UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE WORKSHOP
November 5, 2005
Illinois Green Party membership meeting
Facilitator: Vito Mastrangelo, South Central Illinois Green Party
Health care is a right, not a privilege.
–GPUS Platform, 2004
The following is taken, with permission, from the website of Rich Whitney, who has run two campaigns for state representative for the 117th District:
The United States is the only industrialized country in the world that does not guarantee health coverage for its population.
The U.S. spends far more on health care per person than any other country in the world – in fact more than twice as much as the average for other rich countries. We have the best technology and certainly among the finest physicians. Yet we are not getting our money's worth in terms of good health.
The United States ranks near the bottom of the industrialized world in life expectancy, infant mortality, and other standard measures of health. The World Health Organization ranks the United States 37th in overall quality of health-care performance. No wonder, since so many don't have health-care coverage at all and millions more have inadequate coverage.
–www.gogreen115.org/issues/health.html
In 2004 the Illinois legislature enacted the Health Care Justice Act of 2004 (HB 2268). The Act creates a process to achieve affordable and accessible health care in Illinois. It instructs the General Assembly to enact a health care access plan by December 31, 2006 and to implement it by July 1, 2007.
In 2005 the Illinois legislature enacted, at Governor Blagojevich’s urging, All Kids legislation, which will ensure that all Illinois children will have access to health insurance.
References/resources:
ILGP member Rich Whitney's 2004 campaign position
www.gogreen115.org/issues/health.html
Universal Health Care Action Network
http://www.uhcan.org/
Phone: 216/241-8422 or 800/634-4442 Fax: 216/241-8423
UHCAN is a nationwide network that promotes comprehensive health care for all through education, strategy development and advocacy.
Campaign for Better Health Care
http://www.cbhconline.org/
Champaign Office Phone: 217/352-5600 Fax 217/352-5688
Chicago Office Phone: 312/913-9449 Fax 312/913-9559
The Illinois Campaign for Better Health Care is a grassroots coalition of more than 300 local and statewide organizations representing consumers, health care workers and providers, community organizations, seniors, religious, labor, disability rights organizations and other citizens concerned about health care and wellness.
National Conference of State Legislatures
http://www.ncsl.org/programs/health/universalhealth.htm
Public Citizen
http://www.citizen.org/pressroom/release.cfm?ID=1623
Public Citizen and Harvard Medical School: Study Shows National Health Insurance Could Save $286 Billion on Health Care Paperwork
Physicians for a National Health Program
http://www.pnhp.org/
An organization with over 12,000 members advocating for single-payer national health insurance in the United States. PNHP was founded in 1987 and has physician spokespeople across the country. For a local spokesperson, call the national headquarters at 312/-782-6006.
Dennis Kucinich plan
http://www.kucinich.us/issues/universalhealth.php
ILLINOIS GREEN PARTY POSITION ON UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE
from the ILGP Platform (updated 2004)
C. HEALTH CARE
Health care is the most profitable industry in the nation, and it is perhaps the most shameful example of unbridled corporate greed in the United States. In the guise of "cost containment," it redistributes tremendous resources from sick people and their caregivers to wealthy businessmen and shareholders.
About 46 million Americans have no health insurance today. Eighty percent of the uninsured are employed people and their dependents. Tying health care coverage to the job simply encourages companies to use part-time and temporary workers to avoid having to provide benefits.
The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, but the majority of its people are not getting their money's worth. A poorly regulated, corporate-dominated health care system eliminates choice, erodes care, and inflates administrative costs while boosting profits and CEO compensation. For example, our nation spends 24 cents of every health-care dollar on administrative costs, while Canada - which provides high quality health care to all of its citizens through a single-payer, government-insured system - spends only 11 cents per dollar on such costs.
The wealthiest nation in the world clearly ought to be able to deliver quality health care to all its citizens, no less than Canada and other industrialized nations. Health care is a critical social good that demands that collective interests prevail over private gain. It should be viewed as a right, not a privilege. Accordingly, the Illinois Green Party calls for:
1. Universal entitlement for all residents to comprehensive health care benefits including preventive, curative, rehabilitative and long-term care. This should be provided through a single-payer health-care program, publicly administered and funded, delivered by a non-profit system. It must include freedom to choose one's own doctors and health professionals, including midwives and other alternative practitioners.
