Health care reform is on everyone's mind. It's an idea, they say,
whose time has come. The cost of health insurance is out of control. 40
plus million Americans cannot afford or cannot qualify for health
insurance.
But health care reform has been here before.
Actually, about every 15 years there is a push for reforming health
care in America. It started way back in 1912 when Theodore Roosevelt's
Bull Moose Party introduced a platform calling for national health
insurance for industry.
In 1934 as part of the New Deal,
Franklin Roosevelt considered proposing universal health coverage as
part of the Social Security Act. Presidents as diverse as Truman,
Carter, Ford, George H.Q. Bush and Clinton have all introduced various
proposals for health care reform. Universal health coverage is always
the stated goal. All the proposals put forth by all these
administrations, dating back to the early 1900's have only thing in
common-failure.
In 1943 President Truman proposed a single
insurance plan that would cover all Americans. His plan allowed for
public subsidies for the poor. This universal, comprehensive plan was
to be run as part of Social Security. But Truman was faced with an
economy that was transitioning from a war time economy to a peace time
economy. For a time Truman lost the confidence of the general public.
Republicans gained control of both houses of Congress in 1946 and
branded Truman as a lame duck.
But Truman campaigned in 1948
on a promise to extend the New Deal and specifically targeted
Congressional Republicans who has opposed national health insurance.
Truman defeated these Republicans and seemed to have a mandate from the
people to implement national health insurance. But despite having a
Congress that had a Democratic majority, Truman could not pass his
health reform plan. His plan failed because powerful Southern Democrats,
all of whom held key leadership positions in Congress, feared that
federal involvement in health care would lead to desegregation of
hospitals that still separated patients by race.
Labor unions
also played a part in the defeat of Truman's plan. The AFL-CIO supported
the plan for universal coverage as did the UAW. But then, the UAW
negotiated a deal with General Motors that included payment by GM of
health insurance and pensions. Unions then believed that they could
negotiate better benefits for their members than they could get under a
federal universal health plan and they abandoned their support of
universal care.
The AMA also opposed the Truman plan but they
based their opposition on the unpopular concept of socialized medicine.
As anti-communist sentiment rose, the public support for universal
health care declined. Most large associations including the Chamber of
Commerce, the ABA and the American Hospital Association supported the
concept of voluntary and private health insurance. This was also the
position favored by most of the nation's media.
Universal
health insurance failed again in 1950. By that time the employer
sponsored plans were deeply entrenched as an employee benefit. This was
the time that insurance companies began to experience rate premiums.
The result of this new rating system was that older, sicker people
found it harder to get affordable coverage. In 1960 Congress passed the
Kerr-Mills Act. This Act provided federal funds to the states to cover
the health costs of the elderly who were too poor to afford health
insurance. But this Act, with all its well meaning hope, failed
completely because by 1963, only 28 states had agreed to participate and
even those states did not budget correctly to support the plan. This
Act became the precursor to Medicare and Medicaid.
From 1970
through 1976 more competing plans were proposed But compromises came
and went and no significant bill ever reached the House floor because of
lack of Committee consensus. President Ford withdrew his attempt at
universal health reform fearing that it would make inflation worse.
President Carter campaigned on the promise of a comprehensive national
health plan but once elected shifted his priorities to cost containment,
specifically hospital cost control, and told the American people that
national health insurance would have to wait until the economy was
stronger.
About that time, Senator Edward Kennedy introduced a
new proposal which called for private health insurance companies to
compete for customers. The private plans would sell an insurance card to
be used for hospital and physician care. The cost of the card would
depend on income and employers would be expected to cover the majority
of the cost for their employees. The federal government would pick up
the cost of the card for the poor. Neither the Carter nor the Kennedy
proposal made it through the Congress.
The Clinton plan also
supported universal health insurance through the enforcement of
individual and employer mandates. The government would control the
competition between private insurance companies The Health Care Task
Force, chaired by Hillary Clinton when she was first lady, gave
President Clinton a complex plan in September 1993. Despite a
Democratic Congress, the size and complexity of the plan slowed its
progress through Congress and lost the interest of the general
population.
Now in 2009, another administration is proposing
health care reform. The White House has created the Office on Health
Care Reform. Members of Congress are polishing up their own creations
for solving this problem. The administration believes that popular
opinion will compel our elected officials to end what might be
considered a national embarrassment of having millions of American
unable to afford or have access to quality health insurance. But as far
back as the 1930's, public support quickly began to fail as the insured
were advised that the goal would only be achieved if they contributed
more to the cost, either directly or through some added taxes.
The
United States spends twice as much per capita as the average of the 10
next richest countries in the world. Yet, despite this expenditure, 1
out of 6 Americans under the age of 65 are uninsured and/or individually
uninsurable.
One of the problems facing reform is that the 80%
or so of American who have health insurance are generally happy with
the care they receive. They like their doctors and the freedom to make
their own choices when it comes to doctors and hospitals. Most think
they already pay too much for health insurance. Most believe, and there
is evidence to support this belief, that the red tape and the
administrative expenses of their health insurance plan are part of the
reason their cost has increased. Why can't someone fix that, they
wonder?
The insured fear change. Any proposal that threatens
their current insurance arrangement will be regarded with deep
suspicion. Everyone is aware of the power of special interest groups.
Our political system is set up in such a way as to frustrate action on
any large and socially controversial idea. Congressional committees
wield enormous power. The interest of each state in controlling its own
health insurance programs can, in itself, bring down the whole idea of
reform.
We have had some success in improving access to health
care for million through some of the Children's Health Insurance
Programs. But note that most of the programs to cover uninsured
children are state based.
We seem to be unable to learn from
past mistakes or take advantage of the concepts that actually have
worked. Anyone who has done even a cursory study of history should
realize that we have been here before.
Yes health reform is back again. What will happen this time? Stay tuned.
Sheila
Guillotine is the owner of Prestige Planners, a health specialty agency
placing health and dental insurance for business and individuals.
Licensed with all the major carriers, she counsels and advises clients
on how to select the most appropriate coverage.
Jumat, 01 November 2013
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