Healthcare Is So Horrible Here that Thousands Rely on Free Clinics—And You’re Fined if You Don’t Use Prescription Drugs

Hey, California, is there a doctor in the house?
Paul Krasner,  Alternet

Photo Credit: spirit of america / Shutterstock.com

Although Coachella Valley in Southern California has become synonymous with music festivals, Goldenvoice, the company that produces those events, also helped sponsor the first massive four-day health clinic this year. Free medical, dental and vision care was provided to nearly 2,500 uninsured patients at the Riverside County Fairgrounds.

According to the California Healthcare Foundation, this state now has the largest number of people without health insurance — 6.9 million –- more than any state in the country. More than 20% of Californians remain uninsured. Employees in businesses of all sizes are more likely to be uninsured in California than any other state. About 60% of the uninsured population are Latino.

Pamela Congdon, president of the Remote Area Medical’s California affiliate (RAM CA) and Volunteer Coordinator, told me:

“The California Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons (CALAOMS) helps sponsor RAM CA. They allow us to use their office, use our staff, including myself and our Associate Director, without any charges.I work for CALAOMS, and when I asked if they would help us bring RAM in Northern California, they agreed. Stan Brock asked me to start the affiliate — RAM CA –- which ran the clinic in Coachella. Please say that the clinic is run by the greatest group of volunteers.”

Indeed, over 1,200 general and healthcare professionals volunteered to provide more than 10,000 individual services with more than $1,000,000 in value. Over those four days, twelve hours a day, an estimated 600 custom pairs of eyeglasses were cut, 750 medical exams administered, and 1,300 dental patients treated.

There were 615 general volunteers, 395 dental professionals, 60 vision professionals, and 190 medical professionals of all kinds. There were 1,766 dental patients, 1,435 medical, and 798 vision. One patient hadn’t seen a doctor for seventeen years. Of the 2,419 patients, 1796 were Latino. Oh, yes, and 234 stuffed animals were handed out to children.

One patient sent this message:

“My name is Jennifer and I wanted to say thank you from the deepest of my heart! I found out about RAM in Indio at 11 p.m. on Thursday. By 2:30 a.m., I had made my way across the valley, and joined in line with the rest of the people you helped. Not a SINGLE person I interacted with was anything but kind, courteous, and understanding. No one judged us for being there, no one thought we were a burden.

“I had all of my wisdom teeth pulled, something I avoided due to an overbearing phobia of dentists in general. Both my dentist and the dental assistant were comforting, and made the procedure almost painless, and fast. I am almost in tears as I write this email, due to the overwhelming gratitude I have for everyone involved in this amazing project that has changed and saved so many lives, including my own.”

***

I’m writing this in the middle of the Open Enrollment time frame, during which my wife Nancy and I finally signed up for a Medicare Advantage plan. Stemming from an old police beating, I use a cane to walk from room to room, and a walker outside the house. The new healthcare plan includes free access to a gym, and I picture myself using my walker on a treadmill. That image reminds me of a New Yorker cartoon depicting a group of people on stationery bicycles in a park.

In the process of enrolling in the Medicare Advantage plan, we were told that we would have to pay a penalty because we hadn’t joined a Medicare (or any other “creditable”) prescription drug coverage. We were never informed about that requirement, which began in 2006.

Since we’ve always avoided taking prescription drugs, we never felt the need for it. I called the Health Insurance Counseling Advocacy Program and learned that the penalty would be $32 for each of us. That means $64 every month for the rest of our lives. It seems somewhat absurd and unfair that we could be penalized for not taking any prescription drugs.

Ironically, “This penalty is required by law is designed to encourage people to enroll in a Medicare Drug Plan when they are first eligible,” yet we had no way ofknowing there was such an option to consider. Another irony is that Medicare doesn’t cover any dental procedures, even though rotten teeth and gums can cause internal illness that Medicare does cover.

I asked RAM CA volunteer Dr. Peter Scheer, a world-renowned oral surgeon, about that. His response: “In regard to Medicare and covering dental needs, it has always been an issue. Medicare stands strong in only providing benefits for services that are deemed medically necessary and has always excluded anything related to dentistry, surgical or restorative.

“Yes, there are situations where a patient may have an atrocious dental infection that can become life-threatening if not treated. The times where this situation really hits a grey area is when the patient also has other medical issues that may be affected by the infection or contributing to it. Unfortunately, most instances we come across are a decrease in the quality of life due to a poor oral condition rather than a life-threatening event.”

However, a research team from Columbia University’s School of Public Health has just released the results of a three-year study of 420 men and women, concluding that the improvement of gum health can help slow the development of atherosclerosis, the build-up of cholesterol-rich plaque along artery walls, which can lead to heart attacks and strokes.

Meanwhile, Goldenvoice has invited RAM CA to return next year. I asked Pamela Congdon, “Will the Affordable Care Act affect that event, or is it too early to tell?” She replied, “The ACA won’t affect the event in terms of people needing service. We are going to have the Borrego Community Health Foundation there to help people sign up for the ACA.” As inspiring as this year’s four-day free clinic has been, in a truly compassionate culture, there would be no need for its existence.

But the insurance industry has a pre-existing condition known in technical terminology as greed. Not to mention the pharmaceutical industry; the annual turnover of revenue for prescription drugs by the top ten companies is estimated to be worth $700-billion dollars. In my new Medicare Advantage Enrollment Kit, there are listed a few thousand prescription drugs, from Abacavir to Zyvox. Okay, now cue that soothing voiceover to recite all their side effects, from anal leakage to zits.

