Saturday, July 9, 2022

More important than our circadian rhythm: Creating a society that is safe and has health care for all

The New York Times, in addition to covering world and local news, has a lot of “feature” type news, generally appealing to educated, urban, and often higher income people, especially in New York, who are a large percent of its readers. Obviously its Arts coverage reflects the enormous NY arts scene, but also frequently seems to be more in-depth, designed to appeal to an even smaller group. Similarly, while its health coverage often includes news and opinion pieces on the social inequities in health care, on community risks (such as gun violence), and on policy issues, it also includes pieces aimed at what might be called “individual health self improvement”, sometimes involving new(ish) research.

An example is the recent front-page piece on “Circadian Medicine”, that reports on research about following our “body clocks” to get the greatest health benefits from how we do things like eat, exercise, etc. It starts with a look at the effort to move toward permanent daylight savings time and how this affects our personal and work lives.  Of course, this is ultimately a sociocultural issue; the amount of light and dark each day is unchanged, but the question is when our particular area decides to do things. Farmers and ranchers, for example, do not work based upon the time it says on the clock. If we wanted to, we could work from 9 to 6 instead of 8 to 5 rather than changing the clocks.

What is actually more important about this piece, to me, is that it goes on to emphasize how individuals can (possibly) improve their health by choosing the correct time of day to do their health-inducing activities. It is thus yet another effort to look at what each of us can (provided we have the education, autonomy, money, and time) do to make our individual selves healthier. Maybe. Such emphasis is not wrong per se (except, of course, when it is wrong, as has been, for example, our obsession with taking vitamin supplements when we are not vitamin deficient, as see F. Perry Wilson on Medscape, “It’s official: vitamins don’t do much for health”). The real issue is that it is a distractor, in that it focuses upon something that is perhaps slightly beneficial for some people (or not) but will not have a major impact upon the health of the public or the populace, taking our attention away from focusing on the very many major serious things that do have a significant effect upon the health of the public, and that we, as a people, could do something about.

 Like what? Let’s start with some data that should be scary: Among wealthy countries, the US is the only one that has seen a leveling-off and decrease in life expectancy, as reported by “Our world in data”. I have reported on this trend several times previously (Lower life expectancy in the US: A reflection of racism, classism, and social inequity April 29, 2022, Decreasing life expectancy in the US: A result of policies fostering increasing inequity, November 29, 2019) and examined some of the various proposed explanations. Case and Deaton, among others, suggest that the increase in the death rate (particularly among less affluent whites) are “deaths of despair”, mediated through the use of substances (alcohol, tobacco, opioids and other drugs). No doubt these are major contributors, but there are also others. One that has many people very concerned, as it should, is the ubiquity of gun violence in the US. This is a major contributor to death rates in populations such as young males, where suicide and homicide are very important causes of mortality. Most of us can reel off the names associated with major episodes of mass shootings, especially school shootings like Columbine, Sandy Hook, and Uvalde, but these are the tip of the iceberg. An interactive story in the Times documents the 63 “mass shootings” (four or more people shot) in May 2022 alone, and there were 65 in June, and 25 in July -- and as of only July 8 when this was published! And this does not count the many more deaths where “only” one to three people were killed! In the wake of Buffalo and Uvalde, Congress finally passed a very weak gun law. It did break an impasse, but in the minimal amount of restriction it places on gun ownership and carrying, it reinforces the idea that “America is a gun”, as in Brian Bilston’s poem. Any other country with only one major mass shooting has reacted much more dramatically and effectively. While articles continue to appear, such as the Op-Ed of Patti Davis describing the reaction (in her) and lack of reaction (in the nation) to the shooting of her father, Ronald Reagan, 41 years ago, we still are in thrall to the gun lobby and to folks who truly believe that they are at risk if they don’t have and carry guns that they make it easy for those who are going to create major violence and death.

And what about when we get sick? We – Americans – are as a group less able to access care than people in those other countries because we don’t have universal health insurance or access. Dr. Aaron Carroll, in an Op-Ed on July 7, emphasizes the impact of health insurance deductibles, noting that it is not just the uninsured but the underinsured, for whom deductibles are a major obstacle (along with other inappropriately-designed out-of-pocket payments) who suffer from not being able to access medical care, especially in time. The numbers that he cites for deductibles, and for co-payments and co-insurance, are amazingly high, as is the impact that it has on the health of those affected. For example, “The good news is that the A.C.A. limits these [out-of-pocket expenses] in plans sold in the exchanges. The bad news is that they’re astronomical: $8,700 for an individual and $17,400 for a family,” and for people in Medicare drug plans “a simple $10 increase in cost-sharing, which many would consider a small amount of money, led to about a 23% decrease in drug consumption.”


The fact that it is the Medicare drug plan (Part D) that is cited here is not coincidental; it, along with both Medicare Advantage (Part C) and the newer REACH (formerly DCE) program implemented by CMS (the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services) are the portions of the Medicare program focused on providing profit to investor-owned companies rather than health care to American seniors. A recent report by the Urban Institute on Geographic Predictors of Medical Debt, in Health Justice Monitor, shows, unsurprisingly, that those areas with the highest concentration of poor, uninsured and underinsured people, and people with chronic diseases have the highest level of debt. And the lowest level? Those areas with the highest concentrations of people over 65. This, of course, is the only part of the general US civilian population that has essentially universal health insurance, despite the efforts of the programs above to decrease or dilute it. Although this seems worth mentioning, the Urban Institute did not; maybe they thought it was obvious.

But in this country nothing is obvious to most people and needs to be pointed out.  This includes our legislators, federal and state, to whom often the only thing that seems obvious is who is contributing to them. With all respect, we need to be focusing less upon our body clocks and circadian rhythm and more on the things that made a real difference in our nation’s health.

We need to decrease the availability of semi-automatic guns with high-capacity magazines. We need government policy focused upon creating well-paid, good-benefit jobs that will decrease “deaths of despair” rather than maximizing corporate profit. And we need high-quality universal coverage and access to health care for all our people. What we do not need are more programs like Medicare Advantage, Medicare Part D, and REACH that channel public tax dollars to private enterprises as profit.

What we do need, we needed long ago, and we need it now.


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