For over 20 years our country and its undying commitment to capitalism have tried desperately to slow mushrooming healthcare costs, and failed miserably. HMOs, Capitation, things that business was confident would succeed where those fiscally incompetent doctors failed, fell flat. Patients, it seems, did not tolerate their health and well-being treated as a business. I suppose business was part of the problem. After during WWII, with wages fixes and worker shortage, jobs starting sweetening benefits with healthcare and insurance to compete. It turns out patients and workers really, really like this system. It removes us from feeling any of the pain in our wallets with doctor visits and poor health.
Speaking in strictly capitalist, business terms customers were going to receive services from physicians, while a third party, insurance companies and businesses footed the bill. This removes some of the natural checks on inflation of cost. The patient and the doctor can now gang up on the third party payer, making control of spending difficult. So as an economist, obviously we just need to restore the marketplace, right?
It really depends on how one envisions healthcare. I can’t see going to the doctor or hospital the same as shopping for a new SUV, or getting cable TV. Our health is a fundamentally different thing, central to our quality of life, our independence, even the pursuit of happiness. Is it something people deserve or something we buy, dependent on our resources and wealth?
Without question it is dependent on our wealth to some extent, because it is creating a very real drag on our economy. Businesses have been weighed down with the cost of healthcare to the point where even the most heartless capitalist is demanding that the government do something to fix this mess. We spend more on healthcare by far than any other nation in the world. In spite of this, we have huge inequities in care with a mushrooming population of “working poor.”
These are people who have jobs and contribute to society, eliminating their eligibility for medicaid, but don’t have access or resources to get health insurance, so they go without. These people do take themselves out of the equation. The price checks work, as they stop seeing the doctor, that is until their uncared for hypertension, diabetes, cancer, lands them straight in the hospital desperately ill, devouring resources. But hey, a recent study actually showed this saves us money. We should just let them shorten their lifespan right?
You could even go so far as to say they deserve it for not taking care of themselves. If they just ate right they wouldn’t get hypertension or diabetes, right? Problem is fat, sugar, processed food are very cheap. Fresh fruit, vegetables, unprocessed grains are not so cheap and take time to prepare, time that could be spent working away at your minimum wage job to make ends meet. No, I am afraid blaming the poor has become an American pastime, one I am deeply ashamed of.
I have witnessed it firsthand. In medical school, our catholic hospital often received “patient dumps” from another large private hospital. These were medicaid patients, the cost of their care being eaten by the hospital. Medicaid pays substantially less than the actual cost of healthcare with the thought being that Hospitals and Doctors can take the hit as doing their share of charity work. This being the real world, the cost is passed on to everyone else through inflated costs to cover losses caring for the poor. These losses would be very manageable if the poor were evenly distributed among us, and everyone took in their share. Alas, the poor are concentrated in the inner cities, the victims of family flight to the suburbs, or in rural areas where the resources are scarce. We now have laws outlawing patient dumping and ERs everywhere are becoming the primary health care clinic for the poor. ER physicians are frustrated, burnt out and cynical. Many of them blog about it. Many of them grow contemptuous of those they care for. It is sad really.
The president recently stated that we actually have universal health care in this country. He was referring to our “safety net”, government and community hospitals. In fact all hospitals are now required by law to take care of everyone who walks through their doors, regardless of ability to pay.
I have spent a good portion of my training in county and inner city hospitals and I have seen our safety net in action. I have watched as a hospital has closed, causing an overflow of the poor to other hospitals. When the poor arrive in too large of numbers, the old patients get spooked. They equate care for the poor with substandard care. They leave and take their insurance with them. The end result is that, indeed, care for the poor becomes substandard. Morale in these hospitals is exceedingly low. They go bankrupt, they cut staff and wages to make ends meet, they outsource, then they die. All the while, patients with money cause the suburban hospitals to thrive, explode, and expand. This is what it means to make healthcare a commodity. This will destroy our “safety net.” This is a crisis.
