The commitment I seek is not to outworn views but to old values that will never wear out. Programs may sometimes become obsolete, but the ideal of fairness always endures. Circumstances may change, but the work of compassion must continue.
What we have in the United States is not so much a health-care system as a disease-care system.
The more our feelings diverge, the more deeply felt they are, the greater is our obligation to grant the sincerity and essential decency of our fellow citizens on the other side.–Sen Ted Kennedy
Utopia 20: The Hospital
Jack walked up to a console in the lobby. He touched the screen and entered the letters of Andy’s name. The console showed him a room number and then showed him an animated progression of the walk to Andy’s room.
Jack watched the animation twice to be sure he had it memorized and would not need to consult a consoles further along. Then he set out to find Andy. He had no problem reaching the room but paused at the doorway for a moment. He had no idea what condition Andy would be in. He heard nothing at the door so he cautiously pushed the door open.
“Educant Randall, you made it!” Jack jumped at the slightly squeaky male voice with a prominent lisp welcomed him to the room. Andy was actually speaking to him, and in a rapid, excited tone. “Come over and check out my stitches.” He continued with an element of pride.
Jack could not help himself, he chuckled with relief. Andy was all boy.
Jack walked to Andy’s bedside and examined his leg. His relief was short lived. Andy’s wound reached from just above the knee to the ankle and the skin of his leg still had a sickly purple, puffy appearance. Still he smiled at Andy, who seemed like his ordinary self. “How you feeling sport?” he signed as he sat on the edge of the bed.
Andy smiled, “I feel fine.” he squeaked.
Jack gave Andy a serious expression. “Have you texted your parents?”
“Will emailed them when we got here. They are on their way. They should arrive in the morning. I got to email them while they were on the train about an hour ago.”
“The doctor says he can go in a few days.” Will added. Jack had not noticed Will when he had entered the room. Jack turned to look in his direction now. He was sitting on a couch along the side of the room looking very relaxed.
Jack thanked Will for staying with Andy throughout the process and he insisted that Will get something to eat in the cafeteria. Jack sat with Andy while Will took a well earned break. Jack made himself comfortable on the couch and sat as Andy chatted with him for a while and then fell asleep shortly before Will’s return. Then he asked Will about their time apart.
Will told Jack the hospital staff had been rather upset that no other adult had come with Andy. They had immediately assigned a Hospital Liaison to the case who told Will that the doctors needed the permission of his parents to do surgery immediately. That they needed to clean the wound made in the Desert. With Will’s help the Liaison had located Andy’s parents and the Liaison had helped Will to tell them what had happened. Jack winced at this. He had known Andy’s parents first. Before he had even been assigned the rest of his students. He had let them down. He had failed to keep their son safe. He could only imagine what a call from a hospital Liaison about your son must be like. Jack should have been the one to make that call.
There had been a brief video conference with the doctor and Andy was whisked off to surgery.
The Liaison had taken Will first to breakfast and then to the room Andy would have when he was out of surgery. There he had called his own parents and spoken with them. Again Jack felt the hollow feeling in the pit of his stomach.
The Liaison had suggested a game of chess while they waited and Will suspected that the Liaison had let Will defeat him. Andy had come out of surgery and there was another call to Andy’s parents. Then the Liaison offered another game of chess but Will had sent him away saying he needed some time to rest. The Liaison had brought blankets and pillows and shown Will how to make the couch into a bed but Will had just wanted to be alone. The Liaison had shown Will how to reach him through the hospital computer and then he had left.
Andy had awaken shortly afternoon and had stopped being groggy about dinner time. Will was about to set up the chess board again for Andy when Jack had entered the room.
“You did well, Will. Thank you.” Jack looked at the young man with true appreciation. Instead of Andy or the liaison, Jack played the next game of chess with Will. His heart was not really in the game and Will beat him even though Jack had not deliberately thrown the game. Then they had watched some historic documentary on TV while Will curled up on the couch. The Liaison had come to check on Will but found him with Jack. The Liaison offered his services to Jack but Jack declined any assistance and he soon left again.
Jack sat on a comfortable high back chair and watched a second documentary without hearing a word of it…
Dim light was streaming in the window when someone shook him awake. Jack gazed up and recognition hit him.
“Mr. Clay!” Jack managed as he propped himself up in the chair.
“Educant.” Ted Clay greeted Jack. His voice was distant and Jack interpreted this as worry about his son.
