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The Policy That Dare Not Speak Its Name
I'm sure I'm not the only reader who noticed the juxtaposition of two front page stories in Sunday's New York Times dealing with health care. The first article cited a new Times-CBS poll showing that 72 percent of Americans favored a government run health plan comparable to Medicare, which would be available to everyone.
The second reported on a rogue radiologist at a Philadelphia VA hospital who botched 92 prostate procedures.
The right will doubtless go to town on that one, as what we can expect of government-sponsored medicine. I'll have more to say about the VA in a moment, but first let's consider the poll findings.
The poll is relevant because Congress will soon decide whether to include the so-called "public option" in the Obama health reform bill. As drafted by three House leaders and unveiled last Wednesday, the 852-page bill would include a government-sponsored, Medicare-like public plan.
Republicans and the health industry have been kicking and screaming that this is socialistic. But the poll suggests that defenders of the public plan have nothing to fear politically, and that Republicans are in danger of getting on the wrong side of a popular issue.
However, that's only the beginning of the story. The reform package, as drafted by the Obama administration and the House leadership, is dubious legislation even with the inclusion of a public option. Basically, it leaves the two worst aspects of the system intact. First, private insurers will continue to dominate. Second, most people will continue to get their insurance through their employers. Given these two bedrock realities, there is no way that the bill can make serious inroads on cost without cutting back on care. The high cost of the approach is already causing key legislators to back off. The current system wastes huge sums, but because it is so fragmented the money flows to profit opportunities and not to the most cost-effective forms of health care.
Also, as my American Prospect colleague Paul Starr warns, a mixed system with a public option effectively invites the most expensive and hard-to-treat people to opt for the public plan, while private insurers will seek to insure the young and the healthy. This is a familiar problem known as adverse selection. The private insurers will then smugly point out that the public plan is less "efficient," when in fact it simply will have a more costly population. The only way to avoid this problem is to have everyone in the same universal plan--what's otherwise known as a single-payer plan.
The public option is a not-very-good second best--because our leading liberal politicians lack the nerve to embrace the one reform that simultaneously solves the problem of cost, quality, and universal inclusion. The policy that dare not speak its name is of course comprehensive national health insurance, or Medicare-for-All. I try to avoid using the term "single payer," because a technical, policy-wonk phrase not understood by most civilians has become insider shorthand for national health insurance. Let's call the thing by its rightful name. Medicare-for-All is something regular people understand.
The Times-CBS poll is evidence that this is what more than two Americans in three really want. Most voters have not followed the nuances of how the public option in the Obama plan would compete with private insurance. The poll simply indicates that voters want access to a straight-up, Medicare-style plan to be available to one and all. In past polls, when Times-CBS pollsters ask whether people favor national health insurance, responses generally favor Medicare-for-All by margins of about two-to-one.
In the current debate, liberals find themselves fighting to keep the public option alive, so that some form of efficient, publicly-run health insurance will stay in the mix--but knowing that it is embedded in a reform package that is far more costly and inefficient than it should have been. Instead of validating the common sense and reformist demands of ordinary Americans and identifying the insurance, drug, and corporate elites as the obstacles to real reform, too many of our liberal leaders from President Obama on down hope to co-opt business elites with a convoluted scheme that undermines the efficiencies of a comprehensive and universal system. And just wait until it gets watered down further in order to retain the support of these same elites. A plan that all of these groups would endorse would not be worth having.
So what's the matter with our politicians? Why are the people so far ahead of their elected leaders on this one? One reason, as usual, is money. The combination of the insurance industry, the drug industry, the American Medical Association, the hospital lobby--all of whom oppose Medicare-for-All--represents a huge amount of political spending. It takes a brave politician to face down all of these industries, even though the people are on the side of real reform. The AMA's position is especially shameful, since the professional societies that represent most actual physicians favor national health insurance.