As for me, I owe my longevity to never taking any legal drugs.

Read more of Paul Krassner at PaulKrassner.com




Obstinate Memory: The nurses warned us about Obamacare

The brave Rose Ann DeMoro. She speaks for us all.

The brave Rose Ann DeMoro. She speaks for us all. Nurses have always been at the forefront of social defense.

Note: The piece reproduced here was first posted on March 25th, 2010. None of its contents has become dated since that time. If anything, DeMoro’s words are today more prophetic and relevant to this debate than when she first sat down to write this assessment. We have included in the Appendix some select comments from the original discussion.—Eds

Diary of a Wimpy Health Care Bill

By Rose Ann DeMoro
DeMoro is executive director of the 150,000-member National Nurses United

Passage of President Obama’s healthcare bill proves that Congress can enact comprehensive social legislation in the face of virulent rightwing opposition. Now that we have an insurance bill, can we move on to [real] healthcare reform?

As an organization of registered nurses, we have an obligation to provide an honest assessment, as nurses must do every hour of every day. The legislation fails to deliver on the promise of a single standard of excellence in care for all and instead makes piecemeal adjustments to the current privatized, for-profit healthcare behemoth.

When all the boasts fade, comparing the bill to Social Security and Medicare, probably intended to mollify liberal supporters following repeated concessions to the healthcare industry and conservative Democrats, a sobering reality will probably set in.

What the bill does provide

  • Expansion of government-funded Medicaid to cover 16 million additional low income people, though the program remains significantly under funded. This limits access to its enrollees as its reimbursement rates are lower than either Medicare or private insurance, with the result some providers find it impossible to participate. Though the federal government will provide additional subsidies to states, those expire in 2016, leaving the program a top target to budget cutting governors and legislatures.
    • [pullquote]Among other things, Obamacare is a veritable windfall for pharmaceutical giants. Through a deal with the White House, the administration blocked provisions to give the government more power to negotiate drug prices and gave the name brand drug makers 12 years of marketing monopoly against competition from generic competition on biologic drugs, including cancer treatments.[/pullquote]
  • Increased funding for community health centers, thanks to an amendment by Sen. Bernie Sanders, that will open their doors to nearly double their current patient volume.
  • The mandate forces people without coverage to buy insurance. Coupled with the subsidies for other moderate income working people not eligible for Medicare or Medicaid, the result is a gift worth hundreds of billions of dollars to reward the very insurance industry that created the present crisis through price gouging, care denials, and other abuses.
  • Inadequate healthcare cost controls for individuals and families.
    • 3. An illusory limit on out-of-pocket medical expenses. But even in the regulated state exchanges, insurers remain in control of what they offer and what will be a covered service. Insurers are likely to design plans to attract healthier customers, and many enrollees will likely find the federal guarantees do not protect them for medical treatments they actually need.
  • Significant loopholes in the much touted insurance reforms:
    • 3. Allowing insurers to charge three times more based on age plus more for certain conditions, and continue to use marketing techniques to cherry-pick healthier, less costly enrollees.
    • Taxing health benefits for the first time. Though modified, the tax on benefits remains, a 40 percent tax on plans whose value exceeds $10,200 for individuals or $27,500 for families. With no real checks on premium hikes, many plans will reach that amount by the start date, 2018, rapidly. The result will be more cost shifting from employers to workers and more people switching to skeletal plans that leave them vulnerable to financial ruin.
    • A windfall for pharmaceutical giants. Through a deal with the White House, the administration blocked provisions to give the government more power to negotiate drug prices and gave the name brand drug makers 12 years of marketing monopoly against competition from generic competition on biologic drugs, including cancer treatments.

    Most critically, the bill strengthens the economic and political power of a private insurance-based system based on profit rather than patient need.

    As former Labor Secretary Robert Reich wrote after the vote “don’t believe anyone who says Obama’s healthcare legislation marks a swing of the pendulum back toward the Great Society and the New Deal. Obama’s health bill is a very conservative piece of legislation, building on a Republican (a private market approach) rather than a New Deal foundation. The New Deal foundation would have offered Medicare to all Americans or, at the very least, featured a public insurance option.”

    Unlike Social Security and Medicare which expanded a public safety net, this bill requires people — in the midst of the mass unemployment and the worse economic downturn since the Great Depression — to pay thousands of dollars out of pocket to big private companies for a product that may or may not provide health coverage in return.

    Too many people will remain uninsured, individual and family healthcare costs will continue to rise largely unabated and private insurers will still be able to deny claims with little recourse for patients.

    If, as the President and his supporters insist, the bill is just a start, let’s hold them to that promise. Let’s see the same resolve and mobilization from legislators and constituency groups who pushed through this bill to go farther, and achieve a permanent, lasting solution to our healthcare crisis with universal, guaranteed healthcare by expanding and improving Medicare to cover everyone.

    Leaders of the National Nurses United have raised many of these concerns about the legislation for months. But, sadly, as the healthcare bill moved closer to final passage, the space for genuine debate and critique of the bill’s very real limitations was largely squeezed out.

    Much of the fault lies with the far right, from the streets to the airwaves to some legislators that steadily escalated from deliberate misrepresentations to fear mongering to racial epithets to hints of threatened violence against bill supporters.

    For its part, the administration and its major supporters shut out advocates of more far reaching reform, while vilifying critics on the left.

