“Ryancare” Dead on Arrival: Can We Please Now Try
Single Payer?
BY ELLEN BROWN/WEB OF
DEBT
The Canadian plan also helps Canadians live longer
and healthier than Americans. . . . We need, as a nation, to reexamine the
single-payer plan, as many individual states are doing.
— Donald Trump, The America We Deserve (2000)
The new American Health Care Act
has been unveiled, and critics are calling it more
flawed even than the Obamacare it was meant to replace. Dubbed
“Ryancare” or “Trumpcare” (over
the objection of White House staff), the Republican health care bill
is under attack from left and right, with
even conservative leaders calling it “Obamacare Lite”, “bad policy”, a
“warmed-over substitute,” and “dead on arrival.”
The problem for both administrations is that they have been
trying to fund a bloated, inefficient, and overpriced medical system with
scarce taxpayer funds, without capping its costs. US
healthcare costs in 2016 averaged $10,345 per person, for a total
of $3.35 trillion dollars, a full 18 percent of the entire economy, twice as
much as in other industrialized countries.
Ross Perot, who ran for president in 1992, had the right idea: he
said all we have to do is to look at other countries that have better health
care at lower cost and copy them.
So which industrialized countries do it better
than the US? The answer is, all of them.
So which industrialized countries do it better than the US?
The answer is, all
of them.They all not only provide healthcare for the entire population
at about half the cost, but they get better health outcomes than in the US.
Their citizens have longer lifespans, fewer infant mortalities and less chronic
disease.
President Trump, who is all about getting the most bang for
the buck, should love that.
Hard to Argue with Success
The secret to the success of these more efficient systems is
that they control medical costs. According to T. R. Reid in The Healing of America, they follow
one of three models: the “Bismarck model” established in Germany, in which
health providers and insurers are private but insurers are not allowed to make
a profit; the “Beveridge model” adopted in Britain, where most healthcare
providers work as government employees and the government acts as the single
payer for all health services; and the Canadian model, a single-payer system in
which the healthcare providers are mostly private.
A single government payer can negotiate much lower drug prices
– about half what we pay in the US – and lower hospital prices. Single-payer is
also much easier to administer. Cutting out the paperwork can save 30 percent
on the cost of insurance.According to
a May 2016 post by Physicians for a National Health Program:
Per capita, the U.S. spends three times as much for health
care as the U.K., whose taxpayer-funded National Health Service provides health
care to citizens without additional charges or co-pays. In 2013, U.S. taxpayers
footed the bill for 64.3 percent of U.S. health care — about $1.9 trillion. Yet
in the U.S. nearly 30 million of our citizens still lack any form of insurance
coverage.
The for-profit U.S. health care system is corrupt,
dysfunctional and deadly. In Canada, only 1.5 percent of health care costs are
devoted to administration of its single-payer system. In the U.S., 31 percent
of health care expenditures flow to the private insurance industry. Americans
pay far more for prescription drugs. Last year, CNN reported, Americans paid
nearly 10 times as much for prescription Nexium as it cost in the Netherlands.
Single payer, or Medicare for All, is the system proposed in
2016 by Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders. It is also the system endorsed by
Donald Trump in his bookThe America We Deserve. Mr. Trump
confirmed his admiration for that approach in January 2015, when he said on David Letterman:
A friend of mine was in Scotland recently. He got very, very
sick. They took him by ambulance and he was there for four days. He was really
in trouble, and they released him and he said, ‘Where do I pay?’ And they said,
‘There’s no charge.’ Not only that, he said it was like great doctors, great
care. I mean we could have a great system in this country.
Contrary to the claims of its opponents, the single-payer plan
of Bernie Sanders would not have been unaffordable. Rather, according to research by
University of Massachusetts Amherst Professor Gerald Friedman, it
would have generated substantial savings for the government:
Under the single-payer system envisioned by “The Expanded
& Improved Medicare For All Act” (H.R. 676), the U.S. could save $592
billion – $476 billion by eliminating administrative waste associated with the
private insurance industry and $116 billion by reducing drug prices …
According
to OECD health data, in 2013 the British were getting their healthcare for
$3,364 per capita annually; the Germans for $4,920; the French for $4,361; and
the Japanese for $3,713. The tab for Americans was $9,086, at least double the
others. With single-payer at the OECD average of $3,661 and a population of 322
million, we should be able to cover all our healthcare for under $1.2 trillion
annually – well under half what we are paying now.