2. Support for the Bernardin Amendment as a step toward attaining these goals. Promoted by the late Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, the Bernardin Amendment would amend the Illinois Constitution by adding the following provision: "Health care is an essential safeguard of human life and dignity, and there is an obligation for the State of Illinois to ensure that every resident is able to realize this fundamental right. On or before [date], the eneral Assembly by law shall enact a plan for universal health coverage that permits everyone in Illinois to obtain decent health care on a regular basis."
3. As an interim measure, while advocating for a single-payer, universal health-care system, we support measures to make HMOs and other health-care insurers accountable to their policyholders for any negligence or harm caused by denials or delays of service and to require such providers to provide a full spectrum of health-care services, including preventive care. (Currently, HMOs in Illinois aren't required to pay the full cost of even such basic services as mammograms and pap smears.) Patients should have the right to sue HMOs and insurance providers for negligence or deliberate indifference to the health-care needs of policyholders. The costs to policyholders should be regulated.
4. Full funding of public health programs performed by the public sector to provide services to vulnerable populations, to monitor population disease trends, and to prevent and treat communicable diseases.
5. Funding for research that serves the public good, not private gain. Academic health centers must have support for their research mission.
6. Informed choice and unimpeded access to a full range of family planning and reproductive services for men and women.
7. Strong representation and a decision-making role for health-care recipients and health-care workers, and their unions, in public planning and oversight bodies.
8. More emphasis on promoting public health through better education on nutrition, the benefits of organic food, exercise, avoiding tobacco and excessive alcohol, practicing safe sex, and other healthy practices. Studies have shown that such education proves the old adage that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure: Investing in public health education today will save public health-care costs tomorrow.
9. Drugs or medicines developed with public funds should be made available at affordable prices, by prohibiting monopoly licensing and control of new drugs and, if necessary, by imposing price controls.
GPUS POSITION ON UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE
From the GPUS 2004 Platform
F. Health Care
* * *
1. Universal Health Care
The United States is the only industrialized nation in the world without a national health care system. The current system's high costs and widely recognized failures demand that bold steps be taken. The Green Party supports a universal, comprehensive, national single-payer health insurance program as the only solution to the current disastrous for-profit system.
Under a universal national single-payer health care system, the administrative waste of private insurance corporations would be redirected to patient care. If the U.S. were to shift to a system of universal coverage and a single payer plan, as in Canada, the savings in administrative costs would be more than enough to offset the cost. Expenses for businesses currently providing coverage would be reduced. State and local governments would pay less because they would receive reimbursement for services provided to the previously uninsured, and because public programs would cease to be the "dumping ground" for high-risk patients and those rejected by HMOs when they become disabled and unemployed.
Most importantly, the people of America will gain the peace of mind in knowing that needed health care will always be available to them. No longer will people have to worry about facing financial disaster if they become seriously ill, are laid off their jobs, or are injured in an accident.
The Green Party supports a universal, comprehensive, national single-payer health plan that will provide the following with no increase in cost:
a. A publicly funded health care insurance program, administered at the state and local levels.
b. Lifetime benefits for everyone. No one will lose coverage for any reason.
c. Freedom to choose the type of health care provider, with a wide range of health care choices.
d. Decision-making in the hands of health providers and their patients.
e. Comprehensive benefits, as good or better than existing plans, including dental, vision, mental health care, hospice, long-term care, substance abuse treatment and medication coverage.
f. Participation of all licensed and/or certified health providers, subject to standards of practice in their field.
g. Portable health plan benefits.
h. Primary and preventive care as priorities, including wellness education about diet, nutrition and exercise.
i. Greatly reduced paperwork for both patients and providers.
j. Fair and full reimbursement to providers for their services.
k. Preservation of all health care services currently available.
l. Cost controls via streamlined administration, national fee schedules, bulk purchases of drugs and medical equipment, and coordination of capital expenditures. Prices of medications must be publicly supervised.
m. Hospitals that can afford safe staffing levels for registered nurses.
n. Establishment of national, state, and local Health Policy Boards consisting of health consumers and providers to oversee and evaluate the performance of the system, expand access to care, and determine research priorities. All meetings of the boards shall be open to the public.
o. Establishment of a National Health Trust Fund that would channel all current Federal payments for health care programs directly into the Fund, in addition to employees' health premium payments.