    Both trends are troubling for democracy, as is the pervasive corruption of corporate lobbying that so clearly influenced the language of the bill. Insurers, drug companies, and other corporate lobbyists shattered all records for federal influence peddling and were rewarded with a bill that largely protected their interests, along with a Supreme Court ruling that will allow corporations, including the health care industry, to spend unlimited sums in federal elections.

    Rightwing opponents fought as hard to block this legislation as they would have against a Medicare for all plan. As more Americans recognize the bill does not resemble the distortions peddled by the right, and become disappointed by their rising medical bills and ongoing fights with insurers for needed care, there will be new opportunity to press the case for real reform. Next time, let’s get it done right.

    SOURCE: Michael Moore’s Open Mike
    _
    ______________________________

    APPENDIX

    SELECT COMMENTS FROM THE ORIGINAL DISCUSSION THREAD

    I agree timetoact, i saw the demos in DC shouting down the health care bill. Your country is so large that the it is usually only the priveliged that gets that luxury!!! after all poor people who would benefit from the bill can hardly afford to travel all the way to DC can they? and that is exactly how the greedy b#####ds fleecing you for your health insurance like it!!!!! Mr. Average can’t afford the time off or the travel costs cos he’s too busy licking his wounds from the banks shafting him, or is too ill to travel because he can’t afford his prescriptions!!!!! let the doctors care!!! how dare a pen pushing businessman tell a doctor who he can or cannot treat!!!


    Letsgeterdone Posted March 29th, 2010 1:28 AM
    We Need to End Insurance Market-based Health Care.
    What Did We Get? Where Are We? And, Where Do We Go From Here?
    A year ago health care was in crisis. Its cost burdened individuals, businesses, and all levels of government. Americans were dying at a rate of 45,000 per year due to lack of access to health care, health care bankruptcies were rising. Change was urgently needed. The crisis was an opportunity to create the best health care system in the world.

    Because we have extensive experience with three health systems, we could have had a very informed debate. The U.S. has a market-based system (private insurance-controlled health care); a single payer system (Medicare) and a socialist system (the Veterans Administration). We could have asked which worked best, which covered the most people, which was least expensive, and which produced the best health outcomes. This fact-based discussion could have resulted in putting in place an efficient, effective national health system moving the U.S. into the top tier of health programs from its current dismal ranking of 37th in the world.

    But, that debate never happened. Right from the outset President Obama and the Democratic leadership decided to consider only a private insurance, market-based solution. A real debate would have found that the market approach was the least effective and most costly part of American health care. In the end we got the pre-ordained decision; market-based health insurance was further enshrined with all its administrative and bureaucratic costs, its unfairness and inability to provide health care to all.

    Over the last year, Democratic and Republican partisans in and out of government have made the debate on health a misleading one. False distractions like ‘death panels’ and ‘government take-over’ kept the right wing and Republicans fomenting and angry when neither was occurring. On the left, the public option, always miniscule and never really on the table, was the primary focus of non-profits aligned with the Democratic Party. This non-issue distracted progressives from the real issues and divided Americans who wanted real reform.

    Reality is still hard to see through the fog of partisan rhetoric. The Republicans continue to claim socialism and a government takeover of health care, when the law is neither. And, the Democrats have been high-fiving each other and claiming they’ve achieved the equivalent of Social Security, the Civil Rights Acts, and Medicare – none of that is true either.

    When the rhetorical fog lifts, we will see the system has not changed much. Health care will still be dominated by profit-driven insurance companies. More public money will go to executive salaries and private industry profits. Tens of millions of people will remain uninsured and costs will continue to increase. The challenge for the future is how to get public dollars to go to the nation’s public health and not to corporations that serve as middlemen that do not provide health care.

    The centerpiece of the “reform,” subsidizing the insurance industry, forcing Americans to buy their overpriced product and more deeply embedding insurance market-control of health care, was barely debated. Only after passage of the bill is a debate beginning on whether this is within the constitutional power of government. Of course, the corporate media are saying the mandate is constitutional, not surprisingly since it is in the interests of corporate power. But never before has the federal government required Americans to buy a product. This unprecedented expansion of federal power raises a very real constitutional question that expands the Commerce Clause at a time when the Supreme Court is reining it in. Putting on my lawyer hat, I see this as unconstitutional and in the end it will be decided by a divided court. Click here and here for links to the legal arguments from a progressive and conservative perspective.

    We never had a debate about whether it is a good idea to have the federal government force Americans to buy a corporate product. This major, unprecedented approach was lost in the din of death panels and the public option. Where does this precedent lead? Should Americans be forced to buy a retirement plan from JPMorgan or Bank of America to ensure retirement security? The U.S. already gives hundreds of billions annually in corporate welfare through crony capitalism, disguising it with “free market” rhetoric, not even counting the massive bailouts of the last year. This new form of corporate welfare will extend the big business-big government connection in new ways and further the pay-to-play politics of Washington, D.C., with more corporate money polluting politics.

    The new law forces Americans to buy a corporate product that is overpriced and flawed. Americans could be required to pay up to 9.5 percent of their income on insurance that only covers an average of 70 percent of their medical expenses. In addition, insurance is allowed to deny care with no court review of that decision. As a result, someone with insurance, paying an expensive premium, could find themselves in bankruptcy as a result of this law. The major cause of bankruptcy before this bill was a health care crisis and a majority of those people had insurance. That will remain true under the new law.

