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Rx and the Single Payer
In 2003, a young Illinois state senator named Barack Obama told an AFL-CIO meeting, "I am a proponent of a single-payer universal health care program."
Single payer. Universal. That's health coverage, like Medicare, but for everyone who wants it. Single payer eliminates insurance companies as pricey middlemen. The government pays care providers directly. It's a system that polls consistently have shown the American people favoring by as much as two-to-one.
There was only one thing standing in the way, Obama said six years ago: "All of you know we might not get there immediately because first we have to take back the White House, we have to take back the Senate and we have to take back the House."
Fast forward six years. President Obama has everything he said was needed -- Democrats in control of the executive branch and both chambers of Congress. So what's happened to single payer?
A woman at his town hall meeting in New Mexico last week asked him exactly that. "If I were starting a system from scratch, then I think that the idea of moving towards a single-payer system could very well make sense," the President replied. "That's the kind of system that you have in most industrialized countries around the world.
"The only problem is that we're not starting from scratch. We have historically a tradition of employer-based health care. And although there are a lot of people who are not satisfied with their health care, the truth is, is that the vast majority of people currently get health care from their employers and you've got this system that's already in place. We don't want a huge disruption as we go into health care reform where suddenly we're trying to completely reinvent one-sixth of the economy."
So the banks were too big to fail and now, apparently, health care is too big to fix, at least the way a majority of people indicate they would like it to be fixed, with a single payer option. President Obama favors a public health plan competing with the medical cartel that he hopes will create a real market that would bring down costs. But single payer has vanished from his radar.
Nor is single payer getting much coverage in the mainstream media. Barely a mention was given to the hundreds of doctors, nurses and other health care professionals who came to Washington last week to protest the absence of official debate over single payer.
Is it the proverbial tree falling in the forest, making a noise that journalists can't or won't hear? Could the indifference of the press be because both the President of the United States and Congress have been avoiding single payer like, well, like the plague? As we see so often, government officials set the agenda by what they do and don't talk about.
Instead, President Obama is looking for consensus, seeking peace among all the parties involved. Except for single payer advocates. At that big White House powwow in Washington last week, the President asked representatives of the health care business to reason together with him. "What's brought us all together today is a recognition that we can't continue down the same dangerous road we've been traveling for so many years," he said, "that costs are out of control; and that reform is not a luxury that can be postponed, but a necessity that cannot wait."
They came, listened, made nice for the photo op. and while they failed to participate in a hearty chorus of "Kumbaya," they did promise to cut health care costs voluntarily over the next ten years. The press ate it up -- and Mr. Obama was a happy man.
Meanwhile, some of us looking on -- those of us who've been around a long time -- were scratching our heads. Hadn't we heard this before?
Way, way back in the 1970's Americans were riled up over the rising costs of health care. As a presidential candidate, Jimmy Carter started talking about the government clamping down. When he got to the White House, drug makers, insurance companies, hospitals and doctors -- the very people who only a decade earlier had done everything they could to strangle Medicare in the cradle -- seemed uncharacteristically humble and cooperative. "You don't have to make us cut costs," they promised. "We'll do it voluntarily."
So Uncle Sam backed down, and you guessed it. Pretty soon medical costs were soaring higher than ever.
By the early '90s, the public was once again hurting in the pocketbook. Feeling our pain, Bill and Hillary Clinton tried again, coming up with a plan only slightly more complicated than the schematics for an F-18 fighter jet.
This time the health industry acted more like Tony Soprano than Mother Teresa. It bludgeoned the Clinton reforms with one of the most expensive and deceitful public relations and advertising campaigns ever conceived -- paid for, of course, from the industry's swollen profits.
As the drug and insurance companies, hospitals and doctors dumped the mangled carcass of reform into the Potomac, securely encased in concrete, once again they said don't worry; they would cut costs voluntarily.
If you believed that, we've got a toll-free bridge to the Mayo Clinic we'd like to sell you.
So anyone with any memory left could be excused for raising their eyebrows at the health care industry's latest promises. As if on cue, hardly had their pledge of volunteerism rung out across the land than Jay Gellert, chief executive of Health Net Inc. and chair of the lobbying group America's Health Insurance Plans, assured his pals not to worry abut the voluntary reductions. "We believe that we can do it without undermining the viability of companies," he said, "and in effect enhancing the payment to physicians and hospitals." In other words, their so-called voluntary "reforms" will in no way interfere with maximizing profits.
