Thursday, February 28, 2013

Winning Medicare for All? “I Like Our Chances”

Despite insights, Time magazine’s cover story falls short on remedy

In his recent Time magazine article, Steven Brill paints a vivid and rather depressing picture of the perverse malfunctioning of our health care system � overpriced and technology-addicted � and he acknowledges some of the advantages of Medicare.

Sadly, however, he shies away from an endorsement of the obvious solution: an improved Medicare for all, i.e. single-payer national health insurance.

I�ll come back to that a little later. However, let me first say that Brill masterfully illuminates much of what�s wrong with U.S. health care.

Take, for example, the �chargemaster� list: an archival, bizarrely hyper-inflated price list in each hospital based on some long-lost secret formulas and automatically inflated over time.

As a physician and health policy researcher, I�ve long known about the massive charges offered to non-contract payers (read: individuals not covered by a public or private insurer), charges that are completely meaningless for costing studies because they�re almost never paid in full and don�t represent the real resources used to provide care. However, what Brill lays out brilliantly (pun intended) is the following:

Some very poor (lower-middle income) people actually do pay the sky-high chargemaster rates. There is a cottage industry (growing, I�m sure, if nothing else due to this article) to help those hapless souls negotiate steep discounts on these ridiculous bills. Hospital administrators either refuse to discuss the chargemaster list or offer up the most heinous, transparently nonsensical justifications for using it. Perhaps worst of all, the CEOs of large not-for-profit providers are paid literally millions of dollars (OK, not tens of millions like big for-profit companies, but still �), thereby introducing into a supposedly public-good-oriented setting the compensation (and marketing) tone of for-profit industry. When these not-for-profits list their �charity� care they value it at the price levels in the chargemaster, even though the cost to produce those services is less than 10 percent of the chargemaster price.

In these and other instances, Brill performs an outstanding public service. However, he regrettably stops short (or his editors stopped him short) of explaining why a single-payer health care system is the only effective remedy for the mess we find ourselves in today. This despite the fact that much of what he says would lead you directly to that conclusion.

He goes so far as to quote others, including John Gunn, Sloan-Kettering�s chief operating officer, who says, �If you could figure out a way to pay doctors better and separately fund research � adequately, I could see where a single-payer approach would be the most logical solution. � It would certainly be a lot more efficient than hospitals like ours having hundreds of people sitting around filling out dozens of different kinds of bills for dozens of insurance companies.�

Yet Brill characterizes single payer, the most logical solution, as �unrealistic� and fraught with the danger of government overreach and intrusion, summarily dismissing it. Need we mention insurance-company overreach and intrusion in the doctor-patient relationship? Need we note the freedom of Medicare beneficiaries to choose their own doctor and hospital, something that would also characterize a single-payer system?

Incidentally, Brill sharply undervalues the government role in paying for health care. He says that the federal government pays $800 billion per year out of our $2.8 trillion health bill, with the remainder mainly picked up by private insurers and individuals.

The $800 billion federal spending on Medicare and the federal portion of Medicaid is right. However, when you add in other federal programs, the state portion of Medicaid, other state and local programs, health insurance for government employees, and tax subsidies, the total government contribution is over 60 percent of total health spending, and rising. Our government already spends enough to pay for universal single payer!

Single-payer health reform is clearly the answer. We need to create the meme and the momentum and the aura of inevitability to do the right thing � despite the opposition of individuals and organizations with massive vested financial interests in the private health industry. They can be overcome.

Think Lincoln and the 13th amendment. As he said (or at least Daniel Day-Lewis said in the movie), regarding prospects of passing the amendment out of Congress, despite doom-saying by his advisers � �I like our chances� (slight smile).

I like our chances on single payer because it�s now so obvious how irremediably broken our system is, and the house of cards will eventually fall. It�s all about perseverance and timing.

James G. Kahn, M.D., M.P.H., is a professor at the Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, Global Health Services, and the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, all at the University of California, San Francisco. He is also past president of the California chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program.

New York Medical School Widens Nontraditional Path For Admissions

More From Shots - Health News HealthChange In Law May Spur Campus Action On Sexual AssaultsHealthStrategy To Prevent HIV In Newborns Sparks Enthusiasm And SkepticismHealthNintendo Wii Helped Budding Surgeons Move To Head Of The ClassHealthNew York Medical School Widens Nontraditional Path For Admissions

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

A Dozen States Already Showing Leadership on Health Insurance Marketplaces

Because of the Supreme Court�s clear and final decision upholding the Affordable Care Act, middle class families and small businesses have greater security when it comes to health care � they can keep their current coverage or, if they need to or want to, search for new, affordable insurance options. In 2014, we can look forward to new state-based health insurance marketplaces, called Affordable Insurance Exchanges, where consumers can compare health care plans and choose a private health plan that meets their needs. Across the country, a dozen states have committed in recent weeks that they will lead efforts to create these Exchanges.

There is no one-size-fits-all approach, and each state has the opportunity to tailor its Exchange to meet its citizens� needs. States have the flexibility to decide whether to build a state Exchange, work with other states, or partner with the federal government. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is committed to flexibility in our support of the states� progress in whatever route they choose, as well as providing planning and implementation funds to help the states to establish the marketplace that suits their residents� needs.

We have already begun to hear from governors on their states� commitment to establishing these one-stop-shop marketplaces.

As Rhode Island Governor Lincoln D. Chafee noted in his letter, he signed an executive order in September 2011 to begin work on an Exchange, an effort he says �will provide Rhode Island families and small businesses with access to more affordable, high quality health insurance coverage.�

Maryland Governor Martin O�Malley wrote that Maryland�s state-based Exchange is �well underway and we continue to make significant progress with strong support from the state�s political leadership and broad-based stakeholder community.�

Even though the official deadline is November 16, I have already received letters from a dozen states representing nearly one-third of all Americans committing to establishing an exchange. Letters have come from:

California Gov. Edmund G. Brown, Jr.Colorado Gov. John W. HickenlooperConnecticut Gov. Dannel P. MalloyHawaii Gov. Neil Abercrombie.Maryland Gov. Martin O�MalleyMassachusetts Gov. Deval L. PatrickMinnesota Gov. Mark DaytonNew York Gov. Andrew M. CuomoOregon Gov. John A. Kitzhaber, M.D.Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln D. ChafeeVermont Gov. Peter ShumlinWashington Gov. Christine O. Gregoire

I appreciate the hard work many states have engaged in over the past months to begin laying the foundations for the Exchanges, and HHS will be as flexible as possible to help them get over the finish line by 2014. Just late last month, I announced the availability of additional funds to help the states deliver these new health insurance marketplaces, and, as many governors had requested, they will now have until the end of 2014 to apply for the funds. And on January 1, 2014, consumers in every state will have access to an exchange.