    What did we get? There were some attempts to fix insurance abuse, but every fix had a poison pill added by the insurance industry. A good example is insurance no longer being able to deny care for pre-existing illness. The poison pill, which may actually make things worse for more people, is the industry can charge people who do not meet their wellness guidelines double what they charge others. And, if you are older, they can charge triple. So, while you cannot be denied insurance, will you be able to afford it?

    We also got expansion of coverage. The largest source of expansion is Medicaid – 16 million more people will be covered. Medicaid is woefully underfunded poverty medicine that pays doctors such poor reimbursement that many refuse Medicaid patients, and it does not cover all health needs. States are already stretched thin trying to pay for Medicaid resulting in more cuts to services and lowered payments to doctors. The federal government provides financial assistance but that ends in 2016. Relying on Medicaid reinforces a caste system where health care depends on wealth.

    The other expansion of coverage depends on people buying insurance. For many the penalty in increased taxes will be more affordable than health insurance. And, businesses will find that it is much cheaper to pay a small fine than to provide insurance. More people will be pushed into the individual insurance market where the cost of insurance is rapidly increasing.

    Perhaps the change that will have the most positive impact is one produced by Senator Bernie Sanders; a deal he got for not forcing a vote on single payer in the Senate, the expansion of funding by $12.5 billion for community health centers so that they can double the patients they see. Community health centers are the foundation of primary care for residents of rural areas and inner cities, providing basic services such as blood and dental work for about 20 million U.S. residents.

    I’m not going to review every detail of the bill here. Two clear-sighted reviews come from National Nurses United, the largest nurses union, and Physicians for National Health Program. You can see those here and here. http://www.healthcare-now.org/ http://pnhp.org/ http://www.singlepayeraction.org/ http://www.nationalnursesunited.org/ http://pdamerica.org/index.php http://www.prosperityagenda.us/

    Maybe more important than the specifics, because most of those have insurance company-written poison pills that undermine them, is that for the first time ever in U.S. history, the law codifies the view that all people should have access to health care, regardless of age, income, health or employment status. This bill does not achieve the goal, after fully implemented it leaves 23 million (at best) without health insurance and tens of millions more with inadequate health insurance because they are on Medicaid’s poverty care or their private insurance does not fully cover them.

    Now the law states an aspiration. Just as the U.S. is working to become a more perfect union, health care policy needs a lot of work, indeed some important paradigm shifts, before we achieve good quality health care for all.

    What should real reform advocates do now?

    The first step is to know clearly what we want: Public dollars should only go to health care not to insurance expenses, profits, and bureaucracy. That means a national health program based on expanded and improved Medicare for all so we cost effectively provide health care to everyone in the United States.

    Organize a movement to achieve that clear purpose. Build from the base up, organized around congressional districts. The foundation of this movement will be a well educated and unwavering core group that will not compromise on core principles. There are already many strong organizationms working for real reform (see Health Care Now!, Physicians for National Health Program, Single Payer Action, National Nurses United, Progressive Democrats of America, Prosperity Agenda) that did not compromise and no doubt many of the groups that compromised now see that the result was unsatisfactory. And, polls consistently show majority support for a single payer national health program, so we are further along than many realize.

    Apply strategies and tactics designed to achieve that end. We need to build a foundation of broad-based education and an understanding that you cannot compromise or effectively regulate the insurance industry. All the traditional tools of advocates have a role in the single payer movement: lobbying, litigation, voter initiatives, state-level reform, protest, civil resistance and elections to achieve our goals. On elections, the single payer movement needs to challenge incumbents in primaries and General Elections. The latter may be where we have more power. The movement must be independent of either political party. One lesson we should learn from this year is we cannot count on any ally in Congress until we build a movement that adds to our power and theirs.

    Those who recognize the need for real reform should not get stuck within the framework of the status quo. Now that the Democrats have further enshrined the insurance industry, some will urge that we work within that framework to improve the law. Tinker with insurance regulation, increase subsidies, and increase penalties for not purchasing insurance. Tinkering with the insurance industry is insufficient.

    There will be a special push for a public option or lowering the age of Medicare. We cannot be fooled by this. These types of programs will leave in place the wasteful insurance industry that makes health care so expensive. There will only be a positive gain if everyone – those with insurance and those without, whether they get their insurance from work or the individual market – is able to participate. If these programs are limited to those without insurance they will do more harm than good because they will become a dumping ground for those who are priced out of the insurance market because of illness or age. It will make the public program fail and add to industry profits. We need to end insurance market-based health care and put in place a public health system that is publicly funded and covers everyone.

    A particular spotlight needs to be kept on the insurance industry. Their behavior will not change with the new law, indeed it will worsen. Single payer advocates need to continue to highlight their abuses, denials of care, excessive executive salaries, rapid increases in premiums and cut backs in coverage. Tools like shareholder actions, boycotts and divestiture need to be used. When abuses occur the movement needs to use tactics like sit-ins at insurance companies to show that people are angry. See www.MobilizeForHealthCare.org.

    The last year has seen an expansion of activism from those who favor improved Medicare for All. It is critical that the momentum of the movement not be slowed by a law that protects the status quo even if it is called reform. The urgent need for such change remains as tens of thousands will continue to die annually, and hundreds of thousands (mostly with insurance) will go bankrupt. The task of providing health to all as a birth right still remains.