Also last week, John Lechleiter, the chief executive of drug giant Eli Lilly, blasted universal health care in a speech before the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. "I do not believe that policymakers have yet arrived at a full and complete diagnosis of what's wrong and what's right with U.S. health care," he declared. "And I am very concerned that some of the proposed policies -- the treatments, to continue my metaphor -- will have unintended side-effects that make our situation worse."
So why bother with the charm offensive on Pennsylvania Avenue? Could it be, as some critics suggest, a Trojan horse, getting the health industry a place at the table so they can leap up at the right moment and again kill any real reform?
Wheelers and dealers from the health sector aren't waiting for that moment. According to the non-partisan Center for Responsive Politics, they've spent more than $134 million on lobbying in the first quarter of 2009 alone. And some already are shelling out big bucks for a publicity blitz and ads attacking any health care reform that threatens to reduce the profits from sickness and disease.
The Washington Post's health care reform blog reported Monday that Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina has hired an outside PR firm to put together a video campaign assaulting Obama's public plan. And this month alone, the group Conservatives for Patients' Rights is spending more than a million dollars for attack ads. They've hired a public relations firm called CRC -- Creative Response Concepts. You remember them -- the same high-minded folks who brought you the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, the gang who savaged John Kerry's service record in Vietnam.
The ads feature the chairman of Conservatives for Patients' Rights, Rick Scott. Who's he? As a former deputy inspector general from the Department of Health and Human Services told The New York Times, "He hopes people don't Google his name."
Scott's not a doctor; he just acts like one on TV. He's an entrepreneur who took two hospitals in Texas and built them into the largest health care chain in the world, Columbia/HCA. In 1997, he was fired by the board of directors after Columbia/HCA was caught in a scheme that ripped off the Feds and state governments for hundreds of millions of dollars in bogus Medicare and Medicaid payments, the largest such fraud in history. The company had to cough up $1.7 billion dollars to get out of the mess.
Rick Scott got off, you should excuse the expression, scot-free. Better than, in fact. According to published reports, he waltzed away with a $10 million severance deal and $300 million worth of stock. So much for voluntarily lowering overhead.
With medical costs rising six percent per year, that's who's offering himself as a spokesman for the health care industry. Speaking up for single payer is Geri Jenkins, a president of the California Nurses Association and National Nurses Organizing Committee -- a registered nurse with literal hands-on experience.
"We're there around the clock," she told our colleague Jessica Wang. "So we feel a real sense of obligation to advocate for the best interests of our patients and the public. Now, you can talk about policy but when you're staring at a human face it's a whole different story."
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Show AllNathan reminds me of one of those who says quit ya whining, until he runs into trouble and whines louder than anyone else. Remember too, that you become whatever you compromise with. Compromise goes hand in hand with corruption.
My view on astrology is that there are definitely 'planetary influences' (just look at how a change of seasons on this planet affects you inwardly), but that only awareness can fully apprehend the meaning of their affects as a whole. All attempts to come to an understanding of planetary influence by way of the intellect alone without this 'greater' awareness are of limited value at best.
Oh my Barack, the sheer impossibility of it all.
We did it over here in the UK relatively quickly, easily and painlessly. But not without considerable resistance from the British Medical Association whose members had, up until then, been paid privately for their services.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_National_Health_Service_(England)
Oh sorry I forgot, silly me, we didn't have a financial crisis to deal with did we?
No Barack, all we had was a country that had had most of it's major cities and industrial infrastructure half blown to pieces by the Luftwaffe; a population who were still subject to rationing of essential items like food and a huge number of ex-servicemen and servicewomen returning from a little conflict called WW II. You'll find that one in the history books Barack.
We also had a government of the left i.e. the Labour party who had a majority in Parliament.
But WE did it.
What's your REAL excuse Barack?
But non of us are pushing for a completely "socialized" British NHS-type system - although I would certainly support it!
We are only pushing for a Canada style system.
Thanks, Enemy of Empire, for the reminder about Britain. I have friends who insist it's not happening in America because we are in a recession. This is not a good time, we can't have Single Payer now.
