voiceofsandiego.org: James Goldsborough... Socialized Medicine?
an independent nonprofit |
Support This Service

Socialized Medicine?

By James O. Goldsborough



Wednesday, March 11, 2009 | Sixteen years after Bill and Hillary Clinton tried to create a health care system with universal coverage, Barack Obama is back at it. He wants to avoid the mistakes the Clintons made, but leaves no doubt his goal is the same: to bring down healthcare costs and create a system where all Americans have health insurance.

It's a tough time to introduce reforms more sweeping than anything since the New Deal. Banks are failing, markets collapsing, economies sinking, and Obama faces a deficit higher than anything since World War II. But it is that very crisis, throwing people out of work and leaving them without health care, that creates the urgency, he says. He thinks Clinton waited too long after his election. Relying on a 67 percent approval rating and large majorities in Congress, he wants to get the job done this year, which will be tough.

James O. Goldsborough

The ugly fact is that health care costs and coverage are worse in America than in any other industrialized nation. At $8,160, we will spend twice as much per capita this year as the average industrialized nation, and even at that have 47 million people uninsured. The problem is not the quality of our professionals -- medical students come from around the world to study and work here. The problem is the system itself.

For 40 years, the medical, pharmaceutical and insurance lobbies, strong supporters of the Republican Party, have found ways to block any move beyond universal health care coverage for seniors, or Medicare. The GOP opposition is not hard to understand: A survey last year by the Harvard School of Public Health showed that two thirds (68 percent) of Republicans believe the U.S. health care system already is the best in the world, compared to only 32 percent of Democrats who hold that view.

It's not hard to guess which party's supporters have better health care coverage.

Obama has an advantage: The wretched Bush presidency delivered him a mandate Clinton never had. Obama is FDR to Bush's Hoover. Still, just as Lyndon Johnson needed time and bi-partisan support to pass Medicare in 1965, so will Obama need both to succeed. Though public support for Medicare (69 percent) in 1965 was as high as it is for universal coverage today, the AMA lobby was strong enough to defeat the Medicare bill when it first came to a vote under Kennedy in 1962. Despite the Johnson landslide of 1964, it took Congress another 19 months to pass the bill.

People who've always had good jobs, good insurance and good doctors have rarely supported universal coverage. But with people losing jobs and insurance and with medical costs rising at twice the rate of inflation, attitudes are changing. Our existing system has too many moving parts, too many middle men and fee takers, excludes too many people and relies too much on employers, putting on them a direct burden that foreign competitors don't have. The U.S. auto industry is an example.

Since the health care debate began seriously after World War II, the question has always been how to do it. The arguments against universal coverage have not changed: Quality will slip, costs will rise, waiting times will grow, rationing will be introduced and Washington bureaucrats will pick your doctor for you.

None of those things need happen if the changes are done right. I've lived and worked in two nations with universal coverage, France and Great Britain, and observed how each system evolved slowly, building on existing practices, until they achieved wide popular support. France, which has the top health care system in the world according to the World Health Organization, created its system over many years.

When I first began working in France in 1965, only the employed, their families and retirees were fully covered. Before I left a decade later, the self-employed had been added to the system, and it took several more decades to extend the system to all residents, including the unemployed. Calling it socialized medicine misses the point that coverage is in part financed by a payroll-tax on employers and employees, with funds funneled through private insurance companies.

One effect universal U.S. coverage could have is a fall in doctors' salaries. For general practitioners (family care), the average U.S. doctor's salary in 2005 was $140,000. In Britain it was $102,000, in Italy $60,000 and France $50,000. For Obama to succeed, especially given the size of budget deficits now anticipated, he must deal with costs. Hillary Clinton admits today that costs were a central reason the Clinton plan failed 15 years ago. Obama's plan addresses costs with a variety of proposals, including taxing the wealthy and reducing payments to insurers, drug companies and hospitals. Congress will need to look carefully at his numbers, and Obama, unlike Bill Clinton, has invited Congress to improve his plan.

For the plan to work, it must follow the formula that has worked in other countries, that is, build on what already exists. For a country our size, you can't start from zero. That means using proven parts of our existing system. Examples would be Medicare, the federal workers insurance programs and the veterans' health care system with some 1,000 government-run health facilities around the nation.

Massachusetts introduced a state-wide universal health care system two years ago with elements that resemble Obama's proposals. Obama calls for a public insurance program to compete with private insurers, one that requires employers either to contribute to their workers' coverage or to the cost of the public plan. Such an idea borrows both from the French and the Massachusetts systems.

Done right, there's no reason America can't do what every other modern nation has already done. We've bucked the tide up to now, but rising costs and diminishing coverage are proof that our jerry-built system needs rebuilding before it collapses

James O. Goldsborough has written on foreign affairs for four decades, both from the United States and abroad, where he worked as a foreign correspondent for The New York Herald Tribune, International Herald Tribune and Newsweek magazine for 14 years, reporting from more than 40 countries. Visit his website here. Submit a letter to the editor here.




