Angelolopez’s Weblog

August 28, 2009

Thoughts on Health Care Reform

Over the past few months, one of President Obama’s greatest legislation goals has been a push for near universal care for all Americans. I generally support universal health care, but I haven’t had a strong opinion on how this country should best achieve this goal, since I’ve yet to get a major health problem that has required me to go through the current medical system. I’ve had several friends who have had bad experiences with their insurance or friends who’ve lost their jobs and have struggled finding health insurance to help them cover their family. I did a cartoon in the July 29, 2009 issue of the Tri-City Voice .

With all this talk, the question first needs to be asked, “Why do we need to reform our health care system?” The June 27, 2009 issue of the Economist was dedicated to the issue of health care reform and it had an editorial that wrote:

Diagnosing what is wrong with America’s health-care system is the easy part. Even though one dollar in every six generated by the world’s richest economy is spent on health- almost twice the average for rich countries- infant mortality, life expectancy and survival-rates for heart attacks are all worse than the OED average. Meanwhile, because health insurance is so expensive, nearly 50m Americans, an obscene number in such a rich place, have none; those that are insured pay through the nose for their cover, and often find it bankruptingly inadequate if they get seriously ill or injured.

The costs of health care hurt America in three other ways. first, since half the population (most children, the very poor, the old, public sector workers) get their health care via the government, the burden on the taxpayer is heavier than it need to be, and is slowly but surely eating up federal and state budgets. Second, private insurance schemes are a huge problem for employers: the cost of health insurance helped bring down GM, and many smaller firms are giving up covering employees. Third, expensive premiums depress workers’ wages.

The July 1, 2009 issue of the New Republic has an editorial that neatly sums up the goals of health care reform:

The only litmus test reform should be whether it achieves its goals: making sure everybody can get timely medical care without experiencing financial ruin; reducing the cost of care overall, so that it no longer imposes such a serious economic burden on individuals and on society as a whole; and improving the quality of care, so that it focuses on prevention and actually makes people better once they are sick. How we achieve these goals is far less important than whether we achieve them.”

There are three models of universal health care being used by the developed nations of the world. Countries like Britain, Canada, and Sweden use a single payer system, which uses taxes for a public system. Countries like the Netherlands and Switzerland obligate its citizens to buy insurance. France has a mixture of a public and a private health care system. I’ll explore the options.

One of the strongest arguments for the single payer health plan is by Pam Pohy, an activist and blogger for Everyday Citizen, a progressive activist site. Pohy quotes the Physicians for a National Health Program in defining a single payer plan and its benefits:

Single-payer is a term used to describe a type of financing system. It refers to one entity acting as administrator, or “payer.” In the case of health care, a single-payer system would be setup such that one entity—a government run organization—would collect all health care fees, and pay out all health care costs. In the current US system, there are literally tens of thousands of different health care organizations—HMOs, billing agencies, etc.

By having so many different payers of health care fees, there is an enormous amount of administrative waste generated in the system. (Just imagine how complex billing must be in a doctor’s office, when each insurance company requires a different form to be completed, has a different billing system, different billing contacts and phone numbers—it’s very confusing.) In a single-payer system, all hospitals, doctors, and other health care providers would bill one entity for their services.

The General Accounting Office (a non-partisan government office) projects an administrative savings of 10 percent through the elimination of private insurance bills and administrative waste, or more than $150 billion. The Congressional Budget Office (another non-partisan government office) projects that single payer would reduce overall health costs by more than $225 billion despite the expansion of comprehensive care to all Americans. Pohy feels that this savings in administrative costs would provide medical care for those currently underserved. Roger Bybee, a Milwaukee based activist, concurs with Pohy’s assertion. He wrote an article titled “Health Reform Via Guaranteed Choice” for the December 2008 Z Magazine where he states:

“Essentially, single-payer plans, operating in nations as diverse as Canada and Taiwan, provide health care to all citizens and permit them free choice of their doctors and hospitals. They also largely eliminate the commanding role of private insurers in the system and the huge administrative costs they impose, enabling the health system to cover every citizen. The single-payer plans are typically funded by a mixture of general tax revenues and payroll taxes.”

Though Obama sees merit in the single payer plan, he is not proposing that for our nation because he feels a change to the single payer plan would be too disruptive to our nation at this time. The June 27, 2009 Economist holds a similar view:

If he were starting from scratch, there would be a strong case (even to a newspaper as economically liberal as this one) for a system based mostly around publicly funded health care. But America is not starting from scratch, and none of the plans in Congress shows an appetite for such a Europen solution. America wants to keep a mostly private system- but one that brings in the uninsured and cuts costs. That will be painful, and require more audacity than Mr. Obama has shown so far.”

