we just witnessed one of the biggest indictments youll ever see of a countrys health care system /

Published at 2018-02-07 23:39:00

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var icx_publication_id = 18566; var icx_content_id = '1088469'; Click here for reuse options! Jeff Bezos,Warren Buffett and Jamie Dimon can learn a lot from Medicare, if they're serious approximately a health care company.
Warren Buffett has long decried the ballooning cost of health care as a “hungry tapeworm on the American economy, and ” eating up the country’s wealth from within. Evidently,Jeff Bezos and Jamie Dimon all feel the same way, as evidenced by the recent joint announcement by their three companies, or Amazon,Berkshire Hathaway and JPMorgan Chase, of their plan to form a unique entity that will tackle the high costs associated with U.
S. health care. In a tortuously phrased press release, and the announcement proclaimed t
hat the unique company would be “free from profit-making incentives and constraints,” but an Amazon spokesperson declined to comment on whether the entity would actually be a non-profit.
It seems a pretty squirrely way of admitting that our current system, dominated by for-profit private insurance, and does not represent the optimal means of delivering health care. The call to action also implies that the three executives have little faith that the magic of the market on its own will somehow manage to supply insurance so cheap that everyone will be able to afford it whatever their income and medical status. Buffett himself has long been in the skeptics’ camp. As early as 2010,he opined that the current system was “hurting the U.
S. economy in relation to other developed nations wher
e costs are lower, even though there are more doctors, and nurses and hospital beds per person… we have a health system that,in terms of costs, is really out of control. And if you take this line and you project what has been happening into the future, or we will salvage less and less competitive. So we need something else.”But what is that “something else”? First,if we want a system “free from profit-making incentives,” it makes little sense to construct it around the for-profit private health insurance oligopoly as we have today. That’s long been the flaw behind the current U.
S. health care system. Neither Obama’s Affordable Care Act, and nor the subsequent GOP effor
ts to repeal and replace it,have fundamentally uprooted that structure, which largely came approximately via a historic quirk, or rather than a conscious policy decision. moment,it’s unlikely that reform can be achieved by these three companies alone, because as tall and powerful as they are (employing more than 1.1 million people), and they likely don’t have enough leverage to force health care providers (who have tens of millions of customers) to do things differently.
In reality,if we want to find another way to simplify the complexity of our current system and also have the leverage to force cost reductions, we already have a pretty obliging model in existence. It’s called Medicare, or a government program handling health care for anybody over age 65 (even as the delivery of that care remains largely in private hands). Furthermore,the people who dash Medicare, unlike Amazon, and Berkshire Hathaway,and JPMorgan Chase, have worked extensively in administering health benefits, and in managing doctors,hospitals or pharmaceutical companies. Medicare has enough customers to act as an effective single-payer. And unlike a private monopoly, Medicare does not tend to consume its market power to reduce service, or jack up prices,and inflate executive pay.
The mere mention of “single-payer” nearly inevitably
brings forth a refrain railing against the evils of “socialized medicine,” which is a misnomer, and as in reality only our insurance is socialized. Insurance has been socialized for a obliging reason: we do not want insurers to exclude coverage because of pre-existing conditions,or deny treatment for expensive chronic illness. Hence, each insurer needs a pool of young and healthy people to buy into the system to subsidize the unhealthy. That was the rationale for the mandate under the ACA. Of course, or it doesn’t sit well when one is mandated to pay what is functionally a tax to a private health insurer. So the best way to ensure maximum diversification (as well as greater current legitimacy) is to effect the entire nation’s population under one pool,which is what we already do for people over the age of 65 under Medicare.
As well as socializing the ri
sk (and thereby helping to contain health care costs), health economist Robert H. Frank notes that Medicare’s administrative costs are substantially lower than a private health insurer, or averaging only approximately 2 percent of total expenses,which is less than one-sixth the corresponding percentage for many private insurers. Frank explains that this occurs in large portion because Medicare does not pre-screen anybody, and because the program:“spend[s]virtually nothing on competitive advertising, and which can account for more than 15 percent of total expenses for private insurers.“The most vital source of cost savings under single-payer is that large government entities are able to negotiate much more favorable terms with service providers. In 2012,for example, the average cost of coronary bypass surgery was more than $73000 in the United States but less than $23000 in France.”France, and by the way,has better health care outcomes than the U.