Andy’s mother was sitting on the bed with a protective arm around her son. She was hugging him and kissing his forehead. Tears were streaming down her face and Andy was signing furiously trying to reassure her while rolling his eyes at the scene she was making.
“Glad to see you made it here.” Jack said and extended his hand.
Ted Clay looked down at Jack’s hand and scowled. Then he turned back to his wife and son.
Jack’s arm hung in mid air a moment longer and then Will began to stir on the couch. Jack dropped his hand and let his eyelids slide closed for a moment. Then Jack just stood gazing at Andy and his mother. He had wanted to do exactly what she was doing several hours ago. How was it that women could be so free with their emotional lives?
Will awoke and immediately stood. “Hey, Mr. Clay, Mrs. Clay!”
Andy, who had only being making half hearted attempts to get his mother to stop fawning over him, became more insistent with his best friend watching. Will seemed to take no notice at all.
“The doctors said he is doing really great. They think he can go home in a couple of days.” Will began, “When we get back to class…”
“He won’t be going back to class.” Ted interrupted through tight lips.
“But there’s 2 more months of school left. He’ll surely be well before graduation.” Will reassured them.
“We will provide for his education.” Ted said sternly. Andy read his lips and looked on with a shocked expression.
“But he’ll need…” Will began.
“He won’t need a teacher!”
Silence fell over the room. Jack’s head snapped up to see Ted Clay glaring directly at him. Their eyes locked and Jack’s back stiffened. He had never been called a “teacher” to his face before. Jack said nothing but he refused to look away from Ted’s angry stare.
Will looked on wide eyed and even Mrs. Clay looked away from her son to her husband. Andy, who had not been able to see his father’s lips was furiously trying to catch someone’s attention to find out what had happened.
Will recovered first, “Educant Randell is not a teacher.” Out of habit he signed this as he spoke, allowing Andy to catch up. “He has always encouraged us to go our own way, to think our own thoughts. He’s never once even given us a spelling list to memorize!”
“Will, please.” Will looked ready to continue the argument but Jack held up his hand.
Andy was now signing furiously a similar protest but Jack took a step forward and rested his hand on Andy’s good ankle to get his attention and then shook his head.
“I’m sorry you and Kate feel that way, Ted. Andy is a good student and he shouldn‘t be punished for something I did. The other members of the class will miss him and his insights. Won’t you consider letting him complete the year with his classmates?”
“You’re right. He is bright. He can complete the year at home.” Ted’s voice was resolute.
Andy was unable to find his words. He was now furiously signing his objections to this plan. Will also began to object but Jack grabbed his shoulder. Now was not the time to have a rational conversation with Andy’s father. In truth, Jack could not even be angry with Ted. Jack could not think of how he would have responded if he were in Ted’s shoes right now.
“It is of course your decision to make.” Jack said and then he turned to Andy, “I will miss your son deeply as I know all of the class will.”
Andy stopped signing and looked crestfallen.
The Concepts behind the Fiction:
1. Hurrah for Health Care?
Well I admit that I am surprised any health care bill at all got passed into law. Only because Americans did not forget that this was one of the key campaign points did anything at all get passed. It is a far cry from what Obama said he wanted when he was campaigning, however. And it is a big wet sloppy kiss to the health insurance industry and big pharma. So, for those of you not sick to death of hearing about health care, here is the good, the bad and the ugly of it.
2. The Good
*It reins in some of insurance companies most egregious acts. They can not cap how much they will pay over your lifetime if you get sick with a chronic illness or a very expensive acute illness. They are prohibited from “rescission”, where insurance companies review and nullify benefits after you make a claim based on some irrelevant thing you did not tell them years ago, while keeping all the money you gave them over those years. If you pay the premium, they must pay for the illness when it occurs.
*Insurance companies are restricted from considering preexisting conditions before they give you insurance. Unfortunately this does not occur for the next 6 months for children and until 2014 for adults.
*Small business owners will get a tax break immediately for providing insurance to employees. They will also be able to take advantage of their own health insurance exchange in 2014.
*It increases spending on low income community clinics. Thank you Bernie Sanders, you old socialist you. No really, he ran and was elected as a socialist.
*Dental health gets recognized as an integral part of health care in 2014 and gets coverage. No more pulling your own teeth with pliers. Children get more coverage immediately. Mental health and addiction therapy also get recognized as real health care.