As President Obama said after the Supreme Court ruling, it is time to move forward. Since the health care reform law was passed two years ago, we have worked closely with states to begin building these Exchanges where Americans will be able to choose private health insurance plans based on price and quality�and we will continue to work side-by-side with the states to provide the health care quality and security that our citizens need and deserve.

You can read and download the Governors' letters on Exchanges here.

Constitutional or Not, It’s a Win-Win for the Health Insurance Industry

The recent Supreme Court hearing on the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), or �ObamaCare,� has reopened the false debate surrounding the President�s signature legislation.

Whether to uphold or strike down the ACA isn�t about how to provide truly universal healthcare in a sustainable way. Common sense solutions such as improving and expanding Medicare to everyone were kept completely off the table as the law was being written. The ACA is designed to bail out the for-profit healthcare industry before their profits flat line and the court�s decision will reflect how best to do that.

The health insurance industry spent $1 million a day to influence the national healthcare reform debate in their favor. Written by Liz Fowler of the nation�s largest insurer, WellPoint, the law delivers 30 million new customers and $447 billion in taxpayer subsidies directly to the private health insurance companies.

If fully implemented, the ACA will leave at least 23 million people uninsured, egregious insurance company practices such as charging older people more for policies, denials and delays in approving care, and high rates of medical bankruptcies due to inadequate insurance plans, will continue.

The Supreme Court�s ruling, expected by the end of June, could have a number of different outcomes.

1) The punt: The Court could punt the decision on the constitutionality of the law until after the insurance mandate goes into effect in 2014 and someone has actually been fined for not purchasing health insurance. The court would then take up the case again in 2015 when people have to provide proof of health insurance when they file their taxes.

2) Throwing out the mandate: The Court could toss out the mandate declaring it unconstitutional, affirming the arguments that mandating people to purchase private health insurance is beyond Congress� role of regulating interstate commerce. The rest of the law could remain intact allowing some of the beneficial provisions to be implemented such as the Medicaid expansion and the regulation of health insurance company practices.

3) Throwing out the whole thing: If the mandate is deemed unconstitutional, the court rules that entire law must be struck down. Without the mandate, the ban on preexisting conditions restrictions and community rating provisions would drive up costs and reduce coverage. The mandate is therefore inseparable from the entire law and the entire law will be struck down.

4) Upholding the law: This Supreme Court has a track record of ruling in favor of the corporate interests (see Citizens United), and the ACA is based on legislation crafted by the health insurance industry. This should not be a surprising outcome. If the law is thrown out and the status quo in healthcare continues, the insurance companies are left with a playing field stacked in their favor without regulations that may eventually threaten profits. Costs will continue to skyrocket; more people will be without insurance.

If the ACA is upheld, many of the law�s provisions won�t be enacted for another two years, plenty of time for the industry to whittle down regulations that get in the way of profits and still have the 30 million customer stimulus. The Supreme Court will rule according to what is best for the corporate interests. Upheld or struck down, the for-profit healthcare model continues to take public money for a public good and make obscene profit. The opposition to the legislation mostly came from people saying the law doesn’t go far enough in making healthcare a right.Recognizing the enemy in this debate is a first step toward building unity in fighting back.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Suffering and Dying for Healthcare in Las Vegas

By Donna Smith–

Happy Easter everyone. Happy season of new life and blooming flowers. It�s the season of rebirth and regeneration. So, if that�s the case, then what the hell is up with letting thousands of people wait and suffer and die because we do not have the money to treat their illnesses anymore? In Las Vegas. It�s Vegas, baby. But it could be Sioux City or Boston or even Missoula. It is the reality of our national healthcare disgrace in America.

If you watched CBS�s �60 Minutes� on Sunday, April 4, then you saw the same horrifying story I did. Budget cuts had to be made at the county hospital in the recession, the hospital CEO said. Outpatient chemotherapy clinic is closed. Letters go out to the patients. Treatment ends. People suffer with growing tumors, broken bones from metastasized cancers; people suffer to breathe. The budget is cut. It�s horrifying stuff this national disgrace. (If you didn�t see it, you can watch it here.)

Want a chocolate Easter egg? How about some jelly beans in a basket?

Meanwhile, a young mom and cancer patient in Las Vegas goes untreated� she worked and had insurance until she got too sick. Then, well, you know the drill by now. She�s dying. She�s suffering. She even had her hospital bed repossessed. She�s one of us. She is me. She is you. She is your child. And she is just one of thousands who got the letters telling them their treatments were ending. Done. No more care.

And now there is no bail-out for her or for any of us if we�re in her shoes. Where�s her bail-out? No one is even talking that way or thinking that way. Healthcare reform is on their radar, they say. We�ll get it done this year, they proudly exclaim. Meanwhile, this woman suffers. Another person dies. What is there to be proud of?

Could this Congress act now on our behalf, please? There is a war against humanity going on in these United States. My Congress and my President are to be keeping me safe and secure in my home. But so long as they know of these lethal abuses within the healthcare system, they are not honoring their commitments to me. Or to you.

This isn�t Iraq or Afghanistan. It�s Las Vegas.

We could see swift action, if we had lawmakers who saw this as an attack on our citizens. For instance, there could be a moratorium on any patient having cancer treatment discontinued due to budget cuts or insurance company bottom lines. Clean and clear. No more letters cutting off treatment. While they dance their political dances on the long-term policy, could they please act as if we�re under attack? Because we are. People are being put to death through budget cuts and profit-margins, and many are getting less care than is guaranteed a prisoner under our set of laws protecting those who are incarcerated.

Yet we sit in calm meetings in Washington, DC, — and we argue about who sits in the White House forums and who does not — and in other venues around the nation trying to decide if the political impact of health reform plans will harm re-election chances for our favorite elected friends or make the insurance or big corporate hospital interests upset with our lawmakers. Blah, blah, blah� while another dozen or score or more die. Cancer doesn�t wait for anyone to decide who is in and who is out.

Happy Easter. The season celebrating the risen prince of peace isn�t so damn peaceful for people on the wrong side of the recession. Especially people with cancer.

