(Shum does a good job diving into the limitations of the proposals that have been leaked. – promoted by juls)
California gets much of the attention in today’s Single-Payer Update, as Schwarzenegger robs Peter to pay Paul in his upcoming health care bill, while bringing back George Bush’s failed Health Savings Account idea. Also Paul Krugman looks at the inefficiency of health care privatization, the Massachusetts Mandate hits a stumbling block, and blogger Avedon figures out how to make single-payer health care a reality.
Brought to you by the National Nurses Organizing Committee as we organize to make 2007 the Year of Single-Payer Healthcare.
California Schemin’
“Moderate” politicians around the country (meaning those trying to protect their corporate healthcare donors) are hitting on a similar strategy to divert the public’s demands for genuine progress on our healthcare crisis: they are passing laws to force people to purchase health insurance, and sometimes coupling that with nominal expansions in programs that serve a few patients here and there.
None of this will solve the problems in our health care system, but they do raise a whole new set of problems: how to pay for even these “nibbling around the edges” reforms.
In California, the San Francisco Chronicle reports on Schwarzenegger’s scheme to find more money to pay for coverage for poor people: he’s going to take it out of public health funds.
That’s right, Governor Arnold plans on taking $2 billion of money now used to cover care for indigent people at hospitals and instead use it to cover health insurance for many of those same people.
In other words-he’s taking dollars used to directly cover care and feeding them into the Insurance Industry Machine, which will start by disappearing about a third of those dollars into their overhead, marketing, profits, and bureaucracy.
Which means we’ll continue to see out-of-control health care costs, but will have fewer public resources to go around.
HSA’s are Back??
The same article floats a trial balloon for state “Health Savings Accounts.” As you recall this idea was proposed by President George Bush as an attempt to privatize health care risk, in the same vein that he wanted to privatize retirement risk by replacing Social Security with private accounts. There are multiple problems with HSA’s, including: they drive more people into bankruptcy; they do nothing to contain costs; they are much better for the rich than middle class or poor people; they greatly increase administrative costs.
Privatization’s Peril
Paul Krugman in the New York Times (reg. req’d.) gives us historical perspective on the harmful trend of privatizing health services:
One of the main features of the (Medicare part D) legislation was an effort to bring private-sector fragmentation and inefficiency to one of America’s most important public programs….but for the Bush administration and its Congressional allies, privatization isn’t a way to deliver better government services-it’s an end in itself…(now the privatized portion of Medicare) costs 11 percent more per beneficiary that traditional Medicare.
Massachusetts Mandate Mess
Meanwhile problems with the Massachusetts mandate are continuing. Massachusetts is one of the more heart-breaking stories in the push for health-care reform. They were probably closer to single-payer than any other state, until one politician with visions of the Presidency in his eyes moved them towards an “individual mandate” system. This is also known as criminalizing the uninsured, where the entire population becomes a forced market for the insurance industry.
The Boston Globe today reports hospitals are having trouble signing people up for their mandated coverage. They don’t know they have to sign up, or they don’t understand it, or, in the words of one hospital executive,
even when some people are informed about the plans, they remain wary about signing up for coverage, fearing hidden costs or penalties in the fine print.
Go figure. Are they going to get thrown into the poorhouse?
The Haggle
Avedon over at Atrios has a great idea for how to bring about single-payer: haggle. Start with a demand for a National Health Service…and single-payer emerges as the reasonable alternative it really is!