I recently wrote a very long argument against private health care as it exists in the US and for some form of public health care, and I posted it on facebook. I mostly argued using knowledge that I've gleaned through my lurkings of this board and some personal experience, and I try to use logic to support my argument rather than constant references to evidence. It's kind of a concise combination of many opinions that I've read from here, as well as my analysis and understanding. My parents - who are staunch conservatives and W supporters to the end - have taken me to task, and I was wondering if anyone had any thoughts on my argument and on their responses.
Mother responds:Alright, let's talk about health care for a little bit. Disclaimer: I don't fully understand the Health Care industry, so what follows is only my limited understanding and may be subject to mistakes.
The United States has a private system of health care from the insurance to the doctors to the medicinal manufacturers and so on. Usually this health care is provided through your employer. For example, let's say that I'm hired by Jiffy Lube. Jiffy Lube offers me a health care package with their preferred insurance provider, and whenever I get sick I can take this insurance with me to the doctor's office or the hospital and get taken care of. This insurance, depending on the package, can provide for doctor's fees, prescriptions, treatments, and so on. Of course, the employee is responsible for paying a certain percentage of this insurance while the employer covers the rest, and this is often called a "Premium."
Private health care ensures a certain level of quality through competition and rewards. Insurance providers try to provide products of high quality to their customers so that they will remain with them. Doctors are highly trained professionals to ensure high quality of care (and prevent malpractice lawsuits). Pharmaceutical companies try to produce good, quality medicines.
All of this makes private health care sound like a healthy, functioning system. In some ways it is, since it generally provides superior quality care...but in many more ways it is a fundamentally flawed system.
Intrinsic to private health care is the need to compete. This means that there are many competing doctors, hospitals, pharmaceuticals, and insurance companies. Even within insurance companies there are competing health care programs to provide potential customers with choices between plans. This is attractive in any private system, but all of this competing increases the level of redundancy. What that means is that there are many insurance companies doing the same thing when they don't have to. This does increase the options for the customer, but it also increases the waste. Consider that each insurance company has to employ large bureaucracies to operate, and their employees have to be paid. This is often called an "overhead" or an "operating" cost. What could be a relatively low overhead cost for one task is now multiplied by the fact that many companies perform that one task. The same can be said for all the other players in health care, including doctors, hospitals, and pharmaceuticals.
So we come to one general principle of private healthcare. More entities exist to compete and provide choice. If more entities perform a task that could easily be performed by one entity, then overhead costs - and the cost of health care - are increased.
Also intrinsic to private health care - or any private endevour - is the need to profit. In order to be successful you have to have a certain profit margin to invest in expansion and maintain confidence in your firm. What this can mean sometimes is that an extra percentage is tacked onto your fee to ensure that profit margins are met. This translates to a higher cost for insurance coverage, a higher cost for pharmaceuticals, and a higher fee for doctor visits among other things. Now, this isn't necessarily a bad thing since many aspects of American society operate on a profit motive and society obviously isn't collapsing. However, there are a few monkey wrenches thrown into the machinery. There are malpractice lawsuits, which cost great sums of money for doctors who lose. Even the risk of lawsuits carries a cost for there is malpractice insurance for doctors to help offset the cost of losing. My brother once explained to me that this leads many private practitioners to increase their prices since malpractice insurers routinely increase theirs. There is also just plain greed, where poorly regulated enterprises charge a great deal more than necessary to ensure an exhorbitant profit margin. Certainly this is not true in all cases, but I think it's fair to say in light of the recent financial crisis - which was caused in large part by short sighted greed in some of the most vital parts of the economy - that such an element does exist, even in health care.
So we come to a second principle of private health care. If entities must make a profit, then an additional fee will be tacked onto the original fee and the overall cost for health care is increased still further. A corollary to this principle is that profits are subject to liability and greed, which increase costs further since liabilities must be offset and greed must be satisfied with even higher prices.
