see the horrors and indignities visited upon American patients.
CNN's Wolf Blitzer interview with Michael Moore was followed by Dobbs and McCathery attacking Moore.
Two jerks that have absolutely nothing to contribute to the conversation.
All Moore is saying is that compared to the rest of the world America is not where it needs to be on such an important issue as Healthcare and all they can do is say he's a little whiny Communist?
Can I get paid to be a jerk too? Sure!
Jimbob: I have lived in several nations, too, and it definitely opens perspective. To too many jingoism substitutes for reality and their perspective as a result is delusional as per the USA. (Not on this site, but the Fox crowd, 99% there!)
"a child who dies because an emergency room that isn't a participant in her mother's health plan won't treat her, "
Isn't what happened to the child againt the law, even in the US?
Here in France, "non-assistance to a person in danger" is a criminal offense. I thought it was also the case in the US?
Jimbob, you're right on. It's amazing the power of propaganda in the US that feeds on Americans' total ignorance of the facts. It's understandable that, since Americans do not travel internationally, they have no clue about life in other nations. They only know, and regurgitate, what they hear on Fox Propaganda. Most countries in the West have a far superior quality of life to the US. Citizens of these countries never worry about maybe losing their home if they cannot pay a medical bill. The US is all about the dollar, and nothing else. If you're rich, the US is your kind of place (as long as you keep your money offshore). If you're middle class, you're better off in another country.
The substandard quality of America's healthcare simply reflects the broader substandard quality of life. I have lived outside the USA and I can honestly admit that America is NOT the best place in the world to live. Not the worst, but certainly not the best (though, it could be the best). I'm sure this will come as a shock to many and I'm certain I will be labeled unpatriotic by some. Harsh words spoken by the ignorant do not concern me. It has taken several years of de-programming to realize that truth. You want to make it better? Look within and make a change.
Republican economics: invade oil rich country for a trillion or 2 dollar$ so we can pay $3 or $4 a gallon for gas. Really, after all the money spent on unnecessary war, the argument that we cant afford to do this, we cant afford to do that is shot to hell. Yeah, I know they want to bankrupt our country to their cronies so they can say "sorry, we ran out of money" so they can justify no social spending. And yes, they've done a hell of a job at digging a deep hole. But all this could be fixed by doing the proper thing like democratically responding to the will of the people and give us the health care that we want. Start impeachment proceedings asap and set the damn republicans back 50 years. If they had they're way, Social Security would have been privatized by now. The time is ripe for a progressive pendulum swing. Salud!
Ragdoll:
No, so-called "Good Samaritan" laws no longer exist in the States. Nobody is obliged to lend a hand to others, on the contrary most Americans fear liability therefore do NOT get involved in helping each other. Nice system, n'est ce pas? C'est immonde et inhumain.
Thank God for Paul Krugman, he has been my lifeline since the coup of 2000.
For years I was convinced most Americans are sad, sad sheep. After experiencing admirable French health care for 20 years I would literally gag each time I heard some moronic TV talking-head or "journalist" spout the party-line about "American health care, best in the world," LOL.
How deeply un-informed and easily-manipulated the American citizenry has been, and that was indeed the root of their huge problems.
Please God, tell me they are finally waking up!!! And help them break these chains of ignorance and media mind-control!!
A frog in warming water? ___ Kathy, how could you say it; that's awful.___ Funny too.
jedediah zachariah jedediah springfield July 9th, 2007 1:01 pm wrote:
"what's the good of health care when the american way of life is designed to maximize stress & insecurity, primary contributors to heart failure, etc.? when many americans cannot afford an essential component of health, relaxation and leisure time?"
The good is that the adoption of single-payer, universal, publicly-funded health insurance would do away, in one fell swoop, with the primary reason that Americans are stressed and insecure. People work insane hours for the chance to pay hundreds of dollars a month in insurance and copays because they're understandably terrified to do otherwise. Imagine all the energy and capital Americans would have to devote to other issues - healthy affordable food, the environment, better labour standards - if they weren't scared of losing what pathetic crumbs the insurance industry may (or may not) throw them in a crisis!
"...there are nasty forces working mercilessly to dismantle the health care system..."
