Is the House Health Care Bill Better than Nothing?
Well, the House health reform bill -- known to Republicans as the Government Takeover -- finally passed after one of Congress's longer, less enlightening debates. Two stalwarts of the single-payer movement split their votes; John Conyers voted for it; Dennis Kucinich against. Kucinich was right.
Conservative rhetoric notwithstanding, the House bill is not a "government takeover." I wish it were. Instead, it enshrines and subsidizes the "takeover" by the investor-owned insurance industry that occurred after the failure of the Clinton reform effort in 1994. To be sure, the bill has a few good provisions (expansion of Medicaid, for example), but they are marginal. It also provides for some regulation of the industry (no denial of coverage because of pre-existing conditions, for example), but since it doesn't regulate premiums, the industry can respond to any regulation that threatens its profits by simply raising its rates. The bill also does very little to curb the perverse incentives that lead doctors to over-treat the well-insured. And quite apart from its content, the bill is so complicated and convoluted that it would take a staggering apparatus to administer it and try to enforce its regulations.
What does the insurance industry get out of it? Tens of millions of new customers, courtesy of the mandate and taxpayer subsidies. And not just any kind of customer, but the youngest, healthiest customers -- those least likely to use their insurance. The bill permits insurers to charge twice as much for older people as for younger ones. So older under-65's will be more likely to go without insurance, even if they have to pay fines. That's OK with the industry, since these would be among their sickest customers. (Shouldn't age be considered a pre-existing condition?)
Insurers also won't have to cover those younger people most likely to get sick, because they will tend to use the public option (which is not an "option" at all, but a program projected to cover only 6 million uninsured Americans). So instead of the public option providing competition for the insurance industry, as originally envisioned, it's been turned into a dumping ground for a small number of people whom private insurers would rather not have to cover anyway.
If a similar bill emerges from the Senate and the reconciliation process, and is ultimately passed, what will happen?
First, health costs will continue to skyrocket, even faster than they are now, as taxpayer dollars are pumped into the private sector. The response of payers -- government and employers -- will be to shrink benefits and increase deductibles and co-payments. Yes, more people will have insurance, but it will cover less and less, and be more expensive to use.
But, you say, the Congressional Budget Office has said the House bill will be a little better than budget-neutral over ten years. That may be, although the assumptions are arguable. Note, though, that the CBO is not concerned with total health costs, only with costs to the government. And it is particularly concerned with Medicare, the biggest contributor to federal deficits. The House bill would take money out of Medicare, and divert it to the private sector and, to some extent, to Medicaid. The remaining costs of the legislation would be paid for by taxes on the wealthy. But although the bill might pay for itself, it does nothing to solve the problem of runaway inflation in the system as a whole. It's a shell game in which money is moved from one part of our fragmented system to another.
Here is my program for real reform:
Recommendation #1: Drop the Medicare eligibility age from 65 to 55. This should be an expansion of traditional Medicare, not a new program. Gradually, over several years, drop the age decade by decade, until everyone is covered by Medicare. Costs: Obviously, this would increase Medicare costs, but it would help decrease costs to the health system as a whole, because Medicare is so much more efficient (overhead of about 3% vs. 20% for private insurance). And it's a better program, because it ensures that everyone has access to a uniform package of benefits.
Recommendation #2: Increase Medicare fees for primary care doctors and reduce them for procedure-oriented specialists. Specialists such as cardiologists and gastroenterologists are now excessively rewarded for doing tests and procedures, many of which, in the opinion of experts, are not medically indicated. Not surprisingly, we have too many specialists, and they perform too many tests and procedures. Costs: This would greatly reduce costs to Medicare, and the reform would almost certainly be adopted throughout the wider health system.
Recommendation #3: Medicare should monitor doctors' practice patterns for evidence of excess, and gradually reduce fees of doctors who habitually order significantly more tests and procedures than the average for the specialty. Costs: Again, this would greatly reduce costs, and probably be widely adopted.
Recommendation #4: Provide generous subsidies to medical students entering primary care, with higher subsidies for those who practice in underserved areas of the country for at least two years. Costs: This initial, rather modest investment in ending our shortage of primary care doctors would have long-term benefits, in terms of both costs and quality of care.
Recommendation #5: Repeal the provision of the Medicare drug benefit that prohibits Medicare from negotiating with drug companies for lower prices. (The House bill calls for this.) That prohibition has been a bonanza for the pharmaceutical industry. For negotiations to be meaningful, there must be a list (formulary) of drugs deemed cost-effective. This is how the Veterans Affairs System obtains some of the lowest drug prices of any insurer in the country. Costs: If Medicare paid the same prices as the Veterans Affairs System, its expenditures on brand-name drugs would be a small fraction of what they are now.
