Lost opportunity
A remarkable thing just happened in the people's party. Democrats have chosen a candidate, in the year 2008, who does not have a plan for universal health coverage. Barack Obama caresses the words "universal coverage" almost hourly, but his proposal offers nothing of the kind — unlike the plans of Hillary Clinton, John Edwards and other Democratic hopefuls.
Most striking, the man who showed such timidity on health care became the hero of ardent progressives. So forgiving was their love of Mr. Big that they virtually abandoned what should have been the Democrats' most potent promise: medical coverage for all.
This is political opportunity lost. In a new CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll, 49 percent of registered voters list the economy as their No. 1 issue, with the Iraq war second at 19 percent. Health care comes in a close third at 14 percent.
Make no mistake: A universal health-care system is an economic as well as social imperative — the idea that in a rich country, no one should go without medical care. The lack of one hurts Americans' ability to compete with foreigners whose governments have controlled national health-care costs and achieved better average medical outcomes through their national
systems of universal coverage.
So how are voters to compare the health-care proposals of Obama and presumptive Republican candidate John McCain?
McCain proposes tax credits for families to buy their own coverage. This is not the freshest of ideas, though he does call for federal aid to help states cover sick people rejected by private insurers. McCain opposes a mandate requiring everyone to get health insurance.
And so does Obama. He would insist that all children have health coverage, but not adults. As he said during the recent campaign, "Sen. Clinton believes the only way to achieve universal health care is to force everybody to purchase it."
Thing is, a system based on private coverage that doesn't force everyone to participate is, by definition, not universal.
What happens is that the young and healthy don't bother buying in. (They figure that they can always glom onto a taxpayer supported program, should they face a medical crisis.)
The inevitable result is that the government programs fill with expensive patients, while the hearty souls — who in any coherent system subsidize their sick neighbors — get to sit on the sidelines. This is a disaster in the making.
The logic of Obama's argument isn't great, either. His line about Hillary forcing people to buy insurance was followed by this: "And my belief is, the reason that people don't have it is not because they don't want it but because they can't afford it." Well, if his plan makes health insurance affordable, why can't everyone afford it?
For the record, McCain also vows to make coverage affordable for all. And although his more free-market approach to health care can't possibly deliver on this (without spending a lot more than he says he will), the McCain vision stands on a sturdier reality.
The best idea is to enroll all Americans
in Medicare. This would be much simpler and administratively cheaper than either the McCain or Obama (or Clinton) plan. As it now does for the elderly, Medicare would pick up most of the hospital and physician bills for everybody. An expanded Medicare would free businesses from the burden of providing medical care to employees and their kin.
Obama's health-care plan looks like a back-of-the-napkin scribbling by someone who didn't care all that much but needed something. How curious that out of the smoke and drama of the Democratic race, there emerged a "candidate of change" whose health-care proposal is not universal, much less bold.
Froma Harrop, 05.06.08
Most striking, the man who showed such timidity on health care became the hero of ardent progressives. So forgiving was their love of Mr. Big that they virtually abandoned what should have been the Democrats' most potent promise: medical coverage for all.
This is political opportunity lost. In a new CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll, 49 percent of registered voters list the economy as their No. 1 issue, with the Iraq war second at 19 percent. Health care comes in a close third at 14 percent.
Make no mistake: A universal health-care system is an economic as well as social imperative — the idea that in a rich country, no one should go without medical care. The lack of one hurts Americans' ability to compete with foreigners whose governments have controlled national health-care costs and achieved better average medical outcomes through their national
systems of universal coverage.
So how are voters to compare the health-care proposals of Obama and presumptive Republican candidate John McCain?
McCain proposes tax credits for families to buy their own coverage. This is not the freshest of ideas, though he does call for federal aid to help states cover sick people rejected by private insurers. McCain opposes a mandate requiring everyone to get health insurance.
And so does Obama. He would insist that all children have health coverage, but not adults. As he said during the recent campaign, "Sen. Clinton believes the only way to achieve universal health care is to force everybody to purchase it."
Thing is, a system based on private coverage that doesn't force everyone to participate is, by definition, not universal.
What happens is that the young and healthy don't bother buying in. (They figure that they can always glom onto a taxpayer supported program, should they face a medical crisis.)
The inevitable result is that the government programs fill with expensive patients, while the hearty souls — who in any coherent system subsidize their sick neighbors — get to sit on the sidelines. This is a disaster in the making.
The logic of Obama's argument isn't great, either. His line about Hillary forcing people to buy insurance was followed by this: "And my belief is, the reason that people don't have it is not because they don't want it but because they can't afford it." Well, if his plan makes health insurance affordable, why can't everyone afford it?
For the record, McCain also vows to make coverage affordable for all. And although his more free-market approach to health care can't possibly deliver on this (without spending a lot more than he says he will), the McCain vision stands on a sturdier reality.
The best idea is to enroll all Americans
in Medicare. This would be much simpler and administratively cheaper than either the McCain or Obama (or Clinton) plan. As it now does for the elderly, Medicare would pick up most of the hospital and physician bills for everybody. An expanded Medicare would free businesses from the burden of providing medical care to employees and their kin.
Obama's health-care plan looks like a back-of-the-napkin scribbling by someone who didn't care all that much but needed something. How curious that out of the smoke and drama of the Democratic race, there emerged a "candidate of change" whose health-care proposal is not universal, much less bold.
Froma Harrop, 05.06.08
Etiquetas: USA health
1 Comments:
FREE NOTES ABOUT HEALTH IN DEMOCRATIC USA PRESIDENTIOAL ELECTIONS
(Obama vs Hilary)
You know, Ted Kennedy said that he is confident that we will get universal health care with me as president,” Obama said. “And he's been working on it longer than, I think, anybody.”
…
Hillary. Healthcare. Hillarycare. Ring any bells yet, folks?!? Maybe I lived on some other planet in the early 90s, but I seem to remember Hillary having been placed in charge of healthcare reform once before, and having completely screwed the pooch on that one. Seriously, we're talking about a chihuahua with a 14-inch wide sphincter limping away from Hillary's offices with a grimace on its little face and a red cross tatooed on its belly.
…
Please, someone explain this to me. Given the truly epic catastrophe that Hillary caused the last time she was in charge of healthcare reform, why on God's green Earth would Obama even think about giving her the same job again?
…
On health care, Obama defended a plan he says would make insurance affordable to everyone who wants it, but not require everyone to buy it.
….
Families who lose coverage will be expected to enroll in another plan or be assigned one. For the few people who refuse to pay, the government will help collect back premiums with interest and collection costs by using tools like the ones it uses for student loans and taxes, including collection agencies and wage garnishment.
(Recolhido de diversos jornais, revistas e blogs)
_____________________
… anybody understand?
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Summarizing and concluding:
“THE TRUTH IS THAT NEITHER THE OBAMA PLAN, NOR THE CLINTON PLAN, GUARANTEES "UNIVERSAL COVERAGE" FOR ALL AMERICANS, ALTHOUGH THEY BOTH ASPIRE TO THIS GOAL.”
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