| May 18, 2009
Barack Obama Spins the Facts,
Takes Single-Payer Health Care Off the Table
By Jerry Policoff
Last Thursday at a town hall meeting in Rio Rancho New Mexico
President Barack Obama was
asked why,
when "so many people go bankrupt using their credit cards to pay
for healthcare. Why have they taken single-payer off the plate
(audience applause), and why is Senator Baucus on the Finance
Committee discussing health care when he has received so much
money from the pharmaceutical companies? Isn't it a conflict of
interest?" (more audience applause)
The President seemed uncomfortable with the question, and his
entire response lasted longer than seven minutes. He did not
get around to actually responding to the question until about
four minutes in:
"Healthcare is one-sixth of our economy, so it is a
complicated and difficult task. Congress is going to have
to work hard, and everybody is going to have to come at this
with a practical perspective as opposed to being
ideologically pure in getting it done... Why not do a
single-payer system? ... A single-payer system is like,
Medicare is sort of a single-payer system, but it's only for
people over 65, and the way it works is, uh, the idea is you
don't have insurance companies as middle men. The
government goes directly and pays doctors or nurses.
"If I were starting a system from scratch then I think
that the idea of moving toward a single-payer system could
very well make sense. That's the kind of system that you
have in most industrialized countries around the world. The
only problem is that we're not starting from scratch. We
have historically a tradition of employer-based healthcare.
And, although there are a lot of people who are not
satisfied with their health care, the truth is that the vast
majority of people currently get health care from their
employers, and you've got this system that's already in
place.
"We don't want a huge disruption as we go into healthcare
reform where suddenly we're trying to completely re-invent
one-sixth of the economy. So what I've said is, let's set
up a system where, uh, if you already have healthcare
through your employer and you're happy with it, you don't
have to change doctors. You don't have to change plans.
Nothing changes. If you don't have healthcare, or you're
highly unsatisfied with your healthcare, then let's give you
choices. Let's give you options, including a public plan
that you can enroll in and sign up for. That's been my
proposal.
"Now, obviously as president I've got to work with
Congress to get this done. And, ha ha ha. There are folks
in Congress who are doing terrific work. They're working
hard. They've been having a series of hearings. Uh, I'm
confident that both the House and the Senate are going to
produce a bill before the August recess. And, it may not
have everything I want in there or everything you want in
there, but it will be a vast improvement over what we
currently have. We'll then have to reconcile the two bills,
but I'm confident that we are going to get healthcare reform
this year, and start putting us on a path that's sustainable
over the long term. That's a commitment I made during the
campaign, and I intend to keep it."
The President's response left no doubt that he has taken
single-payer healthcare off the table, but his answer lacked
the logic and candor we have often come to expect of him. In
fact his response seems more than a little disingenuous, and it
cannot be permitted to stand unchallenged.
First of all, it is clear that President Obama understands
what single-payer is, and given his assertion that it would be
the way to go if we were starting from scratch, clearly he
realizes that it is the superior system, one that "most
industrialized countries around the world" have embraced, and
yet he offers what are clearly rationalizations for why we
cannot go that route in the United States.
The president suggests that it would be too disruptive to
dismantle the "employer-based healthcare" system, yet this
system is a total failure. The fact that employers bear
much of the cost of healthcare in this country puts us at a
distinct disadvantage in international trade because employers
in other countries do not bear this substantial cost. The
cost of healthcare to U.S. business is responsible for much of
the out-sourcing that has cost our economy millions of jobs,
and has resulted in much of our car manufacturing fleeing across
the border to factories in Canada. More and more businesses are
cutting back healthcare benefits, passing a greater percentage
of the cost on to employees, or dropping health benefits
entirely simply because the cost is overwhelming their eroding
bottom line to the point where their very survival is often
threatened.
The Business Roundtable
reported recently
that "Health care costs are one of the top cost pressures
facing American businesses today, inhibiting job creation and
hurting America's ability to compete in global markets." An
ever-growing percentage of the American workforce is finding the
cost of employer-based health insurance too costly to bear.
In the past decade the number of uninsured working Americans has
swelled by more than 6 million
and
now represents 18% of our workforce, or nearly 27
million people. And that's just the working Americans.
The current world financial crisis is also causing millions
of Americans
to lose their health insurance
when they lose their jobs. This is a uniquely American
phenomenon because the rest of the industrialized world has
universal healthcare, and the loss of a job in those countries
does not carry with it the additional burden of the loss of
healthcare (recent
studies suggest that the stress that accompanies the loss of
a job can often in itself bring on additional health problems).
Barack Obama surely knows all of this, so when he suggests
that it would be disruptive to dismantle our employer-based
system, he realizes that the reality is that most employers
would gladly be relieved of this burden. It doesn't take much of
a stretch to also recognize that there are millions of Americans
trapped in jobs they hate but dare not give up for fear of
losing their employer-based health insurance.