A main argument I have seen on other blogs against a single payer system is that people will expect more, waste more and everything will cost more. They state that patients won’t tolerate the rationing of healthcare that a single payer system will require. Governments won’t control the spending because it is politically harmful. I agree. I can tell you right now, patients don’t tolerate rationing. We have a tiered system with quality going to the highest bidder. This is capitalism, welcome to America, right?
I just can’t embrace it. My stomach has turned watching the market in action as hospitals are destroyed and the face of the poor ground upon. The resources available to medicine are not unlimited. We do have to face this. Personally I believe a single payer system would at least be a huge improvement over the fractured system we have now. You could tax business what they are paying for healthcare right now, eliminate all the duplication of beuracracy in insurance companies and with the money you save, put it toward real quality that benefits everyone, all without raising costs, which you could fix with inflation adjustments to force economic responsibility. Since we spend twice as much on healthcare as any other nation, we would have the best system in the world instead of the most wasteful.
Realistically you would still have two tiers. The Uber rich, I am sure, would feel they wanted something better and would pay out of pocket to doctors that would only be too happy to oblige. If they pay taxes and foot the entire bill, I suppose it is only fair. They would be a definite minority. The important thing is that healthcare would become a resource that we share.
There is a certain basic concept that we are beginning to forget in our society, the concept of common wealth. Way back in the days of print media, communities would pool their resources to build a collection of books we call a library. This was because information and education was felt to be mutually beneficial if shared. The poor can only benefit from learning. We all can gain more as a group, enriching the whole, than any of us can individually. This is a way the group can protect resources from individuals who would devour or horde them. It turns out that together we have much more than any of us could ever hope to acquire individually. This is the thinking behind public museums, national parks. These are something different than commodities. They are actual sources of well being. This is our true wealth, and it is shared.
The common wealth of America are habitats, ecosystems, languages, cultures, science, technology, schools, social and political systems, democracy. These are things often so basic we sometimes forget how much we have. They are things we all value together and are well worth fighting for. So is medicine a right, or a commodity dependant on resources and wealth? My answer has to be an unqualified yes, it’s both.
I believe, sincerely in the depths of my soul, our commonwealth has to include medicine. We need to protect it, not exploit it. I doubt any of us could calculate what exactly any of these things would cost on the open market. I think it is safe to say that taken together our common wealth’s value exceeds all we could ever own privately.
This is why collectively, we need to move to protect healthcare and medicine and distribute it among ourselves equally. Yes this means placing some trust in the government, which after all represents all of us. I am just enough of a hopeless optimist to suggest this is something we must fight for. In the end, I have to come down believing health care is a right, inextricably tied with life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. I leave you with this closing thought about what I believe society should and can be.
“We need to speak up, to say boldly why we fight for good schools, why we build houses for the homeless, why we protect open space, why we look after the ailing and the elderly, why we pay taxes without grumbling, why we honor government as a force for public good. In a society obsessed with competition, we need to say why we practice cooperation. In a culture addicted to instant gratification, we need to champion long-term healing and the welfare of coming generations.”
15 comments
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February 29, 2008 at 7:10 pm
Stephen M (Ethesis)
Nicely argued.
I hope more people follow the link and read it.
BTW, have you read Taubes Good Calories, Bad Calories?
February 29, 2008 at 8:36 pm
Doc
Can’t say I have. I’m guessing it about eating naturally?
February 29, 2008 at 10:05 pm
LDS Anarchist
It’s funny you should mention this topic. Just yesterday, a close friend of mine, who has no health insurance, went to see a doctor for a condition she thought was pretty bad. She was thinking maybe she had cancer, etc. She paid cash for the visit and got a 10% discount as a result. It cost her $124 and basically the doc told her that it seemed to be a combination of nerves, allergic and maybe indigestion (acid reflux). She recommended a blood test a few other tests. Then my friend went to the laboratory to find out how much the blood test would be. $825 was the price she got. She decided to skip on the blood test and change her eating, drinking and other habits, as that was cheaper. I, personally, didn’t realize that prices were so high, though we’ve all heard the news report on this. Insurance has insulated us from the real cost of health care. If these numbers are typical, these costs truly are skyrocketing.