Obama’s health care plan seems to model itself after the Swiss and Dutch universal private insurance plans. The June 27 Economist writes:

After decades of failed attempts at reform, a consensus appears to be emerging in America around the principles needed for universal coverage. One likely change means a restructuring of America’s failed health-insurance markets. Firms are today allowed to pick the safest patients and reject the sickest. In future they will have to take all comers. Because this imposes unfair burdens on firms that attract lots of older or sicker people, reform is likely to include government-funded mechanisms for risk pooling or reinsurance.

If done properly, this will in time move America towards the Swiss and Dutch models of universal private insurance. These are not perfect, to be sure. Regina Herzlinger of Havard Business School observes that the Dutch reforms have led to rapid consolidation of insurers and hospitals, fuelling resented price increases. She favours the decentralized Swiss model, which preserves individual choice and competition. Others note that Swiss health-care costs are high by European standards. But they are a third less, as a share of GDP, than America’s, and the country’s excellent health outcomes should be the envy of American reformers.”

The crux of the recent debates in Congress right now have been about the “public option”, a government run insurance entity that people can voluntarily join and that could provide competition to private insurers. Obama has argued that such a public option would insure that all Americans would have access to affordable coverage and that rising health care costs could be contained. Such a plan seeks to preserve existing insurance industry arrangements. Shaleigh Murray wrote an article called “The Crux of the Debate” for the Washington Post National Weekly Edition in which she quotes Obama as saying:

“Just conceptually, the notion that all these insurance companies who say they’re giving consumers the best possible deal, if they can’t compete against a public plan as one option, with consumers making the decision what’s the best deal, that defies logic.”

One of the strongest arguments against such a public option is that a government program would underprice private insurers. The New Republic July 1, 2009 editorial takes note of that argument and replies:

“The more intelligent criticisms focus on whether a new public program would set prices too low, starving providers of resources and disrupting care, or take unfair advantage of access to taxpayer money in order to underprice private insurers and drive them out of business. But these are reasons to build in safeguards- safeguards that the leading advocates for a public plan have already embraced. They are not reasons to water down the idea beyond redemption, let alone ditch it altogether.”

Another frequent criticism of government run health care plans is that there are long waiting lists that one must be in to receive care. The Economist feels that having incentives would cut on the waiting lists while also cutting down on costs. In it’s June 27 issue, it writes:

“More competition and transparency would help, but the main goal of any reform plan must be to address the perverse incentives that encourage overconsumption and drive costs up. Medicare has been tinkering with ‘pay for performance’, a promising experiment. Mr. Halvorson insists that by rejigging incentives other health providers can also create their own ‘virtual Kaisers’.

If American reformers doubt the power of incentives, they should visit Sweden. Like other relatively cheap OECD systems, Sweden’s single-payer model has been plagued by long waiting lists- a sign, to American conservatives, of the rationing that goes with socialized medicine. Sweden health officials tried and failed to cut queues by increasing direct funding for hospitals and even issued an edict requiring hospitals to cut queues for elective operations to three monts. Then, last year, the health ministry said it would creat a fund into shich it would pay $128 million a year for local authorities that managed to reduce waiting times to that threshold. Nine months ago, virtually none of the counties passed, but this month the health minister revealed that nearly all had cut their queues to three months or less.”

Because of the opposition of the insurance industry to this public option, Shalaigh Murray reported that a bipartisan group of Senators had been working on an alternative plan, a national network of member-run cooperatives. These cooperatives would create a national structure with state affiliates, and would have the authority to pool their purchasing power. Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad of North Dakota is an advocate of the co-op idea and feels it would be “strong, significant competitors to private insurance.”

Working in the library, it’s easy to research magazines about the various health care ideas. I learned long ago to do my own research when it comes to learning about a subject so that I could make up my own mind about things. One of the things that the advocates of a government insurance alternative, a single payer plan or a national co-op system have is a desire to break some of the monopoly of power that large health insurance companies have and give some real choices to the average consumer. Ezra Klein wrote the article “The Ghosts of Battles Past” for the August 3, 2009 Washington Post Weekly in which he wrote:

By last year, only 7 percent of American workers were in ‘traditional’ indemnity health plans, while the rest of us- or at least those of us fortunate enough to have insurance- were swimming in the alphabet soup of HMOs and PPOs and HDHPs. we’re all in networks now. We don’t get our choice of doctor. There’s no appeals process. No out-of-pocket caps. Nothing to stop insurers from rejecting our coverage applications based on preexisting conditions. And if we don’t like our insurer? Tough.