Health care is a human right, not a privilege.
From www.DemocracyNow.org, 10/18/05:
GM to Cut Health Benefits for 750,000
In business news, General Motors is preparing to cut one billion dollars in annual health care benefits for more that 750,000 blue-collar workers and retirees. The Wall Street Journal reports the United Automobile Workers union has tentatively agreed to the cuts making it one of the union's biggest concessions since the early 1980s. The New York Times reports that GM has been losing market share to foreign rivals that operate at lower costs, partly because Japan, Germany and other governments provide universal health care for all their citizens.
http://www.ncsl.org/programs/health/universalhealth.htm 11/3/05
National Conference of State Legislatures
Universal Health Care: 2005 Legislation
After more than two years of high-visibility public debate, federal universal health care proposals failed in 1993-94. This period was followed by a significant shift in the policy debate toward "incremental" health reforms, affecting both private and public health insurance. On the state level, the resulting passage of major managed care comprehensive consumer rights laws, HIPAA "portability and accountability" implementation laws, and Children's Health (SCHIP) plans, also has moved much of the legislative debate further away from "universality".
However, specific broad-based health care reform legislation, affecting every citizen in a state, has been filed or re-filed in a number of legislatures. A majority of these are based on the "single-payer" model. This approach consolidates all payers - Medicare, Medicaid, state programs and private insurers - into a single administrative structure, with the state (or federal) government handling payments.
Currently, at least 18 states have introduced legislation regarding Universal Health Care: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii, Kansas, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, New Hampshire, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
from http://www.gogreen115.org/issues/health.html
Rich Whitney's 2004 campaign website
copied with his permission
How We Can Win Health Care for All
by Rich Whitney, Green Party Candidate for State Representative, 115th District
[Adapted from speech delivered 10/17/04.]
[Note: Last year, the State government passed the Health Care Justice Act, after intensive lobbying by the Campaign for Better Health Care and, among others, the Illinois Green Party. The Act requires the State legislature to come up with a plan to provide accessible, affordable and high quality health care to all Illinoisans by Dec. 31, 2006, to be implemented by July 1, 2007. Incumbent Representative Mike Bost voted against the bill. Rich Whitney supported it, and has signed a campaign pledge that he will work to uphold it.]
The United States is the only industrialized country in the world that does not guarantee health coverage for its population.
The U.S. spends far more on health care per person than any other country in the world – in fact more than twice as much as the average for other rich countries. We have the best technology and certainly among the finest physicians. Yet we are not getting our money's worth in terms of good health.
The United States ranks near the bottom of the industrialized world in life expectancy, infant mortality, and other standard measures of health. The World Health Organization ranks the United States 37th in overall quality of health-care performance. No wonder, since so many don't have health-care coverage at all and millions more have inadequate coverage.
The situation is growing worse. Double-digit increases in health care costs are leading more employers to drop health insurance coverage for workers or their family members, and to raise costs for those who keep coverage. According to one recent report, "health insurance premiums for workers are rising around three times faster than their wages, and health costs eat up a quarter of earnings for more than 14 million Americans." This survey of 35 states found that health insurance premiums rose by nearly 36 percent between 2000 and 2004, while average earnings rose only 12 percent. It added that "Family health premiums paid by employers and workers rose from $7,028 in 2000 to $9,320 in 2004. The average amount paid by workers for this coverage rose from $1,433 to $1,947 during that period."
Thus it's no surprise that the number of people without insurance or with inadequate insurance is rising rapidly. Here in Illinois, we have about 1.7 million uninsured, and about twice that number, 3.5 million, are uninsured during some part of the year. Eighty percent of the uninsured are working people and their dependents.