The Problem Is Not Just the High Cost of Insurance
That is true in theory; but governments at all levels in the
US already spend $1.6 trillion for healthcare, which goes mainly to Medicare and
Medicaid and covers only 17 percent of the population. Where is the
discrepancy?
For one thing, Medicare and Medicaid are more expensive than
they need to be, because the US government has been prevented from negotiating
drug and hospital costs.
In January, a bill put forth by Sen. Sanders to allow the
importation of cheaper prescription drugs from Canada was voted down. Sanders
is now planning to introducea bill to allow Medicare to negotiate drug
prices, for which he is hoping for the support of the president. Trump
indicated throughout his presidential campaign that he would support
negotiating drug prices; and in January, he said that the pharmaceutical
industry is “getting away with murder” because of what it charges the
government. As
observed by Ronnie Cummins, International Director of the Organic Consumers
Association, in February 2017:
. . . [B]ig pharmaceutical companies, for-profit hospitals and
health insurers are allowed to jack up their profit margins at will. . . .
Simply giving everyone access to Big Pharma’s overpriced drugs, and corporate
hospitals’ profit-at-any-cost tests and treatment, will result in little more
than soaring healthcare costs, with uninsured and insured alike remaining sick
or becoming even sicker.
Besides the unnecessarily high cost of drugs, the US medical
system is prone to over-diagnosing and over-treating. The Congressional Budget
Office says that up to 30
percent of the health care in the US is unnecessary. We
use more medical technologythen in other countries, including more
expensive diagnostic equipment. The equipment must be used in order to recoup
its costs. Unnecessary testing and treatment can create new health problems,
requiring yet more treatment, further driving up medical bills.
Drug companies are driven by profit, and their market is
sickness – a market they have little incentive to shrink. There is not much
profit to be extracted from quick, effective cures. The money is in the drugs
that have to be taken for 30 years, killing us slowly. And they are killing us. Pharmaceutical drugs taken as prescribed are the
fourth leading cause of US deaths, after heart disease,
cancer and stroke.
The US is the only industrialized country besides New Zealand
that allows drug companies to advertise pharmaceuticals. Big
Pharma spends more on lobbying than any other US industry, and it
spends more than $5 billion a year on advertising. Lured by drug advertising,
Americans are popping pills they don’t need, with side effects that are
creating problems where none existed before. Americans compose only 5
percent of the world’s population, yet we consume fully 50 percent of Big Pharma’s drugsand 80
percent of the world’s pain pills. We not only take more drugs (measured
in grams of active ingredient) than people in most other countries, but we have
the highest use of new prescription drugs, which have a 1
in 5 chance of causing serious adverse reactions after they have been
approved.
The US death
toll from prescription drugs taken as prescribed is now 128,000 per
year.As
Jon Rappaport observes, with those results Big Pharma should be under
criminal investigation. But the legal drug industry has grown too powerful for
that. According
to Dr. Marcia Angell, former editor in chief of the New England Journal of
Medicine, writing in 2002:
The combined profits for the ten drug companies in the Fortune
500 ($35.9 billion) were more than the profits for all the other 490 businesses
put together ($33.7 billion). Over the past two decades the pharmaceutical
industry has [become] a marketing machine to sell drugs of dubious benefit,
[using] its wealth and power to co-opt every institution that might stand in
its way, including the US Congress, the FDA, academic medical centers, and the
medical profession itself.
It’s Just Good Business
US
healthcare costs are projected to grow at 6 percent a year over the
next decade. The result could be to bankrupt not only millions of consumers but
the entire federal government.
Obamacare
has not worked, and Ryancare is not likely to work. As demonstrated in many
other industrialized countries, single-payer delivers better health care at
half the cost that Americans are paying now.
Winston Churchill is said to have quipped, “You can always
count on the Americans to do the right thing after they have tried everything
else.” We need to try a thrifty version of Medicare for all, with negotiated
prices for drugs, hospitals and diagnostic equipment.
Ellen Brown
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