Big Food vs. Big Insurance
To listen to President Obama's speech on Wednesday night, or to just about anyone else in the health care debate, you would think that the biggest problem with health care in America is the system itself - perverse incentives, inefficiencies, unnecessary tests and procedures, lack of competition, and greed.
No one disputes that the $2.3 trillion we devote to the health care industry is often spent unwisely, but the fact that the United States spends twice as much per person as most European countries on health care can be substantially explained, as a study released last month says, by our being fatter. Even the most efficient health care system that the administration could hope to devise would still confront a rising tide of chronic disease linked to diet.
That's why our success in bringing health care costs under control ultimately depends on whether Washington can summon the political will to take on and reform a second, even more powerful industry: the food industry.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, three-quarters of health care spending now goes to treat "preventable chronic diseases." Not all of these diseases are linked to diet - there's smoking, for instance - but many, if not most, of them are.
We're spending $147 billion to treat obesity, $116 billion to treat diabetes, and hundreds of billions more to treat cardiovascular disease and the many types of cancer that have been linked to the so-called Western diet. One recent study estimated that 30 percent of the increase in health care spending over the past 20 years could be attributed to the soaring rate of obesity, a condition that now accounts for nearly a tenth of all spending on health care.
The American way of eating has become the elephant in the room in the debate over health care. The president has made a few notable allusions to it, and, by planting her vegetable garden on the South Lawn, Michelle Obama has tried to focus our attention on it. Just last month, Mr. Obama talked about putting a farmers' market in front of the White House, and building new distribution networks to connect local farmers to public schools so that student lunches might offer more fresh produce and fewer Tater Tots. He's even floated the idea of taxing soda.
But so far, food system reform has not figured in the national conversation about health care reform. And so the government is poised to go on encouraging America's fast-food diet with its farm policies even as it takes on added responsibilities for covering the medical costs of that diet. To put it more bluntly, the government is putting itself in the uncomfortable position of subsidizing both the costs of treating Type 2 diabetes and the consumption of high-fructose corn syrup.
Why the disconnect? Probably because reforming the food system is politically even more difficult than reforming the health care system. At least in the health care battle, the administration can count some powerful corporate interests on its side - like the large segment of the Fortune 500 that has concluded the current system is unsustainable.
That is hardly the case when it comes to challenging agribusiness. Cheap food is going to be popular as long as the social and environmental costs of that food are charged to the future. There's lots of money to be made selling fast food and then treating the diseases that fast food causes. One of the leading products of the American food industry has become patients for the American health care industry.
The market for prescription drugs and medical devices to manage Type 2 diabetes, which the Centers for Disease Control estimates will afflict one in three Americans born after 2000, is one of the brighter spots in the American economy. As things stand, the health care industry finds it more profitable to treat chronic diseases than to prevent them. There's more money in amputating the limbs of diabetics than in counseling them on diet and exercise.
As for the insurers, you would think preventing chronic diseases would be good business, but, at least under the current rules, it's much better business simply to keep patients at risk for chronic disease out of your pool of customers, whether through lifetime caps on coverage or rules against pre-existing conditions or by figuring out ways to toss patients overboard when they become ill.
But these rules may well be about to change - and, when it comes to reforming the American diet and food system, that step alone could be a game changer. Even under the weaker versions of health care reform now on offer, health insurers would be required to take everyone at the same rates, provide a standard level of coverage and keep people on their rolls regardless of their health. Terms like "pre-existing conditions" and "underwriting" would vanish from the health insurance rulebook - and, when they do, the relationship between the health insurance industry and the food industry will undergo a sea change.
The moment these new rules take effect, health insurance companies will promptly discover they have a powerful interest in reducing rates of obesity and chronic diseases linked to diet. A patient with Type 2 diabetes incurs additional health care costs of more than $6,600 a year; over a lifetime, that can come to more than $400,000. Insurers will quickly figure out that every case of Type 2 diabetes they can prevent adds $400,000 to their bottom line. Suddenly, every can of soda or Happy Meal or chicken nugget on a school lunch menu will look like a threat to future profits.