Here lies the danger. The real answer is an end run. First, get the Health Freedom of Choice Act passed. Then we need legislation that prohibits medical practitioners from being persecuted/prosecuted for treatments that cause no harm. In case you are not aware of it, a physician who treats his patients with "alternative" methods, including but not limited to nutritional therapies, can lose his license by being called on charges by state Medical Boards, EVEN WHEN THEIR PATIENTS TESTIFY TO THE BENEFITS OF THE "UNAPPROVED" TREATMENTS!!! Other physicians learn real fast not to tempt the fates, and, by the way, save their patients/insurance companies hundreds or thousands of dollars.
Insurance companies are not the only villians. Insurance companies are just doing a bad job of responding to the financial monopoly that is our health care system. (Short on doctors? Hmm, why not increase medical school admissions, or change focus to primary care to respond to the need?) Once physicians have access to the vast amount of information and research and experience in the nutritional component of healing, health care costs could collapse and all those medical industrial complex businesses would too. And I don't mean eat good and get exercise, although that's always a good idea. I mean reassessing the role of gut pH in illness, understanding the problem of Vitamin D deficiency in our adult population etc, etc., etc..
Without this, the only difference between then and now is taxpayers will be footing an unaffordable bill. Until then, eat your vegetables and take cod liver oil.
A friend of ours recently had to undergo a double mastectomy. She was released shortly after surgery because her insurance would not pay for the normal two days of hospital care. The insurance companies are trying to make that operation an outpatient procedure. Oh my God.
To COMarc:
Yes, but on the other hand, the only kind of change we get with Republics is change for the worse!
Don't just vote for Democratic candidates, vote for Progressive Democratic candidates.
It is easy to appreciate Mr. Krugnman's views here in Canada. The sad point is that there are nasty forces working mercilessly to dismantle the health care system that Tommy Douglas built. And no thanks to shills like Two Tiered Tony Clement, the sleazy federal health minister, who has or had $$ intersts in the for profit health care schemes, trying to give the greedy a free pass to privatizing health care one step at a time while he sits idly by. Joseph Howe, a Nova Soctia politician some time ago used to retire each evening with three questions that he asked of himself: What is right? What is just? and What is for the public good? The times have sure changed but it would be great if we could get Howe back.
Like with everything else, if you want change, then please don't vote Democrat.
It's not health care terror. It's health insurance terror.
Mr. K--Please use the appropriate term -- not the Rove-polished "privatization" but rather "corporatization"
"Oscar Wilde once quipped that war will retain it's fascination so long as it is viewed as wicked but will cease to be popular when looked upon as vulgar."
With all respect to the poster (and of course Wilde), we already did that experiment. It was called Abu Ghraib, and it bounced off the monster like a tennis ball.
Get ready for the big confusion tactic:
Universal Access (corporate sponsored & run by) - Mandatory for us to purchase and they use the States to garnish our wages to pay the premiums - then they refuse to pay just like they do now - Retroactive Review.
Vs.
Single payer, Medicare for all. No corporations, no big Pharma, NO BILLIONS TO EXECUTIVES, just quality healthcare for us.
In about 5 years, the Dems might begin to think about talking about maybe doing something, maybe, but only if the timing's right and there are no Republicans in Congress.
Until then, we're going to keep on dying so that richfilth can get richer on our suffering. It is the American way isn't it?
It's no secret that the American health care system is sick. So sick that we spend more, twice as much more per person, on health care as citizens of other advanced countries, yet we get less, and are less healthy besides.
The U.S. does not have the world's best care. It has the costliest.
Our health care system is so dysfunctional and unjust that one in six Americans, including some nine million children, go without health care twelve months out of the year. One in three Americans below age 65 lack private or public health insurance for all or part of the year. Six of ten of these uninsured adults even hold full-year, full-time jobs.
And, not surprisingly, since 2001 the number of Americans falling through the cracks of our broken health care system has been steadily rising.
Also not surprisingly, uninsured Americans receive about half the medical care of those with insurance. They receive too little care too late, get sicker, and die sooner. Roughly 18,000 excess deaths occur each year in this nation of plenty among uninsured adults age 25 to 64.
Put in contemporary terms, lack of health care is clearly killing many more Americans than terrorism. The real wolf at the door is not the one purportedly roaming the mountains of western Pakistan.