Even those who have insurance are feeling the impact of rising costs. Employers across the country are passing on rising health care costs by forcing workers to accept pay cuts to keep their health care coverage and to pick up more of the cost of their health insurance. Millions of workers have to pay much of the cost of their insurance premium out of their own pocket, and often have to pay the entire cost of insuring their spouse or children. Increasingly, they have large co-payments and deductibles that still leave them stuck with big medical bills. With out-of-pocket expenses already averaging almost $1,000 per person each year (and, as just shown, nearing $2,000 per worker per year), it should come as no surprise that health care expenses are the number one cause of skyrocketing personal bankruptcy rates in this country.
With health care costs projected to more than double over the next decade:
Unless something is done, the number of uninsured is also expected to grow rapidly.
Unless something is done, those who have insurance will have to devote an ever-larger portion of their pay to health care costs.
Unless something is done, even workers with decent insurance will live in constant fear that if they lose their job, they will lose their insurance. Studies show that when workers lose their jobs, the prospect of getting another job with comparable health insurance is bleak – especially for the tens of millions of workers with preexisting health conditions. And in a system in which health-care coverage depends upon employment, the rising cost of health care will encourage more companies to use part-time and temporary workers to avoid having to provide benefits.
Why is this happening? And what can be done about it?
As to why, health care is the most profitable industry in the nation and it is perhaps the most shameless example of unbridled corporate greed in the United States. In the guise of cost-containment, it redistributes resources from sick people and their care-givers to wealthy businessmen and shareholders.
Our health care system is also enormously wasteful. Every year, hundreds of billions of dollars of health spending gets wasted paying the administrative costs of a fragmented and inefficient private health insurance system. Most private insurers are run for profit. In addition, the top executives in the insurance industry often pull down annual salaries that run into the millions, or even tens of millions. The private profits and the huge CEO salaries necessarily comes out of the pocket of patients and/or employers.
In addition, the web of private insurers creates a huge amount of unnecessary paperwork and bureaucracy. Insurers make money by not paying bills. Their profits rise when they can find ways to avoid paying bills, passing them on to either the government, other insurers, or to you, the patients. As a result, the administrative costs of the private health insurance system are almost ten times as great (per dollar amount of health-care payouts) as the administrative costs of the Medicare system. Or, to use another point of comparison, our nation spends over 31 cents of every health-care dollar on administrative costs, while Canada – which provides high quality health care to all of its citizens, through a single-payer, government-insured system – spends only 16.7 cents per dollar on such costs.
The huge gap in administrative costs between the U.S. and Canada arises from their differing mechanisms of paying for health care. While Canada has a single insurance plan, or "single-payer", in each province, that pays the bills for everyone, the U.S. has a complex and fragmented payment structure built around thousands of different insurance plans, each with its own regulations on coverage, eligibility, and documentation.
Functions essential to private insurance but absent in public programs – such as underwriting, marketing, and corporate services – account for about two-thirds of private insurers' overhead. In addition, private insurers have incentives to erect administrative hurdles – by complicating and stalling payment they can hold premiums longer, boosting their interest income. Such hurdles also discourage some patients and providers from pursuing claims.
The waste that results from the system of private insurers is even larger than just the difference in administrative costs. The efforts of private insurers to avoid paying claims force hospitals, doctors' offices, and other health care providers to spend hundreds of billions of dollars dealing with paperwork from the insurance industry.
A fragmented payment structure is inherently more expensive than a single payer system. For insurers, it means the duplication of claims processing facilities and reduced insured-group size, which increases overhead. Fragmentation also raises costs for providers, who deal with multitudes of different insurance plans -- one study pointed out that there are at least 755 insurance plans in the City of Seattle alone. This means providers must determine each patient's insurance coverage and eligibility for a particular service, and keep track of varying co-payments, referral networks, approval requirements and formulas.
In contrast, Canadian physicians send virtually all bills to a single insurer using a simple billing form or computer program, and may refer patients to any colleague or hospital.
The multiplicity of insurers also precludes paying hospitals on a lump sum, or global-budgeted basis as in Canada. Global budgets eliminate most billing, and simplify internal accounting since costs and charges need not be attributed to individual patients and insurers.