Is the House bill better than nothing? I don't think so. It simply throws more money into a dysfunctional and unsustainable system, with only a few improvements at the edges, and it augments the central role of the investor-owned insurance industry. The danger is that as costs continue to rise and coverage becomes less comprehensive, people will conclude that we've tried health reform and it didn't work. But the real problem will be that we didn't really try it. I would rather see us do nothing now, and have a better chance of trying again later and then doing it right.
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25 Comments so far
Show AllNo, it's too complicated. Actually, there is only one short and simple way to provide healthcare for all.
Put the insurance companies out of business today, take all their money, put their executives in jail for racketeering and murder, confiscate their fortunes, and create a universal single payer system with the money. Insurance company employees can be reeducated and put to work in WPA programs in poor neighborhoods with Wall St. felons as well.
O'Bomb'em is just the new Emperor. He talks good but the same corporate interests are in charge - same "wars" - occupations/invasions - the Fox is in charge of the chickencoop in every instance - Wall St., Halliburton, Pharma, Pig Oil, Coal. The Best Democracy Money Can Buy!
Recommendation #7 : If you get sick, move to Canada
Exactly
Canada or: New Zealand, Costa Rica, France, Germany, Belgium, Denmark, Spain, Netherlands, Portugal, Japan, Taiwan, Slovenia, Sweden, the UK, Italy, Austria, Czech Republic, Norway...
Recommendation #6: Repeal this toxic sludge HR 3962 and replace it with HR 676 !
Actually, drop all five recommendations and make this one #1 and the only one. Trying to reform HR 3962 is like trying to reform NAFTA. When it is as bad as cancer, it is best to drop it altogether and start anew.
" And quite apart from its content, the bill is so complicated and convoluted that it would take a staggering apparatus to administer it and try to enforce its regulations."
Well, you can damn well bet that they will find enough of an "appratus" to enforce the penalties for non-coverage.
No sweat.
Don't worry about your state AG getting stuck with the job of enforcement. This duty will go to a third-party, free-market, private entity -- either a subsidiary of the big "insurers" (sic) or an offshoot of one of Haliburton's offshoots.
It'll cost, but at least the money will be getting into the right pockets instead of being wasted on the public good.
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Is the House Health Care Bill Better than Nothing?
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No.
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"...Medicare, the biggest contributer to federal deficits."
This statement seems wildly disconnected from reality to me. I think the deficit would drastically reduce or even disappear if a number of other money pits, such as corporate tax evasions, the Pentagon, and the financial frauds were to be cut.
Yep, It's the CBO that's disconnected from reality. The Imperial budget is the most gross misdirection of monies ever in world history; it and all the tax cuts given to corporadoes and their companies are "the biggest contributer to federal deficits.
"And [Medicare]'s a better program, because it ensures that everyone has access to a uniform package of benefits."
Mind you, this 'uniform package of benefits' does not include eyes, ears, or teeth! :P
What a mess.
Dennis Kucinich voted against this House bill. That says it all as far as I'm concerned. I don't want to hear any talk about a progressive movement inside the House democrats because it does not exist as we saw who voted for this garbage health care bill and who didn't. Federal funding for abortions and illegal immigration issues do not constitute a progressive movement in my opinion. The health care debate and process has been hijacked once again by the same old democrat agenda that voters have repeatedly said they do not want - which detracts from the central issue which is SINGLE- PAYER. I hope Mr. Kucinich stays committed to his fight for single-payer because as we've seen the democrats are trying to push this disgusting excuse for healthcare legislation so that they can BURY single-payer and not return to it any time in the near future.
"I hope Mr. Kucinich stays committed to his fight for single-payer because as we've seen the democrats are trying to push this disgusting excuse for healthcare legislation so that they can BURY single-payer and not return to it any time in the near future."
You have to wonder, at this point, if Kucinich isn't doing more harm than good by continuing to remain a Democrat.
Poop pudding.
It's what's for dinner.
It worked for the Soviet Union. Until...
I just received the most stunning email: The AFL-CIO sent me a message, urging me to thank the Democrat congress for "caring more about working families" than they care about "big insurnace companies." This from a union that endorsed single payer (though only after a vigorous grass roots push from the rank and file). It boggles the mind. How does passing a bill that will force working families to buy over-priced, defective private insurance policies show that the Democrat traitors "care more about the working familes than they do about the big insurance companies"? Such a dishonest statement doesn't even count as sophistry. It's just a plain old, vular lie.
