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- <text id=93TT2315>
- <title>
- Jan. 18, 1993: Paging Dr. Clinton
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 18, 1993 Fighting Back: Spouse Abuse
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH CARE, Page 24
- Paging Dr. Clinton
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The President-elect promised to prescribe a speedy cure for
- the growing medical crisis, but he is still rummaging through
- his first-aid kit
- </p>
- <p>By JANICE CASTRO - With reporting by Bernard Baumohl/New York
- and Dick Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Doctor, Doctor, Give us the news!
- </p>
- <p> The clamor for decent, affordable health care has reached
- a fever pitch. President-elect Bill Clinton, who won plenty of
- votes by promising that he would work to deliver such a system,
- is now under heavy pressure to deliver on his pledge within the
- first 100 days. As he prepares to take office, the problems with
- America's health-system have reached a critical condition.
- Medical costs have begun to accelerate at an even faster pace
- than was expected. More and more employers, unable or unwilling
- to shoulder the financial burden any longer, are canceling or
- slashing benefit plans. Millions more Americans are learning
- that they simply can no longer afford basic medical care.
- </p>
- <p> The crisis is distorting the shape of the U.S. economy.
- The Commerce Department reported last week that health-care
- costs climbed 12% in 1991, to $838.5 billion, at a pace four
- times the rate of overall inflation. Medical bills now account
- for 14% of the entire American economy, up from 9.4% in 1980.
- The total cost, which was expected to top $1 trillion by the
- year 2000, seems likely to hit that level as early as next year.
- </p>
- <p> Employers, who provide coverage for 85% of their workers,
- are staggering under the costs. Among the hardest hit are
- industrial giants, which support millions of aging retirees,
- whose medical bills far exceed those of younger people. Ford
- Motor, for example, was compelled to make a fourth-quarter
- write-off of $7.5 billion to account for the costs of providing
- medical coverage for its retirees, a blow that will probably
- force the automaker to report the largest annual loss (nearly
- $7 billion) ever suffered by a U.S. corporation. AT&T expects
- to take a similar write-off this year, and General Motors, with
- far more retirees, may face a catastrophic deficit when it
- finally takes the health-care hit.
- </p>
- <p> Insurers are also suffocating. New York State's vast
- Empire Blue Cross-Blue Shield plan, which insures 1.4 million
- mostly poor and elderly patients, temporarily averted insolvency
- this month thanks to a state-financed bailout plan. Even with
- a one-time $100 million infusion, though, customers will face
- average rate increases of 20%. As a result, hundreds of
- thousands of New Yorkers may be forced to join the ranks of the
- uninsured.
- </p>
- <p> Some of Clinton's advisers are urging him to re-evaluate
- the health-care-reform package that he promised to unveil as
- one of his first major initiatives. To cope with the price
- inflation, Clinton must decide how he can reconcile his aim of
- expanding coverage while curbing costs. Any plan that could
- achieve both of those goals, however admirable, would require
- many Americans to pay more for care, give up benefits--or
- both. "Any reform will create millions of winners and millions
- of losers. Health care is the most emotional and personal of all
- public policy issues," says John Rother, director of legislation
- and public policy for the American Association of Retired
- Persons.
- </p>
- <p> So far, Clinton has been neither consistent nor clear
- about the methods he would use to achieve his goals. His model
- for reform shifted several times during the campaign, moving
- from a simple call for preventive care to a more ambitious
- "pay-or-play" plan that would require all employers either to
- "play"--provide insurance for their workers--or to pay taxes
- into a huge new government-run insurance program. In the final
- weeks of the campaign, Clinton settled on the broad outlines of
- the plan he is now trying to make work. The program is guided
- by five goals:
- </p>
- <p>-- All Americans must have access to medical coverage.
- </p>
- <p>-- Employers should continue to bear most of the cost of
- insuring workers.
- </p>
- <p>-- The Federal Government must not micro-manage medical
- care.
- </p>
- <p>-- The states, which provide about 45% of Medicaid
- funding, must have enough flexibility to adjust health programs
- to the needs of their citizens and to the limits of their
- resources.
- </p>
- <p>-- Total medical costs must be contained under an
- "enforceable budget," a reference to a cap on total public and
- private health spending with built-in price controls.
- </p>
- <p> To achieve these goals, Clinton is fashioning a new
- amalgam of several different models for reform. The central
- feature of the emerging plan is so-called managed competition,
- under which American workers and retirees would be grouped into
- huge insurance pools. Employees of small companies, for
- example, which normally would be unable to negotiate affordable
- coverage for a handful of employees, would gain the advantage
- of being represented as part of larger worker pools. The pools
- would have the clout to negotiate better rates and benefits with
- medical providers, including hospitals and physician groups. All
- employers, no matter how small their enterprise, will almost
- certainly be required to provide basic coverage for their
- workers.
