This is a letter to editor I recently published:
>'Rather than listen
to all the misinformation being bantered about by politicians regarding the
American healthcare system, I strongly suggest that everyone simply read the book “An American Sickness- How Healthcare Became
Big Business and How You Can Take It Back” by Dr. Elisabeth Rosenthal. It is
available in the Warren
public library. As both a doctor and investigative reporter, Dr. Rosenthal
offers a meticulously researched account of how healthcare in this country has
metastasized into a system which, as she states “…has stopped focusing on
health or even science. Instead it attends more or less single-mindedly to its
own profits.” She then backs up that
claim with example after example of how hospitals, drug companies, insurance
companies, individual doctors, and administrators have gamed the system to
maximize profits-often knowingly to the detriment of patient care. This
unfortunate deterioration started long before Obamacare or whatever new plan
the Republicans come up with. In fact, one economist in the book, Glenn
Melnick, states that “It (healthcare) is now so dysfunctional that I sometimes
think the only solution is to blow the whole thing up.” That is the exact same quote I hear from some
of the most experienced healthcare workers I talk to right here in Warren. So if anyone
genuinely wants the facts regarding American healthcare rather than ignorant
sound bites, please read the book and encourage whatever lawmaker you support
from either party to do the same.'<
..............and some other reflections:
A recent tweet by a mother outlining the
$200,000 plus hospital bill for her sick son exposed several things about the
American healthcare system, and wealth distribution in general. Since 1982
the wealthiest 400 people have increased their worth from a collective 80
billion to 2.4 trillion. One of them, Warren
Buffett, admitted in a PBS interview that a proposed version of the Republican
health care bill would reduce his tax bill by $679,999, or 17%. His worth according to Forbes is over 75 billion, on which he paid a 16.3%
tax rate in 2016...............and some other reflections:
That tax on people with incomes over $200,000 is currently helping pay the
subsidies for Obama care. At the same time many Insurance companies’ stock price and profits have
gone up despite their having dropped out of certain markets,
raised premiums and diversified their businesses. So there has been a lot of money
moved around over the last 35 years, some of it to the middle and lower
classes in the form of entitlements and much of it to the rich.
As for the mother
and her son, his hospital stay required about a third of the $679,999 of Mr.
Buffet’s tax payment, which he freely admits he does not need. The mother paid a
$500co-pay. As a society the decision becomes whether to give the wealthy-both individuals and corporations- their money back or
save the kids life. Because as a people we have decided to save infants
at all costs without having a clear system to pay for them , the life and
death decisions have shifted from the mother-who if she did not have insurance would have
watched her child die-to the rest of us. The inefficiency
in the health care industry contributes to the dysfunction, but so do 90 year olds who receive extensive lab tests and recurring hospitalizations. Do they deserve to have all their bills paid, or should we refer them to priests
instead? Is a premature infant who would die within hours without receiving a million dollars of care worth the expense? Should corporations and individuals pay for that level of care or should nature be allowed to take
its course? Those are the realities this country-and individuals- have not been
able to reconcile, and meanwhile we debate and debate and move money around
without really solving
anything.