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The Best Health ‘Reform’ Money Can Buy
When the White House or Democrats in Congress talk about health care reform, and about wanting to preserve the central role of the private insurance industry in health care, it pays to look at just what it is that they they're so anxious to preserve.
According to the Health and Human Service's department's National Health Expenditures report, private insurers will pay out $854 billion in medical claims for health insurance policyholders this year. That represents about one-third of the nation's estimated $2.5-trillion medical care bill for this year. But that's not the whole story. The premiums paid for those claims payments will total $1.2 trillion, which includes $179 billion in "administrative" costs (21% or over $1 out of every $5 dollars spent on health care) and another 150 billion in profits (a tidy 15% return). That is money that was paid out in premiums by individuals and by employers (who every year are shifting more of the cost of health coverage onto employees).
A big part of that $179 billion you and your employer pay for insurance company "administrative expenses" (none of which is for actual patient care) goes to fund private "death panels" whose job, as insurance company whistleblower Wendell Potter has testified in Congress, is to deny coverage to sick policyholders.
And that $179 billion wasted on administration (Medicare, a federally-run program, only devotes 4% of costs to administration by way of comparison), isn't all. Doctors, hospitals and pharmacies also spend a similar sum on administrative expenses, much of it devoted to fighting to get paid by those same insurance companies. How many of us have spent hours struggling over claims forms, and getting signatures from physicians in order to get reimbursed for care, or on the phone arguing with insurance company "customer service" people on the phone, either to get reimbursed, or to get a pre-treatment authorization? Doctors, hospital administrators and pharmacists do the same thing. That's why your doctor's office has such a large staff of people who aren't there to take your pulse or blood pressure-just to work with paper.
Insurance companies, in their discussions with investment analysts, actually refer to their payouts for patient care vs. their premium take as their "medical loss ratio," a figure which they vow to improve by clamping down on "losses" (meaning benefits paid).
I took a look at the latest 10-Q financial statement filed by Aetna, one of the nation's largest private health insurers. Through June 30, Aetna took in $14 billion in premiums, $10.7 billion of that amount from employers and employees, $2.9 billion more from Medicare recipients who bought a supplemental insurance plan to cover the gap in what Medicare covers, and another $400 million for handling Medicaid claims. Aetna reports that it paid out $11.9 billion in health care reimbursements, and $2.3 billion in administrative expenses (20%).
By the way, this same Aetna is headed by CEO Ronald A. Williams, who earned $24.3 million in 2008 according to Forbes magazine (about the norm for insurance CEOs), as well as another $296,639 as a board member of American Express. Williams also has unexercised options on Aetna stock worth $194.5 million, according to Forbes. He owns a palatial home in Farmington, CT assessed at $1.7 million. According to Opensecrets.org, Williams has spent close to $10 million on lobbying activity for his company and the insurance industry since 2005.
Somebody tell me why this is a system we not only want to keep, but that, under proposals working their way through House and Senate, would force another 40-50 million currently uninsured people, most of them low-income, to pay into, under threat of being assessed a $3800 tax penalty by the IRS if they don't buy some particularly crummy plan.
Common sense says that if this insurance intermediary were removed from the process, besides Williams and the other industry CEOs and other executives losing their fat paychecks and bloated homes, planes and portfolios, the whole American healthcare system would run a lot more smoothly and cheaply.
I remember back in 1990, when I was working on my book Marketplace Medicine (Bantam 1992) about the for-profit hospital industry, talking to the administrator of a Canadian hospital in Ontario. He told me he had formerly worked as a hospital administrator in the US. He reported that back then, when new less-invasive technologies, as well as reforms introduced to Medicare, had begun reducing the amount of time people were spending in hospital beds, his hospital had been able to shut an entire wing because of a declining patient census. "But one year later, we had to reopen it to accommodate all the staff needed to deal with paperwork from the insurance industry," he said. That problem has only gotten worse over the ensuing two decades. Meanwhile, this same administrator told me, "In Canada, I have only three people doing paperwork for the whole hospital: one for Canadians, and two to deal with paperwork for the occasional American tourist who gets sick or injured."
Let's be clear. The only reason Congress and the White House are pushing a plan that continues to give a central role to the private insurance industry is that the private insurance industry is flooding the capital with money. It's a great investment for them. If health insurers are collectively earning $150 billion in profits in a year, and it only costs them perhaps $50 million in legal bribes to keep their scam operating, they're earning a 3000% return on investment!