Little wonder, then, that the Canadian single-payer health system is better at controlling health-care inflation. Health expenditures in the U.S. are currently rising three times as rapidly as the U.S. Gross National Product; in Canada they are rising at a rate only slightly greater than growth in the Gross National Product.
In sum, a poorly regulated, corporate-dominated for-profit health care system eliminates choice, erodes care, increasingly sticks you with the bill anyway, and inflates administrative costs while boosting profits and CEO compensation.
While the costly administration of the insurance industry is one of the biggest single sources of waste in the U.S. health care system, it is not the only one. The United States also spends far more on drugs each year – more than $200 billion in 2004 – than any other country in the world. Drug prices are the most rapidly growing health care expense. Drugs are projected to cost the country almost $520 billion annually by 2013, more than $1,700 per person.
There is no reason that drugs have to cost this much. With few exceptions, drugs are cheap to produce and would sell for a low price in a competitive market. Drugs are only expensive because the U.S. government grants the pharmaceutical industry unrestricted patent monopolies. These patent monopolies allow drug companies to charge as much as they want, without fear that competitors in the market will undercut their prices. The United States is the only country in the world that gives the industry unrestricted patent monopolies. As a result of these unrestricted patent monopolies, people in the United States pay twice as much for their drugs as do people in Canada or other rich counties. Some drugs sell for prices in the United States that are three or four times as high as the price that the same drug – subject to the same quality and safety standards – sells for in other rich countries.
This, unfortunately, is a problem, or failure, of national policy that will mostly have to be solved at the national level, notwithstanding our Governor's current attempts to challenge the federal government on it. So there's not much I can propose on that account, except to say that the we could improve our ability to use our State government to negotiate a price with the industry if we had a single-payer system.
Clearly, a single-payer health-care system would seem to have tremendous advantages over the present system. But I'm sure most of us have heard common objections to this idea:
This is "socialized medicine." Do we really want the government in charge of health care?
People in Canada have rationing and have long waiting periods. Some Canadians come to the U.S. to get faster treatment, so their system can't be all that good.
Maybe this would be a good idea on a national scale but it will not be feasible for a single state like Illinois to adopt such a plan; and
This will drive our taxes up.
Let's address these in turn.
First, a single-payer health care plan is not the same as "socialized medicine." Government is not going to be delivering the care. It's going to pay for it. Your doctors, other health professionals and hospitals will remain private, just as now. The medical decisions are left to the doctor and patient, and you have your choice of doctors, unlike the lack of choice that many people have now. A government health-care agency will perform functions of health planning, creating an overall budget, making budgetary decisions and negotiating reimbursement rates with doctors and hospitals. It will be like any other agency that oversees a public service. Because it is a public agency, problems will be aired in public. Nothing will be hidden or swept under the rug. The agency will be accountable to the people, in contrast to the lack of accountability in our health care now.
Second, as to rationing and waiting periods in Canada, "single payer" does not mean that our system would have to emulate Canada's system in every respect. Notions of rationing in Canada are highly exaggerated. There are problems with some services in Canada, depending on which province you live in. For example, some shortages exist in radiation treatments for some cancers. However, Canadians with end-stage renal disease, for example, receive more kidney transplants on average than U.S. citizens do. U.S. citizens receive more procedures than Canadians, but Canadians receive more overall care -- more testing, more evaluation by physicians, more overall health services than Americans do. (JAMA, 1996;275:1410.)
Also, keep in mind Canada spends one half what we spend per person. A single-payer system does not dictate how much we spend. And if we kept spending twice as much as Canada (on actual health-care services, not waste) we would not experience the same shortages.
In other words, it's a matter of public will, or you get what you pay for. What is actually happening in some provinces of Canada is a systematic attack by the right wing to underfund public health care in order to let the forces of privatization and corporate greed get their foot in the door – much like the right wing in this country has systematically underfunded public education in order to push their agenda of cutting taxes for the rich and push privatization in education. First they cut the budget, then they turn around and say, "Aha! See, government programs don't work – we need to turn this over to private business." And unfortunately, some voters, some of the time, fall for it. And then you end up with the worst of both worlds, publicly subsidized profiteering.