I just want that young woman and the thousands of others in her same inexcusable situation in these United States to know we�re fighting for what is just� healthcare is indeed a human right. Health insurance will not get us there � it can be lost, it can be changed, it can be inadequate, it can be denied and it can be dishonored.

But healthcare is a human right. It is not a political football. I pray we have the strength to do what is right and just, publicly funded and privately delivered healthcare � and do it now � because doing less would not be what we are all about as people. We are better than this.

During Easter and every season, we are better people than this. I know we are because we still have the ability to be horrified when a young mother in Las Vegas suffers needlessly. I hope she takes her place in heaven knowing we cared. Happy Easter, Yolanda Coleman. May God somehow make your pain a little less severe today. I am sorry you have hurt so badly during this time. You deserved better.

Donna Smith is a community organizer for the California Nurses Association and National Co-Chair for the Progressive Democrats of America Healthcare Not Warfare campaign.

Oregon's Medicaid Experiment Represents A 'Defining Moment'

More From Shots - Health News HealthHow Guinea Pigs Could Help Autistic ChildrenHealthScientists Sift For Clues On SARS-Like VirusHealthWhen Sizing Up Childhood Obesity Risks, It Helps To Ask About Random KidsHealthYounger Women Have Rising Rate Of Advanced Breast Cancer, Study Says

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Women To See Higher Prices For Long-Term Care Insurance

More From Shots - Health News HealthYounger Women Have Rising Rate Of Advanced Breast Cancer, Study SaysHealthIn Many Families, Exercise Is By Appointment OnlyHealthShould You Fear The 'July Effect' Of First-Time Doctors At Hospitals?HealthAnesthesia Care And Web-Surfing May Not Mix, Nurses Say

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Treating Everybody With HIV Is The Goal, But Who Will Pay?

More From Shots - Health News HealthMost People Can Skip Calcium Supplements, Prevention Panel SaysHealthGovernors' D.C. Summit Dominated By Medicaid And The SequesterHealthTo Spot Kids Who Will Overcome Poverty, Look At BabiesHealthSpanish Test: Mediterranean Diet Shines In Clinical Study

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Governors' D.C. Summit Dominated By Medicaid And The Sequester

More From Shots - Health News HealthMost People Can Skip Calcium Supplements, Prevention Panel SaysHealthGovernors' D.C. Summit Dominated By Medicaid And The SequesterHealthTo Spot Kids Who Will Overcome Poverty, Look At BabiesHealthSpanish Test: Mediterranean Diet Shines In Clinical Study

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Barring Insurance Discrimination Based on Pre-Existing Health Conditions

Too often, I�ve heard from people worried that they couldn�t leave a job because they had diabetes or breast cancer and they wouldn�t be able to get health insurance on their own because of their pre-existing condition.

Thanks to the health care law, those fears will soon be a thing of the past. As part of the Affordable Care Act, HHS today proposed a rule that would prohibit some of the worst insurance industry practices that have kept affordable health coverage out of reach for millions of Americans.

Under this new rule, starting in 2014, families and individuals would see new protections from egregious insurance company practices, including higher premiums or the denial of health coverage because of a pre-existing condition.

No longer would women like Myrna Rodriguez Previte, a breast cancer survivor, have to struggle to find health coverage because insurance companies refused to cover her because she had cancer previously.

No longer would young adults like Abby Schanfield, who has a rare genetic parasitic disease that has required multiple surgeries, and Steven Giallourakis, a two-time cancer survivor with chronic health conditions, have to worry about being refused coverage or charged more because of their medical history.

The proposed rule that HHS is issuing today would guarantee that being sick will not keep you, your family, or your employees from getting affordable health coverage.

This rule builds off earlier successes of the Affordable Care Act, which prohibited health plans from denying children health coverage because they had a pre-existing condition.

To learn more about how this proposed rule would create a better health insurance market for consumers, please see this page.

The Obama Administration today also issued the following:

A proposed rule outlining policies and standards for coverage of �essential health benefits,� while giving states flexibility to implement the Affordable Care Act. Essential health benefits are a core set of critical benefits that would give consumers a consistent way to compare health plans in the individual and small group markets. For more information regarding this rule, visit this page.A proposed rule implementing and expanding employment-based wellness programs to promote health and help control health care spending, while also ensuring that individuals are protected from unfair underwriting practices that could otherwise reduce benefits based on health status. For more information regarding this rule, visit this page.

These Are The Tweets That Will Get A Doctor In Trouble

More From Shots - Health News HealthPediatricians Urged To Treat Ear Infections More CautiouslyHealthHow 'Crunch Time' Between School And Sleep Shapes Kids' HealthHealthAncient Chompers Were Healthier Than OursHealthContagion On The Couch: CDC App Poses Fun Disease Puzzles

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Sunday, February 24, 2013

HealthMap Vaccine Finder: Helping Adults Find the Vaccines They Need

When we talk about vaccines, most people think of �flu� or �childhood immunizations.� But there are actually a number of vaccines available to protect adults from serious infectious diseases and their long-term consequences. Adult vaccines can prevent diseases such as shingles, pneumonia and whooping cough. The HPV vaccine can prevent cervical cancer. And the hepatitis B vaccine also prevents the liver cancer that can develop as a result of chronic hepatitis B infection.

In the past many Americans faced financial barriers to immunization, but thanks to the Affordable Care Act, millions of Americans now have free access to the vaccines recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices without co-payments or other cost-sharing requirements when those services are delivered by an in-network provider.

Despite the numerous benefits of vaccination, too many adults are not getting the protection that they need.� So, starting this month, it will be even easier for adults to find where to get vaccinated. Now, you can just go online and enter an address or zip code and HealthMap Vaccine Finder will locate nearby immunization providers (including health clinics and pharmacies) that offer the vaccinations routinely recommended for adults. In addition to telling people where to get the flu vaccine, the HealthMap Vaccine Finder will now tell consumers where to find providers of 10 other vaccines, including:

Hepatitis AHepatitis BHerpes Zoster (Shingles)HPV (Human Papillomavirus)MMR (Measles, Mumps, Rubella)Varicella (Chickenpox)Td (Tetanus and Diphtheria)Tdap (Tetanus, Diphtheria, and Pertusis)MeningococcalPneumococcalhttp://wcdapps.hhs.gov/Badges/Handlers/Badge.ashx?js=0&widgetname=vaccinefinderw199

The new HealthMap Vaccine Finder is an expansion of the Flu Vaccine Finder, and lists more than 50,000 providers across the country that offer flu vaccinations, searchable by vaccine delivery type (nasal spray, shot, etc.) and location. To find out where to get vaccinated in your area, go to vaccines.gov!

