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- <text id=93TT1293>
- <title>
- Mar. 29, 1993: A Cure for the Wrong Diseases
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 29, 1993 Yeltsin's Last Stand
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 70
- A Cure for the Wrong Disease
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Barbara Ehrenreich
- </p>
- <p> It's the ultimate medical nightmare. You slip under the
- anesthesia confident that your problem will be solved with some
- simple procedure--a polyp excision, for example, or tubal
- ligation. But when you wake up you find your breasts are missing
- or your intestine now terminates in a plastic bag. Too bad we
- had the wrong patient, the surgeons shrug, because the operation
- went beautifully.
- </p>
- <p> Something similar could be happening in the area of
- health-care reform. Dreaming of universal, comprehensive health
- insurance, Americans are about to wake up to a byzantine new
- arrangement called "managed competition." More than 60% of the
- public tell pollsters they want a Canadian-style system of
- national health insurance, which would make health care, quite
- simply, a right. But managed competition, which Bill Clinton is
- on record as favoring, may more nearly resemble an amputation
- of the limited health rights most Americans already have. Even
- its boosters are expecting the public to warm to managed
- competition with the enthusiasm usually reserved for root-canal
- work.
- </p>
- <p> The Clintons, like the surgeons in the nightmare, seem to
- have the wrong patient. Their first concern should be us, the
- "consumers," whose symptoms include lack of coverage, inadequate
- coverage or the terror of losing insurance through a job change
- or the whim of some green-visored claims adjuster. Another
- worthy "patient" is American business, or at least businesses
- that offer health benefits to their employees. These benefits,
- which consume one-fourth of corporate net income, have become
- like cement shoes on the feet of American enterprise,
- threatening to hobble the entire economy.
- </p>
- <p> But managed competition seems to be designed for yet
- another patient, the private insurers. The insurance industry
- has been languishing because demand for its product keeps
- shrinking as prices shoot through the roof, and whimpering
- because a majority of Americans--the ones who favor a single,
- public-sector insurer--would just as soon see it in hospice
- care.
- </p>
- <p> No one doubts that managed competition will cure what ails
- the insurers. The idea, insofar as anyone can comprehend it, is
- to create a new layer of bureaucracy--health-insurance-purchasing cooperatives, or HIPCs--which will
- contract with insurance companies to provide health-care plans
- for consumers, including the poor and unemployed. In theory, the
- HIPCs will force the insurance companies to compete to come up
- with the lowest-cost plan, which will in turn cause the
- insurance companies to lean on doctors and hospitals to hold
- down their costs. Thus, whatever else happens under managed
- competition, the insurance companies will cease to be mere money
- handlers and become the very organizers and arbiters of care.
- </p>
- <p> That might be a small price to pay in order to cover the
- 37 million Americans who presently lack insurance, but what
- about the rest of us? Here's where managed competition starts
- looking more like Dr. Jekyll than Dr. Welby. All the analysis
- behind it--cooked up by academics and insurance-company reps
- schmoozing at comfortable seminars in Jackson Hole, Wyoming--assumes that given a little insurance, Americans greedily drive
- up expenditures by "overutilizing" care.
- </p>
- <p> Hence the supposed wisdom of proposing that the insurance
- companies be located at the very center of the medical system.
- They are, as we all know, remarkably adept at weeding out sickly
- consumers and harassing providers about the need for each and
- every test or procedure performed. Beyond that, the HIPCs and
- insurance companies will be doing their best to herd us all into
- "managed care" plans featuring a limited choice of physicians
- and strong financial incentives against anything that could be
- regarded as overutilization. Never mind that utilization has
- remained constant for the past 10 years, while costs have
- soared, and that Americans are actually less likely to use
- doctors and hospitals than citizens of other industrialized
- nations.
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, there's not the slightest evidence that the
- sacrifices entailed by managed competition will pay off in
- lowered costs. Managed competition has never been tried,
- anywhere in the world. But managed care, represented by HMOs,
- PPOs and other ghostly amalgams of insurance plus actual care,
- has been abundantly tested right here in the U.S.--and found
- ineffective at curbing health-care costs.
- </p>
- <p> There is a solution--at least for our first two
- patients. Instead of adding a new layer, like a Band-Aid on a
- gangrenous wound, the aim should be to simplify: eliminate the
- 1,500 private insurers (they can always go back to auto and
- life) and replace them with a Canadian-style "single payer,"
- which could be the Federal Government, a quasi-public agency or
- each of the 50 states. In one fell swoop, health-care costs
- would be reduced by much of the $80 billion that now goes for
- "administrative overhead," producing savings that, according to
- the General Accounting Office, would be sufficient to insure
- everyone, without deductibles, coinsurance or Oregon-style
- rationing. It would still be the job of the new single payer to
- crack down--not on consumer overutilization but on rampant
- profiteering and plain old corruption (doctors referring
- patients to their own profitmaking CAT-scanning facilities, for
- example).
- </p>
- <p> It's a shame that Big Business seems willing to put its
- commitment to free enterprise, i.e., the insurance industry,
- ahead of an obvious and effective solution. It would be worse
- than a shame--a betrayal--if the Clintons were to ignore
- public demand and go for a cumbersome, jerry-built plan designed
- to benefit the most parasitical element of the health-care
- system.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-