*It sets aside $500 million in seed money to create a new government organization, “Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute.” This institution is supposed to compile data on the best way to treat diseases. The data can not be used to deny coverage, however. Normally I would be all for this, but history tells us some interesting lessons about such care. For example, all care was based on studies of white men until the 80’s. Then it was discovered that the treatments that worked in white men often failed in black men or women. Even when the disease was not related to sex or race, like high blood pressure or diabetes. So some research can be misleading for certain groups of people. The more exclusive the group the more likely this is to happen. Also we know that drug companies are able to design studies for drugs that make them appear effective even when they are only minimally so. Or they design a study to minimize the ill effects of drugs. These studies are compiled by the FDA but the FDA has been fooled by these studies for years and drugs like Vioxx and Phen-Fen were allowed on the market because of this sort of lying with statistics.
*Medicaid will expand to cover people below 133% of the federal poverty level (Around $14,000 annually for a single person and $29,327 for a family of four.) Never mind that it is much more expensive to live in some parts of the country than in others and that the poverty line only takes into account the cost of food and not housing.
*There is help for those who make up to 4 times the poverty level in this country. Buying health insurance is a new expense for some people, and I fear that some of them can not afford insurance. The poverty level is calculated on food alone and does not take into consideration housing or other costs. Some people barely make ends meet now adding this cost will force them to break the law. Unlike car insurance, which you must have if you drive, there is no way out of this cost. Theoretically if you can not afford car insurance, you could not drive and take public transit or a bike instead.
*It will allow nonprofit insurance co-ops in 2012. Remember though that this is how Blue Cross started, and look where that ended up. Currently states are restricted from participating form this type of insurance by laws lobbied in by health insurance companies. Dennis Kucinich and Bernie Sanders tried to undo these laws but failed. California has passed a law to create a state wide public option twice. It was vetoed by the Govenator, twice. There was some legislation on the internet that has now been taken down about County public options. If you are interested in that contact me and I will put you in touch with the right people.
*Would reduce the deficit…maybe. So many things could interfere with this I hesitate to even include it here and I refuse to give you a number because that could change on a moment’s notice.
*It funds SCHIP thru 2016. This is the program that provides preventative health services to low income children throughout the nation and I have absolutely nothing bad or even catty to say about that.
If you are a kid in college or just getting started, then you can stay on Mom and Dad’s health insurance until age 26.
Strips banks of the ability to originate student loans in favor of a system of direct government lending. Has nothing to do with health care but happens to be the best part of the bill. It helps to prevent the start of life as a debt slave.
3. The Bad
*As promised, if you like your health care coverage, you get to keep it. Unfortunately, if you don’t like your health care insurance, you also get to keep it. In fact, it will be breaking the law to go without health care in America after 2014. The fine for doing so is $695.
*If your employer didn‘t have health insurance before, and you were having difficulty finding private insurance, there will be exchanges of insurance set up for you to shop for insurance you can afford. It is estimated that 32 million people who were doing without health care will now get some. Of course this means all of these people will now be paying homage to the God of Health Insurance. Still this means that the number of uninsured will drop from 19% to 8% by 2016 and there will still be 23 million uninsured by 2019! We will remain the only industrialized nation to fail to insure all of our citizens.
*It pays for itself with some new taxes.
- For one thing the insurance itself is taxed. The value of the insurance itself will be reported on your W-2 if your employer has insurance for you. That’s right you will be taxed on something you paid for that is barely worth anything if you really do get sick.
- Medicare Payroll tax on investment income — Starting in 2012, the Medicare Payroll Tax will be expanded to include unearned income. That will be a 3.8 percent tax on investment income for families making more than $250,000 per year ($200,000 for individuals).
- Excise Tax — Beginning in 2018, insurance companies will pay a 40 percent excise tax on so-called “Cadillac” high-end insurance plans worth over $27,500 for families ($10,200 for individuals). Dental and vision plans are exempt and will not be counted in the total cost of a family’s plan.
- Tanning Tax — 10 percent excise tax on indoor tanning services.– CBS
- Drug manufacturers would pay the US a total of $16 billion between 2011 and 2019.
- Health insurers would pay $47 billion over the same period.
- Medical device manufacturers would pay a 2.9 percent excise tax on the sale of any of their wares, beginning Jan. 1, 2013.-Christian Science Monitor
Tanning Tax? Really?