Should The U.S. Import More Doctors?

More From Planet Money Planet MoneyEpisode 438: Mavericks, Monopolies And BeerBusinessAt A Trade Show, Power Tools Fit For The AmishPlanet MoneyPlease Take Our Survey. (Please)Planet MoneyHow To Start A Magazine (And Make A Profit)

More From Planet Money

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Washington’s Revolving Door Is Hazardous to Our Health

We’ve seen how Washington insiders write the rules of politics and the economy to protect powerful special interests, but now as we enter the holiday season, and a month or so after the election, we’re getting a refresher course in just how that inside game is played, gifts and all. In this round, Santa doesn’t come down the chimney — he simply squeezes his jolly old self through the revolving door.

It’s an old story, the latest chapter of which came to light a few days ago with a small item in Politico: “Elizabeth Fowler is leaving the White House for a senior-level position leading ‘global health policy’ at Johnson & Johnson’s government affairs and policy group.”

A familiar name. We had talked about Liz Fowler on Bill Moyers Journal in 2009, during the early stages of Obama’s health care reform. She was at the center of the action, sitting behind Montana Senator Max Baucus, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee at committee hearings. We noted, “She used to work for WellPoint, the largest health insurer in the country. She was Vice President of Public Policy. And now she’s working for the very committee with the most power to give her old company and the entire industry exactly what they want: higher profits, and no competition from alternative non-profit coverage that could lower costs and premiums.”

After Obamacare passed, Senator Baucus himself, one of the biggest recipients in Congress of campaign cash from the health care industry, boasted that the architect of the legislation was none other than Liz Fowler. “I want to single out one person,” he said.

“… Liz Fowler is my chief health counsel. Liz Fowler has put my health care team together… She put together the white paper last November 2008, [the] 87-page document which became the basis, the foundation, the blueprint from which almost all health care measures in all bills on both sides of the aisle came. She is an amazing person. She is a lawyer; she is a Ph.D. She is just so decent. She is always smiling, she is always working, always available to help any Senator, any staff. I just thank Liz from the bottom of my heart.”

The health care industry was very pleased, too. Early on in the evolution of Obamacare, the Senate and the White House cut deals that protected the interests of the health care industry, especially insurers and the pharmaceutical companies. Lobbyists beat back such popular proposals as a public option, an expansion of Medicare, and a requirement that drug companies negotiate the prices they charge. As the eagle-eyed journalist Glenn Greenwald noted in The Guardian last week, “The bill’s mandate that everyone purchase the products of the private health insurance industry, unaccompanied by any public alternative, was a huge gift to that industry.” That sound you hear isn’t jingle bells; it’s cash registers ringing.

And Liz Fowler? The White House brought her over from Congress to oversee the new law’s implementation, first at the Department of Health and Human Services and then as Special Assistant to the President for Healthcare and Economic Policy.

And now, it’s through the revolving door once more. Yes, Christmas has come a little early for the peripatetic Ms. Fowler, as she leaves the White House for the pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson. As Greenwald writes,

“[Ms. Fowler] will receive ample rewards from that same industry as she peddles her influence in government and exploits her experience with its inner workings to work on that industry’s behalf, all of which has been made perfectly legal by the same insular, Versailles-like Washington culture that so lavishly benefits from all of this.”

Friends of Liz Fowler will say this is harsh — that she was the talented, intelligent protégée of two liberal Democrats — outgoing California Congressman Pete Stark and the late Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan of New York — who believed in public service as a calling. That she was seriously devoted to crafting a health care reform proposal that would pass. No doubt, but it’s not the point. She’s emblematic of the revolving door culture that inevitably means, when push comes to shove, corporate interests will have the upper hand in the close calls that determine public policy. It’s how insiders fix the rules of the market, no matter which party is in power.

The last time we looked, 34 former staff members of Senator Baucus, whose finance committee has life and death power over the industry’s wish list, were registered lobbyists, more than a third of them working on health care issues in the private sector. And the revolving door spins ever faster after a big election like the one we had last month, as score of officials, elected representatives and their staffs vacate their offices after the ballots are counted. Many of them head for K Street and the highest bidder.

When his administration began, President Obama swore he would get tough. “If you are a lobbyist entering my administration,” he said, “you will not be able to work on matters you lobbied on, or in the agencies you lobbied during the previous two years… When you leave government, you will not be able to lobby my administration for as long as I am President. And there will be a ban on gifts by lobbyists to anyone serving in the administration as well.”

Reforms were passed that are supposed to slow down the revolving door, increase transparency and limit the contact ex-officials and officeholders can have with their former colleagues. But those rules and regulations have loopholes big enough for Santa and his sleigh to drive through, reindeer included. The market keeps growing for insiders poised to make a killing when they leave government to help their new bosses get what they want from government. That’s the great thing about the revolving door: one good turn deserves another.

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Medicare for all CA Bus tour: In West Covina Tonight SiCKO ‘Sisters’ Reunite

What: SiCKO Reunion on final summer 2012 Medicare for all bus tour in California
When: Thursday, July 12 � health screenings 3-6 pm, and town hall at 6:30 pm
Where: West Covina City Hall, 1444 W Garvey Ave

Today in West Covina, the California Nurses Association summer 2012 Medicare for all bus tour will come to a close. After visiting 18 other California cities since June 19, the nurses will wrap up this run with a bang and with clarity. Three of the subjects of Michael Moore�s 2007 documentary film SiCKO will be on hand to help lead others in sharing their stories of struggle and frustration with the broken healthcare system.

The American SiCKOs reunited in Philadelphia in June. Pictured are Anne Moore, Molly Hardesty-Moore, Reggie Cervantes, Dawnelle Keys, Julie Pierce, Tracy Pierce, Jr., Michael Moore, Adrian Campbell-Montgomery, Eric Weinrib, Larry and Donna Smith, Lee Einer.

9/11 first responder Reggie Cervantes and Dawnelle Keys, the mother whose toddler died because she was denied treatment at an out-of-network hospital, will join me at this final stop where the nurses will perform health screenings from 3 � 6 p.m. and then we�ll have a town hall meeting from 6:30 � 8 p.m. My husband and I lost everything we had worked a lifetime to achieve when we got sick even though we always carried health insurance.

