Thursday, 3 February 2011

The Failed Promises of Government Funded Health Care

By Frank S. Rosenbloom, M.D.

The health care debate in this country is an old story. It began in 1934 when President Franklin D. Roosevelt attempted to include government-funded health care in his "New Deal" as part of his comprehensive Social Security legislation.  President Roosevelt was very concerned that the Supreme Court might rule parts of his "New Deal" unconstitutional.  He tried to induce Congress to approve increasing the total number of justices on the Supreme Court to fifteen, attempting thereby to circumvent the judiciary and the Constitution by stacking the Court in his favor. 

Subsequently, government funded health care has been debated in nearly every session of Congress since 1939.

Many people assume that the establishment of Medicare in 1965 was the result solely of Lyndon Johnson's Great Society legislation.  In fact, the establishment of Medicare was the culmination of decades of efforts by progressive liberals, and was seen as a stepping stone to government funded health care for all.  In fact, some of the tactics the government used to pass Medicare were illegal at the time, employing taxpayer money to lobby for political programs.

Today President Obama theorizes that a government "option" will increase competition, lower costs, and provide better medical care for larger numbers of people.  In any scientific endeavor the veracity of a theory is determined by whether it is supported by empirical evidence and predictive of future outcomes.  Therefore, we must examine Obama's assertions in light of the available evidence.

  • 1. A government health care option will increase competition.
In order to determine whether this is the case, we must review whether government involvement has ever increased competition in the past.  We must remember that the force of law attends government involvement and that the force of law gives an advantage to the government.  For instance, Medicare and Medicaid employ price-fixing, which is illegal for any private organization.  The government decides on the worth of medical services and the providers of those services must comply.  The government therefore utilizes unfair practices to establish a monopoly, transferring costs to the private sector, artificially magnifying the cost of private insurance and hiding the true cost of government coverage.

When Medicare was passed senior citizens were promised that Medicare would not prevent them from utilizing private primary insurance if they wanted to. This assurance was false. Private primary health insurance has become all but impossible for persons over 65 to obtain.

Medicaid recipients, as well as and those on military health plans, are significantly restricted in their choices. This lack of choice has stifled competition. Contrary to the claims of the current administration, every time government has gotten involved in health care, competition has been suppressed by practices that would be prosecutable if carried out by private companies.  Far from promoting competition, a government plan will eventually eliminate private health care, thereby eliminating all competition.

Tom Miller, Director of Health Policy Studies at the Cato Institute, explained:

"As fiscal pressures mount, the federal government does not 'negotiate' with medical providers for lower prices for covered services.  It dictates below-market reimbursements with its near-monopoly power as a purchaser of health care for seniors. The full costs of such price discounts eventually reduce access to quality care and hold health care markets hostage to political exploitation."


  • 2. A government option will decrease costs.
It is naïve to believe that increased government intervention will lower the cost of medicine. All past evidence indicates that the reverse is true.  In 1965, the government promised that Medicare part A would cost $9 billion by 1990. The actual cost was more than $66 billion -- over seven times projected costs. There has never been a single large federal social program that has come in at budget or has performed as predicted.

Democrats have tried to pin the rising cost of medical care on the private sector. It is, however, government interference and government regulations that have caused the high cost of medical care in the past and that will continue to increase the costs of medical care in the future.  Medicare increases the cost of medical care by shifting federal administrative overhead to the private sector and through oppressive regulation.[i] These practices will undoubtedly accelerate under "Obamacare" as the following chart, using data from the Congressional Budget Office, indicates:


The estimated $1.6 trillion for Obama's proposed legislation will cover only about one third of his claimed 45 million uninsured. If historical precedents and evidence are any indication, the actual costs of the plan could be seven times higher than this estimate. Adding to the fiscal nightmare, Mr. Obama is planning on cutting benefits for Medicare and Medicaid in order to transfer funding to his new health plan. This is another example that government does not contain costs, but shift costs from one program to another.

The effect of Obama's program will be to increase taxes on small businesses and further worsen unemployment. This loss of jobs will result in driving people into the government-funded plan. Increasing the costs of the plan would create a vicious cycle of unemployment, increasing costs, rising taxes, and unending dependence on government.

  • 3. A government option will improve health care and cover more people.
Mr. Obama's claim of 45 million Americans without medical insurance is completely unfounded.  His health care plan will initially cover about 13 million people. However, nearly 100 million people will be eligible for the proposed government option.  As mentioned above, nothing about the plan would promote increased competition. 