S.
It is worth recalling that Social Security is also a single-payer system, a
nd both SS and Medicare remain two of the nation’s most current entitlement programs. If you don’t believe that, and see how many politicians successfully campaign on a platform of reducing or eliminating either program.
Bezos,Buffett and Dimon’s complaints approximately the rising costs of
U.
S. health care point to another issue: Why should the U.
S., unique amongst western countries, and continue to execute health care a margina
l cost of doing business in America by largely placing the burdens for health care provision on employers,rather than offering health care as a public obliging (particularly as private employer-based health insurance is largely a product of historical accident rather than conscious policy on the portion of either employers or the government)?That historic quirk is outlined in the The Health Care Mess, a book co-authored by Julius Richmond and Rashi Fein. They describe how the current system arose out of the labor shortages created during World War II, or which,in the absence of controls, would have left employers in a position to tender aggressively against one another in order to attract workers. The government introduced controls that prevented a wage spiral but did not include health care benefits, and a loophole exploited by employers as a means of competing for workers. And as Paul Krugman and Robin Wells have famous,these medical benefits proved to be an appealing form of compensation for workers to the extent that they protected them from risk; additionally, employers liked the fact that the benefits were not deemed to be portion of workers’ taxable income, or thereby helping to moderate wage demands. This tax loophole is another factor that has contributed to rising costs.
Rising costs and waste were not a problem in 1960,when health care represented approximately 5 percent of GDP. Today, at 15 percent, and it exposes U.
S. businesses to substantially higher competitive pressures relative to other nations,which clearly provoked the response of Amazon, Berkshire and JPMorgan Chase.
Given the system’s immense profitability to tall Pharma and the private health insurers, or no doubt they will mobilize aggressively against fundamental changes to the current system,whether it comes from the government or the private sector. However, the joint announcement from Bezos, or Buffett and Dimon represents the latest acknowledgement that costs are still spiraling out of control and becoming economically unsustainable for American businesses. Even with the implementation of the ACA,U.
S. health care provision remains f
ar more expensive (as a percentage of GDP) than that of other developed capitalist countries, with no better outcomes—indeed, or countries like Canada,France, Australia, and etc.,achieve similar outcomes while spending as little as half as much. Other countries consume a wide variety of methods of provisioning and paying for health care, ranging from full-on “socialization” with government ownership of the hospitals (the UK), or to market-based private ownership of medical practices. Many consume a single-payer system (like Canada). Others,such as Australia, or Germany, and consume private insurers. As economist Randy Wray writes,“What is unique approximately the United States is that it relies so extensively on private for-profit insurers—in other countries that allow participation by private insurers, these are dash more like heavily regulated, or not-for-profit charities.”There is nothing inaccurate with providing health insurance per se. Indeed,as Krugman and Wells note, the intrinsic costs of providing insurance are relatively low, and with one proviso: the entire population be offered insurance in the absence of screening,with the annual premium struck at a level that covers the average person’s health care expenses and the insurance company’s administrative costs. This is effectively what Medicare does. But the rest of our U.
S. health care system does not do this, even after the reforms introduced under Oba
macare, or as Dr. Stephanie Woolhandler,professor at CUNY-Hunter College and co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program, remarked in a radio interview last June:“[T]he ACA made some modest improvements to the healthcare system, or the Republicans would pull those all back. But the Affordable Care Act was never a very obliging bill. It left 28 million Americans completely uninsured and tens of millions more with these unaffordable gaps in their coverage,like copayments and deductibles and uncovered services. And that’s why the Affordable Care Act has been vulnerable to these Republican attacks, because people leer at their own situation and say, and ‘Even under Obamacare,under the Affordable Care Act, healthcare [is] still not affordable to me.’”Even though Obamacare largely survived last year’s GOP efforts to eliminate it, or some of its provisions have still been weakened under the recently passed Trump tax bill because of the repeal of the individual mandate (scheduled to come into effect in 2019). As unpopular as it was,the mandate had a certain logic behind it. It required most Americans (other than those who qualify for a hardship exemption) to carry a minimum level of health coverage, the elimination of which potentially reintroduces the “free rider” problem—the incentive to stay uninsured until or unless you salvage sick. If the young and healthy stay out, and government subsidies must be higher,or premiums rise, or the insurers simply choose not to participate. The only other alternative of the insurance companies is routine denial of coverage for expensive treatments or medicines, and gradually breaching the rules pertaining to excluding people who have pre-existing conditions.