Five years ago, when SiCKO was released, the nurses of CNA went to Sacramento with Michael Moore to call attention to the pain Californians were needlessly suffering at the hands of the dysfunctional system. On this fifth anniversary of the film�s release, this West Covina reunion of some of the American SICKOs will help highlight how far we have yet to go and what these women have to say about the current healthcare law � the Affordable Care Act � just upheld by the Supreme Court and the subject of so much political gamesmanship. These SiCKO patients will share what it means to real people, real Californians. And that�s what this tour has been all about.

Don�t come planning to sit unengaged through a lengthy program. Come ready to become a part of what moves California and the nation to a place where there are no more SiCKOs like me or Reggie or Dawnelle. See you in West Covina. And don�t think because this tour is almost a wrap that the nurses are finished. They won�t be done until every patient is treated under a system that includes a single standard of high quality care for all � a guaranteed, improved Medicare for all system.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Medical Waste: 90 More Don'ts For Your Doctor

More From Shots - Health News HealthFeds Set New Rules for Controversial Bird Flu ResearchHealthFlu Vaccine Has Been Feeble For Elderly This SeasonHealthMorning-After Pills Don't Cause Abortion, Studies SayHealthHospitals Clamp Down On Early Elective Births

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Don't Count On Extra Weight To Help You In Old Age

More From Shots - Health News HealthHow The Sequester Could Affect Health CareHealthBritish Man Dies From SARS-Like Virus In U.K. HospitalHealthFew Public Family Planning Centers Accept Insurance, YetHealthCancer Rehab Begins To Bridge A Gap To Reach Patients

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Cancer Rehab Begins To Bridge A Gap To Reach Patients

More From Shots - Health News HealthFew Public Family Planning Centers Accept Insurance, YetHealthCancer Rehab Begins To Bridge A Gap To Reach PatientsHealthTargeted Cancer Drugs Keep Myeloma Patients Up And RunningHealthWhat Nuclear Bombs Tell Us About Our Tendons

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Monday, February 18, 2013

Giving Women Control Over Their Health Care

Women deserve to have control over their health care.� Aug. 1, 2012, ushers in a new day for women�s health when, for the first time ever, women will have access to eight new services at no out-of-pocket cost to keep them healthier and to catch potentially serious conditions at an earlier, more treatable stage. This benefit will take effect for millions of adult and adolescent women over the course of the next year�and it�s just one of many benefits of the health care law that let women and their doctors, not insurance companies, make decisions about a woman�s care. �

When it comes to health, women are often the primary decision-maker for their families and the trusted source in circles of friends. Women often take care of their families first and put off their own health care needs. Too often, they have gone without preventive services, worrying about what even a $20 insurance copay would mean to their families� budgets and choosing to pay for groceries or rent instead. �

But now, thanks to the health care law, many women won�t have to make that choice. �

Because of the Affordable Care Act, women in private plans and Medicare already have received potentially life-saving services, such as mammograms, cholesterol screenings, and flu shots at no extra cost. Today, the law builds on these benefits, requiring new, non-grandfathered private health plans to offer eight additional screenings and tests for adolescent and adult women at no extra charge. These include:

Well-woman visits.Gestational diabetes screenings that help protect the mother and her child from one of the most serious pregnancy-related diseases.Domestic and interpersonal violence screening and counseling.FDA-approved contraceptive products, which have proven health benefits like a reduced risk of cancer and protecting against osteoporosis.Breastfeeding support, supplies, and counseling.HPV DNA testing, for women 30 or older.Sexually transmitted infections counseling.HIV screening and counseling.

According to a new report, about 47 million women are eligible for these new additional preventive services that address their unique health care needs. �Instead of letting insurance companies decide what care women receive, the health care law requires insurers to cover these preventive services in new plans beginning Aug. 1. Because these changes take effect at the beginning of a new plan year, the requirement may go into effect later in the year. Ask your insurance company when the new benefits will take effect for you.

Women�s health decisions shouldn�t be made by politicians or insurance companies. Rather than wasting time refighting old political battles, this Administration is moving forward and putting women in control of their own health care. If women are going to take care of their families and friends, they have to take care of themselves. The Affordable Care Act is making it easier for women to do that by making health care more accessible and affordable for millions of American women and families.

To learn more about the health care services you are eligible for at no extra charge under the Affordable Care Act, go to http://www.healthcare.gov/prevention.

To see a video of what people are saying about preventive services go to http://youtu.be/lKejT13Jh9g

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Conyers Reintroduces National Single-Payer Health Care Bill

Today, Representative John Conyers, Jr. (D-Mich.) reintroduced H.R. 676, �The Expanded And Improved Medicare For All Act.� This bill would establish a privately-delivered, publicly-financed universal health care system, where physicians and non-profit health care providers would be in charge of medical decisions — not insurance companies.

H.R. 676 would expand and improve the highly popular Medicare program and provide universal access to care to all Americans. The program would be primarily funded by a modest payroll tax on employers and employees, a financial transaction tax, and higher taxes on the wealthiest Americans.

H.R.676 has been introduced in Congress since 2003, and has a broad base of support among universal health care activists, organized labor, physicians, nurses, and social justice organizations across the nation. The bill has been endorsed by 26 international unions, Physicians For A National Health Program, two former editors of the New England Journal of Medicine, National Nurses United, the American Medical Students Association, Progressive Democrats of America, and the NAACP. Last Congress, 77 other Members in the House of Representatives signed on as cosponsors of the legislation. In 2011, the Vermont legislature passed legislation that lays the foundation for a single-payer health care system in the state.

Representative Conyers issued this statement following the release of the bill:

�I am pleased to announce the reintroduction of H.R. 676, �The Expanded And Improved Medicare For All Act,� in the 113th Congress. I have introduced the bill in each Congress since 2003 and I will continue to do so until the bill is passed,� said Conyers.

�Many Americans are frustrated with high out-of-pocket costs, skyrocketing premiums, and many other serious problems that are part and parcel of a health care system dependent on private health insurance plans. H.R. 676 would reform this broken system.

�Passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was an important initial reform, which will provide health insurance to millions of our nation�s uninsured and eliminate many of the worst practices of the private health insurance industry.