    Textynn  Posted March 28th, 2010 10:43 PM
    We must continue to demand Single Payer and waiting until 2014 to do anything is unacceptable.




Health Care in the US as Seen From Down Under: “Mens Sana in Insanus Patriae”

By Niall McLaren, Op-Ed

Physician.

(Photo: Alex Proimos / Flickr)

Article 25 (1) of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted by the UN in 1948, states: “Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including . . . medical care . . . and the right to security in the event of . . . sickness, disability . . . “

 

These days, most people would say that an adequate standard of living includes readily available health care of a proper standard, that “health care delayed is health care denied.” Most people would also expect that citizens of a wealthy country should be able to expect better health care than the benighted citizenry of a poor country. So it comes as something of a shock to learn that the United States, which spends almost 50 percent of the world’s total health expenditure, ranks way down on most health statistics. Let’s start with the World Bank Health Indicators, which show that, in 2009 (latest available figures), Germany, for example, spent $4,724 per capita, some 11.7 percent of GDP, for which citizens received 8 hospital beds per thousand people and a princely four doctors per thousand. Germans are generally pretty healthy, but they pay for it. My tightwad country, Australia, spent $4,118  per capita, 9.0 percent of GDP, to get four beds and one doctor per thousand patients for slightly better standards of health than the Germans. Since then, our government has committed to spending 8.0 percent of GDP on health, and we are on course to get that (now down to 8.4%).

However, when we look across the Atlantic, we find that the United States spends $7,990 per person, an astounding 17.7 percent of GDP, to get only three beds and two physicians per thousand population. To make things worse, US figures are rising rapidly, now thought to be over 18.0 percent of GDP, but where are the standards of health? In a word, they’re nowhere. In fact, they’re worse than that, as the statistics conceal a grossly inequitable distribution of health expenditure. A Hollywood starlet’s boob job, at $65,000, crowds out any number of poor people from even a look at a clinic, as Joe Bageant’s biting reportage shows. Health costs are the biggest single cause of bankruptcy in the United States, while disabled veterans can be seen on street corners in any city, begging for money, not to mention all the mentally ill people crammed in prisons, the new asylums.

But the most bizarre fact is, alone among the world’s hundred or so wealthiest countries, the United States does not provide health care for its most vulnerable citizens. Oh sure, the wealthy can book into some very fancy, ultra-high-tech institutes to have a total body rebuild, but that’s the sort of stunt that got Prince Grigory Potemkina bad name: Behind the facades, the poor are warehoused in the charity wards, if at all. Anybody with an interest in the health game (and that’s all of us) knows perfectly well that the true measure of a nation’s health is not the tiny heads of rich old people getting heart transplants, whose expenditure drags the national average up, but the very large tail of poor children who drag the health statistics down, because their untreated throat infections end up as rheumatic heart disease, perforated eardrums, chronic bronchitis etc. What counts is not expenditure, but what that money achieves. Now the interesting thing is that, if we look at the very large, naturalistic experiment going on around the world, the one called “health care delivery and funding,” it would seem that providing treatment for all those poor people does two things: it actually lowers the total cost  to the country and  it yields improved health standards.

Why is the United States playing hold-out when everybody else has jumped on the national health-service wagon? That’s a difficult question, so let’s look instead at what they are missing. We can use my miserable excuse for a developed country as an example, since our economy and social structure are fairly similar to America’s in many respects. With a few blips, we’ve had a national health service since about 1971. It provides universal health care at practically no cost to the patient. Those who want more, such as my unworthy self, pay for the pleasure. Medicare is partly funded by a 2 percent levy on each person’s taxable income, but that gets buried in your income tax so you don’t notice it: I don’t know what I pay. For additional private insurance, my family of four pays $3,980 a year additional to the Medicare levy. This gives all sorts of benefits like your choice of doctor and private hospital, one pair of spectacles a year, dental care, physiotherapy, psychology, chiropractics, hearing aids, wheelchairs and so on. If you’d like to get a quote on your own case, go to Medibank Private and insert your details in the box, then click “Go” to see what benefits you get for your payment. Remember, there are no arguments about this. Even if you have a serious chronic illness, you can’t be rejected by an insurer. You can’t be disqualified after the event unless you really cheat. It may happen, but I’ve never heard of it.

There are “incentives” to encourage people who can afford it to take private insurance, which amount to penalties for those who don’t (go here for details; click on FAQ). A single person who has not joined an insurance plan by 31 years old will have to pay a penalty for the rest of his life. This is to stop “free-riders,” because people of that age are unlikely to make a claim anyway. A national health service is a bit like a conscript army in a national emergency, it only works properly when everybody is in.

I’ve always thought we got our $4,000 back by about February each year. My wife had two emergency caesareans; both babies were in neonatal intensive care (my son for eight weeks), and we paid a total of $430 for some stray fees. Pathology tests, optometry, hearing tests and the like are free, but some radiology tests are charged extra. In the past 15 years, I’ve had three hernias repaired, two cataracts replaced, a cervical fusion, and the total cost was . . . nothing. That varies, of course; you have to choose a doctor who charges by the book. If you don’t, you can end up with a large bill, like some unhappy women in Sydney who complained their obstetricians charged them $10,000 for a confinement, but the insurers would only pay about $3,000 (actually, the women were all warned in advance). The Medicare rebate is fixed by a committee in Canberra, but private practitioners can charge what they like. However, it doesn’t do to stand out too much from the crowd: Word very quickly gets around. Having fixed universal fees for services keeps costs down very significantly.