16 Comments so far on this story...

When I hear people argue against universal health care and call it socialism I ask them what kind of country do you want to live in? Do you want to live in a country where people lose their life savings,and their homes to pay for medical bills? Do you want to live in a country where only the wealthy can afford health care? Do you want to live in a country where children die from a preventable diseases? So, what kind of country do you want to live in America?

Posted by zollner | reply to this comment
March 11, 2009 4:37 pm

I want to live in the country whose system has made it the world's engine for the advancement of humanity - developing life saving drugs, medical devices and operating procedures are just part of the long list of items America has either invented or perfected (from the car to the airplane to the computer to the internet..and FREEDOM...). As far as the above article, the data the author cites ignores the impact of illegals, immigrants from poor countries, the horrible diet of Americans and a host of other issue (including the "cost" in other countries of waiting for service or being denied service. yes, our system needs fixing. I don't think anyone has a good answer.

Posted by d | reply to this comment
March 11, 2009 7:05 pm

2 Questions 1. We do indeed have 45 million or more uninsured, a significant number of them young healthy adults who have opted out of coverage to avoid contributing to the premiums each month. The question is - once they all are covered, where are the providers who have been twiddling their thumbs waiting for these folks to get coverage? Are they out there waiting, or are we going to become like Canada, forced to wait months for critical care because of a shortage of providers, but unlike Canada, have no Southern neighbor where we can go for urgently needed care as a backup plan? 2. Countries with some form of Socialized medicine have extraordinarily low compensation for providers? How many readers would go to school until they are 28-31, depending on specialty, pile up 10s or 100s of thousands of dollars in debt to earn $50,000?

Posted by John Buesing | reply to this comment
March 12, 2009 2:30 am

No zollner, I would like to live in a country where people aren't afraid of liberty and are willing to take responsibility for themselves. The only thing that are government has been consistently good at over the years is bombing and killing. Do you honestly think that they are going to be any good at managing our health care? The biggest problem with the current system is corporate subsidization and the government created this problem. It seems as if the government sabotaged health care purposefully. Do you ever look at your health care bills? I mean besides your copay have you seen how they jack up rates for even the most trivial things? This is because of corporate subsidization of insurance. They do it because they can, plan and simple. The insurance industry needs to be radically changed, no doubt.

Posted by shawn1874 | reply to this comment
March 12, 2009 5:34 am

Kaiser Permanente has a good plan already up and running, and should be considered as a model for national health care. It wouldn't be so difficult to convert health care plans to a pay in advance system with variations of co-pays. The problem as I see it is the profit seekers in health care. And it may be unrealistic to give EVERYONE healthcare. Perhaps starting with everyone 10 and under, and as our generation phases out and the kids grow up the whole system becomes truly an all encompassing national plan. I think it's unrealistic to try to cover every American now.

Posted by John Taylor | reply to this comment
March 12, 2009 7:52 am

As far as Kaiser goes, Kaiser is not a model for anything except failure. Recently my gf took a headache class. The copay was only $20 but the bill was $500. The insurance paid $500 to the hospital just for her and 20 other people had the same bill. That is a lot of money for one nurse to give a class and hand out some brochures. Where do you think that this money comes from? Corporate and government subsidization of health care is ruining the industry. I have a solution. Allow ALL americans to pay for medical expenses tax free. Allow up to $10000 per year to be invested in an HSA by individuals and families. End all medical insurance plans. Require individuals to pay cash for non-emergency medical services.

Posted by shawn1874 | reply to this comment
March 12, 2009 11:54 am

Good idea. When you consider that a garden variety appendectomy can run a hundred grand, that 10K you mention would be a cool down payment and tax free to boot. How generous of you. I'll think of you next time I see some well dressed fop look the other way when a homeless guy asks for a quarter.

Posted by Vic | reply to this comment
March 15, 2009 10:41 am

Thanks for your insightful remarks. I am one of those 47 million citizens without insurance and it has bankrupted me. I worked for 25 years, paid extra on my mortgage monthly, saved 15% of my income for retirement, living comfortably but not extravagantly. Then the bottom dropped out. I lost my job and right after becoming unemployed, I got sick. I am now nearly 55 and will soon be destitute. I sold my home and used that money to live on and for medical care. When that ran out I had to tap my 401k and now my retirement is nearly gone. Today, I still owe over $240,000 in hospital bills. I will file for bankruptcy soon. To those who are against universal health insurance I ask: Who is paying for my health care? You already are!

