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The enemy of health reform is NOT "opposition to reform"....The enemy of reform is PSEUDO-"REFORM".

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Faryn Balyncd Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-11-09 12:27 PM
Original message
The enemy of health reform is NOT "opposition to reform"....The enemy of reform is PSEUDO-"REFORM".
Edited on Mon May-11-09 12:52 PM by Faryn Balyncd




....and, as always, the devil is in the details.


We will not find the enemies of healthcare reform using rhetoric "opposing reform".


The deadliest enemies to reform are the corporatists huddling with politicians for the express purpose of deciding how to package a corporate welfare bill to peddle to the American people as "healthcare reform".


The template for this is the "Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit", the primary effect of which has been to enrich Big Pharma. With competitive bidding disallowed , Big Pharma was put in position in subsequent years to create the most disproportionate & inflationary price hikes in modern times.


The "Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit", which could never have passed in the Senate if not for the backing of Max Baucus, has worked out to be one of the most profligate examples of CORPORATE WELFARE in history, one that has resulted in markedly higher drug prices for ALL AMERICANS.


As the advocates for real reform are not only excluded, but hauled off by the police to the chuckling of Sen. Baucus and his cronies, these corporate pseudo-"reformers" and their lackies are now designing the bill which will be labeled "reform".


The corporatists appear to think all it takes to pass an another egregious CORPORATE WELFARE bailout for insurance companies is to dress it up with a "reform" label, run it up the flagpole, and Americans, desperate for "reform", will salute.


Are we as gullible as they appear to think?









:kick:







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redqueen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-11-09 12:28 PM
Response to Original message
1. We need single payer... call today!
Details at the link in my sig.

Please call!
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librechik Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-11-09 12:43 PM
Response to Original message
2. we're gullible if we believe they will give us ANYTHING--unless we make them
very uncomfortable.

Start screaming, folks. And don't stop.
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European Socialist Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-11-09 02:32 PM
Response to Original message
3. I heard Goolsby say that a public plan is still on the table....
I hope he means it!
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PHIMG Donating Member (814 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-11-09 02:54 PM
Response to Original message
4. Yes, exactly. The D.C. consensus is b.s. We need Sinle Payer!
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kenfrequed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-11-09 04:31 PM
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5. Universal public is the only thing that will work.
ANY solution that involves a 'public-private' or mixed system is inevtiably doomed to utter failure.

The result of these half measures is something that covers less people and will eat more and more federal dollars. A public not-for-profit program is the only possible solution.
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eridani Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-12-09 05:33 AM
Response to Original message
6. Should PNHP support a public Medicare-like option in a market of private plans?
Health Policy Q&A with PNHP Co-founders Drs. David Himmelstein and Steffie Woolhandler on 04/17/2009


PNHP should tell the truth: The “public plan option” won't work to fix the health care system for two reasons. .

1. It foregoes at least 84% of the administrative savings available through single payer. The public plan option would do nothing to streamline the administrative tasks (and costs) of hospitals, physicians offices, and nursing homes. They would still contend with multiple payers, and hence still need the complex cost tracking and billing apparatus that drives administrative costs. These unnecessary provider administrative costs account for the vast majority of bureaucratic waste. Hence, even if 95% of Americans who are currently privately insured were to join a public plan (and it had overhead costs at current Medicare levels), the savings on insurance overhead would amount to only 16% of the roughly $400 billion annually achievable through single payer.

2. A quarter century of experience with public/private competition in the Medicare program demonstrates that the private plans will not allow a level playing field. Despite strict regulation, private insurers have successfully cherry picked healthier seniors, and have exploited regional health spending differences to their advantage. They have progressively undermined the public plan—which started as the single payer for seniors and has now become a funding mechanism for HMOs, and a place for them to dump the unprofitably ill. A public plan option does not lead toward single payer, but toward the segregation of patients; with profitable ones in private plans and unprofitable ones in the public plan.

Would a public plan option stabilize the health care system, or even be a major step forward?

The evidence is strong that such reform would have at best a modest and temporary positive impact—a view that is widely shared within PNHP. Indeed, we remain concerned that a public plan option as an element of reform might well be shaped in a manner to effectively subsidize private insurers by requiring patients to purchase coverage while relieving private insurance of the highest risk individuals, stabilizing private insurers for some time and reinforcing their control of the health care system.

Given the above, is it advisable to spend significant effort advocating for inclusion of such reform? No, for two reasons:

1. We are doctors, not politicians. We are obligated to tell the truth, and must answer for the veracity of our stance to our patients and colleagues over many years. Ours is a very different time horizon and set of responsibilities than politicians'. Falling in line with a consensus that attempts to mislead the public may gain us a seat at the debate table, but abdicates our ethical obligations.

2. The best way to gain a half a pie is to demand the whole thing.

Is fundamental reform possible?

We remain optimistic that real reform is quite possible, but only if we and our many allies continue to insist on it.