President Obama points out that healthcare costs represent
one-sixth of our economy. The President is correct. It is
estimated that
healthcare expenditures in the United States in 2008 were just
under $2.7 TRILLION representing 17% of the gross domestic
product (GDP). That number is expected to reach $4.3 TRILLION
by 2017, or 20% of GDP. What the President leaves out is that
the United States
spends
more than twice as much per capita on health care than the other
developed countries in the world and that as a
percentage of GDP healthcare costs in the United States exceed
those in the other developed countries by more than 70 percent.
What distinguishes those other developed countries from the
United States is that they all have universal,
not-for-profit healthcare.
The president suggests that we dare not tamper with the
essential nature of our healthcare system because it represents
one-sixth of our economy but he fails to point out that
transitioning to a single-payer model would almost certainly
radically reduce the currently bloated cost of healthcare in the
United States both in absolute terms and as a percentage of
GDP.
What possible justification could there be to preserve a
system that costs so much and leaves tens of millions of people
without health coverage and tens of millions more underinsured?
The obvious answer is one the President dare not offer,
namely that in the United States the insurance and
pharmaceutical companies spend hundreds of millions of dollars
on lobbying and campaign contributions, and greedy politicians
like Max Baucus have become quite comfortable feeding off of
that cash cow. Max Baucus, of course, has wonderful health
coverage thanks to the generous benefits bestowed upon him by
the United States Senate.
This doubtless explains why he can
smugly laugh while calling for police
to arrest healthcare professionals advocating for single-payer
healthcare, but whom he has denied a seat at
his "reform" table (a table we all pay for through our taxes).
Also consider how much all of this lobbying and legal bribery in
the form of campaign contributions adds to your insurance
premiums, because ultimately that is where this money comes
from.
Finally, President Obama suggests that it would be unfair to
deprive people of their current healthcare if they are satisfied
with it, and he suggests that moving to a single-payer system
might force people to "change plans" and/or "change doctors."
Let's unmask this rhetoric for what it is: pure disinformation
and fear-mongering utilizing talking points developed by the PR
agents of the for-profit healthcare industry. It is that
industry that rations healthcare by denying medical procedures,
that industry that comes between the doctor-patient relationship
when it blocks doctors from applying their own best judgment as
to what treatments to recommend or what medications to
prescribe. It is also the insurance companies and HMO's that
restrict free choice by limiting members to defined networks and
denying claims if a patient dares venture outside the network
without permission.
(I am reminded of the daughter of an acquaintance who was in
a serious car accident. Her car went through a guard rail and
slid into a ravine where she lay untreated for several days
before being discovered. She was transported, unconscious, to
a hospital by an emergency medi-vac helicopter and was
subsequently billed more than $200,000 for that life-saving
flight to the only hospital trauma unit within reach that could
treat her injuries– a bill which her insurance company refused
to pay because they had not approved that out-of-network
life-saving transport in advance. This is not uncommon. A
similar occurrence was documented in Michael Moore's Sicko.)
The new talking point we are hearing from Barack Obama and
others who want to preserve our dysfunctional healthcare system
is that people who are happy with their current insurance
coverage should be allowed to keep it. The only problem with
this seemingly common sense approach is that most people are
happy with their current coverage because they have never been
in a situation that tested it. Michael Moore's "SiCKO" was all
about people who were "happy" with their insurance coverage
until they got sick and were hung out to dry by their insurance
companies. How many people currently "happy" with their
health insurance would balk at dropping it if they knew they
could go to the doctor of their choice, would no longer have to
deal with co-pays or deductibles, or the cost of
pharmaceuticals, and would, in all likelihood, end up paying
less for their new, improved coverage which would also restore
the exclusive doctor-patient relationship that their for-profit
insurance companies had previously interfered with?
How are we doing people a favor by letting them keep the
coverage they are "happy" with, if down the road that decision
may lead to them losing their homes or being forced into
bankruptcy when their insurance fails to cover the cost of
catastrophic illness that befalls them or their loved ones?
Let's face it, Max Baucus is intent upon letting the AHIP
(American Health Insurance Providers, the PR arm of the health
insurance industry) foxes continue to guard the chicken coop, in
all likelihood further enriching them by compelling us all to
buy health insurance policies while extracting precious little
from the insurance companies in return.
President Barack Obama, unfortunately, is enabling Max
Baucus, et al. in this endeavor, and it is high time that we
tell him to stop. This President has approval ratings in the
mid-60's. With a bully pulpit like that he could force
Congress to enact real healthcare reform that would benefit our
citizens and help restore our economy rather than than further
enrich greedy corporate special interests and the compromised
politicians who watch out for and protect them. He could
mobilize the nation to demand it.
Just last week President Obama
said, "I will not
rest until the dream of health care reform is achieved in the
United States of America."
The path toward fulfilling that dream lies in enacting
universal, comprehensive single-payer healthcare, not in
catering to the healthcare industry special interests yet again.
http://www.opednews.com/articles/Barack-Obama-Spins-the-Fac-by-Jerry-Policoff-090518-685.html
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Author's Website: www.progressives4pennsylvania.com
Author's Bio: I have been an advertising executive most of my
career with a long-time interest in progressive politics and
journalism. My current primary goal is to help bring
single-payer healthcare to Pennsylvania and the country.
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