Thursday, September 3, 2009

A must-read on health care reform

All the folks on all sides of the health care reform debate should pause and read an article in the September issue of The Atlantic magazine. With the provocative title of "How American Health Care Killed My Father," the article by David Goldhill examines the wrong-headed economic incentives and disincentives built into our current system of health insurance. It also explains why past efforts to reform this system have failed and why current efforts before Congress will also fail to control costs and improve patient care.
Warning: It's a long and complicated article. But it is shorter than the 1,000-page health care bill Congress has been considering.
Goldhill's father went into the hospital with a case of pneumonia, but it was not pneumonia that killed him. It was a sepsis infection contracted in the hospital that proved fatal. Similar hospital-borne infections kill 100,000 people a year, even though some simple precautions could prevent most of these deaths. But, as Goldhill explains, our health insurance system does not emphasize quality of care or punish easily preventable errors. In the case of Goldhill's father, the hospital that caused the infection actually made more money treating him for sepsis in the five weeks before he died than it would have made if it had simply cured his pneumonia and sent him home.
Goldhill rebuts treasured beliefs of both liberals and conservatives in the health-care debate. Single-payer governmental health care should simplify payments and save money in efficiency, but statistics show state-run medical plans in Europe also are plagued by out-of-control costs. And the current system of imposing insurers between doctors and patients is wrong and inefficient in several ways, and market-based reforms have failed.
Whatever reform is implemented will be costly, he says: "For fun, let's imagine confiscating all the profits of all the famously greedy health-insurance companies. That would pay for four days of health care for all Americans. Let's add in the profits of the 10 biggest rapacious U.S. drug companies. Another 7 days. Indeed, confiscating all the profits of all American companies, in every industry, wouldn't cover even five months of our health-care expenses."
Fortunately, Goldhill says, the money is already there in the form of health-insurance premiums and co-pays being paid by employers and employees. A typical young worker will invest $1.77 million in health care costs (some paid by his employer) over his lifetime. Redirecting that money into a system that focuses on patient care could actually improve quality of care, prevent unnecessary deaths and reduce costs.
Goldhill's article is getting some attention, such as in this NPR broadcast. It deserves more attention. President Obama, his advisers and all members of Congress should read it. Goldhill agrees that health care reform is badly needed, but the path Congress is taking, he says, will not fix the inherent problems and could make them worse.
"... until we demand the same price and quality accountability in health care that we demand in everything else, each new health-care reform will cost us more and serve us less," he writes.
His counter-proposal: Replace the current system of comprehensive health care with a consumer (patient)-driven system of catastrophic insurance to cover unpredictable chronic or major illnesses or injuries and a modified Health Savings Account to cover routine medical care. The government would subsidize HSAs and catastrophic insurance premiums for low-income residents at a cost far below current Medicaid expenses. HSA contributions would be tax-deductible and inheritable. This system would put patients in charge and would generate price competition among health care providers.
There's a lot more to Goldhill's article than I can explain here. Read it, and encourage others who want to hold forth on health care reform to do the same.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks for posting this!


This link below is an interesting story. A woman in a wheelchair was actually heckled by the right wing loonie plants at a healthcare town hall meeting recently. Just for asking a question. This is what we are dealing with in Healthcare reform. Right wing idiots. Yes, I used an insult. So sue me.

http://www.nj.com/ledgerlive/index.ssf/2009/08/health_care_reform_town_hall_n.html

Anonymous said...

Thanks Hal, I'll give the article a read.
Alex

Anonymous said...

Did you e-mail the article to Obama? Or the senators/congress folks? Thanks for the synopsis. Definitely worth the read.

Erstwhile Editor said...

No, I didn't e-mail this post to our reps or the president. See my earlier post --http://xeditor.blogspot.com/2009/08/what-was-that-e-mail-address-again.html -- about how hard it is to find an e-mail address for a member of Congress. I hope the Atlantic article gets some notice on Capitol Hill.

Anonymous said...

Idiots are ones who call others idiots.

newsy said...

Most Americans are for health care reform. And not some watered down republican version.

The United States is the only industrialized country that doesn't have universal coverage with many developing countries now following suit. If you want to look at a good model of health care look at New Zealand. The naysayers will always have some excuse.


Even our beloved and much admired Israel has compulsory universal health care.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous #4, what???

Erstwhile Editor said...

Newsy: I had one request in this post: READ the Atlantic article. It's not a Republican version of anything; it presents a rational, documented explanation of why we need to address health care, not just health care insurance coverage. READ the article.

Anonymous said...

I don't think Newsy was necessarily commenting on the original post's reference. Although I fail to see what emailing Obama or not having an email address for an official has to do with the article either.

Anonymous said...

Interesting. I am told that Medicaid reimbursements to pediatricians are grossly higher than private insurer reimbursements. It certainly seems that the system could be streamlined and more cost effective without sacrificing patient care. Let's hope that is in our future.

Anonymous said...

to anony #5:

idiots are ones who call others idiots.

You are not an idiot, are you?