Using the string of logic from the first and second principles, it's fair to say that private health care tends to cost more than government owned health care. Well, that's alright so long as the quality of health care is greater, right? Indeed, private health care ensures a quality motive. However, there is an additional caveat to private health care that must be considered. Health care is a service industry, and like any service industry the providers of the service can deny said service to those who can't pay for it. For example, let's say that you walk into a What-a-burger and order a #1 cheeseburger, but when you dig into your wallet you find you don't have enough money. What-a-burger is going to tell you to get lost. Same thing in health care. Furthermore, health care providers (insurance companies in particular) will often assess your future liability to them. How much will you cost if they provide you with insurance? Again, there is a profit motive and a liability factor, and if it is determined that you will cost too much and create too much of a liability on the company then their services to you will be denied.
To illustrate this, imagine someone with a chronic illness such as heart disease or something like that. He applies to an insurance provider. Whenever the insurance company assesses this person for liability they conclude that he will cost the company a great deal of money in the future since he will need regular treatments and drugs to combat the illness. To ensure the profit margin, they increase the applicant's premium. Automatically, because this person is theoretically more in need of health care than the average person, the cost he bears is increased. Convenience is reduced. If this person is wealthy, then the additional cost is no big deal, but what if the person is poorer? This doesn't necessarily mean dirt poor or in-poverty poor (although such people certainly do exist). What about middle class earners? The per capita income of the US is around $40000 last I checked, and although this is relatively high it is not considered a truly middle class income. That honestly doesn't provide much breathing room to cover additional costs when housing, utilities, and luxuries are taken into account. If you don't have the money at all then you don't get the service, and you have to live with your illness and the increased chances of mortality as a result.
So we come to a third principle of private health care that is based on the second. This is the principle of deniability. If at any point a person cannot afford the service or is deemed too great a liability on the profit margin, then services are denied to said person.
Thus, there are three principles intrinsic to private health care. Redundancy, Profit and Liability, and Deniability. The first two increase costs, while the third denies the service to those who cannot afford it. This can hardly be considered a good mix. I've experienced some of these in person as a college student. I had to go to the doctor twice while I was at university, both times with insurance that the doctor's office wouldn't take. Since my insurance was a hassle to work with and would have cost too much time and money for them, I had to pay out of pocket. Again, the profit motive and deniability principle at work. Also very inconvenient for me.
The first time I had an extremely debilitating case of flu. I could barely sleep, and I couldn't attend my classes. It cost me $128 to see the doctor (visit and lab test fees), and then another $40 or so for the prescriptions. The other time I had a very bad heart burn that was keeping me awake at night and had persisted for several weeks. It cost me about $60 to see a nurse, and then maybe about $20 for over the counter antacids. Had I been unable to pay, I would not have been able to have access to health care for these simple, but agonizing, problems. Even though I was able to pay for these services, it was almost more cost effective to just suffer through an illness and convalesce naturally, all while exposing contageons to others and generally wasting time and energy. It doesn't take much of a stretch in logic to assume that most Americans would rather take this route than go to the doctor. Imagine what it might be like for those with even more serious conditions and not enough money to pay for care.
The US health care system fails to provide services to a significant portion of the population, and is extremely inconvenient for most of the rest. From what I remember, about 16% of Americans are unable to receive any sort of health care at all because they are uninsured and cannot afford to pay out of pocket. If you think that health care is a privilege rather than a right, then this may not seem like a big deal. However this is a significant failing because one must also consider health risks to the general population and the costs that businesses, families, and individuals bear when people get sick or injured. Naturally, if someone gets sick, then they are a health risk to the rest of the population. If someone is badly injured, they either cannot work or their work is impaired, which costs their families and their businesses great deals of time and money. So, in private health care even greater costs are foisted on individuals and companies in the form of lost time, and this on top of the additional costs created by redundancy, profit, and greed. For example, if we look at the US auto manufacturers and their recent troubles, a lot of it has stemmed from having to pay skyrocketing health care costs for their employees.
There are still more flaws in a private system. Because health care has grown so expensive, employees are reluctant to switch jobs if their current health care package is good. This isn't a problem for people who enjoy their jobs, but what if the person wants to advance to a new career, or what if a person hates their current job but absolutely needs the health benefits it provides? Having already seen the consequences of deniability, it would be disastrous to switch jobs if the benefits are poorer. Thus, many employees are immobilized by the private health care system, which goes against the very essence of "The American Dream." Opportunities to advance in life are lost.
