Thursday, July 16, 2009

I get it. Why don't you?

So, let me get this straight ...

You like your health insurance company so much, you'd rather pay more than twice as much per person than any other industrialized country for system that routinely fails nearly half of all Americans (well, the half of those not already on some sort of subsidized health insurance program).

Is that right?

I get it, I get it. You like your doctor. You like your therapist. You abhor the thought that some bureaucrat in Washington might tell you that you can't get a certain prescription drug or medical procedure or that you can only consult certain doctors ... I get it.

But you don't get it because your insurance company does that now. Your insurance company routinely tells patients which procedures they can have and which ones they can't, which doctors they can consult and how often. Your insurance company routinely bases prescription drug coverage on which big pharma companies they have contracts with.

In fact, your health insurance company is in the business of denying your claim, in assuring you get the cheapest drugs rather than the drugs you need, and in making sure you stay away from expensive medical procedures, even when they could save your life. If you’ve never had this happen to you, you are either extremely fortunate, have a premium policy or you are much more well off than you realize.

In other words, we already put up with most of the things you say you don't like about health care reform.

Oh, I get it. You don't want to pay for "socialized medicine" or for all those poor people. But, you already do. Roughly 40 percent of Americans have some sort of government subsidized health insurance whether it's because they are government employees, on Medicare, Medicaid, S-Chip or eligible for VA benefits. And, despite the occasional hiccup, most of those people seem to appreciate that coverage.

And, we subsidize the truly indigent because we won't turn them away from treatment of the last resort — the emergency room. (And, don't think for a minute they eventually pay for that treatment — taxpayers pay for it in the form of taxes to our cities and counties.)

In reality, we're not talking about making anyone change insurance companies (meaning you can avoid the dreaded government bureaucrat) or doctors (unless your current insurance company forces you to change) or limiting coverage (other than the limitations your insurance company already imposes).

In reality, this debate about the value of social medicine versus private insurance we're having is really about making sure everyone in this country has some way to afford needed health care.

In reality, our entire economy is hostage to the concept of employer-provided health insurance. It hamstrings entrepreneurship because people are locked into their jobs because that's the only way most of us can afford any health insurance whatsoever — good or bad.

It hampers small businesses because small companies can't afford to offer the same kinds of benefits (read: health insurance) as the mega-corporations and some mega-corporations (can you say: GM?) have experienced some rather catastrophic problems as a direct result of legacy health insurance costs.

In June, Pres. Obama asked why, if the free market was all that, insurance companies should fear the competition of a public option?

As long as insurance companies are for-profit, our health care delivery system will be no better than Cuba's (and you can make the argument that theirs actually provides for all their citizens). The bill the U.S. House passed last week is the best hope our country has ever had to ensure the vast majority of our citizens enjoy this particular liberty.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Maybe you can show me where "this particular liberty" is enumerated in the Constitution?
It's not about health insurance; it's about the socialists taking over ANOTHER major segment (about 1/6th) of the US economy. There are so many other ways to do this-why the complete takeover?

Diego Humanista said...

Hi Richard. I really agree on what you are writing. Here in Argentina we have a public free hospital for everyone since the birth of the past century. Althoug in the 90's the system started to be gradually unfunded and disincouraged, it's working yet. It's an example for our neibourg countries, which in some cases come here to receive high quality treatments (from Paraguay, Brasil, Uruguay, Bolivia, the so-called-exitous Chile, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia).

In my humanist view (and this could be used by you as argument), the health cannot be unregulated and put entirely in the hands of private companies. The greed for profit is not compatible with the needs of better health care or services.

Regards!

Diego