Americans deserve and want a better system. Today's health care system, the manner in which it is organized, its level of funding, and the ways that health services are financed for and by our population are not meeting our nation's requirements.
We need a universal and affordable system of health insurance - available to everyone regardless of how much they earn, where they work, or even whether they have a job. Comprehensive health care reform is long overdue. By squandering time, we're narrowing our options.
Kudos to Krugman for this excellent article. It's time that political ideologies be put aside in the search for solutions. Irrespective of party labels, we're all in this ambulance together.
I'm sorry what planet are you people from? National healthcare we'r in the killing business, not healing. We have killed more people throughout the world than any other country, inclueding Hitler. Do the math.
It's interesting how many reviewers write off Sicko as just clever propaganda. I love it that clear-thinker Krugman doesn't give even a nod to that view. I also like JDJS' take that health care won't take care of bad health brought on by the American way of life. But really caring health care - like we're all in this together - could be a way into a new American way.
"The unthinkable has, imperceptibly, become commonplace."
I have been reflecting on this recently, thinking of it as a frog in slowly heating water. But I like the way fd32 put it. Maybe that's a way of presenting this issue to the public. I've been trying to find a way to get the word out, to get people's attention. My son thinks people will continue to believe the constant drumbeat from the media and a friend told me that most people just want to come home from work, sit in front of the TV and feel safe. It's appalling to think she might be right. After all, not everyone wants to go see SiCKO.
I think our only hope is the young people. They're cynical, disillusioned, and just want to have fun, but they're also aware that we're leaving them an expensive nasty mess will global warming breathing down their necks. Something has to happen. And on top of how we've treated them and how we've trashed their future, we expect them to take care of us in our old age (work your tails off, pour your money into Social Security, but don't expect it to be there in your old age). Aren't we a piece of work.
fd32 wrote - "Perhaps a good place to begin is to go back to your fundamental sense of right and wrong and ask yourself whether what is being done to you is morally feasible in any rational sense. Political wisdom will follow from your answers. There is no other source."
How simple and yet profound. I have been asking this question for over twenty years now. In reference to a plethora of issues - the question I always pose is 'please do not tell me whehter or not it is legal or illegal, just ask yourself whether it is right or wrong. When criminals write the laws and the innocent go to jail and the guilty get their sentences commuted due to connections to power, you can no longer believe that the "rule of law" means anything. Come to think of it, isn't this why the French got fed up enough to bring out the guillotines?
Paul Krugman performs an important service by contributing to what one hopes will become a national mantra designed to promote recognition of the fact that political issues are fundamentally MORAL issues. Behind the anonymity of corporate machinations are human beings who, in cooperation with their enablers in government and media are wielding enormous power in a highly calculated and deliberate fashion. Their ofttimes obscure and attenuated decisions and actions cause incalculable harm and suffering to real people in real time in the real world. It is time to promote the connecting of these dots toward the end of raising the consciousness of the distracted and indifferent to the brutality of the smiling, domineering, self-satisfied establishmentarians, some enjoying celebrity status, whose conduct is seriously criminal in the most fundamental sense of the word.
Oscar Wilde once quipped that war will retain it's fascination so long as it is viewed as wicked but will cease to be popular when looked upon as vulgar. His underlying point was that morality is a social issue and ultimately a political one. Perhaps when those in power begin to lose their populist lustre as pillars of the community and glad-handing celebrities and are more correctly perceived and treated as molesters, thieves, liars and killers, will a social sea change begin to transform our culture into one which is more consistent with the moral principles which all sane people share as natural impulses. Michael Moore put his chubby little finger right on it when asking, rhetorically, what on earth are we thinking when we accept the custom that life and death decisions are legitimately grounded in financial considerations controlled by business executives and their bottom line concerns. The unthinkable has, imperceptibly, become commonplace.
Nader continually presses the idea of individuals thinking in terms of possibilities, of recognizing their own power, of non-acceptance and non-acquiescence in the status quo, a status quo designed to disadvantage us as against it's corporate authors.Perhaps a good place to begin is to go back to your fundamental sense of right and wrong and ask yourself whether what is being done to you is morally feasible in any rational sense. Political wisdom will follow from your answers. There is no other source.
