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Universal
Health Care: The Wrong Prescription
SOURCE:
Brian Schwartz, Hawaii Reporter; February 29, 2008.
What good is having medical
insurance if you cannot get medical care? Peddlers of
“universal health care” – from Hillary, Obama, to 2nd
Congressional democratic candidate Jared Polis – don't get
this.
“Universal health care” is
false advertising for politically-controlled medicine, with
government as the “single-payer” monopolistic insurer. But
having coverage does not guarantee getting medical care.
Since patients prepay
through taxes, medical care appears “free.” Hence, they have
strong incentive to over-consume and providers need not
compete on price. To contain costs, governments restrict
your access to life-saving treatment. In countries with such
“universal coverage,” patients die waiting for treatment.
The Canadian Medical
Association Journal reports that in one year, 71 Ontario
patients died while waiting for coronary bypass surgery and
over one hundred more became “medically unfit for surgery.”
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reports that “109
people had a heart attack or suffered heart failure while on
the waiting list. Fifty of those patients died.”
“Physicians across Canada
are in an advanced stage of burnout due to work conditions”
which “causes them to retire early...or simply leave,” a
former Canadian Medical Association president told the New
York Times. He “attributed much of the problem to
technological shortages and the powerlessness doctors feel
when patients complain about long waits for treatment.”
“Access to a waiting list
is not access to healthcare,” wrote Canadian Chief Justice
McLachlin when striking down legislation banning private
insurance in 2005. Last year a New York Times read: “As
Canada's Slow-Motion Public Health System Falters, Private
Medical Care Is Surging.”
And England? The BBC
reports that “up to 500 heart patients die each year while
they wait for potentially life-saving surgery.” The Times
claims that a British woman “will be denied free National
Health Service treatment for breast cancer if she seeks to
improve her chances by paying privately for an additional
drug.” A Daily Telegraph headline reads: “Sufferers pull out
teeth due to lack of dentists.” Another article says that
“doctors are calling for NHS treatment to be withheld from
patients who are too old or who lead unhealthy lives.”
Consider
politically-controlled health care in America: Medicaid and
Medicare. Doctors are five times more likely to refuse
seeing new Medicaid patients than privately-insured
patients. Increasing reimbursement rates won’t help much;
more than two-thirds of doctors reported being overwhelmed
by Medicaid's billing requirements, paperwork, and delays in
payment.
ABC News says that
“Medicare rules bar cancer drugs for patients,” including
the privately-insured.
“Single payer” advocates
cite international comparisons of life expectancy to support
their cause. But life expectancy depends on factors
unrelated to healthcare, such as unintentional injury and
homicide. Health economist Robert Ohsfeldt found that when
accounting for these two factors, life expectancy in America
is comparable to that of Canada and England.
What really matters is your
chance of surviving a serious illness. The American Cancer
Society claims that “U.S. patients have better survival
rates than European patients for most types of cancer.”
So if
politically-controlled medicine isn’t the solution, what is?
Not a Massachusetts-style
“individual mandate,” which forces everyone to buy
insurance. This is essentially single-payer in disguise.
Insurance regulations severely limit competition, so
insurance companies are effectively government contractors
for politically-defined insurance.
The Boston Globe reports
that to contain costs, Massachusetts authorities will
“probably cut payments to doctors and hospitals” and “reduce
choices for patients.” Sound familiar? Instead, we must
recognize how government policies have crippled free
markets. Because the tax code deeply discounts
employer-provided insurance, you’re essentially stuck with
your employer’s non-portable plans. Hence, insurance
companies can afford to be stingy and deny you care; they
know that losing you as a customer requires that you change
jobs. With government as “single-payer” it's even worse: to
change insurance providers you must move to a different
state or country.
Our current system also
encourages thoughtless over-consumption and skyrocketing
costs. The tax code punishes paying for medical care
out-of-pocket and rewards buying insurance. So “insurance”
has become prepaid medicine, and patients over-consume like
business travelers dining on their company's expense
account.
Further, legislation
mandating minimum benefits makes insurance unaffordable for
many. Consider: Colorado law compels widowed wives to pay
higher premiums for prostate screening, maternity, and
marital therapy. Some Colorado legislators recognize this
injustice. Just as businesses incorporated in other states
can operate in Colorado, Coloradans should be able to buy
affordable policies from insurance companies that meet less
damaging regulations of another state.
While “universal health
care” may provide health insurance; it doesn’t guarantee
health care. The uninsured are not the problem rather they
are the symptom of the real problem – government meddling in
personal choices of how we care for ourselves and our
families.
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