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Health & Wellness

John McCain's Greed-Based Health Care Plan

By Paul Krugman, The New York Times. Posted April 6, 2008.


Mr. McCain's approach to health care is based on the fantasy that the magic of the marketplace can produce cheap health care for everyone.
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Elizabeth Edwards has cancer. John McCain has had cancer in the past. Last weekend, Mrs. Edwards bluntly pointed out that neither of them would be able to get insurance under Mr. McCain's health care plan.

It's about time someone said that and, more generally, made the case that Mr. McCain's approach to health care is based on voodoo economics -- not the supply-side voodoo that claims that cutting taxes increases revenues (though Mr. McCain says that, too), but the equally foolish claim, refuted by all available evidence, that the magic of the marketplace can produce cheap health care for everyone.

As Mrs. Edwards pointed out, the McCain health plan would do nothing to prevent insurance companies from denying coverage to those, like her and Mr. McCain, who have pre-existing medical conditions.

The McCain campaign's response was condescending and dismissive -- a statement that Mrs. Edwards doesn't understand the comprehensive nature of the senator's approach, which would harness "the power of competition to produce greater coverage for Americans," reducing costs so that even people with pre-existing conditions could afford care.

This is nonsense on multiple levels.

For one thing, even if you buy the premise that competition would reduce health care costs, the idea that it could cut costs enough to make insurance affordable for Americans with a history of cancer or other major diseases is sheer fantasy.

Beyond that, there's no reason to believe in these alleged cost reductions. Insurance companies do try to hold down "medical losses" -- the industry's term for what happens when an insurer actually ends up having to honor its promises by paying a client's medical bills. But they don't do this by promoting cost-effective medical care.

Instead, they hold down costs by only covering healthy people, screening out those who need coverage the most -- which was exactly the point Mrs. Edwards was making. They also deny as many claims as possible, forcing doctors and hospitals to spend large sums fighting to get paid.

And the international evidence on health care costs is overwhelming: the United States has the most privatized system, with the most market competition -- and it also has by far the highest health care costs in the world.

Yet the McCain health plan -- actually a set of bullet points on the campaign's Web site -- is entirely based on blind faith that competition among private insurers will solve all problems.

I'd like to single out one of these bullet points in particular -- the first substantive proposal Mr. McCain offers (the preceding entries are nothing but feel-good boilerplate).

As I've mentioned in past columns, the Veterans Health Administration is one of the few clear American success stories in the struggle to contain health care costs. Since it was reformed during the Clinton years, the V.A. has used the fact that it's an integrated system -- a system that takes long-term responsibility for its clients' health -- to deliver an impressive combination of high-quality care and low costs. It has also taken the lead in the use of information technology, which has both saved money and reduced medical errors.

Sure enough, Mr. McCain wants to privatize and, in effect, dismantle the V.A. Naturally, this destructive agenda comes wrapped in the flag: "America's veterans have fought for our freedom," says the McCain Web site. "We should give them freedom to choose to carry their V.A. dollars to a provider that gives them the timely care at high quality and in the best location."

That's a recipe for having healthy veterans drop out of the system, undermining its integrated nature and draining away resources.

Mr. McCain, then, is offering a completely wrongheaded approach to health care. But the way the campaign for the Democratic nomination has unfolded raises questions about how effective his eventual opponent will be in making that point.

Indeed, while Mrs. Edwards focused her criticism on Mr. McCain, she also made it clear that she prefers Hillary Clinton's approach -- "Sen. Clinton's plan is a great plan" -- to Barack Obama's. The Clinton plan closely resembles the plan for universal coverage that John Edwards laid out more than a year ago. By contrast, Mr. Obama offers a watered-down plan that falls short of universality, and it would have higher costs per person covered.

Worse yet, Mr. Obama attacked his Democratic rivals' health plans using conservative talking points about choice and the evil of having the government tell you what to do. That's going to make it hard -- if he is the nominee -- to refute Mr. McCain when he makes similar arguments on behalf of such things as privatizing veterans' care.

Still, health care ought to be a major issue in this campaign. I wonder if we'll have time to discuss it after we deal with more important subjects, like bowling and basketball.

© 2007 The New York Times

AlterNet is making this New York Times material available in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107: This article is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.

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Single payer healthcare
Posted by: sasquuatch55 on Apr 6, 2008 1:46 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Give us all Medicare! Insurance is a scam.