The main point of Michael's film, which really used health care as a way of looking at it, is that the US has deteriorated into a "me" society instead of a "we" society. Way back, when we were a far more agricultural and small town society, people felt connected to each other and looked out for each other. I saw that living in Northern Minnesota in the 1980s. The locals regarded us as "gypsies from California", but while they wouldn't share their limited jobs with us (saved them to try to keep their kids from leaving), they did look out for us in other ways. We could never be a part of them, but they were still willing to take care of us.
We need to turn this around and I'm hoping that when the majority of Americans say we're "on the wrong track" this is what they mean. I think corporations have been very successful at the strategy of divide and conquer. We need to fight back. Start with www.Ni4D.us Mike Gravel's National Initiative for Democracy and Conyer's HR 676. And replace every DLC Democrat with a progressive who reflects the values the majority of Americans want. When Americans are polled they support progressive positions.
That French doctor was wealthy because he was rewarded for getting his patients to make healthy choices. That's health care! American doctors get rewarded for watching their patients to get sick and then denying care. That's insurance industry care. And Senator Ron Wyden wants to force us all into paying for mandatory insurance that many of us can't afford or use. The insurance industry would be salivating over that right now, if they weren't so panicked by SiCKO. Check out the memo by Barclay Fitzpatrick, vice President of Corporate Communications of Capital Blue Cross http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/message/index.php?id=215 and see just how panicked. Barely coherent. But my son pointed out that if they repeat themselves enough, and the media will be very helpful there, the public will start to believe what they hear. Worked for Hitler.
As a biewer of Sicko and someone who was stationed in Canada during military service, Paul Krugman (and Michael Moore) are 100% correct. As Ralph Nader said on Democracy Now today: http://www.democracynow.org/streampage.pl
All it would take is a couple thousand people per congressional dsitrict sacrificing a few hours a week on education and reaching out to neighbors to totally change the look of congress. All it takes is a 2/3 veto proof Senate and Congress to have the Conyers health care law, removal of the troops from Iraq, reinstitution of 35% corporate income tax (with more increases to follow), and repeal of the monsterous neocon measures enacted in the last nearly 7 years.
"You may call me a dreamer, but I'm not the only one"
jedediah, I agree; however singler payer universal health care would be a huge step in the right direction regardless.
There are millions of people that eat healthy, exercise, and in general try to do the right things.
Still many will have accidents, develop cancer, have children with congenital problems, it could be anyone of us.
We all need universal health care even if everything else is deficient.
The American way of life is designed to maximize stress & insecurity, the rat race, and that will not change unless we change the whole system, and replace it with a milder form of capitalism, perhaps like European social democracies or Socialism.
But these solutions are usually labeled as UnAmerican, so for the time being universal health care is a step where most of us find agreement...lets support it, we all need it.
you can always count on krugman to represent the reasonable voice of so-called liberals. but access to universal health care, as necessary as that is, will not significantly affect overall american health, b/c the issue is health, not "health care." what's the point of having gov't sponsored health care when america's gov't sponsored diet causes half of americans to have diabetes? what's the good of health care when the american way of life is designed to maximize stress & insecurity, primary contributors to heart failure, etc.? when many americans cannot afford an essential component of health, relaxation and leisure time?
fix health care, sure. but let's fix a whole lot of other messy crap while we are it.
Excellent commentary. Interestingly universal single-payer health care is in fact the bare minimum that can be done with the common good is a societal ideal. The Canadian system lags behind the UK and France, because essentially it is still in private hand except when negotiating standardized costs. Big pharma is also powerful in Canada, having lengthened the time to market for generics, and thus leading to increasing drug costs in the Canada as well (nowhere near as much as Americans are gouged though!).
Krugman could have added that universal health care would also save American jobs, by lifting the responsibility to provide plans from businesses, and placing it within the basket of services that are paid for by tax dollars. For manufacturers, the prohibitive cost of health plans from private insurers is actually placing them at a competitive disadvantage with plants in Canada or other countries. In fact, when the FTA was negotiated with Canada, Canada's health system was thought of as an unfair subsidy to business, even as American insurance companies were salivating at prying open Canada's market for privatization under neoliberal economic policies.
It would be the ultimate irony if GM puts its weight behind universal single-payer health care, although as a corporate behemoth they are more likely to opt to wage a fruitless war with the UAW to scale back benefits. Check this article for their double standards.