Nobody should take solace about the new regulations that will supposedly force the insurance companies to "cover" pre-existing conditions. Unless the language in the bill specifically says "insurance companies will be required to pay for all treatments ordered by medical professionals" than you can be certain that they will retain a loop hole big enough to throw tens of thousands of corpses into each year.
The Democrat party showed what side they stand on in this class warfare. The lives of the middle class, working class and poor mean nothing to them alongside protecting the power and wealth of the corporate elite. Anybody who doubts that after Saturday's vote is living in a fantasy land.
Briggs Seekins
briggsseekins.wordpress.com
very sad indeed
The AFL-CIO was co-opted by the ruling Corporate Mafia long ago. Sadly, most people don't have class consciousness or understand class struggle. The corporate Mafia has been winning steadily for decades. We are losing very badly, the victory for the Illness and Death Profit Industry is the latest illustration.
Here's an ever better program for real reform:
Fundamental health care for ALL Americans. Period.
Health insurance corporations are NOTHING - understand? NOTHING - but useless middlemen who skim a profit off of the transaction between you and your medical service provider then take their skim and head off to the Wall Street Casino and Resort for a bit of double-down.
They provide NO. OTHER. FUNCTION. None. Zero. Zilch. Got it?
If we can afford $90,000 per American to 'save' history's most notorious Banksters, if we can afford to provide Universal Health Care to 2.3 million prison inmates (at only $40/month per), then we can most certainly afford Fundamental Health Care For All Americans.
Anything less than that is nothing.
Small quibble: Forty dollars per inmate per monnth is on the high side of what even the most generous states spend on health care for a prison population that suffers extremely high rates of HIV/AIDS, Hep C, mental illness, substance abuse and, increasingly, diseases of old age. And a significant percentage of that paltry sum is spent not on health care, but on profits for private contractors. Not surprisingly, health care in US prisons is so abysmal that for medically needy offenders, incarceration is tantamount to the death penalty. Not exactly a model to emulate in the broader community, although the US is doing its damndest.
No. The House bill isn't even as good as Hawaii's health care system. So, by the time they gut it further to reconcile it with the Senate bill, what we'll have is something so beneath reform, that it won't deserve passage.
Not to worry, they'll label it "historic" and "groundbreaking," and they'll pat themselves on the back, then tell us all how lucky we are that they've finally passed health care reform we can believe in. Then, we'll be told to move along, "there's nothing here to see."
The insurance industry has put the champagne on to chill. They'll be popping the corks when Obama signs this piece of c**p.
The way I'm hearing it from some of my friends is like this. It's the best deal we can get because Congress is basically owned by these companies and if we want to cover all the people out here without coverage we have to pay them or get nothing. They win either way. if we go for this shit taco they have their hand even deeper into our pockets as taxpayer sand customers and if Congress does nothing and rejects this plan they just continue raiseing rates and kicking people out and stopping them from joining if they're sick. They really don't give a shit either way. The Dems. think having the rest of us be forced to pay for those without and having the companies raise rates as well is just fine with them. They fig. they can just call it Reform and the stupid out here will believe it because Obama says thats what it is. The have NO fear of the left because it has NO guts and gets no glory. The right however gets whatever it needs as usual. Game Over.
Yep, at least Kucinich explained the truth.
This bill is much worse: in effect it holds a gun to our heads and forces us to give our money to private insurance vampires.
It is a Mafia extortion racket. In fact it is clear that our leaders are working for and get paid by the corporate Mafia. The illness and death profit industry(IDPI)is one of the most powerful of the 5 families, that much has been demonstrated.
This is going from the most expensive illness and death profit system to an even more expensive system and hands the industry 10s of billions in new profits.
They're making us an offer we can't refuse: "hand over your money, or you might have an unfortunate accident"
Well said!
Now if only those Democrat supporters who are starry-eyed with the fact that the Democrats could actually pass something, as bad as the result was, would take the time to understand what was passed, we may have progress in getting rid of the Democrats who essentially have been bought by lobbyists and are not representing the public. Vote independent or at least get rid of most of the Democrats in power.
Dr. Angell is a voice of compassion and sanity.
Unfortunately neither compassion nor sanity are factors in the Washington DC corporatocracy.
Yes, and unfortunately, life is a pre-existing conditon.
Headline sez: "Is the House Health Care Bill Better Than Nothing?"
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As ever with this type of question, it depends who's asking.
From the perspective of your corporate masters, sure, it's a great bill.
For the entities formerly known as U.S. Citizens, not so much.