But it doesn't have to be that way. The experience of other nations – not just Canada – proves that when you keep progressive-minded people in office, single-payer health care can work, and work well.
If comparisons with Canada are troubling, think of Medicare instead. Despite some recent controversial tinkering with Medicare, most objective observers would have to agree that Medicare has been a successful positive example of a government program that works and works rather well. The administrative overhead for Medicare is literally nearly 10 times cheaper, per health-care dollar, than the administrative overhead of private insurance plans. A single-payer system is like Medicare for everyone, which does kind of make sense, since the elderly are not the only people in our society who get sick.
Well, then, if we can't wait for universal health care in the United States, is it feasible to have a single-payer plan in Illinois?
Assuming that our states can be as efficient at administering health-care as the Canadian provinces, one recent study in the International Journal of Health Services showed that states like Illinois would save more than enough to fund universal coverage without any increase in total health spending.
In Illinois, for example, the administrative savings alone – about $12.3 billion – would be equivalent to $7,362 per year per uninsured resident, clearly more than enough to cover their health-care costs.
What does this mean? We could provide quality health-care for all Illinois residents – better than what the overwhelming majority are getting now – and the amount of tax revenue needed to cover it would be less than what most insured residents are paying now in insurance premiums, not to mention co-pays and deductibles.
The details of how it would work in Illinois have not yet been worked out because our government has not yet seen fit to commission a study on single-payer in Illinois. However, the State of Vermont did a study on how it could work in that state and the findings were very eye-opening.
Under the Vermont proposal, public funds now used for government programs (Medicare, Medicaid, etc.) would be folded into the unified system. A payroll tax and an income tax would replace all insurance premiums and deductibles. A payroll tax of 5.8 percent and an income tax of 2.9 percent would be adequate to fund the system. The annual cost to employers would be about $1,450 per worker, far less than the cost of insurance premiums.
Under the model studied, there would be no premiums or deductibles to collect and administer except for a $10 co-pay for most services. Any benefits provided under Medicaid not covered under the plan would continue.
Families earning under $75,000 would pay less than they currently do while getting full health coverage. Businesses with fewer than 25 employees also would save, between $225 and $995 per worker. Employer costs for retiree benefits would drop substantially, saving employers another $30 million, because many covered services would be part of the universal plan. Physicians practices and hospitals would see no net loss in revenue.
Every Vermonter would receive comprehensive healthcare with free choice of provider. Providers could spend more time with patients and less on administration and paperwork. Savings could go to prevention and public health improvement, further reducing long-term costs.
Under the Vermont plan, the total savings to the people of Vermont would be $118 million in the first year. Single-payer in Illinois would obviously have a much bigger payoff because of the advantages of economies of scale. So, yes, obviously our taxes would go up because any publicly funded system would obviously have to be funded with tax dollars. But the increase in taxes would be far less than the savings we would realize by not having to pay health-insurance premiums and our overall cost of living would go down. There would be big savings to businesses, especially small to medium businesses that struggle to pay for health care, and this, in turn, would stimulate spending in other areas and be good for our business climate and our economy.
The wealthiest nation in the world clearly ought to be able to deliver quality health care to all its citizens, no less than Canada and other industrialized nations. Health care is a critical social good that demands that collective interests prevail over private gain. It should be viewed as a right, not a privilege. Accordingly, I support, and will fight for universal health-care in Illinois if elected – because it clearly would serve the public good.
Sources Used:
Health Insurance Costs Rise Faster than Wages (Maggie Fox, Reuters, 9/28/2004).
Dean Baker, Center for Economic and Policy Research, Insuring the Uninsured: The Gains from Reducing Waste, 9/12/04, available on the web at www.cepr.net.
Jobs with Justice, Waste Not, Want Not: How Eliminating Insurance and Pharmaceutical Industry Waste Could Fund Health Care for All, available on the web at www.jwj.org.
Various materials from Vermont Health Care for All; www.vthca.org.
Himmelstein, Woolhandler and Wolfe, "Administrative Waste in the U.S. Health Care System in 2003: The Cost to the Nation, the States and the District of Columbia, with State-Specific Estimates of Potential Savings," International Journal of Health Services, Vol. 34, 79-86, 2004.
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