The second reason that liberal politicians wimp out on single payer is that the self-styled realists in this debate have decided that Medicare-for-All, even if it's the first-best system, is too hard politically. But think about it. Has the administration picked up one Republican vote by supporting the present system plus a public option? Hardly. The current House leadership bill, offering a mixed system, with a robust public option, a requirement that employers provide good insurance or pay a tax, and that insurers not discriminate against pre-existing conditions, is just as heavy a political lift as national health insurance--and far inferior policy. So why not just go for the first-best?
The advocates of Medicare-for-All have become something of an embarrassment to the liberals. The White House forum on health reform on March 5th, which boasted a diverse range of viewpoints, including representatives of the Business Roundtable, the health insurance industry, the drug lobby, as well as a broad spectrum of business, labor and Congressional leaders, left advocates of Medicare-for-All banging on the door. None were included, despite requests for invitations.
When Sen. Bernie Sanders recently arranged for five prominent advocates of national health insurance to have a courtesy meeting with Senate Finance Committee Chair Max Baucus, the story was newsworthy because the political elite usually pretends that this viewpoint doesn't exist, much less that it represents the desires of two Americans in three. The mainstream media have also colluded in the general effort to keep the single-payer option out of the limelight. The organization FAIR recently published an important study in its heroic magazine, "Extra", titled "Media Blackout on Single-Payer Healthcare."
Indeed, the Sunday New York Times-CBS poll didn't even offer Medicare-for-All as a free-standing option. It took the Obama position as the left edge of the debate.
As for that rogue doctor at the Philadelphia veterans' hospital, quality control is not what it should be throughout our fragmented system. And the oases of public medicine are particularly starved for resources. Yet studies consistently find that on average, the VA does more with less than its private sector competitors. Phil Longman has written the definitive book on the subject, "Best Care Anywhere." Here is a summary.
In this case, the offending radiologist, Dr. Gary D. Kao, was actually a contract employee and not a VA physician.
Only by having a comprehensive system can we marry quality, cost-effective care, and universal access. One of these days, a national leader will have the nerve to embrace national health insurance and fight for it. Until then, we will keep paying more money for less care, and liberals will defend reforms they themselves scarcely believe in.- Posted in




53 Comments so far
Show AllThis should be required reading for everyone in Congress.
They no longer represent the people, but the corporations. When two out of three people want Medicare-for-all, and its NOT EVEN IN DISCUSSION, its obvious that the fix is in.
The public needs a way to say, 'put Medicare-for-all on the table and vote for it, or I won't vote for YOU next election'. It really needs to be made THAT simple to these people, or the old corporate game of hide/bribe/divide and conquer will win out, and the public will once again be left out in the cold.
Single payer, Medicare for All, is just not going to happen. Sorry to be such a cynic but Big Pharma and Big Insurance own the representatives and senators lock, stock and barrel. Besides, they already HAVE the best possible taxpayer funded health care insurance, so why should they give a rat's ass about the rest of us?
MONKEY WRENCH THE SYSTEM. Be sure you do not hurt people or property in doing so. Be creative. If I have to suggest ways for you to do so, then please do not participate.
"Besides, they already HAVE the best possible taxpayer funded health care insurance, so why should they give a rat's ass about the rest of us?"
Please stop repeating this misconception. US congress people get the same insurance plan all federal employees do. IT IS NOT FREE. The employee picks from an assortment of private plans or HMO's. The employee pays about a third of the cost. In other words, it is about the same or less generous than the plans private employers provide.
Thanks for pointing that out. Too often facts get lost in rhetoric.
Please stop saying that people are saying it is free. He said that they had the best available. Yes, you pay one third, and the tax payers pay the other two-thirds. We pay for congress to have access to good care while many of us do not.
Tell me how much you pay per month, and I'll tell you how much I pay as a retired federal employee. I'm not proud that you are picking up HALF, NOT TWO THIRDS, of the tab for me; I am in favor of a national single-payer plan for all financed by all, and this includes scrapping the federal employee and retiree insurance plans.
Regardless, I'm guessing I pay far less than you do, and so do your reps and senators and YOU are footing the bill for THEM (And, sorry to say, me... but would you have me refuse that benefit? Would you refuse it?) A LOT needs to change in this country.
