Too much moral purity, eh? Ooooh kaaaaay.
But more on that later. Meanwhile...
The problem with equating our private insurance companies with European private insurance companies, is that ours are investor-owned and profit-driven, while theirs are non-profit and, in essence, not much more than private companies that are hired to administer what is in most cases a de facto government-run single-payer system. The government tells them what they will cover and what they will charge people for that coverage, and most of that coverage is paid for with taxes.
The private "insurers" that Maggie Mahar admires here, Group Health Cooperative and Kaiser Permanente, are non-profit, true HMOs and are basically miniature versions of the National Health Systems of Spain and the UK, where the government [the taxpayers!] owns the hospitals and clinics and employs the doctors and nurses and so forth. We have that here in the US: the VA system [and no, Walter Reed is an Army hospital, not a VA hospital].
The much-admired Cleveland Clinic and Mayo Clinic also operate this way, non-profits that own their own facilities and hire their personnel on salary.
All of which argues that the very best way to deliver superb care *and* contain costs is to just nationalize the whole damned system, where the taxpayers own the hospitals and employ all the nurses and doctors.
After a lot of study, this has become *my* preferred solution: open up the VA system to everybody in the country [we'd probably have to rename it though]. The VA even has a working electronic health records system already in place, for those of you who are turned on by that sort of thing.
Not everybody is up for that radical a change, and besides, I'm all for promoting small and medium-sized businesses, so I'm willing to compromise here.
Nationalizing the whole system [payers, providers, and facilities] is one far end of the spectrum of methods for providing health care [for convenience, we'll call it the left].
What we have right now is almost all the way at the other far end of the spectrum: totally privatized [we'll call this the right]. We've essentially established Medicare as our national high-risk pool, covering the elderly and disabled, as both are rather expensive groups that the private insurers don't want to have to pay for, but beyond that [and a few other imperfect safety nets such as Medicaid, state high-risk pools, etc], it's pretty much market-driven competition.
And this is where Barack Obama's plan, Max Baucus' plan, Jacob Hacker's plan, Ron Wyden's plan, Bill Clinton's plan, Hillary Clinton's plan, John Edwards' plan, [I could go on] fall down. The assumption in all these plans is that providers [doctors, dentists, hospitals, pharmacies, etc] are competing with each other for customers [patients] and that payers [insurance companies, and "a new public plan like Medicare"] will all be competing with each other for customers [individuals, employers].
The reality is that intra-group competition doesn't happen all that much. Your employer dictates who your insurer is, your insurer limits your choice of doctors / hospitals / pharmacies, and people generally pick the closest doctor from that list and go to whichever specialist or hospital that doctor sends them to.
Really, payers are in competition with providers, employers are in competition with payers, individuals are in competition with each other [for jobs] and with their employers [over who pays how much of the premium], and individuals who lack employer-sponsored coverage are in competition with payers.
To help various entities in this multi-sided argument compete with various other entities, we have:
- benefits managers [hired by employers to negotiate with insurance companies, and to explain benefits to employees]
- pharmacy benefits managers [to negotiate three-way with insurance companies, pharmacies, and drug companies]
- radiation benefits managers [presumably they do the same thing as PBMs but with imaging centers instead of pharmacies and drug companies]
- denial management companies [to help providers argue with payers]
- patient advocates [to help individuals argue with payers]
- utilization review and utilization management companies [iirc, they're hired by payers to check up on providers and patients both]
Plus, you can hire auditors to check up on all of the above. It's a terrific system for employing lots and lots of people and shoveling lots of $$$$$ throughout the economy, but it sucks at delivering health CARE.
Single payer and European-style multi-payer are right smack dab in the middle: nationalized insurance and private providers. Single payer [fully-nationalized insurance] is a bit to the left of center, and European style [mostly-nationalized insurance] is a bit to the right of center.
Getting back to the moral purity argument... neither of these centrist positions is one of moral purity, but moving to one or the other of them is going to be essential for our survival.
Single payer has several advantages over European style:
- less administrative complexity means lower costs [or more money available to be spent on actual care]
- the US is a big country with a mobile population, and one plan with every provider "in network" means fewer hassles for travelers
- why would anybody want to choose among *plans* and *payers* when we could all have the same plan and payer and just choose our *providers*?
As for losing groups like the Cleveland Clinic, the Mayo Clinic, Kaiser Permanente, and the Group Health Cooperative if we go to single payer, it's my understanding that under HR 676, such non-profit provider groups would still exist. I haven't called John Conyers' office and asked him about it though, so I could be wrong. Any volunteers?
/rant
Sunday, December 28, 2008
Monday, December 22, 2008
Making a list, checking it twice...
As DCblogger notes, it looks like Ted Kennedy is ready to abandon single payer and get on board with ObamaCare. Oh noes!
Healthcare-NOW! has a form letter that you can print out and mail to Senator Kennedy, but ever since the anthrax brouhaha, mail to Congress and the President has gone through a decontamination process. This has created a real bottle neck, and letters can take weeks, or even months, to reach their destination.
So, I was going to send Senator Kennedy an e-mail, when I thought: I know! I'll send him a Christmas card!
Making the card turned out to be waaaay too much fun, and I got a little carried away... If you want to send any of these cards [or make your own cards] to the President-Elect, or your Senator, or your Representative, or anybody else you can think of, now you know how.
Healthcare-NOW! has a form letter that you can print out and mail to Senator Kennedy, but ever since the anthrax brouhaha, mail to Congress and the President has gone through a decontamination process. This has created a real bottle neck, and letters can take weeks, or even months, to reach their destination.
So, I was going to send Senator Kennedy an e-mail, when I thought: I know! I'll send him a Christmas card!
Making the card turned out to be waaaay too much fun, and I got a little carried away... If you want to send any of these cards [or make your own cards] to the President-Elect, or your Senator, or your Representative, or anybody else you can think of, now you know how.
Sunday, December 21, 2008
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Health care reform is dead! Long live health care reform!
The drumbeat has been low and steady for a long time now, but it's getting louder and more insistent: single payer, Medicare for all, Canadian-style national health insurance just is not politically viable in the US.
Gac.
Gac.
100 years later the evil banks and corporations have fallen
but Cleveland's municipally-owned electric company is still going strong.
You can thank Dennis Kucinich for that.
You can thank Dennis Kucinich for that.
Saturday, December 13, 2008
RIP, Traveling Turtle Girl
Friday, December 12, 2008
Tuesday, December 09, 2008
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