The solution that I see to this problem is a spiritual one. The LDS have been offered the “best gifts,” listed in D&C 46. Two of those best gifts are the gift to heal and the gift to be healed. For the most part, according to my experience in the church, we haven’t used these gifts, nor any of the other best ones. The gift to heal has been “assigned” to the priesthood by tradition and precedent in the administration of priesthood blessings, which, according to D&C 42: 43, only was to occur where there was no faith to be healed. Thus, most priesthood blessings are not miraculous. Some are, though, but these are rare, indeed. I myself have healed miraculously and also been healed miraculously, so I won’t say that the gifts are non-existent in the church, but they appear to be virtually non-existent.
If the LDS would wake up out of their stupor and set right the temporal inequalities among them, so that they qualify for the abundance of the manifestations of the Spirit, which includes the best gifts, then we would have men and women among us who can heal others miraculously. We’d also have individuals, such as bishops or others, who possess the gift to discern other gifts (see D&C 46: 27) and we would know who possessed which gift. This would solve to a great extent the present health care crisis not only among ourselves but also among the people of the world who believe in Christ.
The poor typically are people of faith. If the LDS started exercising these gifts and powers of the Holy Ghost, as they should be, poor people would seek out the LDS healers to rid them of their illnesses and conditions “without money and without price.” This would free up the health care system of a huge drain on their resources. Those who could afford it, and who wished to be healed slowly, or not at all, could exercise their money and visit the allopathic medical doctors, whereas those who couldn’t afford it and who wished to be miraculously healed, could exercise their faith and visit the LDS who possessed and used the gift to heal. If bishops actually possessed the gift of discernment of gifts, as they are supposed to have, a non-LDS believer in Christ could seek out the local LDS bishop and be directed to a member of that ward who possessed the gift to heal.
Unfortunately, the LDS currently also use allopathic medicine, or other types of health practitioners, and have not received these gifts, except in rare cases, or have received them in their lower administrations (blessing the doctor so that he prescribes correctly or the surgeon so that he has a steady hand) instead of the higher administrations (miraculous healing.) This is in keeping with D&C 46: 15, and is better than nothing, at all, but still not what we should expect of ourselves.
Thus we see that the LDS have the solution to the problem but do not use it. What I wonder is, will our unwillingness to obtain and use a fullness of these gifts to bless the world and alleviate the suffering and pain of illness bring repercussions upon us from the Lord in the day of judgment? Are we considered “part of the problem” because we don’t use the very solution the Lord has set up?
February 29, 2008 at 10:59 pm
Doc
LDSA,
Whoa, who knew you had such a dim view of medicine. Color me sensitive, but I consider a lot of what I do to be the gift of healing, which after all is much more than just curing. It takes a real, genuine, personal connection, love and faith.
I do believe in the gift of the spirit to heal and be healed. You probably have a point about a typical lack of faith these days. It is a product of our culture. I would bet you healing is much more common in the Church outside the US.
But the fact is, it remains a gift, and not everyone will be blessed with it. I don’t think it was intended to supplant medicine. Were it so, Brigham Young wouldn’t have sent all those LDS women off to medical school.
February 29, 2008 at 11:54 pm
LDS Anarchist
I didn’t mean to offend you, Doc. But you are right, I do look down upon much of modern allopathic medicine techniques and conclusions. I appreciate the immense knowledge that scientific research has discovered about the body, but due to the inability to factor in the role of plasma in our organisms, modern medicine usually can’t see the forest for the trees. There are a lot of people who, given plenty of facts, still can’t come to correct conclusions, and nowhere is this more prevalent than the medical community. The medical community, unfortunately, has lots of facts of the physical and chemical nature of the body, but does not have an understanding of the electric fields therein, or their role in our systems. They see it, but not being plasma scientists, they don’t know what it does or how it got there, or even why it is important. They look upon it as secondary. Although I have commented on my blog only about plasma cosmology and plasma theology, there is also plasma geology and plasma biology, as well as every other field of study. The role of plasma is universal. When you gain a deep understanding of plasma, all scientific fields suddenly open up, both true causes and true effects. And when it is discounted, the true causes and effects are missed. Nevertheless, it is still possible to arrive at a cure by happenstance, without knowing the true cause and cure.