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Take this article with a grain of salt
Posted by: HavieOwns on Apr 6, 2008 1:57 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Seriously we all must admit there is something wrong with the health care in America however the Democrats do not offer a plan that will work..trust me...if you think universal health care is the way then ask your self this where is the money going to come from. Also lets say your a young 21 year old who is in shape and is healthy lives on their own has a job and goes to college well then you would be talking to me! I have health insurance plan that suits me perfect and only costs me about 1500 a year well guess what with McCain's plan I can do that with either demos plan could i do that heck no....and i will be getting money from McCain to pay that off and have money left over! In the end Trust me McCain's plan has flaws but will work because its up to you as an individual to make it work!

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Socialized medicine: good enough for Cheney,
Posted by: hurricane hugo on Apr 6, 2008 4:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
good enough for me!

:D

jdfu!

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Mccain, just like every other pol. A greedy bastard ready to keep the RIGGED market intact.
Posted by: maxpayne on Apr 6, 2008 5:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
People, this is not a free market but a RIGGED market. See, the market is RIGGED to keep out the natural and healthy medicines (example, hemp and stevia - google it please). In the meantime, the FDA and DEA are "happy" with high fructose corn syrup, aspartame, viagra, etc ... Tell me one FDA approved drug hasn't had a side effect. They're all produced from petroleum-based derivatives so you might as well drink gasoline. And of course, if you're dumb enough to fall for those sleazy FDA-approved commercials from Big Pharma, you'll beg your doctor or even threaten him or her to give you a prescription to that artificially dangerously manufactured drug regardless of the consequences.

If Mccain really believed in a free market, the first thing he would do is get rid of Big Pharma, FDA, and DEA. Ah, but he doesn't want to lose those "lovely" bribes from Big Pharma now does he?

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Terrorist
Posted by: HeKnew on Apr 6, 2008 5:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
McLizard, Shillary or SmoovB

That's IT?


Direct Democracy

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» RE: Terrorist Posted by: estelevistaban
But what evidence!!
Posted by: talkville on Apr 7, 2008 2:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All of a sudden one sees Montel Williams, caring and concerned, traveling around the country representing the Pharmaceutical Industry, caring and concerned, and offering people (who they suddenly just became aware of) 'help' with their prescription costs and even 'free' prescriptions. All of a sudden one sees Humana (remember Mr Frist? anyone?) and other Insurance Industry people offering, in a caring and concerned manner, individual policies for those who have no insurance or are unable to afford them ("as LOW as $167 per month" one says!!) Oh boy!! We're on the way to a healthy, happy and oh so grateful 100% of the population! Who would have known they were SO concerned and worried about our well-being and health! Rest easy, friends, vote McCain and these philanthropic and gentle Giants will make sure that you are fine!

Bunk doctors, bunk hospitals, bunk insurance, bunk HMO's, bunk pharmaceuticals. The only differences lie in who gets the Top Bunk and who the Bottom. And of course who gets squeezed the most for the least and vice-versa: I think I know the answer to THAT one.

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The Difference between McCain, Edwards and You and Me
Posted by: Urstrly on Apr 7, 2008 11:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Unless I'm mistaken, Elizabeth Edwards' point is merely hypothetical, because McCain is a Senator and Elizabeth is married to a retired one, and they have access to federal health insurance which is better than any of us mere consumers can ever hope for.

Voters should demand that Congress participate in these markets that they're so supportive of. The rationale was that people who served there were passing up rich financial opportunities and that they deserved some security for this sacrifice. I guess you could still argue that Members of Congress could earn far more (than the base $167,300)as lobbyists or trial lawyers, like John Edwards, but that's cold comfort to some poor single mother working two jobs, neither of which offers decent insurance for herself or her kids.

Let's level the playing field and either offer everyone federal health insurance or make Congress give it up.

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» RE: Yes! Posted by: nightgaunt
So how long do we have to wait?
Posted by: dkm on Apr 7, 2008 6:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our medical care system has always been free market since the beginning of the republic. We have had such additions as medical insurance, employer paid insurance, but by and large, for the average person, the government has had little influence on their medical costs. Despite that, our medical bills each year take a bigger and bigger bite out of our Gross Domestic Product so that now we are somewhere around 15%. Not too many years ago it was at 8%. When is the free market going to start reversing that trend? It has had over 200 years and the trend in the US, as opposed to every other industrialized country, is in the wrong direction. Could it be that the theory is just completely wrong!!?? Someone once commented on how an ugly fact can just ruin a beautiful theory.

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Ama never,ever will allow
Posted by: compu on Apr 8, 2008 11:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
perhaps what need be done is something like:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barefoot_doctor

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McCain VERY Vulnerable om Health Care Issue...
Posted by: drricklippin on Apr 10, 2008 10:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...He is completely out of touch on this mega-issue.

The night he went over the number of delegates to secure the Pub nomination his victory speech included reference to the US "having the best health care system in the world". This was a gross mistatement of the facts proven many times over and almost a bizarre perception to hold in 2008.

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa

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