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Health & Wellness

Candidates' Focus on Mandates Hinders Health Care Reform

By Jacob S. Hacker, Campaign for America's Future. Posted March 7, 2008.


Clinton and Obama should stop fixating on the individual mandate and focus on what really matters: affordable and accessible health insurance.
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Back in the early 1990s when health reform went down in flames, there was one word that kindled rage in the hearts of reform's opponents: "mandate." This time around, Democrats insisted they would relegate the offending word to the dustbin of history. Now, employers would have a "choice" of providing coverage or helping their workers pay for it (no mandate there!), and Americans would get to pick their health plans from a new "menu" of options (just like at Denny's!). Universal health care had a kinder, gentler face.

So why in the world are presidential candidates Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton beating one another up about, of all things, health care mandates? Clinton has said that Obama's plan would leave millions more uninsured than hers, because it lacks a requirement that all adults obtain coverage (a so-called individual mandate). Meanwhile, Obama's campaign has countered -- in a mailing that's, sadly, a preview of what Republicans will say about mandates of any sort -- that a mandate would amount to forcing people to buy coverage they can't afford.

For anyone who follows health policy, it's a sordid spectacle. For anyone who doesn't, it must be totally incomprehensible -- like watching two rocket scientists boil a discussion of space travel down to a squabble over the angle of re-entry. And yet, arcane as it may seem, the debate carries real dangers. Fourteen years after President Clinton tried and failed to achieve universal coverage, Democrats are making the same old mistake of letting technical litmus tests blind them to the larger challenges they face on health care.

The current enthusiasm for individual mandates rests almost entirely on the experience of single state: Massachusetts, which was implementing an individual mandate just as Democrats were formulating their campaign plans. Never mind that the Massachusetts law has proved to be a mixed bag, with hundreds of thousands of residents still uninsured despite the mandate. A consensus was born that the mandate was the key to an odd-bedfellows coalition of Democrats and Republicans, conservatives and liberals, progressive activists and business leaders.

This consensus is largely mythical. Republicans -- including Mitt Romney, who supported the mandate as governor of Massachusetts -- have raced away from the idea faster than a speeding bullet point. Instead, top Republicans (and yes, that includes John McCain) are calling for the encouragement of Health Savings Accounts and new tax breaks for individually purchased insurance -- a far cry from even the relatively minimal Massachusetts approach of requiring that people obtain coverage and regulating insurance to ensure its availability.

Or consider California, where reform efforts fell apart last year. There, the individual mandate turned out to be not the key to compromise, but a major sticking point -- with many of the strongest supporters of reform reasonably worried that cash-strapped workers would be compelled to spend a huge share of their income on private insurance that provided them with little real protection.


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See more stories tagged with: clinton, obama, mccain, election 2008, health-care, mandate

Jacob S. Hacker is a Yale University political science professor and a fellow at the New America Foundation. He is the author of The Great Risk Shift: The Assault on American Jobs, Families, Health Care, and Retirement -- And How You Can Fight Back, as well as of the "Health Care for America" proposal recently released as part of the Economic Policy Institute's Agenda for Shared Prosperity.

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It is very simple
Posted by: Rod on Mar 7, 2008 11:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
everyone gets medicaid. The private insurers have really mucked things up, and I see no reason to let them continue. People can then purchase gap insurance or whatever if they want it. Then use a windfall prfits tax for the stockprokers, oil companies and defense contractors along with payroll dedections just like SSI. Done. If you are a Dr you accept it.

what is so hard!

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» RE: It is very simple Posted by: carbon-based
» Oh god, come ON Posted by: emmas
» *overprivileged Posted by: emmas
We need a National Health Service, not Medicare or insurance programs.
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Mar 7, 2008 11:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why?

1. A National Health Service funded by taxes and managed by the government would have a huge incentive to promote preventive health care in the public. Americans have so many health problems because of a diet high in fatty meats, preservatives and additives, sugar and corn syrup, and booze and tobacco. For the private health industry, that's just more cash cows. A publicly funded health service, on the other hand, would be motivated to invest in preventive care.

2. Insurance money just goes into the pockets of private investors and drug companies. By focusing on insurance, you ignore the problem of artificially inflated health costs - which are due to things like monopoly practices by drug companies, dishonest claims about new drugs, doctors with too many ties to drug and medical device corporations, the concerted effort to keep cheap generic versions of drugs off the market, and so on.

The fact is that the U.S. pays more per capita for health care than any other country on the planet, yet ranks 37 out of 191 in terms of health (see WHO report 2000. Only addressing insurance means costs are unaffected.

Imagine if Americans were as healthy as say, the Japanese - what would happen to health care costs? What would happen to pharmaceutical and hospital profit margins, in other words?