Posted by Jim S | reply to this comment
March 12, 2009 8:25 am

ONE (and only one) interesting thing in Mr. Goldborough's typical retread of the daily talking points from the liberal blogosphere - that Dr. salaries are likely to fall. I would suggest that also means (UCSD, here is looking at you kid, along with California taxpayer dollars) that having medical education cost $40,50,60K a year is unsustainable under a model where GPs are making only 50K a year. It would mean that TAXPAYERS would have to MASSIVELY subsidize medical education because professionals earning less than elementry teachers can not sustain the average student loan burden MD's current have (estimated to exceed 300,000 this year).

Posted by CMR | reply to this comment
March 12, 2009 9:22 am

I hate to break it to you CMR but taxpayers are already subsidizing the cost of education. Why do you think it costs so much in the first place? Where do you think that any student gets their loans? Most of them are subsidized by the dept of education. As a result public institutions are free to pay their chancellors and other admins outrageous salaries, waste money at will, and jack up tuition rates whenever they wish.

Posted by shawn1874 | reply to this comment
March 12, 2009 11:50 am

I lived for over 20 years in a country with a socialized medical system. Since 1990 I live in the USA, and I can tell you that what you hear on the news about problems with socialized medical systems is simply a propaganda. Just like the "weapons of mass destruction in Iraq." I am a proud American citizen since 1995 and I would fight for the freedom of this country if necessary, but the image of socialized medical system and the Socialism itself portrayed by the media is simply grossly inaccurate and focus on negative extremes. It is a naive attempt by some political or special interest groups to scare the America people.

Posted by Marek | reply to this comment
March 12, 2009 1:30 pm

Elderly people who are terminally ill "have a duty to die," declared Colorado Governor Richard Lamm, (former) This is the current state of healthcare, Maybe it could use an upgrade to single payer.

Posted by bill0000 | reply to this comment
March 12, 2009 7:11 pm

OK, once more with feeling---Even the Kaiser's Germany had a comprehensive health care program for all Germans before WW1, and he was no warm and fuzzy socialist. It's about time we caught up with the enlightened age of nineteenth century autocracy where this subject is concerned. And as for former Colorado Governor Lamm, they should chisel the previous poster's quote on Lamm's tombstone when his time comes, preferably from lack of timely health care, so he can share the fate of so many other Americans who have no insurance---and no options, either.

Posted by Vic | reply to this comment
March 15, 2009 10:31 am

1. It appears that the US, over the last 8 years, has spent about 9 times more to cover just 10 percent of it’s population that countries such as England, France, and even Canada have spend to cover virtually 100% of their population. As well, it seems that privately run medical service providers can attribute about 30% of their operating costs to overhead, while government medical service providers can attribute only about 3% of their operating costs to overhead. In total expenditures for medical care? It looks as if all expenditures in the US about 300 percent greater (per person) than any other country in the world and our business and corporations suffer greatly under those costs. It makes sound economic sense in cost per unit to shift medical care away from the grossly inefficient private sector to the very effect government sector.

Posted by Gregory | reply to this comment
March 15, 2009 11:44 am

When bill and hillary tried to revamp the health care industry, their intention was to create a one system fits all. What they seemed not to realize was that insurance companies weren't going to allow a system in place to be knocked down and rebuilt without them. insurance is the 3rd largest financial system in the states. as such they wield a great deal of power. In New york, our health system is a little more just that most states, whether your an individual, self employed or unemployed, you cannot be discriminated against (www.nyhealthinsurer.com). yes you will pay high premium if you can afford to but at least you cannot be told no.

Posted by SimonB | reply to this comment
March 19, 2009 10:46 am

Sure, that would explain a lot. One the largest business political contributors and one of the strongest lobbying groups in Washington DC… the Insurance industry. Perhaps that could be one of the reasons groups such as AIG (they are an insurance group, no?) seems to be getting and to have gotten in the recent past, so much ‘restrictionless help.’ In Texas, it seems if you cannot pay for life support the hospital can unplug you. Rather makes the whole ‘right to life’ faux-Christian Conservative little Bo-peep demeanor seems hypocritical if you ask me. Guess who was in power in the governor’s house when that policy was put into place? Looks like the same person who was in charge of our National Government when they closed down (streamlined) some 40% of all VA hospitals in our country (2001-2006.) Walter Reed was just the start of that problem.

Posted by Gregory | reply to this comment
March 19, 2009 3:54 pm


Reader feedback
  • Users may post more than one comment, but should not pose as multiple users. Multiple posts from the same IP address but with a different user name on each will be reviewed to determine whether abuse has occurred.
  • Posts with overly personal attacks or unsubstantiated allegations may be edited or deleted.
  • Please be patient with the posts -- there may be a delay before they appear on the site -- and make sure to enter the code in the "image verification" box.
Post a comment
Name:
Email:
Comments:
Current Word Count: Verification Code
b7d15b1



MOST POPULAR STORIES:


Copyright © 2009 voiceofsandiego.org. All Rights Reserved.