When health insurers can no longer evade much of the cost of treating the collateral damage of the American diet, the movement to reform the food system - everything from farm policy to food marketing and school lunches - will acquire a powerful and wealthy ally, something it hasn't really ever had before.
AGRIBUSINESS dominates the agriculture committees of Congress, and has swatted away most efforts at reform. But what happens when the health insurance industry realizes that our system of farm subsidies makes junk food cheap, and fresh produce dear, and thus contributes to obesity and Type 2 diabetes? It will promptly get involved in the fight over the farm bill - which is to say, the industry will begin buying seats on those agriculture committees and demanding that the next bill be written with the interests of the public health more firmly in mind.
In the same way much of the health insurance industry threw its weight behind the campaign against smoking, we can expect it to support, and perhaps even help pay for, public education efforts like New York City's bold new ad campaign against drinking soda. At the moment, a federal campaign to discourage the consumption of sweetened soft drinks is a political nonstarter, but few things could do more to slow the rise of Type 2 diabetes among adolescents than to reduce their soda consumption, which represents 15 percent of their caloric intake.
That's why it's easy to imagine the industry throwing its weight behind a soda tax. School lunch reform would become its cause, too, and in time the industry would come to see that the development of regional food systems, which make fresh produce more available and reduce dependence on heavily processed food from far away, could help prevent chronic disease and reduce their costs.
Recently a team of designers from M.I.T. and Columbia was asked by the foundation of the insurer UnitedHealthcare to develop an innovative systems approach to tackling childhood obesity in America. Their conclusion surprised the designers as much as their sponsor: they determined that promoting the concept of a "foodshed" - a diversified, regional food economy - could be the key to improving the American diet.
All of which suggests that passing a health care reform bill, no matter how ambitious, is only the first step in solving our health care crisis. To keep from bankrupting ourselves, we will then have to get to work on improving our health - which means going to work on the American way of eating.
But even if we get a health care bill that does little more than require insurers to cover everyone on the same basis, it could put us on that course.
For it will force the industry, and the government, to take a good hard look at the elephant in the room and galvanize a movement to slim it down.
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22 Comments so far
Show AllYou really know your stuff... Keep up the good work!
health cover
Americans are like my cat: they are not "fat"; they are "pleasingly plump". Now for something completely different (I dare use this phrase without quotations): for those of you who forgot what public school lunch taste like in low income school districts, let me remind you: like cardboard with salt, way overcooked, using the cheapest, crappiest, USDA (United States dumb a$$es) approved for poor people, food. One day I forgot my lunch I make at home and decided to purchase the public school lunch pizza. Let me tell you: it was so horrible I threw it away! You would like it if you either like a crust that tastes like cardboard or if you have absolutely no sense of taste whatsoever! If you believe the quality of ingredients helps determine how a food tastes, and whether it is good or bad for you, then you understand why public school lunch bites the big one.
Somewhere along the way, American food became dead food. Flash frozen, preserved, chemically injected, wrapped in plastic and suffocated, radiated. Is it any wonder that we don't get any nutrients from the food mafia. Has everyone forgotten that food is SUPPOSED TO BE ALIVE!!!!!
Just cut from the garden, charged by sunlight, breathing, flowing with micronutrients, fed by the activity of living soil organisms. Cultured, fermented. Previously swimming, scurrying, flying that very same day. Hmmm, and if living food was the case, that would mean we would have to be living people to actually be skilled/aware/agile enough to grow, nurture, tend, harvest, catch/hunt it. We would be living seekers eating living food.
Sadly, most people are already the walking dead.
