Saturday, October 26, 2019
Practically Uncovered
If you have a strong union healthcare
plan or if you live in the rarified air of generous corporate benefits, you
will undoubtedly want to keep what you’ve got. Might be there too if you are
already on Medicare (even as benefits will slowly erode if the current
administration has anything to say about that), especially with supplemental
coverage, or if you are just plain rich. And unless you are enrolled in one of
those “not available for individual buyers” plans for glasses, hearing aids and
dental work, what coverage you can buy for those ailments on the open market is
hardly worth the cost.
Prudent consumers, carefully weighing
privately available medical insurance hoping to find a reasonable alternative…
well, sorry, such plans simply do not exist. And a free market not only has
failed to produce falling prices, but instead we have rapidly rising premiums,
contracted coverage, soaring co-pays and massively expanded deductibles. A few
plans look cheaper but on closer examination fly in the face of the requirements
of the Affordable Care Act by listing what they cover (effectively eliminating
expensive treatments and diseases most like to be pre-existing conditions).
Medical bankruptcies, especially among those who have insurance, are beginning
to explode again.
As hospitals market to attract these
prudent shoppers, they often list the cost for basic procedures… but fail
to mention the little extras like anesthesiologists, operating theater
and hospital room costs, nursing staff, additional medications that are
routinely required, which can push the total cost to a vast multiple of the
cited procedure. In short, such wildly inaccurate marketing information seems
to border on fraud… but few do anything short of working out a payment plan
with the hospital.
Where consumers have to pay for
healthcare directly, unless you are rich and simply do not care, here’s the
bottom line: affordable quality healthcare is a myth. It just does not exist. “High-deductible
health plans, which are fast becoming the dominant form of coverage for U.S.
workers, were supposed to empower patients. Backers said the plans would create
engaged shoppers who would check prices and compare providers, forcing
hospitals, doctors and drugmakers to control costs.
“Deductibles have more than tripled
over the last decade for people who get insurance through their jobs, but the
promised consumer revolution never materialized… Instead, Americans have been
left shopping in the dark and increasingly struggling with medical bills they
can’t afford, a Times examination of job-based health insurance shows.
“‘This idea that we were going to
give patients ‘skin in the game’ and a few shopping tools and this was going to
address the broad problems in our healthcare system was poorly conceived,’ said
Lynn Quincy, former healthcare advocate at Consumer Reports now at Altarum, a
nonprofit research and consulting firm.
“‘It’s clear now that the idea
definitely hasn’t borne fruit,’ she said. ‘It hasn’t made people feel more
confident seeking care. It hasn’t led to better value. And it’s had terrible
consequences on patients’ ability to afford care.’
“Although Americans are willing to
seek out lower-priced generic medications, few are comfortable shopping for
medical care, studies and surveys show. Patients like Grimm who do try are
often frustrated by incomplete or inaccurate information from insurers,
hospitals and other medical providers.
“Just 1 in 6 covered workers tried to
shop for the best price for a medical service in the previous year, according
to a nationwide poll conducted for this project by The Times and the nonprofit
Kaiser Family Foundation. Two-thirds of workers with job-based coverage said
finding the cost of a medical treatment or procedure was somewhat or very
difficult.
“Meanwhile, prices for medical care
and prescription drugs haven’t moderated, as advocates of high-deductible
insurance predicted. Instead, they have soared… The average price of a knee
replacement, for example, shot up nearly 80% between 2003 and 2017, increasing
at more than double the rate of overall inflation, a Kaiser Family Foundation
analysis of commercial insurance data found.” Los Angeles Times, October 21st.
Even where consumers can search out
more efficient and cost-effective hospitals and clinics, they often do not know
how to price shop or are simply wary of leaving their vital health needs to the
lowest bidder, often a service provider they know nothing about. “In one study
of nearly 150,000 people covered by two large national employers, only about 1
in 10 who could shop for price information did, even if they had a
high-deductible plan. And use of the tool was not associated with lower
healthcare spending.
“In the Times-Kaiser Family
Foundation survey, only about a quarter of workers with job-based coverage
reported using an online cost tool… Americans show little inclination to find
the best deal even for a basic medical service like an MRI scan, which can be
as much as five times more expensive in one facility than in another, another
recent study found.
“Researchers analyzing commercial
insurance data from tens of millions of Americans reported only 14% of patients
went to the lowest-cost MRI within a 30-minute drive of their house. Patients
on average passed six lower-priced MRI facilities on their way from home to the
place where they had the imaging, the study found.
“Many Americans don’t want to have to
shop for healthcare, preferring to let their physicians guide their care… ‘We
pretty much go where we’re comfortable. We’re not looking for the cheapest
doctor,’ said Jim Morrissey, 39, a food service manager who lives near
Harrisburg, Pa. ‘I’m loyal to the doctors I trust.’ … Americans’ lack of
enthusiasm for medical shopping also reflects how little information is
available about prices.” LA Times.
Developed nations wonder how the
United States can deny universal healthcare as unaffordable… and then cut
trillions of dollars from the tax bills of the mega-rich corporations and spend
41% of the global military budget while still losing all those “wars.” German healthcare,
for example, is a uniform policy administered through private insurance
companies with government support. Dental, eyecare and hearing are covered. The
premium is a percentage of income, there are no co-pays, annual deductibles are
capped at about $500, and prescriptions cannot exceed EU10/month. And trust me,
having experienced the system, it is at least the equal of what rich insurance
policies provide here in the US.
There is no developed Republican
alternative. Twenty red state attorneys general, supported by the US Department
of Justice, are suing the federal government to kill the entire Affordable Care
Act. They are arguing that the only healthcare that works is a free and open
marketplace, even as every independent research survey conclusively determines
that this is beyond a false promise.
Whether we phase a plan in over an
acceptable number of years, fix what we have or find another path to universal
coverage, the “one true thing” is obvious: the United States has finally
reached the stage of a major healthcare crisis that is getting so much worse so
much faster than anyone could have imagined. We have the most expensive
healthcare costs on earth… and the most exclusionary system in the developed
world. And it is finally and dramatically breaking down.
I’m
Peter Dekom, and it is time to get concrete and get a plan on the table that works
for the American people!!!
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