Once the government has a monopoly on all health care in America and the costs to the government have skyrocketed, the government will do what it has always done: use its power to ration services and increase taxes.  This will result in inferior medical care for the American people.

Once this rationing occurs, there will be no turning back.  The government will be in complete control, as it is with Medicare and Medicaid.  We need only ask Medicare or VA patients about the difficulties they face in trying to obtain payments for their medical care to understand what the end result will be.  Denial of payment for care is simply rationing by another name.  Furthermore, the evidence shows that government funded health care initiated at the state level, such as the programs in Massachusetts and Oregon, have failed miserably. We will likely have to consider the morgue as an integral part of any government health care system in the future.

Albert Einstein once defined insanity as doing the same thing over and over again expecting different results.  Mr. Obama's theories are undeniably refuted by historical fact and therefore his projections are unreliable and even dangerous.  There is overwhelming evidence that his health care plan will result in a fiscal and medical care disaster.  More important, his plan would result in a wider unconstitutional expansion of government control over our lives. We must demand real solutions, not the trading of unsustainable benefits for votes, the loss of our liberty, and greater dependence for our medical care -- not on those trained in the healing arts -- but on government and professional politicians.

Website with Information on

http://www.fundedhealthcare.com
http://www.governmentfundedheathcare.com
http://www.govfundedhealthcare.com

Saturday, 25 December 2010

WellPoint helps usher in health care reform

After eight months of grueling debate, health care reform looked stymied in January after the victory of Scott Brown in Massachusetts gave Senate Republicans enough votes to filibuster the bill. But then President Obama revived the bill by seizing on news of sharp premium hikes on individual customers by Indianapolis-based WellPoint Inc.

CEO Angela Braly was dragged before a congressional committee, and Democrats regrouped to push the bill into law. Obama signed it March 23.

WellPoint was later blasted by critics of the law for its ham-handed public and government relations—things that were touted as Braly’s skills when she was named CEO in 2007.

“It’s been a disaster,” said Bob Laszewski, an insurance consultant in Alexandria, Va. “It’s hard to believe retrospectively in her expertise in public policy.”

WellPoint officials said Obama and his administration had “targeted and villainized” the company to rally support for health insurance reform.

The law itself is a mixed bag for WellPoint and its peers. On one hand, the law requires all Americans to have health insurance and will pay more than $40 billion a year in subsidies to help an extra 16 million Americans to buy coverage.

Already, however, WellPoint and its peers face many new regulations on their businesses. They can no longer reject customers because they’re sick and cannot cap customers’ benefits via lifetime maximum provisions.

Also, health insurers must spend at least 80 percent of the premiums they collect—and 85 percent for large-employer accounts—on medical care, potentially limiting their profits.

Lower profits and more complex regulations will lead many smaller insurers to sell to larger ones, and WellPoint executives say they expect to be active in acquisitions in the next few years.

Having an estimated 32 million new Americans with insurance coverage drew support for the law from Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co. and the pharmaceutical industry. But new industry fees, larger Medicaid rebates and other provisions now have analysts expecting it to trim pharma profits.

The law also approved new methods of paying doctors and hospitals, which has accelerated a trend of doctor-hospital mergers.•


For more Information please go to http://www.govfundedhealthcare.com/
http://www.governmentfundedheathcare.com/ 
http://www.govfundedhealthcare.com/