We would all be far better off if Congress just passed Rep. John Conyers' bill, HR 676, to expand Medicare to cover everyone. As I have explained in an earlier article, expanding Medicare would result in no net increase in taxes, and because it would eliminate insurance premiums, workers' comp and public employee health expenses while also lowering car insurance rates, not to mention lowering the prices charged by doctors, hospitals and pharmaceutical companies, also a substantial savings for all Americans.
Some people worry that if we were all on Medicare, medical research would suffer. But this is a spurious fear. Much of the most important research in medical care and treatment is funded by the federal government through the National Institutes of Health. In fact, arguably, the profit motive leads industry to focus research on highly profitable, but much less urgent things, so we get research on cosmetic uses for Botox, but little or no research on finding a cure for Malaria or drug-resistant TB. Furthermore, with all the savings freed up by switching to a single-payer system there'd be more money to provide to the NIH for research.
There may be a valid argument for competitive markets, say for cars or food production and distribution. But it should be abundantly clear by this point that when it comes to health care, the market doesn't work. In fact, it is perverse. The end user-your and me-will never have the information needed to make a wise decision regarding either cost or quality. Furthermore, unless we were all buying our own insurance and selecting our own doctors unimpeded by "preferred provider" or HMO lists, we are being forced to chose, if we get any choice at all, from a limited selection made available by our employers, who are motivated only by bottom-line concerns. In fact, in countries like Canada or France, which have Medicare-like single-payer systems, people have vastly more choice as to physician and hospital than any American patient.
Some people also worry that a government-run single-payer insurance system, by pushing down the reimbursements to doctors and hospitals through its monopoly position as sole paymaster, would lead to a defunding of hospitals and would drive away the "best" students from choosing the medical profession. But really, if you look at what hospitals in the current "competitive" market spend much of their money on, it turns out to be cosmetic things like fancy building exteriors, pretty rooms, etc.-things that help lure patients, but that do nothing to improve patient care. As for future doctors, does anyone really think that having people go into medicine because of the prospect of earning millions of dollars and driving fancy sports cars results in better doctors than having people choose a medical career because of a passion to serve humanity, or a passion for research into curing disease? What changes is not the quality of the medical students, but their motivation.
Some progressives also point out that Medicare, as popular as it is among older citizens who depend on it, and among doctors who treat them and are paid by it, is hardly ideal, covering only 60-80% of most people's medical bills. But that overlooks a key point: if everyone in America were on Medicare, there would be a huge common interest in improving the coverage.
All the sturm and drang in Washington and in the media over the course of health care "reform" in Washington is really much ado about nothing. We are not getting real reform.
In a replay of last year's to-do over the mess in the banking industry, we are watching our dysfunctional and corrupt government simply, to quote President Obama, "kick the can" down the road, leaving the next Congress and the next President to deal with the same disaster. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of Americans will continue to die needlessly every year because the care they need will be denied to them by insurance companies that are focused on making as much money as possible, and by a government that has sold its soul to the health industry lobbyists.




13 Comments so far
Show AllMy ancestors came to this country from Germany in the 1700's. They came because even though they worked hard and produced a lot of kids, this or that army or gang or revolution kept them poor and hungry.
Trash that nobody needs anyway has always been worth more than lives--human or otherwise, no matter how many. We live under the illusion that things have changed.
What is an extra billion dollars worth to an insurance or drug company CEO? No matter, he wants it anyway, no matter how many lives it costs, no matter how much suffering results, no matter who gets hurt.
Governments are supposed to protect us from this sort of criminal activity. Anarchy is misunderstood. It merely means that each person minds his own business. Police and soldiers can't protect you. This is the biggest fraud ever perpetrated on humankind.
Governments inevitably produce too much paper, too many police, too many soldiers, and all of them, in the end, too little freedom. If you have not read Thoreau, he makes a compelling argument for 'all the people sharing all the world'.
They all take Insurance money-- and they are all corrupted by it. They are more anxious about how to keep their patrons happy than to serve public needs. Even the Sainted Ted Kennedy took tons of health insurance money and his Senate committee could come up with nothing stronger than a weak public option available only if your employer did not offer you health insurance and opted to pay a penalty. If they are all bought and paid for whores then let's show them what we think of them and DO NOT VOTE FOR ANY INCUMBENT IN THE NEXT ELECTION. If you are a Democrat and can't vote Republican vote Green. If you are a Republican and can't support a Democrat vote Libertarian. Let's send an entirely new Congress to Washington this fall. Only then perhaps will they realize that there is something more dangerous than not taking corporate money. Vote the bums out.