The system of broken, and a solution is needed. What should replace it? Obviously, something that does not suffer from too much redundancy and waste, an overbearing profit motive, or the principle of deniability. The easiest answer to point to is government provided health care, which if done right would centralize health care provision and reduce waste, would eliminate the profit motive entirely reducing costs further, and would be unable to deny services to anyone since governments exist to service their populations. In fact, governments historically exist to provide order in society, and good health is part of that order. With government provided health care, the average person would no longer have to worry about carrying the costs of their care straight from their wallet, increasing convenience and putting minds at ease. Poorer people would at the very least have access to health care where they did not have access before. Although the quality motive would be lessened, in general there would be electoral pressure to ensure that the system functions well enough to provide the care that people need.
There are questions however. Aren't governments intrinsically wasteful? Wouldn't public health care create less of an incentive to work since it technically rewards poorer people with care even if they don't work as hard? What about wages for doctors? Wouldn't they flee to another place where their wages would be higher, thus reducing quality by leaving only substandard doctors behind? Wouldn't the government have to raise taxes to fund all of this?
I don't have the knowledge to address all of these questions adequately, but I can address a few. While it is true that governments are big and bulky bureaucratic empires, it is not necessarily true that they are wasteful in providing health care. Currently, the US spends approximately 15% of its GDP on providing a flawed health care system, while countries such as France, Canada, and Germany spend closer to 10-11% on a universal, government provided system that everyone has access to. When talking about whole countries, especially one as wealthy as the US, 4-5% is a very, VERY big difference. On unearned rewards, the key concern of health care is that everyone has access to it to reduce the costs that society bears, and this includes individuals as well as corporations. Also, just because someone receives health care for free does not mean that they will suddenly work less hard; indeed, I would continue to work just as hard as before and more so, since I am a generally healthier employee. Addressing taxes, it is very true that the government would have to increase taxes to offset the costs. However, anyone who understands the US budget and the mountainous US debt should understand that the current US tax paradigm is unsustainable. Taxes will have to be raised eventually. Considering that public health care would entirely remove those costs out of the private sector, more revenue would be available for taxation, so perhaps the additional tax burden would not be more than was bearable.
Ultimately, it is clear that the current system is broken and ought to be replaced. I have argued for a government provided health care system because it is the easiest way to eliminate the flawed principles inherent in a private system. If this does not convince you then I do not hold anything against you, but I do hope that you are less ignorant of the problems and issues than you were before.
I respond back:in a perfect world, government health care might be the answer. but our governmental system is just as broken or more so than healthcare. tell me one thing the government runs well and efficiently. i think most of your Canadian cousins would tell you that Canada's healthcare system sucks!i think there are very long waits for almost everything. i think at present, it is illegal to turn away anyone coming in for emergency care. so those of us who do pay insurance premiums have to cover this cost as well. i agree that something needs to be done, but not by the government. there have been things written already that would deny certain people, especially the elderly any treatment and necessary meds if the government deemed it too costly to provide such things to those they consider "unproductive" and old.
She responds then:"tell me one thing the government runs well and efficiently."
Don't try to corner me with this mother. You know better since I've extensively studied government in college. I'm gonna come across as combative here, but your statement isn't grounded in facts more than it is in blind Reaganism.
1) The roads. The government runs, funds, maintains, and builds our roads. I drove them every day, and one conclusion I came to was that our roads were very easy and well built. Not in every case, so obviously there was some waste and inefficiency, but they were still there. Moreover, even if there is waste and inefficiency here, it would be impossible for a private company to do all of these things. Even if one could, it would charge me and everyone else for using it.
2) Waste management. Again, the government funds waste management, and it's universal. Everyone gets it. And again, it's not going to be perfect because we obviously see trash in places we wish we didn't. But I challenge you to tell me that a private company could do it better on its own. What if I couldn't pay for it, espcially if I was poor and lived in a poor part of town? That part would smell to high heaven in no time.
I could go on with that one point you tried to make, but it is clear to me that you take many services from your government for granted if you say that everything is run poorly. So what if it is? The government has to do it because no private company can be entrusted with that service, and I would argue that is true also for health care.
"i think most of your Canadian cousins would tell you that Canada's healthcare system sucks"
And most of my Canadian cousins are from Alberta, which is a conservative province if there was one. I've also heard Canadians praise their health care system for being less expensive and for providing some kind of care to all of their citizens, not just the ones who can afford it.