- </p>
- <p> To control spending, Clinton said during the election
- campaign that he would set up a national board of physicians,
- public officials and consumers, who would set price controls for
- medical caregivers. The board would have another important task:
- to define a basic package of standard benefits that must be
- available to everyone. Clinton has said such a package should
- include not only preventive care like prenatal screenings and
- mammograms but also inpatient and ambulatory care, prescription
- drugs and basic mental-health coverage. High on Clinton's
- agenda: a requirement that insurance companies sign up all those
- who want to buy coverage, regardless of their health, a prospect
- that profit-minded insurers dread.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's package includes a wish list of other reforms
- that could reduce waste and inefficiency, but it remains to be
- seen which ones he will fight for. His aides support, for
- example, the standardization of more than 1,500 kinds of
- insurance forms currently in use, a notion previously endorsed
- by Louis Sullivan, Bush's Secretary of Health and Human
- Services. The measure could reduce wasteful billing costs and
- save as much as $4 billion annually.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton endorses malpractice reform to curb huge
- litigation costs and the insurance premiums that doctors pay.
- He has spoken approvingly of establishing a set of physician
- practice standards, or generally accepted rules on what
- responsible doctors should do for a patient in a given
- circumstance. This reform, endorsed by many medical research
- centers and academics, would free physicians from the expensive
- practice of "defensive medicine," in which they order
- unnecessary tests and perform unneeded procedures to give
- themselves extra protection from malpractice suits. Defensive
- medicine may cost Americans as much as $100 billion a year.
- During the campaign, Clinton promised to put a stop to price
- gouging by pharmaceutical companies and doctors who own the
- laboratories they send their patients to for tests, often at
- jacked-up rates.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton has also said that in the interest of fairness he
- may tax the benefits that companies give their workers.
- Taxpayers spend about $84 billion a year subsidizing tax-free
- medical care for the mostly middle-class and upper-class
- corporate workers.
- </p>
- <p> These and other reforms that Clinton has embraced include
- a number of good ideas that were also tepidly endorsed by
- President Bush and many other people. Most of them have never
- been carried out because they would offend one or more powerful
- interest groups, including patients, doctors, insurers and drug
- companies. To get any program in place, Clinton will have to use
- up some of his political capital.
- </p>
- <p> "We're facing one of the biggest political and policy
- fights ever seen in this country," observes Cathy Hurwit,
- legislative director for Citizen Action, a health-care advocacy
- group that favors a Canadian-style system, under which the
- government would provide health care to everyone.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton is still pondering many important choices. One
- problem is that some of his health-care ideas conflict with the
- rest of his economic agenda. He has promised, for example, to
- nurture leading-edge U.S. research firms. Yet he may impose new
- taxation and other burdens on medical research and
- pharmaceutical firms that could drive them overseas. Several
- companies, including Upjohn and Eli Lilly, have announced major
- plans to restructure, cutting back on spending in anticipation
- of Clinton belt tightening.
- </p>
- <p> More important, some of the reforms favored by Clinton
- aides threaten to undermine his promise to create jobs, since
- he aims to streamline America's most recession-proof industry:
- health care. Most of the 290,000 jobs created since the
- recession officially ended in March 1991 have sprung up in the
- health-care industry, which employs 9 million Americans. Since
- the election, Bristol-Myers has announced that it is cutting
- 2,000 of its 53,000 jobs, and Warner-Lambert expects to
- eliminate 2,700 of its 35,000 positions. Insurance companies,
- a principal target of Clinton's reform philosophy, are bracing
- for the worst. Aetna and Travelers have both announced plans for
- major layoffs.
- </p>
- <p> Finally, many economists maintain that Clinton appears to
- be combining contradictory ideas that will cancel each other
- out. Paul Ellwood, a pediatric neurologist and health-policy
- expert who helped develop the managed-care idea, insists that
- his model cannot work in conjunction with price controls. Says
- he: "That would be like Yeltsin saying, `We're going to
- introduce market forces here in Russia, but we're going to start
- out with the government setting the prices.' Price controls are
- not compatible with price competition." In Ellwood's system,
- costs would be controlled by competition among health-care
- suppliers to serve the members of the large pools of consumers.
- He believes that such incentives would eliminate the need for
- price controls. But Stuart Altman of Brandeis University, a top
- Clinton health-care adviser, thinks that the two mechanisms can
- work together. Challenged during a meeting of the Clinton
- health-care brain trust last week, Altman dismissed criticism
- of the apparent conflict: "I don't think Congress is going to
- give us the keys to the Treasury to do what I really think needs
- to be done, and that is to guarantee every American a decent
- insurance system and to make sure that low-income people are
- covered." Altman conceded that he suspects that Americans lack
- the political will to reform the medical system.
- </p>
- <p> It seems unlikely that the new President can begin
- fighting for a comprehensible plan within the first 100 Days.
- He has yet to decide which changes he will fight hardest to
- achieve. If he shifts his focus from managed competition and
- gives price controls his highest priority, the balky process of
- creating a price-regulating bureaucracy will take time. And time
- is the one thing no incoming President can afford to waste,
- least of all one committed to reforming a major part of the
- American economy that has stalled every attempt so far at
- substantial change.
- </p>
-
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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