A new report released by consumer advocacy group
Public Citizen makes the case that the United
States' fragmented for-profit healthcare system hampered the nation's
coronavirus response "at every turn," resulting in millions of
Covid-19 infections and hundreds of thousands of deaths that likely would have
been prevented under a Medicare for All system.
Titled Unprepared
for Covid-19: How the Pandemic Makes the Case for Medicare for All,
the white paper builds off a recent analysis showing that
around 40% of U.S. Covid-19 infections and 33% of virus deaths are associated
with uninsurance, which was high before the pandemic and soared last year as mass
layoffs threw millions off their employer-provided coverage. The growing
uninsured rate has hit frontline workers particularly
hard.
"The
reality is that our for-profit healthcare system put the U.S. at a dangerous
disadvantage and hindered rapid response," Public Citizen's new report
reads. "It has also meant millions of Americans have contracted Covid-19
unnecessarily and hundreds of thousands of deaths could have been
prevented."
"Under Medicare for All, everyone would have consistent
coverage regardless of their employment status or employer," the report
continues. "And because Americans would have their choice of providers,
instead of facing the narrow networks their employers choose for them, they
would face fewer challenges getting care, especially during a pandemic where
some hospitals and providers are overwhelmed by demand."
If the U.S. had in place a single-payer system that provided
everyone in the country with comprehensive healthcare for free at the point of
service—as proposed by supporters of Medicare for All—"the U.S. would
finally be able to ensure sufficient funding for public health, including
future pandemics," and "the nation could finally begin addressing
massive health disparities in a comprehensive way," the paper argues.
"As the pandemic has shown, everyone depends on the
healthcare system throughout their lives," the paper adds. "Whether
we face a public health emergency like a global pandemic or simply need to meet
routine medical needs, Medicare for All would ensure necessary treatments are
available to everyone regardless of their ability to pay."
Eagan Kemp, Public Citizen's healthcare policy advocate and the
author of the new report, said in a statement that the "pandemic has shown
how wide the gaps in our healthcare system remain and how easy it is for
families to fall through them."
"We need to be prepared for the next pandemic, and we can't
be under the current for-profit system. The time has come for a healthcare
system that guarantees healthcare for everyone in the U.S.," Kemp said.
"The time has come for Medicare for All."
Public Citizen's white paper comes a day before Reps. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.)
and Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) are set to introduce the Medicare
for All Act of 2021, which is expected to broadly resemble single-payer
legislation that the Washington Democrat sponsored in 2019.
That bill, as Common Dreams reported at the time, proposed
a two-year transition to a Medicare for All system that would provide dental,
vision, reproductive health, mental health, long-term care, and other services
with no out-of-pocket costs attached.
"The state of our healthcare system is absolutely
atrocious," Jayapal told reporters on the eve of the bill's release just
over two years ago. "How is it possible that the United States, the
richest country in the world, is the only major country that does not guarantee
healthcare to our residents?"
The case for Medicare for All, as Public Citizen argues in its
new report, has only grown stronger since 2019, with the coronavirus pandemic
further exposing the private system's fundamental and deadly flaws as
well as the rapacity of the insurance and
pharmaceutical industries.
"The Covid-19 pandemic showed just how greedy private
insurers are, as they were reporting record profits because they were paying
out far less in claims due to millions of Americans delaying care," Kemp
writes. "This disparity highlights just how little value insurers are
bringing to the healthcare system despite how much they cost consumers and the
healthcare system in general."
While Congress recently approved a significant expansion of
Affordable Care Act subsidies with the goal of helping more people afford
insurance in the marketplace, Kemp contends that "the scope of the reforms
are limited and so Americans will continue to struggle without a comprehensive
solution like Medicare for All."
"Under Medicare for All," Kemp concludes, "our
healthcare system would focus on health and wellbeing instead of generating profit
and revenue for wealthy insurers."
(Common Dreams)
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