Here’s
one of many indicators about how broken the United States health care system
is: Guns seem to be easier and cheaper to access than treatment for the wounds
they cause. A survivor of the recent mass shooting in Half Moon Bay,
California, reportedly
said to Gov. Gavin Newsom that he needed to keep his hospital
stay as short as possible in order to avoid a massive medical bill. Meanwhile,
the suspected perpetrator seemed to have had few obstacles in his quest to
legally obtain a
semi-automatic weapon to commit deadly violence.
Americans
are at the whim of a bewildering patchwork of employer-based private insurance
plans, individual health plans via a government-run online marketplace, or
government-run health care (for those lucky enough to be eligible). The
coverage and costs of plans vary dramatically so that even if one has health
insurance there is rarely a guarantee that there will be no out-of-pocket costs
associated with accessing care.
It’s
hardly surprising then that the latest Gallup
poll about health care affirms what earlier polls have said:
that a majority of Americans want their government to ensure health coverage
for all. In fact, nearly three-quarters of all Democrats want a government-run
system.
Gallup also found that
a record high number of people put off addressing health concerns because of
the cost of care. Thirty-eight percent of Americans said they delayed getting
treatment in 2022—that’s 12 percentage points higher than the year before.
Unsurprisingly, lower-income Americans were disproportionately affected.
Women
are especially impacted, with more women than men delaying treatment as per the
same Gallup poll. The findings were consistent with results published
by researchers at New York University’s School of Global Public Health—that
women’s health care was increasingly unaffordable, compared to men’s—in a study
that solely focused on people with employer-based health
coverage. Imagine how out-of-reach health care is for uninsured women.
Added
to that, Republican-led
abortion bans have made it even harder for American women to
obtain reproductive health care. On the 50th anniversary of the recently
overturned Supreme Court decision Roe v. Wade, abortion
providers in Massachusetts, for example, reported a steady stream of
people driving to their state—one where abortion remains legal—to access care.
President
Joe Biden and the Democratic Party appear to think that this grim status quo is
perfectly acceptable. Democrats’ reliance on the Obama-era Affordable Care Act
(ACA) as a bulwark against Republican opposition to any government intervention
in health care seems to be resoundingly successful—on paper. In December 2022,
Biden touted the fact that 11.5 million Americans, a record
high number, had signed up for ACA plans during the last enrollment
period. He said, “Gains like these helped us drive down the uninsured rate to
eight percent earlier this year, its lowest level in history.”
His
administration, rather than working to fulfill what a majority of his party’s
constituents want—a government-run health care system—has continued instead to
tweak the ACA by extending a period of discounted monthly premiums for private
insurance plans. Such tweaks are not permanent. Neither are they a panacea for
accessing adequate care. If anything, they are a façade protecting profit-based
private insurance companies.
A survey by
the Commonwealth Fund found that although the number of insured Americans is
now at an all-time high, more than 40 percent of those who bought ACA plans and
nearly 30 percent of those with employer-based plans were underinsured—that is,
the plans were inadequate to cover their health care needs.
By
focusing solely on the number of people who had health plans as a measure of
success, the White House is participating in a great coverup of the ongoing
American health care tragedy.
Meanwhile,
just over the horizon from Biden’s celebration of record numbers of ACA signups
is the fact that millions of people currently enrolled in the Medicaid
government health plan could lose access because of the end
of an emergency provision that allowed for “continuous
enrollment.” That provision expires at the end of March 2023. If all Americans
were automatically enrolled in government-provided health care regardless of
eligibility, this would not be a concern.
Right-wing
sources, so terrified that too many Americans want a government-run health
system, are busy shaping public opinion against it. The Pacific Research
Institute’s Sally
Pipes published an op-ed about how Canada’s national health
system was a good reason why the U.S. should not have a similar program. Using
the deadly logic of a free marketeer, she wrote, “In Canada, health care is
‘free’ at the point of service. As a result, demand for care is sky-high.”
The
implication is that charging people for service would reduce the demand, just
as it would for, say, an electric vehicle. In Pipes’ world, people are
accessing health care just for fun, and if they were charged money for it,
their ailments might resolve themselves without treatment.
The Heritage
Foundation also published an attack on Britain’s National
Health Service (NHS), gleefully claiming that it is “cratering,” and warning
that it is a lesson for American liberals who might support a similar
“single-payer” system in the United States. The Wall Street Journal’s editorial
board published
a similar warning, claiming that the NHS was “failing patients, with
deadly consequences.”
It’s
puzzling why the Pacific Research Institute, Heritage Foundation, and Wall
Street Journal appear unconcerned about the 330,000
Americans who lost their lives during the COVID-19 pandemic
simply because they don’t live in a nation with a universal health care
program.
The
U.S. spends
nearly twice as much per capita on health care than other
comparable high-income nations. According to Health
Affairs, excessive administrative costs are the main reason for this
discrepancy—these are nonmedical costs associated with delivering health care
in a patchwork system of employer-based private health and publicly subsidized
plans. In fact, “administrative spending accounts for 15–30 percent of health
care spending.”
Again,
right-wing media outlets and think tanks appear unconcerned by this disturbing
fact. They only want to convince Americans that a government-run health plan is
a bad idea. And, sadly, the Democratic Party leaders like Biden seem to agree
implicitly.
The
National Union of Healthcare Workers together with Healthy California Now created
an online calculator for individuals to determine how much
money they would save if the U.S. had a single-payer system.
I
have an employer-based health care plan that is considered very good. Using the
calculator, I determined that I would save more than $16,000 if California, the
state where I live, had a single-payer system. That’s money I could be saving
for my children’s higher education or for my retirement.
The
victims of mass shootings, like the Half Moon Bay survivor, are saddled with
high costs of care on top of the trauma of having been shot. Every year, there
are more than 80,000
survivors of injuries from firearms in the United States.
Having a single-payer health care system would not fix our epidemic of gun
violence. But it would certainly make it easier to bear.
Canada
and Britain’s state-run systems of health care may be imperfect, but they are a
vast improvement on the survival-of-the-fittest approach that the U.S. takes.
This article was produced by Economy for All, a project of the Independent Media
Institute.
Sonali Kolhatkar is an award-winning multimedia
journalist. She is the founder, host, and executive producer of “Rising Up With Sonali,” a weekly television
and radio show that airs on Free Speech TV and Pacifica stations.
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