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Health & Wellness

The Candidates Need More Than a Patchwork Approach to Health Care

By Marie Cocco, Washington Post Writers Group. Posted August 28, 2008.


Though Obama's health plan is far better than McCain's, it still only tinkers around the edges. What we need is a system overhaul.
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WASHINGTON -- In the midst of a Democratic convention that is high on psychodrama and necessarily low on wonkish detail, it hardly seems fair to throw around a word like "entitlements." Besides, Republicans are set to commandeer the media spotlight with their own convention next week, and they can be expected to use the E-word once or twice, probably with modifiers to make it sound dirty. Examples: references to "runaway spending'' on "entitlements" and the need to "rein them in."

So it is worth pausing during these orchestrated partisan celebrations to look afresh at entitlements. There is no more recent evidence of their enduring value than the latest report from the Census Bureau on the number of Americans who are doing without health insurance.

The headline seems counterintuitive, if not downright baffling: The number of people without insurance dipped in 2007, falling from 47 million to just under 46 million. Did the private insurance industry suddenly make it easier for employers to pay for this benefit and so make fewer of their workers do without? No. Did more Americans manage to buy policies on their own, using the magic of the free market coupled with such conservative panaceas as tax-favored health savings accounts? No.

The government became the insurer of last resort.

Without a boost in Medicare and Medicaid enrollment, the number of uninsured people would have risen once again last year. The Census data show that the percentage of Americans getting their coverage through the government jumped almost a full percentage point, from 27 to 27.8 percent. Most of the increase came in Medicaid, the joint state and federal program that insures the poor. Medicare, which insures the elderly, and Medicaid combined now provide coverage for 81 million Americans.

At the same time, the percentage of people who get private insurance through employers fell again, to 59.3 percent from 59.7 percent in 2006. It's this decline that has driven up the number of uninsured people -- there are about 6 million more uninsured now than there were in 2001. Which means, of course, that in the current economic downturn more people will become uninsured as businesses shed jobs and try to contain their own costs by curtailing coverage. The employer-based health insurance system, for anyone who hasn't yet noticed, is crumbling.

So why would the two presidential candidates seek to build a new system upon such a creaky foundation? There are only bad answers.

To be honest, Republican John McCain would effectively destroy the employer-based system by breaking it up even further, giving individuals tax breaks to buy insurance on their own. It won't work for the simple reason that the whole concept of insurance is based upon pooling risk: Those who stay healthy effectively subsidize those who get sick, and premiums remain lower than they otherwise would be for a sole individual or family. Besides, after years of tax breaks and other efforts to boost the individual insurance market that were put in place by congressional Republicans, the percentage of people who directly purchase insurance on their own also is declining, the Census Bureau says.

McCain at least has a partisan excuse for taking this approach. The free-market ideologues in his own party are convinced of their correctness, even when their faith is easily punctured by facts.

But what about the Democrats? From the start of their primaries, it was clear that the major candidates were too skittish about taking their talk about universal, affordable health insurance to the logical conclusion: that there is no simple or affordable way to achieve this so long as we continue to rely on something that's neither universal nor even predictable -- employment -- as the basis for coverage. All of the health insurance plans outlined by the major Democratic contenders, including Barack Obama, essentially would patch holes in the existing system.

Yet the employment-based system of insurance is providing coverage to fewer people while costs, even for the best-insured families, continue to mount. Meanwhile, government programs are performing exactly as they were intended to, providing a necessary safety net -- so long as the state and federal governments fund them sufficiently.

All of us would rather build a house on a firm foundation rather than a shaky one. The illogic of doing just the opposite on health care has never been more apparent.

(c) 2008, Washington Post Writers Group

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See more stories tagged with: health, health care, barack obama, john mccain, medicare, medicaid, entitlements

Marie Cocco is a prize-winning syndicated columnist on political and cultural topics for The Washington Post Writers Group. She is a frequent commentator on national TV and radio shows.

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Get rid of all private insurance companies
Posted by: tabt on Aug 28, 2008 12:23 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is a remedy for the "patchwork" system of healthcare
that plagues our country. That remedy is to outlaw private insurance companies because their relentless mission to ever increase their already astronomical profits, has made them a public health danger to everyone.

I amn 58 years old and during my working life of almost 40 years, I have experienced all types of private insurance.

Approx. 12 years ago I became too ill to continue working and after a long and very hard fight, I was granted Social Security Disability (SSDI) and the Medicare that came with it. I still have to pay monthly premiums, Medicare comes out of my disability benefits. However, Medicare is still the best, most cost effective insurance that I have ever had. All the private hospitals and private doctors where I live take it. I can see any doctor of my own choosing. No pre-approvals for medical procedures have ever been required. I do not need Medicare authorization to see a specialist. No doctor or hospital that I've gotten medical services from has ever been refused payment by Medicare.

It is true that doctors and hospitals must agree to accept fees that are lower than those charged by private insurance companies, but 40% of something is still more lucrative than 0% of nothing, if private insurers refuse to pay for services after the fact, because they have figured out yet another way to avoid paying anything at all, or initially refused outright to cover such services.

Federal government funded and administered, single payer health coverage, provided by private doctors and hospitals, can and does work. It's already in place. Without the need for doctors and hospitals to pay additional staff to verify coverage, bill and collect from hundreds of different private plans, their costs of doing business would drop and, therefore, the profit margin discrepancy between public and private insurance fees would lessen.

Taxes from the healthiest, most highly paid employees would, of course, susidize the lower paid, sicker and/or unemployed people. However, that is already the case now.

Federal government, single payer, health coverage for all citizens, delivered by private docs, private hospitals and other private providers is the solution to the dreadful, inhumane medical mess that this country is in.

The problem will not be solved by inviting the insurance companies to particpate in friendly bi-partisan dicussions around the mythical Obama big table, nor will it be solved by McCain's, "not a problem for me", just ignore the whole thing, Republican approach.

It must be done by wresting power from the obscenely wealthy corporate insurance companies who have made sure to pay off, aka contribute heavily, to the campaigns of both. To counteract that, the great majority of Americans must let their elected officials, from local to national, know that they will no longer be voted into office until single payer, public, quality healthcare is a reality for all.

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S.T.O.P.
Posted by: TarryFaster on Sep 1, 2008 1:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The election of a new President is WAY over-rated and actually diverting our attention and energy away from a process that could completely eliminate the Republican Party. Interested in learning how we can Stop The Objectionable Politicians? Then click on this link: http://www.cloudbyte.com/stop.html

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