This is full of horse hockey. This kind of BS about obesity being such a big problem is something the US mainstream media and right wing jack asses are promoting, and have been doing so for a long time. . It's a crock. NBC was putting out this bull back at the end of August this year showing pictures of obese, black people. thus putting out a racist as well as an otherwise right wing false hot air. The claim was that from maybe 150 billion or more dollars to deal with obesity. The third of a trillion dollars that the US health insurance industry takes from the American people and pile of private bureaucratic red tape it piles on medical people and patients far overshadows and is the real problem, but this writer and his fellow hot air blowing wind bags at the New York Times political prostitute for all big business rip offs isn't about to rock the boat. These are same people who've beat the drums for war ever since the Second World War, and they're part of problem, not the solution.
We don't need this kind of right wing hot air in Common Dreams, it's the damn DLC, blue dog, and national GOP's line. Bill Klanton actually was in this TV segment promoting this same garbage. It makes me so glad I never voted for this racist, white Arkie, who had a black retarded kid executed during the 1992 campaign. That probably help Klanton get the Klan vote in Loosana and lot of the rest of the US South.
AD
It might surprise you that obesity is increasingly acknowledged as a global health problem. In the UK. In Europe. In the fast developing Asian countries.
http://www.who.int/dietphysicalactivity/publications/
facts/obesity/en/
http://www.euro.who.int/
obesity
http://www.nature.com/oby/journal/
v16/n10/full/oby2008351a.html
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2006/sep/06/
health.healthandwellbeing
"One of the leading products of the American food industry has become patients for the American health care industry."
That says it all.
Been in food service on/off about 30 years, and I still don't understand how so many choose to eat crap, and tons of it.
Healthy food is not more expensive, doesn't take longer to prepare, isn't hard to find (as in, it's everywhere,) and the info re: the importance of a healthy diet has been out there for decades and decades.
Yet, the line at McD's drive-thru at lunch today snaked out of the parking lot and halfway down the block.
Here's what I think: I think over 60% of Americans are unconsciously trying to commit slow suicide by overeating the worst processed shit they can buy for .99. Either that, or they're under the impression eating right and not being obese is part of Obama's socialist/fascist/marxist indoctrination plan to force us all to look good and feel good...
Food Inc. (the movie) demonstrates that -- because of federal agriculture subsidies -- soda-pop and chips are cheaper than broccoli and carrots. Poor people can afford the empty calories of fake food, but real food costs more than they have.
frank1569--you are probably correct about the slow suicide. And the anti-state obesity protest is a gem. But some do it because they can. If they get sick, someone else will pay the bills. Believe it or not, way back in the '70's, a high school student who lived in a housing project told me he saw no reason to change what he ate because if he lost his teeth they'd give him new ones.
We have quite a HERD of elephants in the room these days, but THANKS, Mr Pollan, for all you've done to point out one of the alpha elephants, (though I wish you and Raj Patel or Vandana Shiva or a whole world of permaculturists would dialogue more than you seem to)-Big Agriculture. However, the grandaddy rogue elephant of them all has got to be our economic system itself, don't you think?.... The Earth is not for sale. Neither should we be. I guess these teeny tiny steps in the direction toward sanity are good, but they're all being taken within an assumed 'reality' that, in fact, is the human artifice of a privatized world.... not real at all except when we make it so. Not that I'm advocating Marxism. Maybe all it amounts to is context... in which we have the opportunity to choose reverence for life, decency and brotherhood/sisterhood over avarice and fear and subjugation of life. Ran across these words of Paul Hawken this morning that seem appropriate:
THERE ARE 2 KINDS OF 'GAME': GAMES THAT END AND GAMES THAT DON'T. IN THE FIRST GAME THE RULES ARE FIXED AND RIGID. IN THE 2ND, THE RULES CHANGE WHENEVER NECESSARY TO KEEP THE GAME GOING. JAMES CARSE CALLED THESE, RESPECTIVELY, FINITE AND INFINITE GAMES. WE PLAY FINITE GAMES TO COMPETE AND WIN. THEY ALWAYS HAVE LOSERS AND ARE CALLED BUSINESS, BANKING, WAR, ECONOMICS AND POLITICS. WE PLAY INFINITE GAMES TO PLAY; THEY HAVE NO LOSERS BECAUSE THE OBJECT OF THE GAME IS TO KEEP PLAYING. THEY ARE CALLED POTLATCH, FAMILY, SAMBA, PRAYER, CULTURE, TREE PLANTING, STORYTELLING AND GOSPEL SINGING....