"i think there are very long waits for almost everything"
If I had a choice between a long wait or not being able to get the service because I couldn't pay for it, then I'd choose the long wait. The issue here is not whether the wait is long or not, but accessibility. The US health care system fails because it is very difficult to access, even for those with insurance as you may well remember when you tried to help me with my doctors visits.
"it is illegal to turn away anyone coming in for emergency care"
Yes. I could have gone to the ER for my flu if I needed to. I would've waited for hours too. The insured receive priority. Then again, I didn't need to go to the ER for the flu. I needed to see the doctor, which could have been easy if it were free.
" there have been things written already that would deny certain people, especially the elderly any treatment and necessary meds if the government deemed it too costly to provide such things to those they consider "unproductive" and old."
This sounds more like theory than actual truth. Do you have any evidence to back this up? An article? Don't tell me that it's something well known or that you just heard about it or that I should just trust you. That's not evidence.
I respond again:our federal govenment is not run efficiently, from the postal service, which has never run at a profit, to the IRS, and military..to name a few. they can't even run a cafeteria cost effectively, as one either in the Senate or House was very badly managed! and i am not just talking one side or the other...i am speaking of the whole, whatever party is in power at any given moment.
1. the roads...many are maintained by each state, not the federal government. the funds needed for this are taken from the inspection sticker and registration sticker fees that we pay. private contractors bid on the jobs of big projects. you see their signs at every major renovation of the roadways...giving names and addresses. we do have a state highway dept. that does smaller ongoing maintainance and repair. you are definitely charged for using said roads by the fees i just mentioned and any of the tollways you choose to take.certain roads are also maintained by the county or city. you can tell who is doing a good job spending the tax dollars that come in for that by the condition of the roads. some are good and some are horrid...the horrid ones show a lack of good city or county government management.
2. i don't know what state or neighborhood has waste management funded by the government. whenever we have lived in Houston, our waste management has been paid for thru homeowners association dues and/or our water bill. it has never been expensive and as far as i know...has always been privately owned and operated.
3. your Canadian cousins do not all live in Alberta...we have many in BC as well as some in Toronto. many of them are extremely liberal in their views.
4."If I had a choice between a long wait or not being able to get the service because I couldn't pay for it, then I'd choose the long wait. The issue here is not whether the wait is long or not, but accessibility."
"Yes. I could have gone to the ER for my flu if I needed to. I would've waited for hours too. The insured receive priority. Then again, I didn't need to go to the ER for the flu. I needed to see the doctor, which could have been easy if it were free."
under government healthcare, you still might not have been seen with the flu. it may have been considered not critical. a long wait is a long wait, son, whether you choose to go to the emergency room for the flu or have to wait a long time at some government run clinic.
5. when you get to be our age, you too may tire of others who won't work or are in this country illegally benefitting from all your hard work. i have just recently had a friend whose son was very critically ill. he had to go to the emergency room, with no insurance and a life threatening health situation. he had just started a new job, thus no insurance coverage as yet and a brand new baby to boot! i was more than happy to think that any insurance premiums or tax dollars we might have paid could have gone toward his very expensive treatment. Health care costs for some are indeed deducted from our paycheck for Medicare and Medicade.
6. i have sent you a link to an article concerning some of the government restrictions on treatment. i will look for more. but i do know that Tom Daschle said specific things about treatment and meds for the elderly. i read the quotes..i just need to find them.
I haven't received the article that she mentioned yet."the roads...many are maintained by each state"
...which is a government. It doesn't have to be the Federal Government to be the government. That it is the state government that largely maintains and funds the road system does not change the fact that it is the realm of government, and not private companies, to do this. Even if the government contracts private companies to do the work for them, that does not change where the money comes from. In that case, it is the government's responsibility to pay for it, and if it is funded through registration and inspection tags, then I am happy to pay those taxes so I can have nice roads. Even then, US Highways and Interstate highways are paid for mostly by the federal government (Interstates favoring the Feds by 90%). That money is allocated to state governments, which then do as we have already discussed. Finally, since it is the government that does this, roads are public, meaning anyone can use them since we all technically pay for them through our taxes.
