By Michael Tanner on 11.19.07 @ 12:07AM
Bringing universal health care back down to earth.
Groucho Marx famously referred to second marriages as "the
triumph of hope over experience." He could just as easily have been
referring to those who believe the federal government should run
the American health care system.
Just take a look at the health care systems the government
already runs. The Veterans Health Administration system is a
national disgrace. The VHA budget is a political football. While
the program struggles with chronic budgetary problems, politicians
from both parties see it has a source of political pork -- sending
funds to VHA hospitals with low utilization rates not out of need,
but because they reside in the districts of powerful congressional
committee leaders.
As a result, the VHA recently suspended enrollments on more than
250,000 veterans to cut costs, and it maintains a very restrictive
pharmaceutical formulary that often denies veterans access to the
newest and most effective drugs. A study by Prof. Frank Lichtenberg
of Columbia University estimated that the restricted availability
of drugs has reduced the average survival of veterans under VHA
care by as much as two months.
Rationing is also beginning to delay or deny care to some
veterans altogether, particularly in special areas like mental
health. The Miami Herald reports that nearly 100 local VA
clinics provide virtually no mental health care. The average
veteran with psychiatric troubles gets almost one-third fewer
visits with specialists than he would have received a decade ago,
and several have been turned away from VA hospitals, which helps to
explain the recent rash of suicides of veterans with Post Traumatic
Stress Disorder.
Early this year, Newsweek reported on the VHA as "an
overloaded bureaucracy cluttered with red tape; veterans having to
wait weeks or months for mental-health care and other appointments;
families sliding into debt as VA case managers study disability
claims over many months, and the seriously wounded requiring help
from outside experts just to understand the VA's arcane system of
rights and benefits."
Or take Medicaid as another example. Does anyone really believe
it provides high quality and reasonable cost? Medicaid now costs
more than $330 billion per year, a cost that grew at a rate of
roughly 10.7 percent in the first half of 2007. While the federal
government picks up 57 percent of the cost, it is now the single
largest item in state budgets, even larger than elementary and
secondary education. The program spends money by the bushel, yet
notoriously under-reimburses providers, driving physicians out of
the program and sending patients to emergency rooms for care.
According to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission only 69.5
percent of physicians are willing to accept new Medicaid patients.
As a result, Medicaid patients find significant barriers to
receiving primary care. The number of Medicaid beneficiaries who
use emergency department services for non-emergency care is higher
than the rate for those in any other payer group, including the
uninsured.
And the care received by those on Medicaid is often inferior to
that received by those with private insurance. According to a study
in the Annals of Internal Medicine the most important
predictor of treatment and outcome in the study was whether the
patient had Medicaid or private insurance.
And what about Medicare? The program faces $50-70 trillion in
unfunded liabilities, and was recently forced to cut back on
reimbursements to hospitals and physicians; its first, highly
inadequate step toward controlling costs.
Yet for all this money, there remain gaps in Medicare's
coverage. Unlike private insurance, Medicare actually cuts back on
reimbursements the sicker you are and the longer you stay in the
hospital. While private alternatives have long included
prescription drugs, Medicare didn't add a drug benefit until 2003.
And even then it was a bizarre design, with its doughnut hole,
confusing menu of options, and unfunded $11 trillion cost. Medicare
still does not cover long-term care.
And studies have repeatedly shown that the quality of care
provided is wildly uneven and pretty much mediocre overall. One
study graded the care received by Medicare benefices for six
medical conditions (heart attack, breast cancer, diabetes, heart
failure, pneumonia, and stroke). The study used 24 measures for
evaluating standards of care and graded performance on a scale of
1-100. The median score was just 73, a "C-."
This is not a track record that inspires confidence. Yet, for
some reason politicians continue to push government-run national
health care. Have they forgotten that this is the same government
that has mismanaged everything from Iraq to Hurricane Katrina? That
has run up $15.5 trillion in unfunded liabilities for Social
Security and still can't find Osama bin Laden? And now we want it
to become our national doctor?
What is there about our experience with government that suggests
it is competent to run one-seventh of the American economy, let
alone make many of our most private and personal decisions for
us?
topics:
Education, Health Care, Medicaid, Iraq, Medicare