�However, it is my opinion, and the belief of many leading health care practitioners and experts, that establishing a non-profit universal single-payer health care system would be the best way to effectively contain health care costs and provide quality care for all Americans. It is time for Members of Congress, health policy scholars, economists, and the medical community to begin a serious discussion of the merits of a universal single-payer health care system.�

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Targeting Single-Payer Advocates

President Obama�s Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act sucks. It isn�t change in the dysfunctional American health care system that any one should believe in or defend. And yet that is exactly what liberals and progressives are doing. Led by spin doctors at The Nation, they�re spinning ObamaRomneyCare (ORC), and that�s what it should be called, as if it were a step in the right direction. As if it were the only outcome of the national health care reform debate in 2009.

The individual mandate that compels millions of people to purchase unaffordable underinsurance and then punishes them with a fine if they don�t, and the transfer of $447 billion in tax payer money to the health insurers were deal breakers for advocates of a single-payer, national health care system. It doesn�t make sense to give the corporations that cause the health care crisis more profits and power in exchange for a modest expansion of Medicaid and a series of mostly rhetorical reforms that the insurance industry and employers are already undermining. It�s no different than giving the bankers responsible for crashing the world financial system billions of dollars in bail out money. How�s that working for Americans?

Single-payer (SP) supporters opposed the passage of ORC and the Supreme Court decision forcing people to buy expensive, malfunctioning products from corporations that bankrupt, deny care or kill them. Many expressed �relief� at the decision to uphold ORC. That feeling was ephemeral as the implications of the Medicaid decision rippled across the country. The Supreme Court ruled that threatening to withdraw Medicaid funding from states that failed to expand their programs was coercive �economic dragooning.� But why isn�t the individual mandate �economic dragooning?�

Seven Republican governors already said they would opt out and dozens are taking a wait and see approach. The liberals told us we had to support ORC if only because 17 million people would get coverage through Medicaid. Now that reform is being scaled back. The Medicaid debacle illustrates why health care reform has to be federally funded and national in scope.

It�s useful to quote Obama on health care before he was president. He actually got it. Candidate Obama said that forcing the uninsured to buy insurance was like forcing the homeless to buy homes and he added, �I don�t have such a mandate because I don�t think the problem is that people don�t want health insurance, it�s that they can�t afford it.�

Senator Obama in 2005: �I happen to be a proponent of a single-payer, universal health care program. I see no reason why the United States of America, the wealthiest country in the history of the world, spending 14 percent of its gross national product on health care, cannot provide basic health insurance to everybody.�

Any reform that leaves 23 million people uninsured, that proudly excludes undocumented immigrants, and doesn�t cover abortion (watch Obama�s speech on health care to Congress in 2009, it�s sickening) doesn�t deserve one shred of support.

SP activists consistently called out Obama�s hypocrisy and challenged him to do the right thing. Liberal, Democratic astroturf organizations like Health Care for America Now (HCAN) worked overtime to convince people that there was no �political will� in Washington for SP. Groups like HCAN always surface when movements for fundamental reform rise. Their job is to dumb down expectations and channel activist�s energy into incremental reforms that help the fewest people and don�t threaten the power or the profits of the status quo. HCAN wasn�t an ally in the struggle for single-payer, they were a deliberate obstacle to it.

The Nation has published a bevy of articles that blindly and breathlessly spin ORC, gloss over its fatal flaws, and bully those who criticize it. The election fear factor has ramped up their dishonest defense of ORC. Now it�s all about reelecting Obama and who gives a damn that his �signature� legislation is unraveling.

David Cole who calls the uninsured �free-riders,� tied himself into a Gordian knot explaining why it was constitutional to force people to buy private health insurance. Is it a tax or is it a penalty? Who cares? It�s wrong either way. If a Republican president wanted the Supreme Court to uphold the individual mandate (say Bush or Romney) he would�ve argued the opposite. Apoplectic, Cole would have thundered: �How dare those Republicans mandate us to buy health insurance!� Cole constantly derides SP advocates with the nonsensical and irksome phrase, �Don�t make the perfect the enemy of the good.� But a single-payer system is not perfect. It�s simply good because it solves the health care crisis.

Katha Pollitt�s article, �Obamacare (s) for Women� is positively gushing about ORC. She thinks that �Progressive women should be more enthusiastic about Obama.� Pollitt admits upfront, though, that Obama �compromised abortion right out of health care reform.� But somehow that�s okay for one of the nation�s leading feminists. She lists seven ways that ORC will help women but every single one of them is under sustained attack and could be reversed. And gender rating hasn�t ended. In the new insurance exchanges, large group plans with more than 100 employees will be allowed to continue this sexist practice.

Wendell Potter is leading the attack on SP activists. In his article, Health Care Advocates: Time to Bury the Hatchet, he pejoratively calls members of Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP) and Health Care NOW! �die-hards.� He writes ��we are still furious at the president and the Democrats for their baffling decision not to give single-payer legislation a decent hearing and for compromising too early and too often, in their view, with the special interests.� Damn right single-payer supporters are angry! And so are millions of Americans who don�t support ORC and not because they�re Republicans or Tea Party nut jobs. No doubt many are Democrats. They want a government funded health care system that eliminates the role of private, for-profit insurers.

Potter, whose book Deadly Spin chronicles the chicanery of his former employer Cigna brilliantly, ought to be a leading voice against ORC because as he writes, �It�s a windfall for the insurers.� As an ex-insider who spun PR daily, including the denial of a liver transplant to 17-year-old Nataline Sarkisyan who died, Potter has written some of the most powerful exposes and made compelling arguments for why the insurance industry must be put out of business. Period. He explains how there isn�t one reform these killers can�t gut or get around. And yet there he was on the steps of the Supreme Court providing commentary for Democracy Now! on why ORC had to be upheld. His former bosses at Humana and Cigna must have relished the delicious irony: Potter denounces the insurers and then Potter defends the Supreme Court decision giving the insurers constitutional rights, billions in subsidies and a mandate to rip off millions of new, coerced customers.

Potter charges SP advocates with failing to create a strategy, but that�s not true. For two decades PNHP has been organizing physicians and educating them about single-payer � no easy job given doctor�s vociferous opposition. Because of PNHP�s tireless work and the uncompromising leadership of Dr. Quentin Young, a majority of physicians now support a government financed health care system. That is a huge triumph! PNHP has over 18,000 members and is growing.

