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Health & Wellness

Three Reasons Why Single-Payer Health Care Has Become Possible

By David Swanson, After Downing Street. Posted January 31, 2009.


For starters, Democratic leadership could persuade enough Democrats to vote to pass it without a single Republican, if they chose to.
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While a Democratic polling firm has just found, as pollsters always do, dramatic public support for public health coverage, Democratic leaders on Capitol Hill appear divided, as they have always been, over whether to take a comprehensive approach to health care.

House Majority Whip James Clyburn, D-S.C., said on C-Span recently that incrementalism would suit him better "than to go out and just bite something you can't chew." Clyburn said he opposes any comprehensive approach in 2009. Meanwhile, on Thursday, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., made a long speech about health care at a Washington conference in which he said, "I am committed to helping bring comprehensive reform to the floor of the 111th Congress."

Now, on Capitol Hill, phrases like "comprehensive reform" and "universal health care" can mean almost anything, including proposals that would likely require comprehensive reform themselves by the time the ink was dry. But there is an opening right now for serious health care reform of the sort that has succeeded in almost every other wealthy country on earth: single payer. Here are three reasons why this is a moment in which single-payer health coverage (private medicine paid for by the government, and the elimination of all health insurance companies) has become possible.

First, the partisan dynamics have changed in Congress. While some Republicans might vote for single payer, they wouldn't need to. The Democratic leadership could persuade enough Democrats to vote to pass it without a single Republican, if they chose to.

In the House, where the Democrats seriously worsened an economic stimulus bill this week in order to win irrelevant Republican votes and then didn't get a single one, they might be in the mood to wake up and begin behaving as the majority they are. In the Senate, there is the ever-present scourge of the filibuster, which allows senators representing 11 percent of the public to block legislation, but the Democrats could change the rule to rid our republic of that anti-democratic blight if they choose to.

This will require placing a great deal of pressure on Democratic senators to persuade them that losing important battles in which they vote well but don't play to win will hurt them as much as it hurts the Republicans who vote against the public will.

That's where the second reason comes in. A massive, well-organized public movement has been built that is pressing right now for single payer. In the House of Representatives, the leading advocate is Congressman John Conyers, D-Mich., whose bill H.R. 676 had 93 cosponsors in the last Congress. Conyers provides a useful FAQ here, and Physicians for a National Health Program has provided a longer one on single payer.

Other advocates include: Labor for Single Payer, Healthcare Now, the California Nurses Association and the Leadership Conference for Guaranteed Health Care, which boasts dozens of major organizational members. Progressive Democrats of America has mobilized tremendous grassroots pressure through its Healthcare Not Warfare campaign. This is essentially a campaign for single-payer health coverage, but it also organizes the peace movement to participate and communicates an important selling point. The financial cost of creating a single payer-system would be a fraction of what we spend each year merely on the occupation of Iraq, which Congress and the president have committed to ending.


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View:
Incrementalism Will Kill Single Payer ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Jan 31, 2009 12:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Breaking up health care reform means endless battles where votes can be sliced and diced while taking years to get into and out of Capitol Hill Committees. The Republicans will have a field day lying about each and every detail while lobbyists and special interests will ply influence and money.

This is why we need a rallying cry, something the Public can understand. Medicare for All through John Conyers HR 676 is the way to move forward. Medicare for All will carry the day if the card is played. The Dems then enact HR676 the Medicare for All Plan.

Call Rep. James Clyburn, and ask him to whip his colleagues for H.R. 676: (202) 225-3315. Tell him we need a full plan, not incrementalism.

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You Heard It Here First
Posted by: NoPCZone on Jan 31, 2009 12:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Something had better happen and soon...
I have worked in healthcare for over 20 years in everything from large regional teaching hospitals to small rural facilities and everything in between and our hospitals and clinics are in trouble. Not the gleaming towers that serve the affluent in Beverly Hills or lower Manhattan, but the urban hospitals that house our trauma, high-risk pregnancy, burn and other specialized units as well as being our safety net hospitals. The small rural hospitals serving the less affluent outlying areas devastated by the wholesale export of our manufacturing economy are also clinging to life by a thread.

The most irreplaceable centers of care that are many times the only source for essential medical services for many, if not most, Americans are teetering on the edge of financial ruin. Years and decades of declining reimbursements in the face of escalating costs combined with an ever increasing number of underinsured and uninsured patients that cannot be denied care is sinking them- plain and simple. Wages can only be held in check so long before staff leaves to migrate to higher wage areas, major maintenance can only be deferred so long before it can no longer be ignored, capital expenditures for end of life or outdated equipment many times cannot be avoided any longer.

Once the system is broken it will cost more to re-establish the care and services these facilities provide than it would to right the ship with the income that Universal coverage would provide. Allowing these facilities to simply disappear is unthinkable. Getting paid for all of your patients would allow not only better care for the patients, but it would give the clinics and hospitals the cash flow necessary to staff properly at market wages, buy the equipment necessary to give state-of-the-art care, improve the efficiency and cost effectiveness of care and catch up the long delayed maintenance of the physical plant. Green technologies can be applied making them more efficient and comfortable as well as reducing their carbon footprint.