An excellent article in Care2 says it all: “. . . the total average cost of having a baby (in the US) is $37,341, making the United States the most expensive place in the world to have a baby. This covers prenatal care ($6,257), birth ($18,136 on average), postpartum care ($528) and newborn medical care ($12,419).  . . . America has one of the highest rates of infant and maternal death among industrialized countries. Insurance doesn’t necessarily help: 62 percent of private plans come with no maternity coverage.” Those prices are outrageous; prenatal care simply does not cost $6,000.

The net effect of health care as a human right under Australian Medicare is that every person in Australia gets the same standard of health care. Rich and poor alike get renal dialysis and kidney transplants . . . if they need them. My elderly mother was knocked down by a car recently, sustaining quite a nasty fracture of her neck. She was in hospital for several weeks, treated by the spinal surgeons, and has had many visits to the physiotherapist since. All her costs were covered by the Motor Vehicle Insurance Trust, which automatically pays all medical costs for any person injured in a car accident, even for a drunken driver. We didn’t have to pay anything. MVIT is funded by a levy on the vehicle’s licence, so the fund will never go broke. Regardless of the cause, anybody injured at work, or traveling to or from work, is fully funded by the compulsory workers’ compensation insurance and is paid their salary for the time off work (it drops to 75 percent after six months). A worker doing something stupid at work, who is left with a long-term disability, may have his benefits reduced, but he will still get something. There are people who try to cheat on this type of insurance, but even that’s not easy. And for every worker cheating, there are two insurance companies trying some fast move.

Rich people can buy cosmetic surgery as Medicare doesn’t pay for it, but anybody with bad scars or significant blemishes can get them repaired under Medicare if they are prepared to wait. There are caps on some forms of treatment, including some outpatient psychiatric treatment. Unfortunately, this has led to an increase in cases of people being admitted to private hospitals when they didn’t actually need it, but Medicare operates a highly sophisticated data analysis system that watches that sort of thing closely. That’s another advantage to a national health service. The statistics are excellent just because they are so comprehensive. But don’t worry, they are protected by layer upon layer of privacy (well, we thought they were, thank you, NSA).

Medications are subsidized by the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, which has been around forever. Anybody on a pension, unemployment or parenting benefits, students, or anybody who just doesn’t earn enough, can get a Health Care Card, which entitles them to cheap medications. They have to pay a maximum of $5.20 per prescription, regardless of the drug. If you don’t have a Health Care Card, the maximum is $37.50 a script. I was once prescribed antimetabolites for a peculiar arthritis. The drugs cost $360 for 100 tablets, but I paid only $37.50 – which was lucky, as they gave me tinnitus, so I had to stop them after a few days. Medication costs are capped for a family at about $1,050 per year; after that, the price drops to $5.20 while, for pensioners, it cuts out altogether. I see where one of the core features of Obamacare, the caps on copayments ($6,350 for a single, $12,700 for a family), has just been deferred as “too difficult for insurers to implement.” As though they didn’t already have nifty caps that worked in their favor – reach the limit and the insurers don’t pay.

How does a doctor fare in this socialist paradise? Actually, we do quite well. There are some who charge what they like as there are always patients who will pay to get to the front of the queue. I once sat in the waiting room of an ear, nose and throat surgeon and heard the fees as they were loudly announced to each new patient. He was pulling in about $1,000 an hour, which struck me as a bit gross as they earn very good money operating. As a psychiatrist, I can comfortably earn about $400,000 a year (49 weeks at 45 hours per week, no nights or weekends) seeing all patients on Medicare and charging private rates for legal cases. For military cases and veterans, the Defence Department pays private practitioners about 50 percent more than Medicare. Government psychiatrists can earn more, but working for the government isn’t my idea of fun.

In our hybrid private/public system, there’s room for everybody. Nobody in this country goes without. We provide full health care to every citizen, regardless. I have worked in the remote north, on the edge of the desert, and Aboriginals leading fairly traditional lives in their own communities get the same care as anybody else. Their health isn’t as good; they still die younger than white Australians, but that’s the subject of a massive drive by state and federal governments to “close the gap.” People who enter the country illegally, which has been a hot topic for the past 15 years, are all provided with health care from the day they arrive. I’ve seen quite a number of them myself, as well as approved refugees who are given Medicare cards as soon as they land.

It may seem like rubbing salt in the wound, but pets can also be covered at a moderate price. This advertisement landed in my in-box the other day: “Pet Insurance from just 33c a day! Medibank Pet Insurance offers . . .  Coverage from 8wks of age; with generous annual limits from $8000 up to $15000 a year; and up to 80% off the cost of vet consultations, surgery and medicines.” For a one-year-old dog, based on $200 excess (ie owner pays first $200), the scheme costs $117.50 a year. I’m sure a lot of Americans would be pleased to have that sort of coverage. They never will, because health insurance is tightly held by private insurance companies, who made over $100 billion profit in 2005. That was money the insurers took out of the system that should have stayed in it to provide better care.

There’s more, but this gives you the basic idea: Without too much effort, any country can have a national health service providing world-class care for a moderate price. Universal health insurance does not bankrupt the country. I often see complaints from the Rabid Right in the United States that having universal health care will make people irresponsible about their health, but this doesn’t make sense. When a community decides they want universal health care, they are being highly responsible about their health. They have talked it over and agreed that this is the best way to go. They are taking perfect, democratic care of their health. How could anybody object? It’s like conscription: Armies and universal health care only work when everybody chips in. My advice is: Just ignore the screechers, they’ll get over it because the good thing about socialism in this country is that it’s optional.