That's why most countries have decided that the primary provider of health care services should be the government. This is not "socialism", any more than having government-run police and fire departments is socialism. Nothing is being "mandated" - you can always hire your own private medical team to follow you around 24-7, if you can afford to - just as you can hire a bodyguard if you want.

The argument is that a certain basic level of medical care should be provided to all U.S. citizens by the government - directly, not using private contractors (Cities don't hire Blackwater to operate their police departments, do they?). If we didn't have such a bloated military budget, funding such a basic health care system, modeled after the British one, would be no problem.

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McCain's Mega Blunder Remark on US Health Care Tues.
Posted by: drricklippin on Mar 7, 2008 11:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hacker is right-

Here is where the DEMS should focus.

In his victory speech on Tues 4 March in Texas Republican annointed Presidential Candidate John McCain had the audacity to characterize the US health Care System is "the best in the world". WHAT?????(Get the transcript!)

THIS IS A HUGE McCAIN BLUNDER WHICH DEMONSTRATES HOW SERIOUSLY OUT OF TOUCH THIS CANDIDATE IS ON THE HEALTH CARE ISSUE-AN SSUE OF GREAT IMPORTANCE TO AMERICANS.

Is there really any serious student of US health care that could possibly conclude that, given the overwhelming amount of data and by many basic measures, that Candidate McCain's assertion is anything but bizarre?

This remark by McCain on Tues should justifiably cause the DEMS to salivate!

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa
http://medicalcrises.blogspot.com

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I hate campaigning even more than taking a bath once a week.
Posted by: Sojourner on Mar 7, 2008 12:51 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Campaigning is serious only in its results. Yes, Bush1 may have gotten hurt because he broke his promise not to raise taxes. But the same thing didn't hurt Reagan. Ergo, promises made during campaigns are soon forgetten after the dust settles.

However, thank you for this careful consideration of what are likely to be the results of either the Clinton or Obama health plans. I remember how Kennedy and Nixon argued over Quemoy and Matsu in 1960. We Americans need our combat, even if over nothing.

I want Clinton and Obama now to sit down and give us some Fireside Chats rather than the msm's formula debates. We will get enough of those after the conventions. Right now we need education rather than entertainment, and it might not spill so much blood on the Demos floor.

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Medicare for Everyone ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Mar 7, 2008 8:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Government already takes care of 50% of the population.

Add up all federal, state , county , school district, Medicare, Medicaide, Vets , Miliatry and Children and it's 50% or better.

Just add the rest ...

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HR 676
Posted by: onevoter on Mar 7, 2008 11:47 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
HR 676 co-sponsored by John Conyers and Dennis Kucinich would provide universal health care for all and eliminate for-profit insurnace companies. It figures that Kucinich was marginalized by the mainstream media and leaders in both parties. Too many of them still want to bring the insurance companies to sit at the table to work this out.

A previous post brought up the valid point that this isn't socialized medicine any more than is having police and fire departments. Could you imagine calling 911 when your house is burning down to see if you are covered by an insurance plan or are in their "network"?

Medicare for all....

http://www.guaranteedhealthcare.org/

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Public Health
Posted by: Southern Gal on Mar 8, 2008 6:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The United States has a very valuable health system in place to address promotion of good health practices and prevention of diseases. The Public Health system promotes and implements disease prevention programs including programs to prevent obesity and tobacco use, programs promoting physical activity and nutrition, diabetes prevention, etc. Every state has a public health department on the state level and some level of services on the local level. Local health departments also provide some clinical services to Medicaid clients and everybody on a sliding scale according to income. These state and local health departments are struggling from insufficient resources, because the focus in health care is on treatment. Just ask the Centers for Disease Control how much Public Health funds have been cut, particularly with the Bush administration. We can all have a voice in asking our federal government and state public health departments to provide adequate funding for these programs, particularly prevention. There is also a new federal certification program for state health departments that would go a long way in insuring quality public health programs and clinical care.

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» RE: Public Health Posted by: CatDad
» Truth, Lies, and Statistics Posted by: gellero
» RE: Truth, Lies, and Statistics Posted by: mkdelta69
Taxes
Posted by: FSadley on Mar 10, 2008 6:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Don't you agree that we folks pay enough in taxes already, and that with a little rearrangement of how our tax dollars are spent, we could fund a very nice Health Service. Let's stop paying for wars and nation building in other peoples' nations, and build ours.

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» RE: Taxes Posted by: mkdelta69
private health insurance very unreliable
Posted by: B. Spoon on Mar 11, 2008 9:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Health insurers' success depends upon charging for goods and services that are not delivered. The more they can charge and the less they can deliver, the better off they are. They are unbelievably well off precisely because they charge so much and deliver so little. Why do not all Americans (uniquely in our civilized world) understand that this is not (but in fact the opposite of) a model of success for consumers? These are not only free market rules they're breaking, but also ones of common human decency.

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