"Vote the bums out."
Agreed, except in Vermont. If you guys vote Bernie Sanders out of office I will personally drive up there and kick some Maple Syrup sippin' butt!
1. First comment on the above: no one "buys" into Medicare or any single payer system. It is financed by taxes.
2. You weren't dealing with Medicare. Medicare is for people 65 or older. You are 47.
You do not have your facts straight.
I hope that eventually you get your case settled and that you get the care you need.
"The best health ‘reform’ money can buy" will be all we will ever see with the "best congress money can buy".
Here is what our "hope and change" must look like:
Democracy will stay dead until we:
1. Reverse corporate personhood
2. Dismantle corporate media monopolization
3. Establish public financed elections
The Beast is named at davedubya.com
The correct name for the proposals coming out of Congress is Boondoggel.
They are Boondoggling healthcare, not fixing it or reforming it.
There will be no meaningful health care reform because Obama does not want to speak up for the majority of the people.
There is too much insurance industry/pharma money at stake. Money corrupts, and when there is a huge amount of money at stake, then any chance of seeing the right thing being done is reduced to zero.
No contingency has a probability of 0. Except maybe death. It is POSSIBLE that Obama is a friend of the working poor. Unlikely, but possible.
Strictly speaking, it's possible that tomorrow the government will be distributing free bread and water. The probability is not 0. Especially with the drumbeats around Iran...
Jason Grant Garza here ... to Vanmungo ... lovely comment but you are totally wrong ... read the article ... it clearly states MEDICARE (unless the newspaer was wrong also ... the article link is www.sfbg.com/entry.php?entry_id=3956&catid=4 ). So please get your facts straight before ... so I guess that the MEDICARE I wasn't dealing with wasn't the MEDICARE I dropped for nonperformance, negligence and bad faith either?
Apparently, I have my facts straight ... it is rigged ... read the article and yes I would have liked for this to settle when I first went to the "professionals" instead they denied me emergency medical services, had me illegally arrested, strip searched,etc. When I complained to all the correct people they screwed me too. READ THE ARTICLE.
Then they testilied in federal court, had me falsely 5150'ed at my deposition, and left me for dead. I am the ONE who continued and got the confession ... it WASN'T their good nature or humanity.
So ok, I thought everyone deserves to defend themselves; however, to NOT have contrition after a confession, nor investigate to list all failures and hold those accountable is the farce. WHAT IS THE LESSON? Yes, I would have hoped for civility after VINDICATION instead I learned "they do NOT have a red face rather BLACK HEARTS!." To Vanmungo ... I hope you have as much zeal and concern when you read the article, find I was right, are as angry as I am at the deception and lies, and come to the realization that I was deliberately screwed because they could and they also knew afterwards they would be unaccountable ... just like the lawyers for BUSH! My, other government workers ... I wonder could this be the way it is? Or I am wrong in that too ... read the article ask yourself which government agency didn't I go to? P.S. Thanks for being fully informed before commenting on such a delicate issue ... help ... I can't even get compassion being DEAD RIGHT! Please let me know Vanmungo ... will you call each and everyone listed and ask ... or is it easiler to BLAME THE VICTIM?
Obama: The mendacity of hype! Single-payer OR SINGLE TERM!!
One thing the ugly health care "debate" has achieved: it has demonstrated just how broken/corrupt our political system is. As everyone says, any reform isn't likely until campaign finance reform happens. As anyone can see, it's the log jam holding back all reform. I'm wondering if political corruption couldn't be framed as a civil rights' issue? Surely something so corrupt and destructive violates our civil rights and the Constitution in a number of ways...
The growing awareness of and anger about how our political system works may create a window of opportunity, a willingness on the part of the government, all three branches, to seriously consider change. Going through the courts or even through the Attorney General might be perceived as a more effective fix than depending on the Congress to fix itself. In fact, there would probably be more support from Congress for this option than for legislation, which would be ever so messy.
They will consider change when it is clear to all, including Bernie Sanders, that if things do not change they will be out. First they have to fear us. Then they will possibly consider how to mollify us enough to save their sorry asses. First there has to be a credible threat. If that threat is credible then let's just do it anyway and let them run for Congress again in four years after the new guys make the reforms needed.