That’s right. Once you pay your tax (that isn’t optional, but I’m not aware that paying taxes is an option in the United States, either), you’ll get your green Medicare card. If you’re too poor to pay taxes, you’ll still get one, but whether you use it or not is entirely up to you. You can be as socialist or as “privatist” as you like. If you don’t want to stand in the queue at the public hospital with all the olfactorily challenging people, you don’t have to but I know plenty of rich people who do. Or you can pay a bit extra and see one of those nice private doctors. You may be treated in a lovely private hospital, but you won’t be treated any better. That’s our boast. We have leveled health care up, not down.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Niall McLarenJock McLaren is an Australian psychiatrist who worked 25yrs in the remote north of the country. He occupies himself delving into the philosophical basis of psychiatry, only to find there isn’t one. This has not helped his popularity with his colleagues, now well into negative territory. 



The Republican Party and the Affordable Care Act

Special for The Greanville Post—
BACKGROUNDER OF THE CONTROVERSIAL LAW FROM A HISTORIC-POLITICAL PERSPECTIVE

By Steven Jonas, MD, MPH
SENIOR EDITOR

Obamacare: Badly built and badly defended, but still better than the Republican option?

Obamacare: Badly built and badly defended, but still better than the Republican option?

In the fall of 1993, President and Mrs. (as she was then know, before she became brand “Hillary”) Clinton were gearing up for the introduction of what became known as “The Clinton Health Plan” to Congress. At the Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association, held in Washington, DC in November that year, a session was held looking for volunteers to speak on behalf of the plan at community meetings to be held the following year. I had a long background in what we used to call “health care delivery systems analysis.” And so I went along to that first session, really a tryout. Each participant was asked to give a brief presentation on the problems facing the US health care system and how they thought that the Clinton Health Plan could help to ameliorate them. I was pleased that I was chosen to participate and invited to come to Washington a couple of weeks later to begin training. I was dismayed, however, when, with no further discussion and certainly no interview for the job, I was asked to become a trainer myself.

 

These folks did not know me, had engaged in no training for trainers, and it quickly became apparent that they were more or less shooting from the hip. Nevertheless, when we, the chosen “speakers on behalf of the Clinton Health Plan”, were invited to a plenary session at the White House, I fully expected that we would be presented with marching orders and a detailed plan, including talking points, for dealing with the policy and political problems with which we would be expected to deal out on the CHP campaign trail. Instead, there were several speeches from the designers of the plan about its contents, which were already well-known, and that was about it. No strategy, no tactics, no group meetings, just sitting in lectures. I remember coming home from that meeting and telling my wife at the time, “if this is all they’ve got, the CHP is going to lose.”

In December of that year I came across a FAX (email was not in common usage way back then) sent out by Bill Kristol (yes, THAT Bill Kristol, and I still have the FAX in my files) to about 1200 Republicans in and about Washington on why they had to oppose the Clinton Health Plan as strongly as they could. Kristol’s focus was not that it was bad policy but because if it passed it would guarantee both a Democratic Congress in 1994 and the re-election of President Clinton in 1996. And of course they defeated it, helped mightily by President Clinton himself, who maintained a studied silence all through the Spring of 1994 while the Republicans ripped his plan apart. In fact, not knowing whether they had seen the Kristol FAX or not, I sent a copy in to the CHP office suggesting that they use it to show up the Republican opposition. I got no response and they never did use it.

•••

Ironically, the anti-CHP campaign in the Senate happened to be led by Bob Dole, the same Bob Dole who, as then Republican Minority Leader in the Senate, in 1974 had introduced a comprehensive National Health Insurance Plan that was similar in many ways to the Clinton Health Plan. In fact, had it not been for Watergate and President Nixon’s forced resignation, it is likely that we would have national health insurance in the United States no later than the run-up to the 1976 Presidential elections. But it was politics, not policy, that counted for the Republicans in 1994, just as it does now.

However, we are now seeing that the President made one huge mistake when he did speak about it occasionally, the “you will be able to keep your health insurance if you like it” mantra. Whether he did not know of the niggling detail about the difference between private (often very inadequate) and employer-provided policies or did know of it is a matter for White House historians. However, if in every one of his speeches on the subject he had simply said “if you have health insurance provided by your employer you will be able to keep it and insurers providing privately-held policies will be required to bring them up to snuff” the present contretemps on that subject would not be on the table. But it is, and the President over the years since the passage of the Act simply handed the Republicans a mallet with which to beat him and his program over the head.

But why do the Republicans really want to repeal, or at least inactivate, what they call “Obamacare?” For exactly the same reason that Bill Kristol went out early on the campaign against the Clinton Health Plan: politics (and who better to lay that one out now than Karl Rove). Not policy, for the ruling class of the US health care delivery system, very much the protectorate of the Republican Party, is kept very much in place by the ACA. For the private insurance companies, the ACA keeps them at the center of the system. For the hospitals there is no “public option” that could seriously bargain with them over reimbursement rates. At the same time, the expansion of coverage means that they will have to provide much less uncompensated care than they do now. For Big Pharma there is no built-in competition on drug prices. For the states there would be major increased subsidies for Medicaid. These are all Republican ideas, ideas drawn in fact (as is very well-known) from a plan developed by the Heritage Foundation that became the foundation for “Romney-care” in Massachusetts. (Click here to inspect the original memo and documents.)

