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Posts Tagged ‘single-payer’

On January 27, 2008, U.S. Representative John Conyers Jr. (D-MI) introduced a new version of a previously unsuccessful bill before Congress that would turn America’s health care system into a socialized, not-for-profit, singer-payer system.  Previous iterations of the bill had few co-sponsors (25 in 2003), and the current version (H.R. 676), has gained a modicum of traction thanks to Michael Moore‘s film documentary, Sicko, which contends that the United States is the only developed country that does not currently have “universal health care.”

As an advocate for market-based health care (which we currently do not have), obviously I have problems with 676.  A few days ago I attended a lecture and discussion about the bill, presented by advocates in favor of it, to an audience of comprised mostly of naive first and second-year medical students…with one of two true skeptics interspersed within.  Below I present a few of the problems with 676 and with single-payer health care in general.

First, the highlights of the proposed law.  676 purports to cover the following: primary care and prevention, inpatient care, outpatient care, emergency care, prescription drugs, durable medical equipment, long term care, mental health services, the full scope of dental services (other than cosmetic dentistry), substance abuse treatment services, chiropractic services, basic vision care and vision correction (other than laser vision correction for cosmetic purposes), and hearing services including coverage of hearing aids.  Basically everything.  And you can go to any doctor or provider you want.  And there’s no deductibles, copayments, coinsurance, or other cost-sharing to be imposed with respect to covered benefits.  Sounds nice doesn’t it?

The cost.  I haven’t read the feasibility studies, but the text of the bill says all of this wonderful stuff, for every American citizen, will be paid for with income tax increases on the top 5% of earners, a progressive excise tax on payroll and self-employment income, existing government health care revenues, and a tax on stocks and bonds.  Additionally, the bill foresees a 15-year integration process, which will be paid for by issuing Treasury Securities.  Congress reserves the right to decide how much to tax the American public, it’s a basic tenet of our system of government…and with the guidelines above, we’re looking at a legislated equivalent of a blank check.  Why?  Because providing comprehensive, quality, accessible care to every citizen will command a budget possibly larger than any other ever conceived by man.  The U.S. Treasury will issue hundreds of billions upon hundreds of billions in debt to fund the 15 year transition period.  Just to “integrate” the new system, we are looking at compounding our debt (which is owned mostly be foreign investors), by nightmare proportions.  We will no longer own our own country.  Our grand-children and great-grandchildren will spend their lives paying interest to Dubai, India, China, Russia, and Japan.  The dollar will continue to weaken…perhaps it will reach parity with the Mexican peso.  Additionally, depending upon the size of the taxes necessary just to drive the operational side of this beast, there will be significantly less incentive for businesses to continue to exist on U.S. soil.  An excise tax on self-employment income is the government’s way of telling entrepreneurs and business owners to get f***ed.  

Medicare is poised to make up a record amount of our GDP in a few years…it’s already unsustainable and will soon be bankrupt in its current form.  It should be noted that the current form of Medicare covers only elderly people, and only pays for a fraction of the services listed above.  The USNHI proposes no revolutionary way to reduce the costs associated with administering an undertaking, which expands Medicare’s coverage on a exponential scale.  This is an atomic bomb. 

Private insurance becomes illegal if 676 is passed.  We use the term “universal health care” in quotations to describe countries like Israel and the United Kingdom, because these countries HAVE private insurance options.  People who can afford to, pay for supplemental private insurance, because even with smaller, more homogenous populations, these countries are not able to provide a fraction of what 676 promises.  And that’s with high personal income taxes, and very little defense spending (with the exception of Israel, most countries with quasi-socialized medical care depend on us for this).  In Canada, people routinely pay bribes to skip the line. 

This brings me to my next point.  Banning something the market is screaming for is like leaving picnic food at a park and putting up a “no ants” sign.  It’s a comical act of futility.  And it costs billions of dollars.  We have a country with a revolving door border policy.  Our government has spent hundreds of billions on drug enforcement…how well is that working?  How many people in this country own firearms purchased without proper licensing on a black market?  If you don’t allow for a private tier of health care payership, you force a black market to form.  Then you have to create government agencies to enforce and prosecute illegal “pushers” of private health care.  This cost isn’t factored into 676. Perhaps we could charge a “modest” excise tax…

Doctors will have no opportunity to attain true wealth.  Under 676, providers may elect to be paid government-dictated salaries, or reimbursed at government-dictated rates for services rendered.  Current private Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs), who are the target of 676 supporters, reimburse doctors at a MULTIPLE of Medicare reimbursement rates.  This is because doctors cannot afford to stay in business strictly on Medicare payments.  With skyrocketing malpractice premiums forcing many doctors into retirement, we could be looking at a future with no domestic doctors.  676 does not (and legally cannot) address medical malpractice – medical licensing and tort reform are handled on a state level.  Doctors have little incentive to exist in this environment, particularly those doctors facing hundreds of thousands in student loans…which is most of them.  676 does not address medical school tuition.  With no primary care physicians, the queues will grow quickly.  In Canada it takes 10.1 weeks to get a CT scan.  How long will it take in a country our size?