*There is a tax credit to keep health care affordable. But it caps out at 2019. That is it will cap out at 2019 if health care costs do not rise above standard of living cost increases as they have done in the last 30 years. In the wake of Anthem Blue Cross raising its cost to consumers without explanation by 39% in a year when their company saw record profit-well.
*HSA plans would only be allowed $2500 a year of savings. Not even enough to pay the deductible on many plans. Many people were using these plans for tax deferred savings. Apparently, even that small threat that a person could become independent of health insurance if they were healthy enough; long enough was too much of a threat. So now the amount you can contribute will be capped at $2500 after 2013.
*It starts to close the Medicare prescription doughnut hole in 2011. It does not completely close the doughnut hole until 2020. However it does this by paying more to the drug companies. There are still no bargaining methods allowed with big pharma and pharmaceutical companies continue to charge 30-50% more in the US than abroad. And the sky’s the limit for what they can charge!
4. The Ugly
*About 87% of private insurance carriers currently offer paid abortion coverage. This bill complicates things by requiring all funds for abortions to be separate from public funds. A woman with insurance for abortion will need to write two checks for the coverage. Many insurance carriers will stop funding abortions all together to avoid the confusion of having two funds and possible fines. Also states could choose to opt out of abortion coverage by not allowing companies with abortion services in their exchange. This is in effect making abortion so cumbersome that making it illegal is no longer necessary.
*It prevents insurance companies from refusing to cover things like birth control and pregnancy that are exclusive to women. However, it allows insurance companies to charge up to 50% more to women than to men. They can also choose to charge more to older patients. This essentially enshrines age and sex discrimination in our laws. Imagine for a moment if this law said that it was OK to charge a black man 50% more than a white man and it did not cover sickle cell anemia, a disease that is almost exclusively in people of African decent. Even if there was some logic to this (and statistically speaking there is) how do you feel about this law then? We have placed the cost of our health care on the backs of women when women still earn less than men and the elderly who earned less over a lifetime.
*It does nothing to prevent insurance agencies, or for that matter to Medicare/Medicaid, from reimbursing doctors who care for women or children at a lower rate than those who care for the men exclusively or the population at large-a long standing issue in this country. The low reimbursements for women and children centered medicine makes hospitals dump huge amounts of money into cardiac cath labs while virtually ignoring or even downgrading care in obstetrics or pediatric units where the dollars actually result in much better outcomes instead of marginally better outcomes.
*Well you might not get to keep your insurance if you like it after all:
“Businesses are fined $2000 per FULL TIME employee (FTE) for not offering insurance. The first 30 employees are not counted in the calculation, however, so the fine for not having insurance for a company of 50 employees is $40,000, or about what they currently pay on 4 employees’ health insurance. In businesses that do not have to offer insurance to remain competitive, this would be a major savings for the business and force you into a public pool. If we take that business with 50 employees, it stacks up like this:
2009 with insurance 2014 if drops coverage NET
EMPLOYER $495,000 $20,000 ($475,000)
The average employee pays around $3500 for premiums in 2009. Under the new plan, his premiums will cap at $4060, a $560 increase over current payments. This may still be lower than what he would pay in 2014 if costs continue to rise, but it also makes him a recipient of government assistance (welfare for the middle class?). There is also a max for cost sharing that is added on top of this. To get the credit, as a married couple, you must file jointly.”
“I also see employers, especially small employers, having a great incentive to drop health care coverage and allow the worker to pick up insurance elsewhere. Admittedly, without pre-existing conditions, this will be much easier.”–Gregory
*Undocumented workers continue to contribute to Medicare and other taxes but will not be allowed to take advantage of health insurance.