But of course now, the big Republican fear is that if the ACA goes into effect, as jerry-built as it is, it will work, and then politically it will work for the Democrats and against the Republicans. They in fact are fully self-revealing on this point, because they offer no alternatives to the ACA that deal with the problems the ACA at least attempts to deal with. And no, their favorites such as allowing health insurance companies to work across state lines and ending the opportunity for patients grievously harmed by physicians and hospitals to get just compensation, otherwise known as “tort reform,” just don’t deal with lack of coverage, no coverage for pre-existing conditions, and so on and so forth.

Of course, this strategy would probably not have a chance of working if the Federal website had worked. But it didn’t. Why not? Since just about since the time the news of the trouble with the healthcare.gov website came out I’ve had the following thought. How much did and does a possible GOP hacking machine, as well as the internal defects in the system itself, have to do with the website trouble we’ve seen. A top-level computer programmer friend of mine told me that it is very easy to do “service denial.” The target website is just overloaded with incoming requests. It takes a fairly sophisticated security system to defend against such an effort.

As another friend of mine said, we could ask the ghost of Mike Connell, Karl Rove’s “IT guy,” who was on his way to testify in a trial about the Ohio vote-rigging scandal of 2004 when his single-engine plane mysteriously (sic) crashed, killing him. But even the NSA would have a difficult time talking with ghosts these days. And one has to add that the few state exchanges that there are seem to be working pretty well. Maybe they are better protected.

I’m not the only one to raise this possibility (although the cited reports concerned the security or lack thereof of website applicants’ data). I do wonder if six to 12 months from now, in the possible wreckage of the ACA, as delays and attempted reconstructions make its truly jerry-built structure fall apart, we will see one of those multi-authored New York Times stories, like the one that revealed GOP long-range planning on the government shutdown, about how the GOP arranged to hack the website. Time will tell on that one. But we already know that half the present problem is due to the fact that the Obama Administration did just about as poor a job of selling the ACA to the public as the Clinton Administration did of selling the CHP.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

http://www.puntopress.com/jonas-the-15-solution-hits-main-distribution/, and available on Amazon.




The Smear Campaign Against Social Security

Busting the Myths
by JACK RASMUS

medicare-card

With the interim ‘debt ceiling/government shutdown’ agreement reached last week between the Obama administration and the Teaparty-driven U.S. House of Representatives, the real negotiations on deficit cutting—aka Austerity American Style—are about to begin again.

A long campaign peddling falsehoods around social security and medicare has created a myth that they are facing a budget and fiscal crisis. This claim will be rolled out by Democrats and Republicans alike, to justify cutting programs for the poorest Americans, while handing tax breaks to the richest corporation.

Both Obama and the Republicans in the House were agreed last summer, before the Teaparty faction upset the negotiations agenda by injecting the Obamacare issue, to proceed toward cutting ‘entitlements’ and seeking Tax Code Overhaul. With the Teapartyers in temporary retreat, Boehner and the Republicans have now returned to their initial strategy of of demanding entitlement cuts for a budget deal, and Obama has indicated that he is prepared to meet them halfway.

At the center of coming negotiations will be hundreds of billions of dollars in proposed cuts to social security and medicare, in exchange for a longer term debt ceiling extension beyond the November 2014 midterm congressional elections. In the ‘ mix’ for an agreement will also be big corporate tax cuts in exchange for token, ‘smoke and mirror’ tax loophole closings, as Tax Code legislation moving through Congress comes to a concurrent vote.

[pullquote]A long campaign peddling falsehoods around social security and medicare has created a myth that they are facing a budget and fiscal crisis. This claim will be rolled out by Democrats and Republicans alike, to justify cutting programs for the poorest Americans, while handing tax breaks to the richest corporation[/pullquote]

Obama recent record on social security and medicare cuts includes his 2014 budget –  where he cut $630 billion.  On the flip side of this austerity for the poor is Obama’s largess for business, and his support for dropping the top corporate tax rate from 35% to 28%.

It is important to make clear that neither social security or medicare are facing a long term financial crisis.

A closer look at the 2014 budget and at reports by social security-medicare trustees shows that problems exist for financials of Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) within the social security program, however, the retirement benefits program in social security does not suffer these issues. Nevertheless, Obama is proposing to cut future social security retirement benefits. The ‘fix’ goes beyond the problem.

Similarly, problems exist with funding for Part D prescription drugs program within Medicare, which has never been funded by a tax since its inception in 2005. Under the program drug companies are allowed to price gouge everyone on drug costs – so there is need for reform. However, Medicare’s basic hospital and physicians programs – Part A and Part B, are fully funded for the next decade, and these programs should not be painted with the same brush.

It is time to get the facts straight, before the hype and lies start to flow once again in the run up to the next deficit cutting-tax cuts for the rich deal that is now on the agenda once again.

Dr. Jack Rasmus is the author of the book, “Obama’s Economy: Recovery for the Few”, published by Pluto Press, London, April 2012. He is the host of the weekly internet radio show from New York, ‘Alternative Visions’, on the Progressive Radio Network, prn.fm. His website is www.kyklosproductions.com and he blogs at jackrasmus.com. His twitter handle is drjackrasmus.    

For more analysis of Obama’s 2014 Budget follow link to this June 2013 interview, on the Progressive Radio Network.