If we have to compromise at the end of the process, what should a public option look like?

This opinion article is compiled from conversations held during April, 2009, with health care reform advocates, including Physicians for a National Health Plan, Health Care for All NJA? and other advocates.
This draft (4-18-09) prepared for discussion, by Craig Salins

In other words, if we can’t get our pony, what should the kitten that we will settle for look like? Congress is finally considering serious health care reform, pushed by the Obama administration and by a worsening crisis nationwide. There are several competing options and proposals, representing a diversity of interests, each seeking to broaden coverage to all or most Americans and at an affordable cost.

One proposed option is simply to expand Medicare to everyone. It would cover all Americans, all ages, be financed publicly, and delivered privately through existing local health services and facilities.

Another option is to leave existing private insurance plans in place, for any Americans who want to keep their existing plan, while simultaneously establishing a public plan which would be open anyone—those who don't currently have coverage, or who desire to switch to a public plan. The expectation is that such a public plan would provide good benefits at a lower price, by operating on a non-profit basis, with a single risk pool nationwide, without expensive overhead.

But such a plan could be hijacked or derailed in Congress by special interests. If not designed with safeguards and combined with tight regulation of private insurance, a public plan could become simply a dumping ground for older, sicker enrollees at taxpayer expense, while letting the insurance industry reap a bonanza in public subsidies and profit: for enrolling healthy people who cost very little.

The insurance industry is already opposing the creation of a public plan option. They complain that it would compete with their established plans (it would, of course—fair competition is the point.) But the insurance industry might use their political clout through Congressional debate to “shape” the public plan so that it cannot succeed—or so that it works to their advantage, perhaps by taking sicker, more costly patients off their hands, leaving low-cost healthy patients to be milked for higher profit.

A public plan option must be designed with the public interest in mind—and not by those in the insurance industry who have private profit in mind at taxpayer expense!

These features below must be part of any public plan option—to achieve a plan that will work for all.

1. Any public option should directly pay providers (like Medicare does) - using a single, efficient public “payer” to pay for services delivered by private health care providers and facilities chosen by the patient. (This contrasts with a referral or “connector” plan, such as the Federal Employee Benefits Health Plan, that simply enrolls people in existing private insurance plans. A connector scheme is expensive, due to an extra layer of administration to broker the arrangement and the expensive overhead of private insurance.)

2. Comprehensive benefit package, one set of benefits for everyone regardless of age, employment status, enrollment group, geography, health status, or any other factor.

3. Free and complete choice of health care providers, including hospitals, clinics, all services.

4. Affordable. No excessive co-pays or deductibles. Appropriate cost-sharing from employers, individuals, and from public sources/programs such as Medicaid and Medicare.

5. Available to everyone including employers, employee groups, and any individual.

6. Guaranteed acceptance* No denial of coverage to anyone for health status, pre-existing conditions, or for any reason. No waiting period. No penalties for not previously having insurance.

7. Immediate enrollment and coverage* in a plan of patient's choice, at the point of first medical contact for those not previously enrolled in a coverage plan. No delay when coverage starts.

8. Community rating* Insurance premiums based on health care risks and costs for the entire population - not on any particular subset of risks and costs, such as those with chronic disease.

* These features should apply by law to all health care insurance - public or private - as a matter of public policy.

Also, if for now, Congress fails to enact HR 1200, HR 676, S 703, or a similar single-payer plan, such that private for-profit health insurance coverage continues to be part of the national mix of options—

There must be robust and effective regulation of private insurers:

1. to limit overhead administrative costs and investor profit (as is done now with regulation of public utilities); and
2. to prevent "cherry-picking"—enrolling only the healthy, and excluding those with pre-existing conditions or chronic disease, etc.; and
3. in general, to prevent the public plan option from becoming a taxpayer-supported dumping ground of sicker patients, while private insurance reaps a windfall from enrolling only the healthy.

Regulation of private insurance plans must include—at a minimum—the features above marked by (*).

Private insurance is the problem

Rather than solving the challenge of affordable health care for all, private insurance IS the problem.

Why? Because real savings can only be realized by eliminating the inefficiency that is built in to the private health care insurance system. A public option plan foregoes at least 84% of the administrative savings available through a nationwide single payer system—publicly-financed, covering everyone, and delivered through private and community-based providers of the patient's choice.

When there are hundreds of private insurance plans, hospitals and doctors need an army of clerks to handle all the different rules and limitations in processing payment and claims. Also, under our current system, the insurance industry spends greatly on screening efforts to “cherry pick” only the profitable enrollees, by excluding those with pre-existing conditions and chronic illnesses. The net effect is profitability for insurance companies, but too many uninsured, and higher costs to the public.

Until and unless there is a single-payer system, effective cost control depends on tight regulation of private insurance, to limit overhead costs where too many health care dollars are actually wasted—such as for marketing costs, investor profit, excessive compensation to CEOs and top management, corporate lobbying and campaign contributions, etc.

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