We can be/are liberated from the first game world by the second, in which the appeal of a canned soda evaporates in a local community of real caring and connection with the earth that sustains us. That's the tricky part... finding/creating/healing that local community beneath all the cultural trappings and waste we've come to accept as normal...even desirable.
If we would tax the crap out of Hi-Fructose Corn Syrup we would do much to help the obesity problem. Soda tax?? LOL!!! Tax the HFCS that is in it.
Just stop subsidizing HFCS. See Food Inc., the movie.
Not sufficient. Stop subsidizing corn, wheat, soybeans, rice and potatoes. And if you're at all concerned about health or the environment, stop subsidizing CAFOs.
Pollan may know more about fake food and disease than he knows about rules and insurance companies.
I question his assertion that "The moment these new rules take effect . . . the movement to reform the food system - everything from farm policy to food marketing and school lunches - will acquire a powerful and wealthy ally [health insurance companies]."
But, why would rules impact insurance company behavior? Insurance companies eat rules for breakfast. They are very adept at noncompliance, challenging and defeating rules in court, and placing their allies in the regulatory agencies charged with enforcing the rules. They just throw lawyers and money at the problem. Ever hear of "delay, deny and wait until you die?" It's how insurance companies make their money. Old rules, new rules . . . the insurance industry's business model won't change.
Case in point. In 1986, the comprehensive immigration "reform" bill was a "compromise" bill (much like today's proposed comprehensive health insurance reform bills). It had two major components: amnesty for the one million illegals then in the U.S. (it turned into 3 million), and "new rules" prohibiting industry from hiring illegals in the future. The result: the amnesties were granted but the new industry regulations were never enforced, and today we have 12-20 million illegals in the U.S. Lesson: government enforces mandates on individuals, but not on industries.
One could compile a list of hundreds of federal regulations which industries are currently ignoring with little consequence.
If Obama's health insurance "reform" becomes law, I expect the mandate that individuals buy insurance from the insurance company profiteers will be enforced, but the new rules for the insurance industry will fall by the wayside. We will have been scammed once again. And, Pollan's "new ally" in the fight to reform the food system will never materialize.
Sadly, I totally agree with you. It was wonderful of Michael Pollan to point out these relationships but his optimism borders on the off-the-wall. In addition to your great point that mandates are enforced on individuals (and States), but not industries, insurance companies have had significant numbers of opportunities in the past 10-15 years to take advantage of research and to work with alternative docs who used that research. They could have, then, held seminars, etc etc on these great low cost treatments and they completely walked away. They didn't even speak out when the FDA banned those treatments.
Michael Pollan should speak out about how the FDA increases health care costs by denying advertising of simple low cost treatments, and how state medical societies prosecute doctors for using those same "unapproved" yet effective treatments.
bill moyers made the observation that health care is treated in this country as a commodity not a condition - and we see where that has led us...
food is another example of the intrusion of the corporations into a part of our life that become commoditized
people should also understand the efforts of the rockefeller family to own and control the world's food supply
people should be looking into gmo's
life is not a commodity and allowing corportions to turn it into one has reduced our qulaity of life dramatically, it has made the business of health care a morass of evil and bloated and starved us with the corporate non-food stuffs
wars without end, lousy health care (or none at all) and shit for food
god may have shed his grace on us but the corporations have dumped their shit on us and you don't need to be michael moore to figure out which one of those is good and which one bad...
