I recently attended a talk by Paul Starr at the San
Francisco meeting of the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC). Dr.
Starr, a professor of sociology and public affairs at Princeton who is probably
most famous for his 1984 book “The Social Transformation of American Medicine”,
has recently written a new book, Remedy and
Reaction: The Peculiar American Struggle over Health Care Reform. His
talk was on the same topic, and was pretty good. He spoke without notes or
powerpoint (lauded by many as a display of great skill, but also meaning that
his “slides” are not available to those who were not present). His main
technique was to divide efforts to “do” health reform – essentially to cover
everyone – into a “play” of 3 acts. The first act, with several “scenes”, was
comprised of efforts during the Progressive Period around WW I, the New Deal,
and after WW II, to develop a National Health Insurance program. He noted that,
if the play had been written by a good playwright, the scenes wouldn’t have
been so similar – but they were, scuttled, at least in part at all three times,
by opposition from the American Medical Association. There were other issues:
in the first, the anti-German sentiment during WW I was attached to the fact
that Bismarck (in 1888) had developed the first national health insurance
system in Germany; in the 1930s, the Roosevelt administration chose to focus on
unemployment insurance and Social Security; in the late ‘40s, Truman’s efforts
were again seen as “socialist” during the early Cold War.
The
second “act” comprised the passage of Medicare and Medicaid in the 1960s, and
the third act the efforts for comprehensive health reform begun under President
Nixon, again attempted by President Clinton, and enacted in 2010 as the ACA
under President Obama. Starr spoke the day before the November 6 election, and
observed that if the Republicans won and, as planned, repealed ACA, 16 million
additional people who would have been covered by expanded Medicaid would not be
covered. Worse, he noted, if the Romney-Ryan plan to cut Medicaid expenditures
by $1.7 Trillion over ten years was put into place, another 35 to 40 million
people would lose coverage. Starr was a part of the core group who developed
the Clinton Plan in the early 1990s, so it is, I guess, not surprising that he
continued to exhibit a preference for that plan compared to ACA. He even argued
that it was really pretty simple, not something anyone who can remember those
days recalls. At the time, I remember a cartoon with two panels. The first,
labeled “The Democratic Plan”, showed someone at a black board covered with
complex formulas and “circles and arrows”. The second, “The Republican Plan”,
showed a stern man (older white man, of course) in a suit saying “Don’t get
sick.” Certainly, however, the expansion of health insurance coverage under
ACA, with individual mandates, Medicaid expansion (limited by state choice
given the Supreme Court decision), and support for private insurance companies,
is pretty complex itself.
This, however, is not why I say the talk was only “pretty
good”. The fatal flaw in Starr’s analysis is that he never mentioned the 30
million people who remain uninsured under ACA (or the probably comparable
number that would have been under the Clinton plan). This is inexcusable; for a
supporter of health “reform” not to even acknowledge this enormous population,
even by saying “well, it was the best we could get through Republican
opposition”, is hard to understand. Did he forget to mention it, or did he
leave it out because it might somehow weaken some of his other arguments? I
obviously don’t know, but it is not uncharacteristic of many political
“insiders” who get so involved in their own issues that they forget things that
are of great moment to tens of millions. Perhaps it is because the best, most
effective, and most cost-effective answer is a single-payer health system, and
that was something he and the other Clinton health planners rejected 20 years
ago off the bat, so he didn’t want to bring it up even now.
But the Obama victory on November 6, as much of a relief as
it was, as much of a deep breath that we can take to know that a majority of
the people were not taken in by lies, racism, and meanness of the campaign,
does not end the struggle, either for the ACA or those left out of it. Yes, the
election shows that America is no longer completely controlled by white men
(whose votes Romney overwhelmingly won; see Maureen Dowd, Romney Is
President, New York Times, November 11, 2012), but nearly half the country voted for
the Republicans. This included many who were not white men, as well as most of
the white men who voted for Romney despite his support for policies that would
be counter to their economic self-interest. And a huge swath of states, mainly
through the South, Plains, and Mountain regions, were bright red and have
governors and legislatures still staunchly opposed to “Obamacare” and in opposed
to Medicaid expansion in their states. And the people returned a significant
Republican majority to the House, who can be expected to do everything that
they can to limit the full implementation of ACA.
The Republicans opposed ACA, and opposed the individual
mandate that was the necessary condition required by the health insurance
companies to agree to key components of ACA such as guaranteed issue of health
insurance and no exclusion of people for having pre-existing conditions. Having
lost both the Supreme Court decision and the election (which means that the
Court is unlikely to have its more “liberal” justices replaced by
conservatives) it remains to be seen whether they will move toward support for
the mandate because it benefits one of their natural constituencies (read:
“contributors”), the large health insurance companies, or continue to oppose it
because of their principled (read: “mean spirited and selfish”) opposition to
everyone having health insurance coverage.
I fear that it will be the latter. It will not appear (at
least not often; there will be gaffes) as “we don’t think everyone deserves
coverage” but will be dressed in the guise of “fiscal responsibility”. “Deficit hawks” will tell us that we can’t
afford it, that we will fall off the “fiscal cliff”. In his November 12, 2012 New York Times piece, Hawks and Hypocrites, Paul
Krugman addresses this issue, and calls those who argue this position “deficit
scolds” because their warnings and suggested policies (mostly cut taxes
especially on the rich) don’t make sense. Rather, it is clear, their agenda is
to decimate and eliminate Medicaid, and Medicare if they could (or at least
privatize it, which will make it unable to cover seniors’ health expenses), and
preferably Social Security (if they could get away with it) and any other
programs that support the most, rather than the least, needy.
This is wrong (I was going to say “obviously”, but it is
clearly not obvious to many). It is not only wrong on the moral count, as was succinctly
presented by FDR, who said “"The test of our progress is not whether we
add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide
enough to those who have too little"; it is wrong economically. For
our nation and economy to grow, everyone needs to contribute, and to be able to
do that they need to be healthy and have good access to health care. I have
written about the “social determinants of health” (“Social determinants, personal
responsibility and health system outcomes”, September 12, 2010), but it is really a vicious cycle, in which
health and other social factors affect each other. Those social determinants,
including especially poverty, that lead to poor health also lead to difficulty
in getting a good education and getting a good job, thus repeating the cycle
for future generations. (A good example is that of “cold winter housing”,
discussed by the British Medical Association in "SocialDeterminants of Health: What Doctors Can Do” (link to pdf is on the right side of that page), and by me in “Michael
Marmot, the British Medical Association, and the Social Determinants of Health”,
November 1, 2011).
The right thing to do is also the economically prudent thing
to do. There is a “cliff” that we should be worrying about. It is not the
“fiscal cliff”, but the cliff face that so many people live too close to and
are in danger of falling off.*
*(See Camara Phyllis Jones’ “cliff analogy”, “Social Determinants of Health and Equity,
the Impacts of Racism on Health”.)
Congrats on your progress and I expect it is a trance.
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