Tuesday, 29 June 2010

Healthcare

Healthcare

Current figures estimate that spending on health care in the U.S. is about 16% of its GDP.[20][21] In 2007, an estimated $2.26 trillion was spent on health care in the United States, or $7,439 per capita.[22] Health care costs are rising faster than wages or inflation, and the health share of GDP is expected to continue its upward trend, reaching 19.5% of GDP by 2017.[20]
In fact, government health care spending in the United States is consistently greater, as a portion of GDP, than in Canada, Italy, the United Kingdom and Japan (countries that have predominantly public health care).[23] And an even larger portion is paid by private insurance and individuals themselves. A recent study found that medical expenditure was a significant contributing factor in 62% of personal bankruptcies in the United States during 2007.[24]
The U.S. spends more on health care per capita than any other UN member nation.[6] It also spends a greater fraction of its national budget on health care than Canada, Japan, Germany or France. In 2004, the U.S. spent $6,102 per capita on health care, 92.7% more than any other G7 country, and 19.9% more than Luxembourg, which, after the U.S., had the highest spending in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).[25]
Although the U.S. Medicare coverage of prescription drugs began in 2006, most patented prescription drugs are more costly in the U.S. than in most other countries. Factors involved are the absence of government price controls, enforcement of intellectual property rights limiting the availability of generic drugs until after patent expiration, and the monopsony purchasing power seen in national single-payer systems.[26] Some U.S. citizens obtain their medications, directly or indirectly, from foreign sources, to take advantage of lower prices.
A study of international health care spending levels in the year 2000, published in the health policy journal Health Affairs, found that while the U.S. spends more on health care than other countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the use of health care services in the U.S. is below the OECD median. The authors of the study concluded that the prices paid for health care services are much higher in the U.S.[7]
Medicare and Medicaid Spending as % GDP
The Congressional Budget Office has argued that the Medicare program as currently structured is unsustainable without significant reform, as tax revenues dedicated to the program are not sufficient to cover its rapidly increasing expenditures. Further, the CBO also projects that "total federal Medicare and Medicaid outlays will rise from 4% of GDP in 2007 to 12% in 2050 and 19% in 2082 — which, as a share of the economy, is roughly equivalent to the total amount that the federal government spends today. The bulk of that projected increase in health care spending reflects higher costs per beneficiary rather than an increase in the number of beneficiaries associated with an aging population."[27]
The Government Accountability Office reported that the unfunded liability facing Medicare as of January 2007 was $32.1 trillion, which is the present value of the program deficits expected for the next 75 years in the absence of reform.[28] According to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, spending on Medicare will grow from approximately $500 billion during 2009 to $930 billion by 2018. Without changes, the system is guaranteed “to basically break the federal budget,” Obama said at a White House news conference July 22.[29]
A new study (published December 15, 2009 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences) from authors at Duke University, National Council of Spinal Cord Injury Association, Brigham Young University, and North Carolina State University shows that it might be more accurate to think of health care spending as an investment that can spur economic growth. The study also shows that government projections of health care costs and financing may be unduly pessimistic.[30]

[edit] Prescription drug prices

During the 1990s, the price of prescription drugs became a major issue in American politics as the prices of many new patented drugs increased sharply, and many citizens discovered that neither the government nor their insurer would pay the monopoly price of such drugs. In absolute currency, the U.S. spends the most on pharmaceuticals per capita in the world. However, national expenditures on pharmaceuticals accounted for only 12.9% of total health care costs, compared to an OECD average of 17.7% (2003 figures).[31] Some 23% of out-of-pocket health spending by individuals is for prescription drugs.[32]

[edit] Impact on U.S. economic productivity

On March 1, 2010, billionaire Warren Buffett (who is considered one of the world’s most savvy investors[33]) said that the high costs paid by U.S. companies for their employees’ health care put them at a competitive disadvantage. He compared the roughly 17% of GDP spent by the U.S. on health care with the 9% of GDP spent by much of the rest of the world, noted that the U.S. has fewer doctors and nurses per person, and said, “that kind of a cost, compared with the rest of the world, is like a tapeworm eating at our economic body.”[34]

[edit] Quality of care

Average Life expectancy in the United States is 78.11 years, lower than in some other countries.[35] For 2006-2010, the U.S. life expectancy will lag 38th in the world, after most developed nations, lagging last of the G7 (Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, U.K., U.S.) and just after Chile (35th) and Cuba (37th).[36]
The U.S. also has a worse infant mortality rate, 6.26 per 1000 live births compared to 5.72 for the European Union.[37] The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) suggests that higher rates of infant mortality in the U.S. are "due in large part to disparities which continue to exist among various racial and ethnic groups in this country, particularly African Americans".[38] Some studies claim the data collected regarding infant mortality and life expectancy do not lend themselves to fair comparison, as there may be differences in whether patients seek help, their ethnic background, diet, lifestyle, and the specific legal definition of a live birth.[39]
In 2000, the World Health Organization (WHO) ranked the U.S. health care system 37th in overall performance, right next to Slovenia, and 72nd by overall level of health (among 191 member nations included in the study).[40][41] The WHO study has been criticized by the free market advocate David Gratzer because "fairness in financial contribution" was used as an assessment factor, marking down countries with high per-capita private or fee-paying health treatment.[42] One study found that there was little correlation between the WHO rankings for health systems and the satisfaction of citizens using those systems.[43]
Some countries, such as Italy and Spain, which were given the highest ratings by WHO were ranked poorly by their citizens while other countries, such as Denmark and Finland, were given low scores by WHO but had the highest percentages of citizens reporting satisfaction with their health care systems.[43] WHO staff, however, say that the WHO analysis does reflect system "responsiveness" and argue that this is a superior measure to consumer satisfaction, which is influenced by expectations.[44]
Another metric used to compare the quality of health care across countries is Years of potential life lost (YPLL). By this measure, the United States comes third to last in the OECD for women (ahead of only Mexico and Hungary) and fifth to last for men (ahead of Poland and Slovakia additionally), according to OECD data. Yet another measure is Disability-adjusted life year (DALY). According to Jonathan Cohn, health care scholars prefer these more "finely tuned" statistical measures for international comparisons in place of the relatively "crude" infant mortality and life expectancy.[45]
The U.S. system is often compared with that of its northern neighbor, Canada. Canada's system is largely publicly funded. In 2006, Americans spent an estimated $6,714 per capita on health care, while Canadians spent US$3,678.[46] This amounted to 15.3% of U.S. GDP in that year, while Canada spent 10.0% of GDP on health care. The Canadian system has been criticized regarding long wait times — 5.5 weeks for oncology and 40 weeks for orthopedic surgery — and provincial health ministers announced a plan to reduce these to four weeks for radiation therapy for cancer and 26 weeks for hip replacement surgery.[47] A 2007 review of all studies comparing health outcomes in Canada and the U.S. found that the quality of care in Canada is at least as good as that in the U.S.[48]