But the idea of the "taxpayer pickinmg up the tab" is itself misleading.
If you are an employee of a supermarket, than it is people spending money on food that is pocking up the tab. If you are an electric utility employee, it is people's bill payments that is covering your insurance.
Poll numbers and public opinion are meaningless. Since Congress is bought and paid for by corporate money, the conversation about single payer is a waste of time. It will never happen.
The Republicans can opt out of the current bill easily because when it passes it will have tremendous problems that they can paint as the problems of socialized medicine.
The only option for the population to move towards a single payer system will be to boycott the private options.
We may be better if this one doesn't pass at all.
Dirt poor people without health care insurance vote republican all the time. Read "What's the Matter With Kansas" by Thomas Frank, or "Deerhunting With Jesus" by Joe Bageant to find out why they do this, why they cut their own economic throats. These dirt poor, but proud people, buy into the argument that single payer health care would be "socialism" and by god, here in the land of the free and the home of the brave where EVERY SINGLE INDIVIDUAL can write his own Horatio Alger story we will NOT, by god, have SOCIALISM. But even this makes no difference, as the reps and senators, democratic as well as republican, are wholly owned subsidiaries of BIG PHARMA and BIG INSURANCE. Its all bullshit, folks, all bullshit.
Actually, it is largely a misconception that poor rural/small town white poeple vote Republican.
Many of the scrffy, right-wing rural americans that a visiting city clicker will assume are "poor" are actually comfortablly middle class, or better, landowners. Those $10,000 ATV's they use in place of their legs in the woods should be a sufficient clue that they are not poor and their conservative votes are in no way paradoxical.
Do you plan to read either reference source I provided? Or, because you can cite one or two cases of poorly educated people making bad choices (Paying $10K for an ATV instead of health care insurance), are you assuming everyone who appears to be poor is actually quite well off?
I read Frank's "Kansas" some years ago. His writing style (like his earlier books) is broad-brush ancetdote and hyperbole with few citations. In fact, I can't even recall the book having footnotes at all.
I suggest that you check your local counties election office data (most have it on the web). Compare the voting records of poor precincts and rich precints. Look for poor white areas (plenty of them here in western PA. With the exception of some urban liberal yupppie enclaves, the richer a neighborhood is, the more Republican it is.
I think you mean EVERY SINGLE white INDIVIDUAL.
Dirt poor, uneducated, sure. But the niggers having the same health care as me? Unthinkable! Even if I have no health care at all there are white people who do, and I'm just like them.
For that matter the same is true of decent jobs, equal protection under the law, equal housing opportunities, equal educational opportunities.
This equal stuff can easily get way out of hand, hell it already has, but we have a supreme court, a congress, even a black president who is doing something about that.
The past is not over, it is not even past.
Being a Vet myself I can say that I am lucky to have the best health care in the world. Yes, I paid a price to qualify but the VA is by far the best health care in the world. Not just here in the US but everywhere. Many Domestic Doctors and Doctors everywhere in the world have gone to US medical schools that are associated with the VA hospital system. Excluding the VA system of health care we basically are in the dark ages of medicine. How many cures for anything have been discovered lately? What comes to mind is Jonas Salk and polio, tuberculosis, and a few others. Big pharma and the insurance industry, the AMA and the rest do not want to cure anything. No money in that. I care for a sister that has been living with MS for years and through medical incompetence and organizations like the MS society nothing has really been found that will cure this horribly debilitating disease. These so called societies that claim to help victims of a disease are just as complicit as any one else. Really good health care is a right of every citizen of the world let alone the US. Until something is done about the cancer that Capitalism has become our health care will not improve one bit.
I encourage you and/or your sister to read "The UltraMind Solution" by Mark Hyman M.D. Dr. Hyman's own health crashed some years ago...and he ended up enduring the approach to "health-care" that he himself had been practicing on his patients up to that point. Nothing in the traditonal approached to health-care helped to solve the avalanche of disease he was experiencing. (Mark Hyman was trained at Harvard Medical School...so to personally discover that what you had been trained to do as a physician was ineffective...motivated him to look at health/disease differently than he previously had ). Dr.Hyman now practices an approach to health-care called Functional Medicine. Again, I encourage you/and or your sister to begin to research this approach to health/medicine.