I would also contend that part of the recovery plan should include grants to not-for-profit hospitals in rural areas, under-served areas and those that provide essential trauma and burn care to update and repair their facilities. Many are now operating in buildings older than the most senior staff- an era before CT, Ultrasound, MRI, Laparoscopic Surgery and other technologies were available. The buildings are ill suited to 21st century health care and remodeling or replacing them is critical even if we were not in the financial mess we are in.

This essential work will create plenty of jobs for construction, electricians, plumbers, HVAC and other people. It will consume new equipment and supplies that will need to be manufactured. It will require trucks and trains to deliver those supplies. And finally, it will render superior service to the communities that depend on their services.

Since America will be paying for the bailout and recovery monies borrowed for decades, this is probably the only chance we have to get it right in our lifetime. We can address a number of national problems simultaneously by investing in our hospitals, clinics and adopting a Universal Coverage system. This is our opportunity and the clock is running...

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» RE: You Heard It Here First Posted by: monkeywrench
» RE: You Heard It Here First Posted by: richholland
Single Payer healthcare system badly needed!
Posted by: Jay Randal on Jan 31, 2009 1:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The best stimulus possible for Americans right now would be Single Payer healthcare system replacing the horrible medical insurance system. Taking away the burden and worry of affordable healthcare would be fabulous. Plus it would create new jobs in clinics all over America.
We all have to force Congress and Obama to do this now.

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Observations from the fraying edges of the Social Fabric...
Posted by: Ashoka911 on Jan 31, 2009 3:48 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I say that because I am ER doc.

The ER is the best place to see just how disfunctional our health care "system" is. Anybody without much effort can research and see why it is absurd to to have to manage sore throats, earaches, and hangnails, along with motor vehicle accidents , gunshot wounds and drunk tanks. Why is a bill generated for $500 for a sore throat? Because of "cost shifting". Since people cant have effective primary care and prevention, when they finally come for care they are paying for the Helicopter on the roof and every other dysfunction in our health care system. But this discussion could go on for ever. I really had a minor point and a major one..

Minor: Rich people, when they need REAL emergency care, still have to go to a functioning ER. There is no "boutique" emergency medicine for real emergencies.

Major: There is a lot of discussion about how electronic medical records and informatics systems can improve care. Because of our balkanized medical system and because the subtext to documentation is actually billing (rather than management of medical information as is naturally assumed), we are in danger of automating an dysfunctional system if we dont deal with the payor issues first.

Unfortunately, we are terribly crisis driven. With all of the other problems on the table, it is likely that the Health Care system will have to crash and burn before it gets attention. I am hopeful about Obama, but if he solves ONE of these problems it would be a miracle.

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» I mostly agree but.... Posted by: bthespoon
Thank you thank you thank you
Posted by: bthespoon on Jan 31, 2009 5:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...for this article.

Now can you (all) help us convince Oprah to help us figure out how to develop and finance a massive public information campaign? Outside of Alternet, PDA, Healthcare Now, etc., the majority of Americans are still being horribly misinformed on this issue by moneyed interests of powers that be. We need a massive public information campaign to counter their misinformation one, and I think Oprah and friends could help us do the trick, if only we can convince them it's a worthy goal (because it is). We have the truth on our side, and that helps a lot. All we need to do now is get the truth out to a "critical mass" of Americans who still fear "socialized" or "government run" (gasp) medicine.

I think we're going to have to force or embarrass Obama and the Democrats to do the right thing by the American people and become the honest and real heroes that they could become (if only they will muster honest and real courage).

Oprah's Producers

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Priorities
Posted by: cbconcord on Jan 31, 2009 6:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Single payer healthcare should be our first priority to turn around our financial crisis, to take care of our most vulnerable citizens (ie, live up to our social responsibilities), and to regain our balance as a people.

Good health is a prerequisite to accomplishment. To generosity. To effective leadership. To clear thinking. To being able to help others.

If we have good health and help each other, we'll be alright.

Ditto for the planet. We need good health to help promote the health of the peoples of the planet. Their good health would reinforce ours and be the foundation for whatever else needs to be done in our mutual future.

David Swanson has made the case for acting now.

I'm on board.

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Isn't it strange.................
Posted by: ava1984 on Jan 31, 2009 10:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
how simple a proposition can be; when greed is removed from the equation?

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California Health Insurers Discriminate Against Women, Lawsuit Contends
Posted by: Sister_Lauren on Jan 31, 2009 10:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
California Health Insurers Discriminate Against Women, Lawsuit Contends

The Times reported in June that insurers Aetna Inc. and Anthem Blue Cross charged women in California more than men for individual coverage and that Blue Shield of California was about to follow suit.

Blue Shield spokesman Tom Epstein said at the time, "Our egghead actuaries crunched the numbers based on all the data we have about healthcare" and found that women were more accident-prone than men and more likely to break bones or get sick.