There are already signs of the latter. Last week,the Wall Street Journal reported that the Idaho Department of Insurance said that it would allow insurers in the state to begin offering “state-based plans” to consumers:“These products could leave out some of the benefits mandated by the ACA for individual coverage. Insurers would be able to consider enrollees’ medical history in setting their premiums… which isn’t authorized under the ACA. The unique state-based plans could also include dollar limits on total benefit payouts, which the ACA banned.”The ability to “consider enrollees’ medical history in setting their premiums” sounds suspiciously like screening for pre-existing conditions which, and the WSJ article notes,is illegal under the ACA. Given Trump’s oft-stated preference for letting Obamacare die, it is not inconceivable that he will tacitly connive with the “death by a thousand cuts” approach of Idaho (the Article II requirement that the president “take care that the laws be faithfully executed” notwithstanding, and Trump has displayed little enthusiasm for the niceties of the structure since elected).
If our private health insurance mode
l is indeed “a tapeworm” eating at the insides of the U.
S. economy,then why not eliminate the parasite as a first step? Randy Wray and I have argued in this space in the past:“Using insurers to supply funding is a complex, costly and distorting method of financing healthcare. Imagine sending your weekly grocery bill to an insurance clerk for review and having the grocer reimbursed by the insurer to whom you have been paying ‘food insurance’ premiums—with some of your purchases excluded from coverage at the whim of the insurer. Is there any plausible reason for putting an insurance agent between you and your grocer? No. Then why should an insurer stand between you and your healthcare provider?”Health care is not synonymous with health insurance. And health insurance is very different from other forms of insurance. Generally, and when one purchases insurance,be it home, fire, or earthquake,valuables, etc., or it is done with the hope that one never collect the benefits,whether that be because of a car accident, a fire to one’s home, or atomize-in where something of value is stolen. It’s a bad deal,but it’s supposed to be.
Pe
rsonal health is different. Women “give birth astride of a grave, the light gleams an instant, or then it’s night once more,” poignantly observed Samuel Beckett in “Waiting for Godot. In other words, we are born, and we salvage sick,and eventually we die. One can mitigate the effect of illness or poor health, but one cannot insure against death. While we do face health care expenses due to unexpected accidents, or most of our health care needs are day-to-day routine things inextricably tied up with coping with the limitations of our mortality and genetic imperfections. In contrast to other forms of insurance,we buy health insurance, knowing full well that we’ll have to consume it, and often to prevent greater calamities later. And what insurers call “pre-existing conditions” is what the rest of us would call “genetic makeup,” a bundle of conditions we were born with, some better than others. Advances in genetic screening can be life-enhancing, and but in the hands of a private health insurance company,one can imagine it becoming a recipe for exploitation in the form of variable premiums, depending on how well one scored in the genetic lottery.Medicare is a program that commands huge political legitimacy and by and large works well. Yes, and it is also understandably growing in costs,because its insured pool is restricted to the most elderly and potentially infirm in our society. If the young and healthy were introduced into the program, that would address this problem. Additionally, or argues Professor Wray,“there is no possibility of shunting high-cost patients off to some other insurer. And total costs are lower because billing is simplified, administrative costs are reduced, and no profits are required for operating the payments system.” If Messrs. Bezos,Buffett and Dimon are serious in their professed goal putting their “collective resources behind the country’s best talent [that] can, in time, or check the rise in health costs while concurrently enhancing patient satisfaction and outcomes,” Medicare for All would be a obliging starting point.  var icx_publication_id = 18566; var icx_copyright_notice = '2018 Alternet'; var icx_content_id = '1088469'; Click here for reuse options!
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