Several groups are trying to show Obama how desperately we need single payer. One group is health-care now. This is their web site:
http://www.healthcare-now.org/
I hope some of you will consider going to these rallies being held throughout the nation May 30th.
I will be at the one in Pittsburgh on Friday, May 29th 11:30 - starting at the ugly Highmark HQ Building, marching to to the US Steel building - now called the UPMC Building and topped with the ugly logo** of the UPMC sick-person-extortion monopoly.
It is this awful corporate insurance-hospital empire that need to go, and single payer is the only thing that will bring them down.
**Mayor "Steelerstahl" needs to learn that classy cities don't allow big corporate logos to deface their downtown architecture. It is also a sad statement that the building that showcased the days when we actually made things at good union wages is now occupied by a firm who's purpose is to extort money for what, in the rest of the world, is a human right, and who's employees are nonunion, overworked and appallingly low-paid.
Medicare for everyone is the solution. Those now covered by and contributing to employer plans could share the medicare premium with their employers. This may require an increase in medicare premiums but would still be much less than private insurance plans. Canada's prescription drug plan if emulated would save a tremendous amount of money. The president and congress have to have the guts to face up to the medical institution/insurance/pharma complex. Indigent
and non-working poor people would be subsidized by the government.
At the end of his PBS-TV program on single payer, Bill Moyers showed video footage from the Baucus/Senate hearings.
A woman in the audience, who's not a protester - possibly a reporter, somehow manages to ask Baucus directly: Senator, with so many people wanting to testify in support of a single payer system, why are you not letting them?
Right away, Baucus's face flushes and contorts upward in surprise and fear -- he's not expecting the question and it clearly throws him off-guard.
Intensely embarrassed and at a loss for words, he stammers the beginning of a response --unable at first to get a sentence going....Well. uh..uh..uh
His face gets redder and more contorted -- embarrassed at his own embarrassment apparently.
Finally, Baucus declares something to the effect: ... we just can't afford to waste our [political] capital on something that's not gonna pass.......and this [single payer] is JUST -- NOT -- GONNA -- PASS...
Baucus' disgusting committee performances aren't going unnoticed at home. They're being broadcast around Montana, and angry op-ed letters condemning him are in the local newspapers every day.
My suspicion is that none of the pro single payer protests will make any difference. The insurance industry will get what it wants.
But for me to believe that too cynically ahead of time........ wouldn't that be just like what Baucus is doing?
All reasonable solutions involve single-payer. Obama's not backing it, presumably because he wants insurance $$$ for the 2012 campaign. By and large, the Democrats in the legislature are not backing it, and we needn't ask after the Republicans.
A bad federal system might be worse that our present quagmire: a requirement to buy insurance from private companies without guaranteeing health care to anyone. Policy holders will pay for ads, competing managerial hierarchies and legal teams, and the teams of experts who go to work each day to deny the public as much as possible of the coverage that they purchase.
Does anyone imagine that if employers are not required to provide insurance, employees will get the money that was formerly paid to the insurance companies?
Does anyone imagine that if individuals must pay insurance from private companies, the price of insurance will not go up?
Getting single payer will require action outside the legislature. For the present, I have canceled all health policies to deny the lobbyists money. If a public option comes in to being, I may purchase the public option.
If we are faced with a law that requires payment of health insurance to private companies, I will need a fair percentage of people willing to avoid paying it to make a similar commitment.
ATTENTION "Nebraska Nathan" and I wished I was free on Friday to nail you but here goes:
Hello there big bad brother. I know who you are and you're not untracable. However, because I'm nice enough, I will not reveal your name even though I'm happy to reveal mine. You think you can have fun badmouthing your ex-wife now my wife so easy? You may have had all your fun bullying me ever since we were born and you may have gotten away with framing me for the crime that YOU committed against my wife. But you know that I have come fighting back and counter kicking your ass no matter how many times you tried to sabotage our business. I have already cracked down on your fraudulent sales and I will not allow you to get away with allowing the agri-corps to take over our inherited farm as you are trying to do. Our parents made the biggest mistake of giving you all the inheritance while unfairly disowning me for being nice but unable to get married simply because of your badmouthing my record despite the fact that I was cleared of wrongdoing after my lawyer proved my innocence. And you can keep having fun talking about the way you had fun hitting my wife when she was then yours but I shot you twice in the back before you could successfully beat my wife to death in front of everyone. It's time for you to stop bullying others and you and me to have a real man to man talk, bad brother ! I know who you are and I may not have won according to you but I'm going to see to it that you don't get away with your scams. I have already busted 3 of your business partners and put them behind bars and don't expect me to bail your sorry ass out this time. I only bailed you out for your then wife but now that she's mine, your days of bullying our numbered and are about to be terminated. I'll be watching you !