My very best hopes for her....
Truth Teller. Thanks for taking the time to give me the information about Dr. Hyman. I will look into it.
You are so very welcome laffingbear....I'm excited at the real possibility of a turn-around in your sister's health.., because of what happened (and is happening) in my own health.., after following the functional medicine approach to reversing years of ill-health. Dr. Hyman has "stripped the clothes off the emperor" of what we have always known as "health care" in this country and I'm astounded at what is happening in my own life because of it.
The very best to both you and your sister
It's wonderful to see that someone else posting here has had a look into real alternatives to AMA "approved" medicine. There are many physicians like him who keep a relatively low profile. I wish they would get together and take on the AMA now, when everyone is watching. You might want to also check out J.V. Wright, MD, one of the more outspoken of the group. I've heard of Hyman but will pursue it. Thanks.
You will find a wealth of information about functional medicine by visiting the functional medicine institute website. Also by visiting Dr. Hyman's site UltraWellness or the UltraMindSolution website. Read some of the forums...and you'll understand why this is different than the usual "alternative" approaches you may have looked into before. Functional medicine is about taking your own health back...it is a new paradigm between you, your well-being, and your healthcare provider (doctor). This is just one step in taking our lives back from a system that doesn't work for us anymore if it ever did.
"Until something is done about the cancer that Capitalism has become our health care will not improve one bit."
Exactly.
Nothing will improve, not just health care.
"Until something is done about the cancer that Capitalism has become our health care will not improve one bit."
Ah-ah-ah...not Capitalism. Under true, free market capitalism, businesses that chronically lose money due to incompetant leadership, non-competitiveness, greed, etc., FAIL. Under corporatism (or per Mussolini, fascism), they survive to the detriment of and at the expense of the people in general. IMHO, the U.$. clearly falls under the latter catagory. Your point however is clear and, you couldn't be more correct!
Unless you mean a free market unfettered by a more-powerful behind-the-scenes stock market, you're wrong wrong wrong.
I agree. Thanks for bringing that up!
laffingbear: You might want to do some research on MS and vitamin D. Check out/contact Dr. John Cannell at www.vitamindcouncil.org
In fact a weak "public option" is probably going to be allowed to demonstrate the "failure" of socialzed medicine. I don't think we should support the "public option" as second best if it will not really do the job. I think we as progresssive should peel off from what Bill Mahr calls the "Center-Right Corporatist" Democratic Party. They would have all the money-- we would have all the passion. I think it would be an even match.
>>In fact a weak "public option" is probably going to be allowed to demonstrate the "failure" of socialzed medicine.<<
I was going to write, "Bet on it.", but you already ARE, with your TAX DOLLARS. That is EXACTLY what is planned in my humble opinion.
Right. That's not a stretch, as we have been tossed half-assed solutions to real problems over the years. Everything that Congress implements for the People has failure built in so they can say how bad The Government is.
I like the label "Medicare-for-All", and I totally agree with Robert Kuttner's political analysis characterizing the current health care legislative reform effort inside the DC beltway as myopically treating Obama's "public option" proposal as "the left edge of the debate."
The core issues are just what Kuttner identifies. Why persist in linking health insurance to an employment-based model, with premiums divvied up between employers and employees through a dizzying array of ever fluctuating price and coverage formulas? Why pretend that government's role is to subsidize and therefore further perpetuate a profit-oriented "market" for delivery of basic health care services through the private US insurance industry?
Treating medicine as just another consumer commodity like oil or pork bellies, and treating health insurance as a never ending fiscal risk assessment chess game like pricing auto insurance based upon the insureds' prior driving record and/or claims experience, is the crux of the problem. I see the public option as an important first step in the process of putting an end to private, employment-linked health insurance as we know it. Bill Clinton ended welfare as we know it. Why shouldn't Obama build on that slogan and partisan approach?
