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Health Care in America: Pay To Play Isn't Working . . . For Anyone

Posted by Christy Hardin Smith, Firedoglake at 9:03 AM on April 28, 2008.


Health industry lobbyists are raking in windfall profits this year, and we're all getting screwed.
robberbarons
Health Care Lobbyist

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At a time when the bean counters on Wall Street are finding the health insurance industry a bad risk, I have to ask how much longer the Beltway crowd is going to keep looking the other way.

According to this CJR report, regarding a series of studies from Health Care Week and other industry groups, the health care industry, drug manufacturers and other related industry groups are doing everything they can to insure there are no changes to their current profit margins:

The insurance companies, of course, think the system is just fine, and they spent heavily to keep the status quo. Health Plan Week, an insurance industry trade pub, took a hard look, revealing that overall health insurance payments to lobbyists soared last year and are likely to grow again in the next couple of years as health reform becomes the biggest issue. A large percentage of that money, the magazine found, was focused on the Medicare Advantage issue, which was front and center last year. Analyzing disclosure forms from the Senate’s public records office, Health Plan Week found that fifteen health plans paid lobbyists more than $22 million in 2007, up from $18 million in 2006, a hefty chunk of change by any measure. WellCare Health Plans, a big seller of Medicare Advantage products that has gotten in trouble with regulators for its questionable sales practices, quadrupled its spending to $320,000 and paid half of that amount to the Washington law firm to plead its case on Medicare issues. Health Net and Tufts Health Plan more than doubled their spending, while insurance biggies like CIGNA and UnitedHealth Group substantially increased their lobbying budgets. Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans spent nearly $10 million....

A press release just issued by the Center for Responsive Politics further reinforces the money and health care story. Its message: Special interests spent $17 million for every day Congress was in session, and the drug industry spent most of all, paying lobbyists 25 percent more than they did last year. Did Harry Reid forget to mention them? Drug companies spent some $227 million on lobbying activities. The insurance industry was right behind with $138 million, and not far down was the hospital and nursing home industry, which spent some $91 million. When the Center pulled apart spending by organization, Pharma, the American Medical Association, and the American Hospital Association ranked three, four, and five on its list of top spenders. It’s too bad that the Center’s latest numbers haven’t gotten more press. For they, too show, the rocky path ahead for health reform.

It’s easy for reporters and editors to dismiss yet another press release about gobs of money thrown at politicians and lobbyists. We’ve seen that before, they say; what else is new? And it’s easy to cop out and blame readers for stumbling over the big numbers anyway. But the big numbers tell a big story. It’s crucial to remind the public of the intersection of money, lobbyists, Congress, and the presidential candidates. “It’s a constitutional right to petition your government, but the average citizen is not doing this petitioning,” says Massie Ritsch, communications director for the Center for Responsive Politics. “The average person’s lobbyist is the elected official sent to Washington.” But, he adds, “Those officials are listening to the outsiders who are doing the petitioning.” The Constitution may guarantee lobbying, but it doesn’t say Congress has to listen to big money. The press needs to shine a light on just who is listening to whom.

Would that I were confident that the light would shine on this -- a big, fat spotlight. Because the folks waiting outside the gate in Knoxville, TN -- the 400 hundred Americans who got turned away from any care in the above YouTube -- they've got very little to hope for from a government that doesn't seem to care for them at all.

And if one of those folks who was turned away has some catastrophic contagion? Well, then I guess we're all in for a world of shit when it spreads around the country, aren't we?

You think just because you have health insurance that things are rosy for you? It's a small world, getting even smaller all the time as various pathogens fly around on airplanes from one continent to the next. That person coughing beside you on the subway or the bus or in that meeting this morning? If they don't have access to decent health care -- and they have a highly contagious nasty ick? That next superbug headline case could be yours.

Health care isn't just about prenatal care and cancer exams, although both are very important. It's also about vaccines and control of dangerous contagions. And we don't have a handle on any of this because we've put profit ahead of care (YouTube)...way ahead. Think it can't be you? Think again...

(YouTube -- 60 Minutes.)


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Single Payer Health Care
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on Apr 28, 2008 9:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We must move to Single Payer Health Care including prescriptions..

Neither Democratic candidate will get us there and this is the only solution...

We can cut costs by 32% or more and it will limit and reduce the run away raising health care costs as well, due to the natural market forces and it will help our industries which are suffering and going into bankruptcy due to these outrageous out of control expenses..

It's a shame neither Democratic candidate watched the recent Frontline series on PBS on Health Care which covered 5-6 other nations who all do it better than the United States..!

We must force the Insurance companies to run not for profit if we keep them in the mix at all..as some nations see fit and works great for them..

It's not about "Insurance" as Obama and Clinton want you to believe, it's about Coverage and Care actually being delivered..!

The purpose of government is to Serve The People not the Insurance and Drug companies..

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oxheadone
Posted by: oxheadone on Apr 29, 2008 3:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Single payer - a government monoply of medical care (it's sickness insurance; not health insurance)insurance is also the solution to the Medicare problem. The US is the only advanced country without a national system, which is also necessary for public health, and is why the public health statistics for the US are like those of underdeveloped countries. The explanation seems to be that Americans really don't care about each other.

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jim of olymm
Posted by: rdrjames on Apr 29, 2008 5:50 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I wondered where my premium money went. I thought it went into the 'pool' to help pay for medical care for other insurees. Now I know it goes to line the pockets of lobbyists and members of congress. (gives new meaning to 'act of congress'--they are screwing us up the gazoo!

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