Our government's opposition to a single payer system has to do with Capitalism's fear of the one good example. The one good example, that is, of a collective effort that outperforms its capitalist counterpart. Which, of course, single payer surely does when compared to privatized health care systems. Whatever his reasons or opposing single payer, President Obama must know that the American people favor a single payer system. This, even though he told us repeatedly during the campaign that change has to come to, not from Washington. So it looks like we can't count on him, which means it's up to us. How? We rise up en masse, that's how. Only not just for a single payer system, for troops out now, for free public education pre-school through graduate school, for a peaceful and just world. What's more we have to begin right away because time's running out, what with perpetual war + global warming + economic collapse = doomsday.
Bullies will always fear collective responsibility and collective victory because they will fear that they cannot own any of it for their own pride. Capitalism didn't always go so far to the point of rewarding bullying. In Europe, there's some quasi-capitalism and yet single payer is out there so I would hold off on blaming capitalism entirely.
Corporations control a predominant portion of all financial and legal resources in the U.S., including the medical industry... and government.
By Supreme Court decree, corporations have "personhood" and all the rights accruing to citizens.
The character of these corporate "persons" is defined by their charters which are limited to descriptions of their components, objectives, structure and planned operations. Unlike real persons, these legal entities require no light, feel no pain, have no conscience. The only real people to whom corporations bear even a remote resemblance are sociopaths. Very cunning sociopaths.
The corporate charter (granted by government) also shields executives and shareholders from certain legal liabilities and consequences.
Corporations make profits by utilizing & exploiting resources. The most exploitable resource in the U.S. is its workers who provide both the production and the market that generate corporate revenue. Thus, controlling the perceptions, beliefs and behavior of the workers is the paramount concern of the corporate community.
The ultimate gauge of corporate success can be measured in the concentration of wealth and power within our society. This concentration has been increasing at an accelerated rate for the past 30+ years. The corollary to this gauge is the inevitable expansion of human suffering.
Corporations currently control a predominant portion of all financial and legal resources in the U.S., including the medical industry... and government. The problem they face is that as human suffering and discontent increase, people become immune to the distractions and diversions (glitz, gadgets, fear, war, bigotry, demagoguery, etc.) that are used to manipulate them.
Historically, this dynamic reaches a critical intensity and the people revolt. In a democracy, the revolution is political and fairly orderly. In a non-democratic society, it can become bloody.
Currently, political change in the U.S. appears to be limited to cosmetics and rhetoric even as the populace faces declining financial prospects. Add to this the bounty of the Second Amendment and we could be cooking off some serious chemistry.
There's only one possible solution to the constant interference in, and buying off of, our government by special interests. LOBBYING our congressional and government personnel in any form from which they gain a personal benefit must be OUTLAWED and made into a CRIMINAL OFFENSE!
It's the only way to return our country to a "government of the people, by the people, and for the people." Our congressional personnel are currently operating under a distorted belief that they are both the masters and beneficiaries of a "government of the elite, by the elite, and for the elite" (special interests) of which they are, de facto, a part.
Our political leaders are not stupid - "you don't bite the hand that feeds you." And they are constantly being fed plenty (in the form of money, privileges, and notoriety by every special interest imaginable, most especially the healthcare industry). When are we going to wake up and DEMAND a return to the government that was fashioned by our founding fathers (who were common people) - a government of the people, by the people and for the people?????
Creating a third party is NOT the solution. It would be only a matter of time (and probably a very short time) before that third party would be just as dirty as the others.
MAKE LOBBYING A CRIMINAL OFFENSE!!!! (It unfairly robs American Citizens of the right to be treated “equally!” with the lobbies!!!)