The medical establishment does much good with what they have, and there are definite gifts of compassion, sacrifice, kindness and knowledge being manifest among these non-miraculous healers. The Lord works according to the conditions among men, so he does what he can with what he has to work with. I do not doubt that you help many people using medical care, and it can be termed a gift of healing, especially as the Lord does still help according to whatever faith is present. But this is not THE gift of healing spoken of in the scriptures, or, perhaps, better said, it is not the higher manifestation of this gift.
I have no idea if spiritual, miraculous healing is more prevalent outside the U.S. Many foreign countries have socialized medicine, which makes it that much easier to rely upon a doctor, so it might be even less than here. But then again, foreigners are often seen to be more “superstitious” than Americans are, so they may seek first a spiritual solution, therefore, you may in fact be right.
Brigham Young was a believer in education, so maybe he had it in mind to get the LDS as educated in all fields as was possible, so that they could take that knowledge and use it to their advantage in their own land. This, in my estimation, would be a wise course to take. Especially if the abundances of the Spirit (the best gifts) were not being manifest due to temporal stinginess and inequality. But if the gifts are manifest, and specifically this one gift to heal, much of medicine becomes unnecessary, except in cases where a healer is not present.
This subject of gifts requires a more in depth exposition. I guess I’d better take it up on my own blog. As yet, I’ve only taken up tongues, but the gifts of healing deserve attention. Thank you for stimulating my mind.
March 1, 2008 at 1:00 am
Ludlow
Thank you for this.
We need to realize that the way our health care system works right now includes having to go through a middle man (the insurance company) who charges an arm and a leg (actually 30%) and adds NO value to our health care. Billions of dollars go into their coffers that ought to be used for actual care of actual patients.
It is not true that private industry can do it better than We the People. The Private Insurance Industry has robbed us blind for the last 30 years, leading to the crisis that we now find ourselves in.
The Medicare system and the VA system, though very underfunded now, have cared better for their constituents over the years than our mish-mosh of Blue Crosses and CIGNAs that have red-lined and cherry-picked “covered lives” (we are not even people to them!) all in the name of making as much profit as they can possibly get away with. Little wonder that costs are out of control.
And those out of control costs hurts all of us.
Business suffers on the world market: Toyota was going to open a plant in the US but decided to go to Canada. Why? Because they would not have to pay $1300-1500 more per car in health care costs for their workers in a country that had universal health care.
Individuals suffer: Those who have survived cancers or heart attacks or opportunistic infections cannot get insured at any cost. Those of us who for any reason put off care until it becomes a catastrophic problem, set ourselves up for untold, unnecessary pain and suffering. And set up the social network of medicaid and medicare for heavy costs instead of the far cheaper costs required to nip things in the bud when caught and treated early.
We all are at risk on a public health scale: Bacteria do not check your passport or insurance card before invading. Denying care to any among us can put us all at risk for communicable diseases.
Instead of paying premiums to the insurance companies who have failed us, we need to put our money into a health care trust fund. This is single-payer. Whenever anyone needs care, they go to their doctor of choice and their hospital of choice and get the care they need. The doctor and hospital get paid out of the trust fund. Because the wasteful middleman is eliminated and many things like paperwork can be streamlined, billions of dollars are made available so that all in America can be covered.
Our workforce can become healthier and stronger; our children likewise. Imagine not having to stress about being able to afford treatment for a broken bone or diabetes or stroke.
Our emergency rooms can be available for true emergencies where time is of the essence. Your heart attack or stroke can be treated right away giving you the best chance for the best outcome.
The belief that we already have care for everyone because anyone can go to the ER for care is ridiculous. Say you are a diabetic and your sugar is sky high. You go to the ER, we check your sugar, we treat you until your sugar is within normal limits and then we send you on your way telling you to see your primary care doctor as soon as possible. You need diabetic teaching and insulin and supplies and monitoring. The ER cannot give you all the care you need. ER care puts out the fire, but you still have all the problems that started the fire in the first place that need to be taken care of.