Health Care NOW! has a strategy of grassroots, community organizing. Throughout 2009, dozens of chapters across the country organized meetings, marches, demonstrations and �bird dogged� politicians. Hundreds of activists were arrested in a series of sit-ins at insurance company headquarters. Our movement took a quantum leap forward but unfortunately it wasn�t large enough to win single-payer.

This is our die-hard strategy: build a large civil rights movement for health care justice that forces whatever party is in power to enact a single-payer, national health care system. There is no short cut. And there is no compromising on the necessity to abolish the health insurance industry.

And where was Wendell Potter during all this activism? He was working with HCAN for the public option and then for passage of ORC. Potter made our job harder � not only did SP advocates have to fight Obama administration promises and lies, we had to wage a fight against the well funded, toxic influence of HCAN that consistently told people single-payer was off the table, so give it up.

Like President Obama, the health insurance industry has a �kill list.� Nataline Sarkisyan was on it. Currently, 84,000 people die every year because they lack access to health care. They�re on the kill list. We need to sharpen the blade of the hatchet and cut the head off the corporations that kill for profit.

Helen Redmond writes about health care and the war on drugs. She can be reached at: redmondmadrid@yahoo.com

Her new documentary about health care is called: The Vampires of Daylight: Driving a Stake Through the Heart of the Health Insurance corporations. Website: thevampiresofdaylight.com

Monday, February 11, 2013

Celebrating Healthier Patients and Stronger Communities

Today we are celebrating the work of the National Health Service Corps in communities across the country.� This year�s theme is �Healthier Patients, Stronger Communities,� and that theme is reflected in the work that our NHSC providers do every day.

The National Health Service Corps helps improve access to health care in communities that need it most. �It provides financial support for doctors, nurses and other health care providers as well as students training for a career in primary care.� This financial support in the form of loan repayment and scholarships allows clinicians who are passionate about serving in our communities the ability to pursue jobs in primary care disciplines without the burden of overwhelming debt.�

Now, thanks to investments made by the Obama Administration there are close to 10,000 National Health Service Corps �doctors, dentists, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, mental and behavioral health specialists, and other health providers treating more than 10.4 million people throughout the country.� In fact, the number of providers serving in the NHSC has nearly tripled from 3,600 since the start of the Obama Administration. �And, while Corps members commit to working for at least two years in high need areas, more than 82 percent decide to stay beyond their initial commitment, helping ensure more Americans get the care they need.

I am also excited to announce that this year, the health care law has invested almost $230 million in the NHSC through 4,600 loan repayment and scholarship awards to clinicians and students who are committed to working where they are needed most.

Today, we celebrate Corps Community Day to honor the important work of National Health Service Corps members who are bringing their talents to communities that need health care providers.� To those of you who are serving in the Corps or will serve, I want to say thank you. Thank you for the work you do each and every day to ensure that Americans get the primary care they need and deserve to lead healthy lives.

For stories from National Health Service Corps clinicians, please visit: http://nhsc.hrsa.gov/corpsexperience/memberstories/index.html� or http://nhsc.hrsa.gov/corpsexperience/40clinicians/index.html

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Olympic Hopeful Works To Improve Bone Marrow Registries

More From Shots - Health News HealthWidely Used Stroke Treatment Doesn't Help PatientsHealthFeds Reject Mississippi's Plan For Insurance ExchangeHealthStressed Out Americans Want Help, But Many Don't Get ItHealthCatholic Bishops Reject Compromise On Contraceptives

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Defying Expectations, GOP Governors Embrace Medicaid Expansion

More From Shots - Health News HealthSilica Rule Changes Delayed While Workers Face Health RisksHealthDefying Expectations, GOP Governors Embrace Medicaid ExpansionHealthDebate Rages On Even As Research Ban On Gun Violence EndsHealthWith Elbows, Cortisone Shots May Hurt More Than Help

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Health Care and Profits, a Poor Mix

Thirty years ago, Bonnie Svarstad and Chester Bond of the School of Pharmacy at the University of Wisconsin-Madison discovered an interesting pattern in the use of sedatives at nursing homes in the south of the state.

Patients entering church-affiliated nonprofit homes were prescribed drugs roughly as often as those entering profit-making �proprietary� institutions. But patients in proprietary homes received, on average, more than four times the dose of patients at nonprofits.

Writing about his colleagues� research in his 1988 book �The Nonprofit Economy,� the economist Burton Weisbrod provided a straightforward explanation: �differences in the pursuit of profit.� Sedatives are cheap, Mr. Weisbrod noted. �Less expensive than, say, giving special attention to more active patients who need to be kept busy.�

This behavior was hardly surprising. Hospitals run for profit are also less likely than nonprofit and government-run institutions to offer services like home health care and psychiatric emergency care, which are not as profitable as open-heart surgery.

A shareholder might even applaud the creativity with which profit-seeking institutions go about seeking profit. But the consequences of this pursuit might not be so great for other stakeholders in the system � patients, for instance. One study found that patients� mortality rates spiked when nonprofit hospitals switched to become profit-making, and their staff levels declined.

These profit-maximizing tactics point to a troubling conflict of interest that goes beyond the private delivery of health care. They raise a broader, more important question: How much should we rely on the private sector to satisfy broad social needs?

From health to pensions to education, the United States relies on private enterprise more than pretty much every other advanced, industrial nation to provide essential social services. The government pays Medicare Advantage plans to deliver health care to aging Americans. It provides a tax break to encourage employers to cover workers under 65.

Businesses devote almost 6 percent of the nation�s economic output to pay for health insurance for their employees. This amounts to nine times similar private spending on health benefits across the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, on average. Private plans cover more than a third of pension benefits. The average for 30 countries in the O.E.C.D. is just over one-fifth.

We let the private sector handle tasks other countries would never dream of moving outside the government�s purview. Consider bail bondsmen and their rugged sidekicks, the bounty hunters.

American TV audiences may reminisce fondly about Lee Majors in �The Fall Guy� chasing bad guys in a souped-up GMC truck � a cheap way to get felons to court. People in most other nations see them as an undue commercial intrusion into the criminal justice system that discriminates against the poor.

Our reliance on private enterprise to provide the most essential services stems, in part, from a more narrow understanding of our collective responsibility to provide social goods. Private American health care has stood out for decades among industrial nations, where public universal coverage has long been considered a right of citizenship. But our faith in private solutions also draws on an ingrained belief that big government serves too many disparate objectives and must cater to too many conflicting interests to deliver services fairly and effectively.

