Wednesday, October 16, 2019
Whatever They Can Get Away With
socialism
so·cial·ism | \ ˈsō-shə-ˌli-zəm \
Definition of socialism
1: any
of various economic and political theories advocating collective
or governmental ownership and
administration of the means of
production and distribution of
goods
2a: a
system of society or group living in which there is no private property
b: a
system or condition of society in which the means of production are
owned and controlled by the
state
and pay according to work done
American doctors aren’t making more,
except in certain rarified circles of expertise or where vanity calls. There
are still strikes from other healthcare workers, so they don’t seem to think
they are making enough. Medicare is falling short, Medicaid isn’t robust and US
mortality rates and life expectancy numbers are going the wrong way. The number
of medical bankruptcies is rising, and healthcare costs are skyrocketing again.
Still, as we listen to the political
rhetoric, where government support of any form of healthcare is labeled as
“socialism.” And as those older folks in our constituency know, if you can
label a program as “socialist” or “communist,” you can draw direct comparisons
to those autocratic and brutal nations who call themselves “socialist” or
“communist,” but repress and slaughter their own people who raise a finger in
dissent. Folks who bandy that “s” word around probably cannot give you a proper
definition. The complete Merriam-Webster definition is given above, and not one
word of that definition would seem to apply simply to a system of governmental
support for universal healthcare.
There is a huge difference between “socialism”
and “social programs.” If you hate governments doing anything in the way of
social programs – stuff like free public primary and secondary schools or
Medicare – that’s totally different… but hardly reflective of a modern culture
based on a severe division of labor, deep and constant interaction of its
citizenry resulting in massive interdependence. Think pioneer woodsman vs
someone repairing cars or working in as office tower. Having a vastly
undereducated population is generally an indicator of a failed and economically
inadequate state.
So, if government support for medical
care is not socialist, if doctors are not making the big bucks anymore (but
still paying the big tuition costs), why is the GOP – clearly calling the shots
– so vehemently against national healthcare? Why are 20 red state attorneys
general, with full legal support from the Trump administration, fighting so
hard to kill the remaining provisions of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and telling
their voters that any public system of healthcare robs them of choice and
quality? Let’s add one work to the equation that will explain it all: profits.
Pharmas, even those causing the opioid epidemic, insurance carriers and
for-profit hospitals are making money hand-over-fist. Just look at their
performance in the stock market, soaring even higher with the GOP gift of a
massive but unneeded corporate tax cut. Republicans recruit people vulnerable
to sloganeering and meaningless “solutions,” while really fostering profits
over everything else.
When the ACA passed Congress in 2010,
so many elected members had received so much in the way of campaign
contributions from the healthcare industry, that the only to get the law passed
was to give in to the pharma lobby – the new healthcare exchanges would not use
their size to negotiate lower prescription prices – and the insurance companies.
In exchange for lower administrative costs, these insurance carriers would get
mandated new customers. In short, “cost control” was not part of the first wave
of national healthcare coverage. That would have to wait for phase 2… except
the GOP was hell-bent on making sure there was no phase 2 and that they could
unravel most of phase one to kill it.
For a nation that spends more on its
military than the next ten highest-military-budget nations combined – and has
not won a major war since WWII – to say that we cannot afford a healthcare
system that is readily available in the balance of the developed and mostly capitalist-friendly
world is the equivalent of saying, “Americans Can’t.” Seriously? How does it
work elsewhere? Our system is even inferior to that of South Africa: “South
Africa’s system… boasts ready access to treatment, and prices that actually
reflect the cost of care, rather than whatever amount healthcare providers
think they can get away with.” Los Angeles Times, September 24th.
“In France, a visit to the doctor
typically costs the equivalent of $1.12… A night in a German hospital costs a
patient roughly $11… And in the Netherlands — one of the few wealthy nations
other than the U.S. where patients face a deductible — insurers usually must
cover all medical care after the first 385 euros, roughly $431… Healthcare in
the U.S. has long been unique. But few things so starkly set the American
system apart as how much patients pay out of pocket for medical care, even if
they have insurance.
“‘The U.S. likes to see itself on par
with other high-income countries,’ said Jonathan Cylus, a former economist at
the Department of Health and Human Services who now studies patient costs
internationally at the World Health Organization and European Observatory in
London. ‘The truth is, it’s a real outlier.’… Nearly all of America’s global
competitors — whether they have government health plans, such as Britain and
Canada, or rely on private insurers, such as Germany and the Netherlands —
strictly limit out-of-pocket costs.
“So while tens of millions of insured
Americans must balance medical bills with spending on food and other basic
needs, such trade-offs are largely unthinkable for patients in Western Europe,
Japan and Australia, a Times examination of international health insurance
systems shows.
“‘We only have to worry about getting
well,’ said Pieter Piers, a 57-year-old Dutch engineer who was talking with his
family doctor this year about work-related stress in Gorinchem, a walled city
in the table-flat farmland of southern Netherlands… ‘If I had to worry about
how to pay for it all, I don’t think that would be very helpful for getting
better,’ said Piers, one of dozens of patients and physicians worldwide
interviewed for this story, including at clinics and hospitals in Germany,
Britain and the Netherlands… The Netherlands, like many wealthy countries,
mandates that visits with primary care doctors are free so patients won’t be
discouraged from seeking care…
“By contrast, as deductibles in
job-based health plans in the U.S. have more than tripled in the last decade,
half of Americans who have coverage through an employer say they or close
family members have put off going to the doctor or filling a prescription
because of cost in the last year, according to a nationwide survey conducted
for this project by The Times and the nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation.
“One in six covered workers has had
to make a difficult sacrifice in the previous year, including taking on extra
work or cutting back on food, clothing or other essentials, the poll found… In
the Netherlands, just 1 in 90 households faces catastrophic health spending
that competes with necessities such as food and housing, a recent World Health
Organization analysis of patient spending in three dozen countries found… In
Ireland, Britain, Sweden, France, Germany and Japan, fewer than 1 in 35
households had medical bills that threatened their financial security.
“The financial struggles of American
patients have prompted renewed calls by some Democrats for a government-run,
single-payer system, or ‘Medicare for all,’ as it is sometimes called.” Los
Angeles Times, September 17th. Germany even funnels its entire
government-supported system through private insurance carriers!
“About 27.5 million Americans, or
8.5% of the population, lacked health insurance last year, according to the
Census Bureau. That’s up from 7.9% in 2017… The Japanese enjoy the longest
average lifespans of anyone in the world (83.7 years). South Korea is No. 11 on
the World Health Organization’s life expectancy list. America is a distant No.
31… Citizens of nearly every other developed country live longer than we do and
pay less for healthcare. That alone says we could be doing much better.” LA
Times. Seriously.
I’m
Peter Dekom, and while I do not know how you feel about all this, I’m betting
that “America can”!
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