Just imagine what it would mean for businesses and wage earners alike if that monthly health insurance premium stroke simply vanished, with employer and employee alike reaping their immediate proportional economic gain? No way would federal taxes have to be increased dollar-for-dollar to cover the cost of a genuine national health system, once the built-in inefficiencies of the private insurance model were shit canned forever. It's a win-win situation.
And we haven't even started to talk about how the transition costs from the current system into Medicare-for-All could be cushioned by having the big corporate insurers disgorge their retained earnings accrued from investing our premium dollars for all those years.
Bill from Saginaw
"Why persist in linking health insurance to an employment-based model, with premiums divvied up between employers and employees through a dizzying array of ever fluctuating price and coverage formulas?"
There is no logical reason for employers to provide health insurance. This was orignially a VERY LOW COST AT THE TIME benefit provided by employers in a seller's market for labor. (At age 22 I began paying for my own Blue Cross/Blue Shield, as I was no longer covered on my parents' policy. My cost was $27.00 per quarter. That is not a misprint. Twenty seven dollars ever three months. NINE DOLLARS A MONTH. This was 1972.)
Why shouldn't employers provide automobile insurance and homeowner or renter insurance to their employees as well? There is no logical connection between employment and acquisition of health care insurance. Why wouldn't employers, especially, whether republican or democrat, be in favor of Medicare-For-All? It would remove a huge administrative and financial burden from their companies and spread the cost across the entire population. This is the big advantage to single-payer, a large pool of participants that cover the illnesses of all.
"No way would federal taxes have to be increased dollar-for-dollar to cover the cost of a genuine national health system, once the built-in inefficiencies of the private insurance model were shit canned forever. It's a win-win situation."
I believe that you are correct. Most who have employer provided health care insurance pay a portion of that insurance. I do not believe that portion is any less than any probable tax increase for Medicare For All. I think taxes might go up, but that cost savings due to economies of scale and reduced cost to employers would more than make up the difference. Single Payer is a huge change, and people generally resist change. It is the fear of the unknown.
Actually, Medicare has a small monthly premium, but I cannot overstate SMALL. I have been covered by Medicare for about 2 years now, or about 2 years after I first became disabled. Prior to Medicare, I was paying $550/month to be covered under my wife's "family coverage" (they would either cover me or our children under 'The Family Plan', but not all of us) that is partially provided by her employer. While under "the private option", most of my claims were denied coverage, and it was like pulling teeth to get anything paid. I was paying $550/mo. to subsidise a private insurance company and its CEO's fat paycheck. I dropped the private policy, both because of the monthly cost and denial of claims, and began particpating in the Medicare coverage that was avaiable under Social Security Disability and was utterly amazed at the difference between the private and Medicare coverage. Under Medicare, I pay a monthly premium of about $35 plus a bit more for prescription drug coverage (Part D.) With the exception of Part D (created under the Bu$h Maladministration with the help of folks such as Tom DeLay) Medicare is FAR superior. I have never had a claim rejected, I have never had to go to a physician that I didn't personally choose, and I have never had to wait for anything, including approval of any proceedure. Perhaps I sound like Billy Mays trying to sell Medicare, but it truly is THAT MUCH MORE SUPERIOR of an approach to insurance coverage for everybody, and that is after 35 years of dealing with private healthcare insurance "coverage."
Thank you for posting this. Adjusted for inflation, that $35/month for Medicare is probably about the same or less than the $9/month I paid for Blue Cross/Blue shield in 1972.
MEDICARE FOR ALL !!
Sioux Rose
BILL: Excellent post.
The public option is a not-very-good second best--because our leading liberal politicians lack the nerve to embrace the one reform that simultaneously solves the problem of cost, quality, and universal inclusion. The policy that dare not speak its name is of course comprehensive national health insurance.
The dogs descend.
The public option, as detailed by Waxman and Rangel, is not a compromise or half a loaf. It is no loaf, a scam.