Our trust appears undeserved, however. Our track record suggests that handing over responsibility for social goals to private enterprise is providing us with social goods of lower quality, distributed more inequitably and at a higher cost than if government delivered or paid for them directly.

The government�s most expensive housing support program � it will cost about $140 billion this year � is a tax break for individuals to buy homes on the private market.

According to the Tax Policy Center, this break will benefit only 20 percent of mostly well-to-do taxpayers, and most economists agree that it does nothing to further its purported goal of increasing homeownership. Tax breaks for private pensions also mostly benefit the wealthy. And 401(k) plans are riskier and costlier to administer than Social Security.

From the high administrative costs incurred by health insurers to screen out sick patients to the array of expensive treatments prescribed by doctors who earn more money for every treatment they provide, our private health care industry provides perhaps the clearest illustration of how the profit motive can send incentives astray.

By many objective measures, the mostly private American system delivers worse value for money than every other in the developed world. We spend nearly 18 percent of the nation�s economic output on health care and still manage to leave tens of millions of Americans without adequate access to care.

Britain gets universal coverage for 10 percent of gross domestic product. Germany and France for 12 percent. What�s more, our free market for health services produces no better health than the public health care systems in other advanced nations. On some measures � infant mortality, for instance � it does much worse.

In a way, private delivery of health care misleads Americans about the financial burdens they must bear to lead an adequate existence. If they were to consider the additional private spending on health care as a form of tax � an indispensable cost to live a healthy life � the nation�s tax bill would rise to about 31 percent from 25 percent of the nation�s G.D.P. � much closer to the 34 percent average across the O.E.C.D.

A quarter of a century ago, a belief swept across America that we could reduce the ballooning costs of the government�s health care entitlements just by handing over their management to the private sector. Private companies would have a strong incentive to identify and wipe out wasteful treatment. They could encourage healthy lifestyles among beneficiaries, lowering use of costly care. Competition for government contracts would keep the overall price down.

We now know this didn�t work as advertised. Competition wasn�t as robust as hoped. Health maintenance organizations didn�t keep costs in check, and they spent heavily on administration and screening to enroll only the healthiest, most profitable beneficiaries.

One study of Medicare spending found that the program saved no money by relying on H.M.O.�s. Another found that moving Medicaid recipients into H.M.O.�s increased the average cost per beneficiary by 12 percent with no improvement in the quality of care for the poor. Two years ago, President Obama�s health care law cut almost $150 billion from Medicare simply by reducing payments to private plans that provide similar care to plain vanilla Medicare at a higher cost.

Today, again, entitlements are at the center of the national debate. Our elected officials are consumed by slashing a budget deficit that is expected to balloon over coming decades. With both Democrats and Republicans unwilling to raise taxes on the middle class, the discussion is quickly boiling down to how deeply entitlements must be cut.

We may want to broaden the debate. The relevant question is how best we can serve our social needs at the lowest possible cost. One answer is that we have a lot of room to do better. Improving the delivery of social services like health care and pensions may be possible without increasing the burden on American families, simply by removing the profit motive from the equation.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Hey, Kid, You Could Be A 'Disaster Hero'

More From Shots - Health News HealthAggressive Care Still Common For Dying Seniors, Despite Hospice UptickHealthExercise Can Be Good For The Heart, And Maybe For Sperm, TooHealthWhy Prostate Cancer Screening Is So TrickyHealthWill Your Long-Term Care Coverage Keep Up With Changing Times?

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Why Some Families Won't Qualify For Subsidized Health Insurance

More From Shots - Health News HealthQuick TB Test Builds Up Arsenal Against Drug-Resistant BacteriaHealthNovartis Recalls Triaminic And Theraflu Cough SyrupsHealthWhite House Tries Again To Find Compromise On ContraceptionHealthAre NFL Football Hits Getting Harder And More Dangerous?

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Feds And Health Insurers Partner To Fight Fraud

More From Shots - Health News HealthQuick TB Test Builds Up Arsenal Against Drug-Resistant BacteriaHealthNovartis Recalls Triaminic And Theraflu Cough SyrupsHealthWhite House Tries Again To Find Compromise On ContraceptionHealthAre NFL Football Hits Getting Harder And More Dangerous?

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Countdown to Affordable Health Insurance

January is the perfect month for looking forward to new and great things around the corner.

I�m feeling that way about the new Health Insurance Marketplace. Anticipation is building, and this month we start an important countdown, first to October 1, 2013, when open enrollment begins, and continuing on to January 1, 2014, the start of new health insurance coverage for millions of Americans. In October, many of you�ll be able to shop for health insurance that meets your needs at the new Marketplace at HealthCare.gov.

This is an historic time for those Americans who never had health insurance, who had to go without insurance after losing a job or becoming sick, or who had been turned down because of a pre-existing condition. Because of these new marketplaces established under the Affordable Care Act, millions of Americans will have new access to affordable health insurance coverage.

Over the last two years we�ve worked closely with states to begin building their health insurance marketplaces, also known as Exchanges, so that families and small-business owners will be able to get accurate information to make apples-to-apples comparisons of private insurance plans and, get financial help to make coverage more affordable if they�re eligible.

That is why we are so excited about launching the newly rebuilt HealthCare.gov website, where you�ll be able to buy insurance from qualified private health plans and check if you are eligible for financial assistance � all in one place, with a single application. Many individuals and families will be eligible for a new kind of tax credit to help lower their premium costs.�If your state is running its own Marketplace, HealthCare.gov will make sure you get to the right place.

The Marketplace will offer much more than any health insurance website you�ve used before. Insurers will compete for your business on a level playing field, with no hidden costs or misleading fine print.

It�s not too soon to check out HealthCare.gov for new information about the Marketplace and tips for things you can do now to prepare for enrollment.� And, make sure to sign up for emails or text message updates, so you don�t miss a thing when it�s time to enroll.

There is still work to be done to make sure the insurance market works for families and small businesses. But, for millions of Americans, the time for having the affordable, quality health care coverage, security, and peace of mind they need and deserve is finally within sight.

Cancer Patient Gets Help From 'Bake Sale' And Aetna CEO

More From Shots - Health News HealthQuick TB Test Builds Up Arsenal Against Drug-Resistant BacteriaHealthNovartis Recalls Triaminic And Theraflu Cough SyrupsHealthWhite House Tries Again To Find Compromise On ContraceptionHealthAre NFL Football Hits Getting Harder And More Dangerous?

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.