…The Justice Department judges an industry ‘highly concentrated’ if a single company controls more than 42 percent of the market. By that definition, 94 percent of statewide insurance markets are highly concentrated. A recent study by the advocacy organization Health Care for America Now showed that in Indiana, WellPoint controls 60 percent of the insurance market; in Iowa, Wellmark accounts for 71 percent; and in Alabama, Blue Cross/ Blue Shield holds 83 percent. In the past 13 years, there have been more than 400 corporate mergers involving health insurers.

Economic textbooks tell us that concentrated markets reduce the competitive behavior that benefits consumers and lead to outsize profits for the dominant firms. Predictably, health-care premiums shot up more than 90 percent between 2000 and 2007, while the profits of the 10 largest insurers increased 428 percent over the same period.

I think that this is one of the big things that government health care advocates fear about the present system- insurance companies try to maximize their profits sometimes at the expense of Americans with medical needs, creating soaring costs that individuals and businesses can’t afford. From what I understand of the various articles that I’ve read, I’m more convinced than ever that some sort of universal health care is needed for our country. Hopefully in the next month or two, as Obama and the Congress debate the merits and argue their positions, average Americans can understand the necessity for some type of health care reforms and make informed decisions on what kind of reforms they want.

Reading Up on a Public Option Versus a Health Care Co-op

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — angelolopez @ 7:31 pm

Over the past week or so, I’ve been troubled by the lack of civility in the town hall meetings. It’s sad to see people shouting down other people who are trying to have a civil discussion on the proposals for health care reform. I’ve been shocked to see videos comparing Obama to Hitler. More ominously, some people have even brought guns in Presidential events, brandishing them in public to flaunt their second amendment rights. Sadly, these displays have had an effect on the opinions of people towards Obama’s health care reform proposals, as support for reform has gone down in the polls.

A debate is necessary because the need for reform for health care is so important for our country. Fareed Zakaria wrote a column in the August 17, 2009 Washington Post in which he states:

“Clearly the U.S. health-care system is on an unsustainable path. If current trends continue — and there is no indication that they won’t — health care will consume 40 percent of the national economy by 2050. The problem is that this is a slow and steady decline, producing no crisis. As a result, we seem incapable of grappling with it seriously.

It’s not as if the problems aren’t apparent to everyone, whatever your political persuasion. Costs are rising so fast that every day more than 10,000 Americans lose their insurance coverage. In 1993, 61 percent of small businesses provided health insurance for their employees. Now only 38 percent do. Larger firms face greater health-care costs. Yet, Americans do worse on almost every health measure than most advanced industrial countries, which spend about half as much on health care per person and have proportionately more elderly people. “

Over the past week, Senator Kent Conrad introduced the idea of a nonprofit health care co-operative as an alternative to the public option plan that has been the centerpiece of President Obama’s health care reform efforts. Senator Kent introduced this plan mainly as a compromise to try to persuade centrist Democrats and Republicans to support health care reform but have serious doubts about a government public insurance option. One must weigh the merits of the co-op plan as compared to the public option plan and see if it meets the goals of helping all Americans receive timely medical care while reducing medical costs so that it doesn’t impose such a burden on the individual and on society. Robert Pear and Gardiner Harris wrote an article in the August 8, 2009 edition of the New York Times examining the merits and possible pitfalls of the co-op idea.

A national co-op idea sounds good on paper. In this plan, the government would offer start up money (estimated at $6 billion) in loans and grants to help doctors, hospitals and other groups to create nonprofit networks to provide health care and coverage. Pear and Harris write that health care experts and economists feel that health care cooperatives could inject competition in some insurance markets around the country. Representative Earl Pomeroy, Democrat of North Dakota and a former state insurance commissioner, is quoted as saying:

“The market here is uncompetitve. A cooperative could provide an alternative source of insurance and some interesting competition for premium dollars. A co-op could operate at lower costs, in part because it would not need to pay its executives so generously as the local Blue Cross Blue Shield plan.”