Health care reform in the United States

The debate over health care reform in the United States centers on questions about
  • whether there is a fundamental right to health care,
  • who should have access to health care and under what circumstances,
  • who should be required to contribute toward the costs of providing health care in a society,[1][2]
  • whether the government should support health care commerce by forcing citizens to buy insurance or pay a tax,[1][2][3]
  • the quality achieved for the sums spent,
  • the sustainability of expenditures that have been rising faster than the level of general inflation and the growth in the economy,
  • the role of the federal government in bringing about such change
  • concerns over unfunded liabilities.
62% of all personal bankruptcies in the United States were medical.[4] Medical impoverishment is almost unheard of in wealthy countries other than the US[5]. The United States spends a greater portion of total yearly income in the nation on health care than any United Nations member state except for East Timor (Timor-Leste),[6] although the actual use of health care services in the U.S., by most measures of health services use, is below the median among the world's developed countries.[7]
According to the Institute of Medicine of the United States National Academies, the United States is the "only wealthy, industrialized nation that does not ensure that all citizens have coverage".[8] Americans are divided along party lines in their views regarding the role of government in the health economy and especially whether a new public health plan should be created and administered by the federal government.[9] Those in favor of universal health care argue that the large number of uninsured Americans creates direct and hidden costs shared by all, and that extending coverage to all would lower costs and improve quality.[10] Opponents of laws requiring people to have health insurance argue that they would impinge on personal freedom[11] and would not contain health care costs.[12] Both sides of the political spectrum have also looked to more philosophical arguments, debating whether people have a fundamental right to have health care which needs to be protected by their government.[13][14]
Recent reform efforts under the Democratic-controlled 111th Congress and President Barack Obama have focused on two bills: the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (known as the "Senate bill"), which became law on March 23, 2010[15][16] and was shortly thereafter amended by the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (H.R. 4872) (which became law on March 30). No Republicans supported either bill.[17]
Reuters and CNN summarized the March 2010 reforms and the year in which they take effect.[18][19]

Kathleen Sebelius, HHS Secretary, answers questions



Kathleen Sebelius, HHS Secretary, answers questions from the About.com community on the Health Care Affordability Act.

Senator Snowe has concerns about tax in Wall Street bill

Senator Snowe has concerns about tax in Wall Street bill

WASHINGTON
Mon Jun 28, 2010 9:16pm EDT
U.S. Senator Olympia Snowe (R-ME), member of the Senate Finance Committee, votes with a verbel ''Aye'' as the Committee passes the Democratic healthcare reform bill with a 14-9 vote, October 13, 2009 on Capitol Hill in Washington. The Democratic-controlled committee delivered President Barack Obama a major victory on his top domestic priority, gaining the support of an influential Republican and approving his healthcare reform bill with a 14-9 vote. Senator Snowe become the first Republican in Congress to back a healthcare bill. REUTERS/Jason Reed
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Republican senator whose support will be crucial to Democrats' chances of passing a landmark Wall Street reform bill said on Monday she was concerned about a bank tax added to it at the last minute. "I have concerns about the bank tax because it emerged during the course of the conference," Olympia Snowe told reporters in a Capitol hallway, with Congress expected to cast final votes on the bill within days.
"I'm still looking at the legislation ... I would have preferred the bank tax not to be included," Snowe said.
(Reporting by Kevin Drawbaugh; Editing by Andrew Hay)