Did they also find out men do these things to women? Break their bones?

My health care provider encouraged my husband to abuse me, their assumption seemed to be I was his service animal, the priority was to have him serviced, not have me safe. I wish a lawsuit would look into that.

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change i can believe in.
Posted by: the way on Jan 31, 2009 10:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nuclear option in the senate. Increase the number of supreme court justices.

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WHAT we pay for is the Critical Issue
Posted by: drricklippin on Jan 31, 2009 11:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not how we pay for it!

I am for more-

-primary care
-prevention
-public health
-ethical and compassionate rationing

Too much emphasis on elecronic health records is a mistake

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa

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Get on these people and don't let up until it's done.
Posted by: tommy_slothrop on Jan 31, 2009 12:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Those of our representatives who would like to vote for single-payer health care need to be able to tell the lobbyists for the companies who fund their campaigns: "I have to support this. My constituents insist on it."

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I called Virginia Foxx
Posted by: luminousball on Jan 31, 2009 12:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
(R)NC 5th and asked for her co-sponsorship and support...we'll see.

lol

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ba
Posted by: mnstra on Jan 31, 2009 1:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Get the Goddamn AMA out of the way and see just how fast a single payer system will be enacted.
Next to Wall Street the AMA is the most maniacal irrational greedy group in America.

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Democrats have a basic moral choice
Posted by: Gregsdiary on Jan 31, 2009 1:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our healthcare System isn't "broken". It's corrupt. Extending a corrupt system so it will include all makes no sense. In fact, it makes it even less likely the corruption will ever be taken out.

The Democrats have been avoiding, evading and outright running away from moral clarity for well over 30 years.

It's time they stopped--they must be tired.

By taking the profit-motive out of healthcare they can put the moral clarity back into their party.

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Cold Chill!
Posted by: weslen1 on Jan 31, 2009 3:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Every time ANY congress person says "Comprehensive" it sends cold chills up and down my spine. "Comprehensive" usually means something easily understood by ALL, whether you're a college grad, a high school grad or a drop out who, never the less, can read and "comprehend" the meaning of what he/she has read. By the time congress long line of "experts" get done with anything, we have nothing buy a TOTALLY INCOMPREHENSIBLE JUMBLE OF NONSENSE left over.
Think about how many 10s of thousands, if not millions, of lives could have been saved or extended many years in the last CENTURY if the US Government had been actually PAYING FOR research into cures for illnesses and for new drugs,FOR THE GOOD OF THE PEOPLE, instead of PAYING corporations to develop them FOR PROFIT.
And the problem with the Republicans is that they are still living in the OLD WEST where their women and children were their property and every problem was solved at the point of a gun, the bigger the better. Not ONE Republican and NOT MANY Democrats are EVER going to vote for single payer health care, "Medicare for all", BECAUSE the pharmaceuticals and INSURANCE execs are their BIGGEST DONORS. That's the bottom line.

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Update
Posted by: davidswanson on Jan 31, 2009 5:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In addition to changing the rules for a filibuster, there is now also the option of Obama appointing a Republican senator to Sec of Commerce from a state with a Dem governor and making sure that governor appoints a Democrat. This is only a short-term fix, but it's more likely to happen and may happen very soon.

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Wisconsin will get screwed. BIG TIME!!
Posted by: AJR Journal on Feb 1, 2009 4:34 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wisconsin has one of the lowest percentages of uninsured citizens in the nation. We will end up being taxed to pay for states that have much higher uninsured (New Mexico, Texas). It is a BIG transfer payment. Single payer is terrible idea, medical savings accounts are a superior plan.

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Doctors and Nurses - Public Funding of Education
Posted by: KitCarson on Feb 1, 2009 9:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To start a full nationwide healthcare programs we need to ensure we have enough caregivers. I suggest that we publicly fund "loan" programs for Doctors, Nurses, and healthcare workers. This "program" should start immediately and once universal healthcare is available we will have enough available trained medical staff. The loans would be forgiven for each year of service. If the individual choses a totally private practice, the loan would be repaid per the original terms. This is being done in some areas of service for public health and military now. The program needs to be expanded so that when college is completed the Doctors and Nurses aren't indebted to the pharmaceuticals and HMOs.

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winston
Posted by: roli on Feb 1, 2009 10:36 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hello,
HR 676 healthcare for all. One payer system, so simple to understand. One card ,nationwide. for all Americans. Like Medicare. If we need to have a supplemental, to cover another part of a 20 % we can do that too. first we have to get it on a ballot, nationwide, so tell CONGRESS put it on a ballot, let the PEOPLE vote.

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its not done yet, nor is it even being discussed...
Posted by: Bearzerker on Feb 3, 2009 11:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... so during this current term, I doubt it... but probably in his last term [if he gets a second chance]

... will he risk everything now and loose it all in 2012 ... or play coy till his second term and then try and move a mountain for a legacy!

he can do it now... not later... I'm just hoping for a visionary leader and not a political mouse...

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