*There is no provision to help lower the cost of your health care. In the wake of Anthem Blue Cross raising its price a mere 39% to its California customers without explanation in a year when it made record profits, I find this hard to swallow. Most of the cost savings are directed at Medicare and Medicaid. It cuts $500 Billion to Medicare payments in the next 10 years. In other words it is asking physicians and hospitals who see elderly, disabled and low income patients to see them for less money. This is due to a formula called the Sustainable Growth Rate which was adopted in 1977. However, in 2001 the cost of health care started to go up dramatically, not due to physician pay which was stable but due to big pharma and the insurance industry. The formula indicated that physician reimbursement should be cut dramatically. Congress has overridden those cuts as doctors opt out of Medicare but that only means that the reimbursement has been stable for over 15 years while the price of seeing the patient has increased. It costs me a certain amount of money to rent an office and pay for staff and supplies. I can not tell the land lord or my staff that they will not get more money from me for the next 10 years-their cost of living is increasing too. There is no such device restricting what insurance companies or pharmaceutical companies make, so during the last 15 years when physicians have made less and less, insurance and big pharma have made record profits. For that reason, even if the drastic cuts to physician salary had gone through; health care cost would have continued to rise at the same rate. The cuts are taking aim at the wrong sector of health care. When I left the job I recently left, it was because the cost of doing medicine had outstripped the profits and the group I worked for financially collapsed. This is the second time I have had that happen to me during my career. When this happened the group I was with did not take Medicare because the cost of seeing the patient outstripped the reimbursement in that area. Factoring in inflation and the increasing cost of running a practice, the recent Medicare cut is not 21.2 percent but a cumulative 83 percent over 2001 profits for physicians. Texas Med The group I joined is doing Medicare, but in the wake of this bill it is now discussing dropping Medicare for the same reason-it costs more to see the patient than it pays. You can see where this is going I am sure. The question is whether these cuts to Medicare will stay or be lobbied out of the bill in subsequent low profile bills that get passed later.
*No public option. It is hard for me to get excited about this given that the public option was so wimpy. Less than 1% of Americans were going to be able to take advantage of it. Yet, even that wimpy public option could not get through Congress and the thought that 1% of Americans might opt for a government run vs a market driven health care system disturbed the tea-baggers to the the point of violence. Still Rep Alan Grayson has a bill that would allow people to buy into Medicare at cost. (HR 4769 The Public Option Act) Kind of a commercial version of Medicare. The act already has 50 cosponsors. You can encourage your representative to cosponsor the act here.
*Death threats and threats of violence. Really? What in this bill could stir anyone’s emotions to the point of violence? At best this is a milk toast reform. Get a hold of yourself for God’s sake!
5. Timeline for Health Care
If you are as confused about the dates when things happen as I was you will probably find this listing useful.
How the health care bill shapes up
Here are effective dates of major provisions of the health care bill:
Within a year
• Would provide a $250 rebate this year to Medicare prescription drug beneficiaries whose initial benefits run out.
Within 90 days after enactment
• Would provide immediate access to high-risk pools for people with no insurance because of pre-existing conditions.
Six months after enactment
• Would bar insurers from denying people coverage when they get sick.
• Would bar insurers from denying coverage to children with pre-existing conditions.
• Would bar insurers from imposing lifetime caps on coverage.
• Would require insurers to allow people to stay on their parents’ policies until they turn 26.
2011
• Would require individual and small group market plans to spend 80% of premium dollars on medical services. Large group plans would have to spend at least 85% on medical services.
2013
• Would increase the Medicare payroll tax and expand it to dividend, interest and other unearned income for singles earning more than $200,000 and joint filers making more than $250,000.
2014
• Would provide subsidies for families earning up to 400% of poverty level, currently about $88,000 a year, to purchase health insurance.
• Would require most employers to provide coverage or face penalties.
• Would require most people to obtain coverage or face penalties.
2018
• Would impose a 40% excise tax on high-end insurance policies.
2019
• Would expand health insurance coverage to 32 million people.
Sources: Speaker of the House, Congressional Budget Office, Kaiser Family Foundation; MCT. Journal Sentinel
Another helpful link was thing interactive website by Christian Science Monitor:
6. Ode to Unwelcome Guests
As long time readers know I am a fan of Lyn Gerry’s podcast Unwelcome Guests. After 5 years of broadcast and over 500 two hour shows, Unwelcome Guests has gone silent recently. I have been unable to find out why. If anyone knows what happened or if Lyn needs some assistance please contact me. I miss the show and I hope that she is well and will return eventually.
2 comments
with my taxes, yet it does me no good at all.
What I chiefly object to in the language over this bill is two major things.
It does not “insure” 32 million Americans. It forces them to buy things they can’t afford. It doesn’t give them “health care” either. It forces them to buy a fraudulent promise from known fraudsters.
Forcing people to purchase insurance coverage is not the same as providing people health care. It only perpetuates the fraud and abuse by people who do nothing but shuffle paper and money to a whole new level. Over the coming years, many Americans are going to find out just exactly what that means.
Otherwise, why not just enact these provisions all at once?
The Democrats achieved the greatest policy blunder in a generation, that’s why. They did nothing to actually take care of people. And enacting the provisions of this bill all at once would have made that crystal clear.