In learning more about co-ops from this article, I believe the co-ops idea has merit in certain regions, but the co-op plan isn’t strong enough to solve the national problems of our nation. Pear and Harris notes that co-ops would need time to buy sophisticated information technology and to negotiate contracts with doctors, hospitals, and other health care providers. A health co-op in each state would need 25,000 members to be financially viable and at least 500,000 members to negotiate effectively with doctors, hospitals, and other health care providers. Larry J. Zanoni, the executive director of the Group Health Cooperative of South Central Wisconsin, said:

“We are a testament to the success of a health care cooperative. But it took us over 30 years to get where we are today.”

A major flaw that I see in the co-op idea is that it may not work in all regions in the country. The New York Times article mentions the case of Iowa in the 1990s. In the 1990s, Iowa passed a law to encourage the development of health care co-ops. One co-op lasted two years before failing, and today, Iowa has no health co-ops.

Lola Wheeler, a blogger in Everyday Citizen, notes that co-ops in her home state of Kansas do not provide universal health coverage for her state. In her recent blog, she notes:

“If cooperatives worked so well in Kansas, why are so many people that I know in Kansas uninsured, going without healthcare or going broke trying to pay their hospital bills? Why are people dying because they have no access to care? Why are we in crisis in the heartland?”

I’ve read 3 strong arguments in favor of the public option. An editorial in the July 20, 2009 edition of The Nation magazine stated:

“Almost every American knows someone who uses Medicare, and the satisfaction with that program is famously high. From a policy perspective, a public option would serve an essential purpose: if it performed with the efficiency and cost control of Medicare, it would impose discipline on private insurers through competition. In other words, it would set a kind of baseline of care by giving people a choice.”

A strong argument was made in the July 1, 2009 edition of The New Republic:

“… the history of American health care is replete with examples of insurers- like all industries- trying to maximize thier profits, often in ways that leave Americans without the financial protection or medical care that they need. In the mid-twentieth century, it was the entrance of for-profit insurers to the market that set off the chain of events that led to the situation we have today- a situation in which people who have pre-existing medical conditions frequently cannot afford to buy coverage on their own. And, in recent decades, it was the transformation of managed care into a for-profit industry that left Americans with medical needs at the mercy of insurers that sometimes made clinical judgments based on profits and loss.

…In this sort of world- the world of American health care as it exists, rather than how it seems in some idyllic conceptions- the case for a public insurance plan is strong. Very strong. Government can decree that its insurance program provide coverage to anybody who seeks it- and that it cover all necessary medical services, without secret gimmickry to wring profits from treatment denials. The government can offer coverage cheaply, by taking advantage of its bargaining power and economies of scale. And, insofar as the goal of reform is to reduce the cost of care in the long run, by attacking the medical habits that encourage excessive or ineffective care, the government can make sure the public plan pays for services in ways that promote the most effective treatments.”

An editorial in the August 19, 2009 San Jose Mercury News strongly advocates the public option plan:

“A public option would utilize the government’s immense negotiating and buying power to drive down rates. Medicare operates with just 8 percent overhead and cares for the vast majority of senior citizens of this country. Why isn’t that the theme of town hall meetings

There’s nothing wrong with establishing co-ops across the nation to help small businesses and individuals get coverage, as the Senate proposes. But they will not substantially affect costs. And without bringing down costs, health care reform- even if it brings coverage to every American- will fail.”

I agree the most with the Mercury editorial. Co-ops in an of themselves are not bad. And the co-op idea shows a commendable thinking outside the box on the part of the Senators trying to craft a difficult health care bill. The example of Iowa in the 1990s, though, shows that co-ops may not be able to cover all citizens in all regions of the nation and compete with well intrenched insurance companies. It seems to me that the public option will do a better job than co-ops of dealing with the problems in our national health care crisis.

Onto more personal news, some of my Everyday Citizen cartoons have been selected for inclusion in the San Francisco Cartoon Art Museum’s Monsters of Webcomics exhibition, and will be featured in the Virtual Gallery along with a wide array of webcomics from around the globe. This historic exhibition will include over 100 artists, making this one of the largest exhibitions in the Cartoon Art Museum’s 24-year history.

Monsters of Webcomics opens to the public this Saturday, August 8, and will run through December 6 here at the Cartoon Art Museum in San Francisco.

You can find the full press release for the exhibition here: http://cartoonart.livejournal.com/29650.html Additional information about exhibitions and events can be found at LiveJournal (http://cartoonart.livejournal.com), Twitter (@cartoonart), on MySpace, and at the museum’s Facebook “Fan” page and “Causes” page.

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