Non-Patients Need a
Bill of Rights
by Mark Weisbrot
It was three and half years ago that Helen Hunt brought
cheers from movie audiences across the country when
she spat out a string of expletives with the acronym
"HMO" nestled in the middle of it. She got
the Academy Award for Best Actress ("As Good
As itGets"), and the industry's image has continued
to slide downhill.
The system of managed care -- getting our health
care through HMO's and other large insurers -- has
failed. For a while in the 1990s it seemed like these
organizations could solve the one problem that employers
worried about -- containing costs. But now insurance
premiums are rising at double-digit rates again. In
the meantime the care managers' attempts at cost-cutting
seem to have succeeded only in angering millions of
Americans, while simultaneously enriching some very
highly paid executives. (WilliamMcGuire, CEO of United
Health Group, led the pack with $54.1 million in compensation
last year, adding to his $358 million accumulation
of stock options.)
But the exorbitant rewards at the top of the managerial
pyramid are only a small fraction of the waste that
makes our health care system the most expensive in
the world. We spend nearly 14 percent of our national
income on health care, while the average for other
high-income countries is about 8 percent. And unlike
other rich countries, we leave one out of six of our
citizens -- 43 million people -- without health insurance.
This result is altogether predictable from a system
that has private insurers competing to cover the healthiest
prospects and abandon, as much as they can, the sick.
You don't need a degree in actuarial science to see
that this is the most effective way for an insurer
to make money, even it means devoting enormous resources
to these non-health-care goals.
The legislation now slogging through Congress will
add another layer or two of oversight -- including
the court system -- on top of the existing bureaucracy.
Despite the additional costs, this will be an improvement,
since there needs to be some way under the present
system to hold the managed care industry accountable.
If the bill makes it through the House without too
much amputation, there will be some added rights for
at least some of the insured. These include the right
to external review when treatment is denied, the right
to sue insurers for denial of covered care, and the
right to visit the nearest emergency room.
But the Patients' Bill of Rights will not help the
uninsured, or tens of millions more -- including chronically
ill patients paying exorbitant premiums -- that are
underinsured. To solve these problems, and to contain
costs, we will need a universal health insurance system,
with the government as the insurer.
The case for social insurance is a simple one, based
on the human condition and some fundamental economic
logic. First, we all get old and sick eventually,
so it's best to insure against these hardships when
we are young, healthy, and working. Second, the most
efficient way to do this is to put everyone into one
big "risk pool" -- it saves enormously on
overhead costs. If you don't believe this, just comparethe
administrative costs of Social Security -- which provides
social insurance for retirement, life insurance, and
disability -- to those of the private life insurance
industry: 0.8 percent versus 12 percent. And lastly,
health care is not a commodity like a DVD player,
but a basic human need. A decent society does not
let its fellow humans go without it.
Medicare was an attempt to extend the principles
of social insurance, which have been so successful
in the realm of Social Security, to health care for
the elderly. At the time (1965) it was assumed that
this would soon be extended to the rest of the population.
The failure to achieve this goal reflects a failure
of our political system, a somewhat limited form of
democracy in which insurance and pharmaceutical giants
purchase -- with their political contributions --
the right to a veto over health care policy. Last
year the pharmaceutical companies spent $30 million
for a blitz of very successful TV ads, in order to
block President Clinton's attempt tocreate a prescription
drug benefit for Medicare.
Now the insurance industry is deploying its army
of lobbyists to gut the Patients' Bill of Rights,
as much as it can. But with the economy slowing and
health care costs rising at unsustainable rates, it
isonly a matter of time until real health care reform
-- with universal social insurance -- is back on the
political agenda.
Mark Weisbrot is currently co-director of the
Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington,
DC, and co-author, with Dean Baker, of "Social
Security: the Phony Crisis" (University of Chicago,
2000). A former resident of the Champaign-Urbana area,
Mr. Weisbrot was a professor of economics at Eastern
Illinois University.