We Can’t Wait Until We Can Afford It

June 19, 2009

It looks as if health care reform is going to cost $1.6 trillion over the next ten years. If that is not enough to scare the pants off you, think about all of the government programs that run hugely over budget. However, this cost does not mean we should not implement a public health care plan that ensures that everyone–that is, everyone, EVERYONE, not just most people–has an adequate health care plan. This is something we need to do, as much as we needed to invade Afghanistan and Iraq. When something must be done, you start doing it.

How many families would get started if women waited until they could afford to raise children to get pregnant? Nobody, except the very rich, can afford to have children. Parents do not wait until they can afford children; they have children and stretch their means to raise them.

This is what the United States must do, now. We must implement a universal health care system and then go about finding the means to support it.


World’s Best Health Care System

June 18, 2009

It is really aggravating when people claim, without stating their basis, that the United States has the World’s Best Health Care System. In the first place, this is just cheerleading. No matter what school it is, the coach and the student council president will proclaim “We’re number one” at the Friday night pep rally. It doesn’t make any difference if the school is U.S.C. or Eastern West Virginia Polytechnical Institute, which hasn’t won a game in any sport since an opponent was disqualified during the Carter Administration. Depending on how the different countries’ health care is measured, the United States’ is undoubtedly better that Zimbabwe’s, but whether it is better than Sweden’s or Canada’s or France’s is less sure. Furthermore, the quality of the care is beside the point for 100 million uninsured and underinsured U.S. residents. They don’t get it.

Secondly, the United States does not have a “health care system.” We have a medical service industry. Then we have a health insurance industry that rations medical services based on insured status and rakes off 15 or 20 per cent. If we really had a system, one third of the nation would not lack adequate health care.

We need a public health care system like Medicare that everyone can buy into at a reasonable price. Medicare has been a wonderful success, despite all the criticism from the political right, the American Medical Association, and the health insurance industry. There are problems, but they are manageable and susceptible to reform.

Health insurance executives are whining that they cannot compete with a public health care system. What better argument could you find in favor of establishing it? They cannot compete because a public system would be fairer, more efficient, and less expensive than the private insurance industry. These executives are like muleskinners a century ago whining that the internal combustion engine will put them out of business. True, but is that a reason to outlaw gasoline?

We need an inexpensive public alternative to private health insurance. That it will hurt the insurance industry is no excuse for leaving 100 million Americans without adequate health insurance. A fair health care system is a fundamental part of the social infrastructure. It is time to fill that void in the United States.