"i don't know what state or neighborhood has waste management funded by the government."
I did a little research, and I couldn't find any evidence supporting what I said. Some municipalities handle their own waste, I concede that point, since I had hastily assumed that waste management was handled by the government.
"your Canadian cousins do not all live in Alberta...we have many in BC as well as some in Toronto. many of them are extremely liberal in their views. "
I am hoping and planning to go visit a friend in Edmonton in July, provided that plane tickets aren't sold out. I just might get the chance to visit with them. I'd also be curious to know their points of view on their health care system specifically.
"under government healthcare, you still might not have been seen with the flu. it may have been considered not critical. a long wait is a long wait, son, whether you choose to go to the emergency room for the flu or have to wait a long time at some government run clinic."
You caught my contradiction, but I need to clarify what I meant. If someone needs surgery and could have gotten it immediately in a private system, but was unable to because they couldn't pay for it, they are certainly a little better in a public system where they have access to that surgery even if there is a long wait. I'll make the assumption that they're not pining for the American system so much as they are trying to figure out how to improve their own public system. Again, my point is that having access to health care is more important than being able to get it immediately, particularly if it is something that can wait. For me, if I really had to, I could take my flu home and convalesce, although I'm a little surprised that you would say that the government might not deem it important. It does stockpile flu vaccines after all, and we did have a recent swine flu scare. Flu is a big deal.
Also, I didn't get the link to the article you mentioned. Did you forget to post it in there?
"when you get to be our age, you too may tire of others who won't work or are in this country illegally benefitting from all your hard work."
And more than likely I'll meet only a very few of these people who suck off of my teat and never make an honest living. Perhaps you've met many in your lifetime. However, I think you're taking a very large group and painting them all one color unjustly. Remember, there are approximately 15-16% of Americans without health insurance for at least part of the year. That comes to about 45 million people. That's certainly a larger number than the current unemployment rate, so there's a goodly portion of these people who work, and they probably work hard so that they can make ends meet. Many are probably down on their luck or in transition or trying to get out of a rut, kind of like your friend. Certainly there are those who choose not to work and just leech off of society, but likely not all or even most. So to say that you don't support government provided health care because you grow tired of people benefiting off of your contributions without having earned it kind of sounds like stereotypical prejudice to me.
Ultimately I have to make this point, and it's one that you seem to have missed. Government has certain responsibilities that cannot be adequately performed privately: roads, monetary policy, military and other forms of defense, etc. Even if a private entity could perform these responsibilities, they would suffer from the profit/liability motive and the deniability factor, plus it would increase inconvenience for the average citizen. Thus, those responsibilities are better placed in the hands of the government, even if their only fingerprints are on the money used to pay for them. Health care ought to be one of those responsibilities for the reasons I mentioned in my original note, because even if government performed health care inefficiently, it would perform it better than our purely private one would.
My father also took me to task, saying:
I responded:what happens with the thousands of insurance workers who no longer have jobs because in your quest to reduce competition you destroy maybe half the insurance companies in the USA. Draconian measures for the good often have side effects that are bad. The cure can be worse than the disease.
I'll see what my father says eventually, and most of what either of them have said has been the typical anti-government, long waits, substandard care mantras that I've become familiar with over the years at home and here on the board. However, one argument caught my eye and has left me with a blank. My mother argues that government health care can deny services to people arbitrarily if their case isn't important, if they are too old, or if they are unproductive. I know nothing of this, and it honestly sounds like some sort of right wing "government is eeeevil" rumor that's been floating around. Does anyone have anything I can look at that addresses this objectively and satisfactorily? Also, does anyone have any criticisms of my original argument or anything I can add to it to make it stronger? Thanks in advance!You once told me about coal miners in the UK who were obsolete, yet the government was obligated to help them stay employed so as to avoid increasing unemployment and avoid a political backlash. Yet now your first argument against my position is that the government should not take steps to create a public system (to reduce the waste of so many bureaucracies) because it would risk the jobs of what would become an obsolete industry? Do you not also think that a new public health care insurance provider would need employees and that they could fill in the gap?
Furthermore, a man can lose his job and find a new one. A chronically or terminally sick/injured man generally doesn't have the option of a second chance without some kind of health care. Your initial argument doesn't really move me yet.