Then there’s the problem of illegal immigrants.  676 only covers American citizens.  Are we prepared to deny all care to illegal immigrants?  I doubt so.  The cost of providing similar care to this demographic (making up a significant chunk of the population), has not been factored into the bill.  Taxes go up more.  A true welfare state. 

There’s a slippery slope here.  At some point you have to decide whether you’re country’s mission is Capitalism (the American Dream), or Communism (from each according to his ability to each according to his need).  I don’t think we’re ready to give up the ghost quite yet.  The great empires of the world had much longer tenures than 200 years.  Are we ready to become a welfare state, and give the crown to a new empire?  The next empire probably isn’t going to be as nice as us.  It probably isn’t going to drop food and vaccines on African villages…

Finally, the perfect irony.  The purveyors of USNHI tout it as the answer to large for-profit HMOs that put shareholder interests and CEO salaries before patient well-beings.  What?!  By putting the government in charge of it?!  The same government that takes handouts from special interests groups that represent all kinds of nasty interests perpendicular with those of individual American health care users?  Corruption was invented in Congress.  Congress created the original food pyramid to promote the interests of the U.S. Agricultural industry, not our health.  That’s why it recommended 5-11 servings of starch per day.  One could cogently argue that the government created type II diabetes to help the American farmer.  If you read history, governments, especially those with absolute power, don’t have the best track record in the human rights category.  There was this guy named Stalin, maybe Michael Moore should do a documentary…

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A while back I wrote a post entitled “Health Care Like the DMV” in which I chronicled my efforts to collect a tax refund from Jackson County, Missouri after they double billed me for my ’07 property taxes and pulled the money out of my bank account.

I paid the taxes on November 21st of last year, found out about the mistake just before Christmas, and begin my appeal to the good bureaucrats of Jackson County that same day.  It is now February 28th , over three months later, and the county has yet to reimburse me for the interest-free loan I have provided them.  Up until today my efforts to collect included numerous phone calls/voice mails to the county, several emails with scanned copies of my duplicate receipts, and several actual conversations with live people assuring me the glitch had been fixed and was being processed.

I had enough.  I physically went to the collections office today, spoke with a very nice mustached lady, and filled out the same paperwork I filled out in December.  I was assured once again that the refund would be mailed to me in 2-3 months.  From today.  At the 6 month mark, perhaps I will provide another update.

Why do post about this?  Because I wouldn’t ever want to trust these people with the task of keeping track of my blood type…

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In September 2003, Harvard Medical Professor Dr. Steffie Woolhandler had this to say in the New England Journal of Medicine: “A large sum might be saved in the United States if administrative costs could be trimmed by implementing a Canadian-style health care system.”

While I’m sure Dr. Woolhandler is a brilliant clinician and activist, I firmly believe that most of the economic data will show that a single-payer health system (which resembles Canada more than the U.S.) cannot provide access to all, or perhaps even most… and would cost this country more in lost lives and productivity, not to mention, increased taxes.

The Frasier Institute, a non-partisan, Canadian research organization recently released some scary data: wait times for Canadians needing surgery or other therapeutic treatment hit an all time high of 18 weeks in 2007.  That’s over 4 months.  “Despite government promises and the billions of dollars funneled into the Canadian health care system, the average patient waited more than 18 weeks in 2007 between seeing their family doctor and receiving the surgery or treatment they required,” said Nadeem Esmail, Director of Health System Performance Studies.

This is an increase from 2006 (18.3 vs. 17.8 weeks).  Some provinces are worse than others, like Saskatchewan (27.2 weeks), New Brunswick (25.2 weeks) and Nova Scotia (24.8 weeks).  The wait time is roughly equal parts waiting to see a specialist (once you’ve seen a primary care physician and gotten your required referral) and waiting to receive treatment once you’ve seen a specialist.  Given the growing shortage of primary care physicians in Canada, these numbers don’t even factor in the time it takes to get an appointment to see the primary care doc.  

Diagnostic technology suffers from similar exaggerated wait times in Canada.  Average queues for a CT scan are 4.8 weeks.  For an MRI, 10.1 weeks.  Oftentimes these types of diagnostics are needed to check for imminent, if not emergency medical problems.  A close friend recently spent a week in the hospital with multiple pulmonary embolisms.  This was a life threatening condition that was detected literally just in the nick of time with a CT scan..which was administered within an hour of arriving at his doctor’s office.  If he had been in Toronto, he would likely have died.  Blood clots don’t patiently wait 4 weeks…

In Canada, people are waiting for 827,429 surgical procedures.  This is a 7.8% increase from last year…and it’s getting worse.  And with data showing that famous and politically-connected people routinely jump the queues, it’s difficult to even make the argument that everyone is given the same level of access.

Esmail concludes by saying: “This grim portrait is the legacy of a medical system offering low expectations cloaked in lofty rhetoric. It’s one defended by special interest groups with a stake in maintaining the status quo. The only way to solve the system’s most curable disease – lengthy wait times that are consistently and significantly longer than physicians feel is clinically reasonable – is for  substantial reform of the Canadian health care system.” (emphasis mine).

Lofty rhetoric is what gets votes…

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