Hitherto the term "public option" has been an empty signifier onto which people have projected their wishes and good intentions. Now, with the Waxman-Rangel plan, we see the ugly reality.
Unlike the nonprofit, single-payer plans in place in Canada and Europe, this "public option" would charge premiums and impose deductibles; unlike them, it could not accept government funding (after the initial infusion), and so would have to be self-sustaining. Moreover, it would likely be saddled with the oldest, sickest, and thus most expensive cohort, and would have to offer higher fees than Medicare--so no cost savings, none of the cost efficiencies of a single risk pool; it would be competing with 1,300 private HMO risk pools, which would aggressively market the youngest, healthiest, and thus cheapest and most profitable cohort.
This is consumer fraud that fails to loosen the HMOs' dysfunctional vice grip on this isystem.
Public-option plans have been tried in several states, and in every case they have failed to reduce costs or increase coverage. The only PROVEN way of accomplishing both goals--based on a half-century's track record in Europe and Canada--is a nonprofit, single-payer approach.
For a detailed analysis of the pitfalls of the public options, please see the following:
http://www.commondreams.org/print/43440
http://www.pnhp.org/facts/singlepayer_faq.php#public-option
What might turn the tide is a Geezer's March on Washington; when they arrive on the Capitol steps, they should all immolate themselves.
-30-
Better yet, immolate the capital.
But how would Nancy Pelosi get her BOTOX under "Medicare For All"? Would she actually have to dig into her own millions to finance her drug of choice?
Single Payer Universal is not Socialism, it is buying in bulk. FY Nancy Pelosi.
Oh, the Gorgon Pelosi will get her Botox®, all right.
There's permanent dedicated funding for Pelosi's Botox®-- revenue freed up by excluding Minoxidil, Viagra, and Cialis from the Congressional prescription plan.
· Yr Obd't Servant
I wonder if Ms. Pelosi knows that Botox works better, covers all problem ares (even potential problem areas) and requires far fewer injections when used IV?
Ask your congressional representative to
Explain the democratic principle where a few thousand men from insurance companies, drug companies and hospital companies have more say about universal healthcare in our Congress than we (hundreds of millions of citizens) have.
Poll: 72% of Americans back Creation of Public Healthcare Plan
A new poll by the New York Times and CBS News has found that 72 percent of Americans support the government creating a public healthcare plan, similar to Medicare, which would compete with private insurance plans. The poll also found the majority of Americans now believe the government would do a better job than private insurance companies in providing medical coverage.
Just think of the millions of jobs lost in the health care industry -
IN INDIA
I'm sure United Health and Wellpoint out source their processing to India and the cheap labor world.
You want to increase employment, mandate the use of US employees to administer and process US programs.
Duh. Medicare-for-All. I think I get it now. Single payer was way too complicated.
"The advocates of Medicare-for-All have become something of an embarrassment to the liberals."
That's because the fight for real reform shows up liberals who defend reforms they themselves scarcely believe in.
That's part of the magic of an issue like singlepayer.
"The advocates of Medicare-for-All have become something of an embarrassment to the liberals."
Anyone who is NOT an advocate for Medicare For All, aka Single Payer, is NOT a liberal!! So how can liberals be embarrassed?
"Anyone who is NOT an advocate for Medicare For All, aka Single Payer, is NOT a liberal!! So how can liberals be embarrassed?"
The ones who do NOT advocate for Medicare-for-All who feel embarrassed appear to be suffering a kind of phantom limb pain--as if they were still attached to liberalism in any real way.
By the way, I don't think regular insurance covers that.
If a few democrats sabotage REAL health care for all, similar to what congress people have for themselves they should be driven from office. Most Americans want it. Most insurers and pharmaceuticals do not. Only corrupt politicians will sell out to the latter
"Most insurers and pharmaceuticals do not. Only corrupt politicians will sell out to the latter"
That just about covers all of both houses of the Legislature. It will nonetheless happen, and ya know what? Not a whimper will be heard from the general population of this "Constitutional Republic." How sad.
I keep listening for our elected officials to say those three little words that say that they care for the people who elected them: "Medicare For All."