Now how can we best fix our messed up system? Congress does have a bill for single-payer ready to go. We just need to let our congress men and women know that we want it NOW. HR 676 authored by John Conyers of Michigan improves and extends Medicare to All. And in California Senator Sheila Kuehl’s bill SB 840 provides for guaranteed single-payer universal health care.
Private insurers have had their chance and their day. They have failed us miserably. It’s time now for single-payer universal health care.
March 3, 2008 at 9:38 pm
Marla Arciniega :)
than-x this really helps me with a persuasive essay i have to do
indeed veru nicely argued 🙂 <33
– marla, 14
August 27, 2008 at 6:17 pm
sm3tennis
The reason why the health care system is failing is not because of businesses but because of government. Businesses started offering people health care because government fixed wages. Many of the problems today stem from government provision of medicare, medicaid, SCHIP, etc. etc. The answer to our health care system’s problems is not more government but less.
August 28, 2008 at 11:00 am
Doc
sm3,
You may have a point about insurance. It seems odd that the idea of pooling resources to keep people from catastrophic losses from illness could be a bad thing. There is a big problem with your argument however.
Going to the doctor isn’t like having a haircut. Treating it like a commodity leads to fundamental inequities and scary ethical lapses. Caveat Emptorum, or let the buyer beware, will always apply to a consumer model and frankly, it is impossible for a patient to be educated enough to keep themselves from being ripped off. Additionally, the patients typically have no idea what their health care costs.
My experience has been that the magic market is no solution when it comes to our health and well being. It is a cess pool of snake oil salesmen and concern for the bottom line over the patient. I know we here in America believe we are much smarter than the rest of the world, but there is a reason why the rest of the world spends so much less on health care and yet still outperforms us on leading health indicators.
February 24, 2009 at 7:02 pm
Bella
Very interesting debate you’ve got going here. I stumbled upon your blog while surfing and just wanted to add my two p.
It was the title of your article that caught my attention : medical care – right or privilege?
Well, my immediate thought was ‘of course medical care is a right – what kind of society would deny someone treatment or even let them die, just because they’re poor?’. But i suppose thats because i live in the UK where healthcare is free to all and i’ve never known any other way to look at this issue.
Here we have a ‘single payer system’ called the National Health Service, which is funded by small contributions taken each week from the wages of everyone who works (called National Insurance contributions). All hospital treatment and primary care are paid for from this pot of money.
We have to pay a set amount towards things like doctors prescriptions, eye tests, dental care etc (this is waived for those on benefits, the elderly and under-16s) but most of the cost is met by NHS funding.
As i said, i just can’t imagine any other way of providing medical care. Putting our health into the hands of insurance companies and businessmen is unthinkable to me.
The system we have in the UK isn’t perfect as care is sometimes ‘rationed’ due to spiralling treatment costs, especially where things like expensive new cancer drugs are concerned. Also, hospital staffing can be a bit top-heavy’ sometimes where the management staff almost outnumber the doctors and nurses.
But on the whole the system works well and despite its limitations, its got to be better than putting a price on health?
I do hope the new US administration comes up with a fairer healthcare provision policy, with good quality care available for any and all who need it.
March 2, 2009 at 10:49 am
Doc
Bella,
Me too. I think that not only is it a moral obligation to make a good degree of care available to all Americans, but also that the politics that have largely scuttled such reform have created a looming potential humanitarian disaster.
October 24, 2009 at 12:20 am
J.
I’d like to see peoples opinion on the comparison of this and another article.
http://www.aapsonline.org/brochures/sademcr.htm
Especially Bella. I’m very curious to hear the opinion of someone living with single payer medical care.
October 27, 2009 at 10:20 am
Doc
J.
My reply is right here. That argument relies entirely on marginalizing the sick by blaming them for illness. The patients I take care of are not those he quotes in statistics, and it is their rights I am fighting for.
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