from the article:
"Their conclusion surprised the designers as much as their sponsor: they determined that promoting the concept of a "foodshed" - a diversified, regional food economy - could be the key to improving the American diet."
yes, yes...watershed, or this word, foodshed, is a very natural departure point when envisioning new social structures...common, immediate interest, assuming future educational programs illuminate the miracle that is the intimate physical relationship between our bodies and the very air and water around us, the very soil beneath our feet...the continual exchange of molecular parts with all of the myriad plants and animals that make up the living world...every breath and heartbeat...every conception and death...
common sense and good food habits, and the personal growing of such, will be what constitutes healthcare in the future...that, and knowledge of traditional, natural first aid and the medicinal uses of available plantlife...
we sure need to stop poisoning everything...the only way forward is back...
Gobal Start Date: September 22, 2012...agrarian, acoustic life...we're gonna need lots of local food...let's get those gardens growing!
"t the moment, a federal campaign to discourage the consumption of sweetened soft drinks is a political nonstarter, but few things could do more to slow the rise of Type 2 diabetes among adolescents than to reduce their soda consumption, which represents 15 percent of their caloric intake."
*sigh*. No. The problem isn't soda per se.
The main problem is when caloric intake is above the level dictated by activity level (over a prolonged period).
Also, a secondary problem is any fast digesting carbohydrate, whether the sugar in soda, doughnuts, muffins, rice, bread, when a fast digesting carbohydrate is not necessary, again, as dictated by physical activity.
Getting people to stop drinking soda, only to have them start eating more doughnuts or muffins, achieves absolutely nothing.
The biggest problem is when the nutritionists focus on a little detail, which they always seem to do, such as soda, and ignore the forest for the trees.
Amen
ps the nutritionists at the Federal level are paid to ignore the forest for the trees. They work for USDA. Do you think they could say anything bad about processed food? The only reason they're on board at all is because the evidence has become more and more overwhelming and because the appropriate profit takers now have their tentacles well dug into the natural food "market" from farm to table.
"The biggest problem is when the nutritionists focus on a little detail, which they always seem to do, such as soda, and ignore the forest for the trees."
That wasn't my experience with my nutritionist at all. She got me to focus on how to properly balance my daily eating between starches, proteins, fats, vegetables, and fruits. What I ate at one time wasn't nearly as important as trying to make sure I didn't eat too much of one group, particularly protein or fats, and especially at the expense of another.
Of course this approach has its limits too, because a diet soda or another artificially sweetened drink would not count as anything, but I have heard of research that suggests the sweetness itself affects how your body processes the food you eat.
After over a decade of eating so horribly I'm rather surprised I never suffered malnutrition despite my high caloric intake and weight, I now eat very balanced meals, with much of the food locally grown and as much as possible (budget-wise) of it organic. My only problem right now is fats...I can get organic peanut butter easily enough, but organic nuts (other than peanuts) are hard to find and a bit expensive for my very tight budget, so I'm not getting the necessary fats...But having a near lifetime supply of it in my body already, I'm not too worried about it right now.
As a middle-school teacher, my students were given the most unhealthy food imaginable! Even fruit, if served, was often unripe. And with a total of 20 minutes in the cafeteria, scarfing down a slice of greasy, pepperoni pizza or a handful of tater tots was about all they had time for.
We sometimes make poor choices as adults, but why do we have to saddle them on the backs of our children??
If agribusiness can block any attempt to reform its practices directly then it can also block anything that would affect it indirectly.
The key to the diet problem is educating children to eat good food. Whatever people enjoyed eating as children, they will continue to eat throughout their lifetimes. I don't care what the food may be, if one continues to eat it then one will come to enjoy it.
We can start by driving home one vital lesson: factory processed food is bad.
This is not to say that education alone can solve this problem. We need to find a way to make good food available for that multitude of parents - especially single parents - who may have neither the time nor the ability to cook properly.
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