Mike Folkerth - King of Simple

Western Colorado’s own Humorist / Economist

Get Real Americans! You Have Been Ripped Off!

Todays post is one submitted by reader Mary Pitt. While just yesterday I wrote a column that asked the question, “Where do we get the money to pay for Universal Health Care?” I received only one answer.

My reason for putting up this column is to remain open to others ideas. I’m a numbers guy and will comment on this post. I encourage you to do the same, Pro or Con, let ‘er rip and keep the tone civil, use facts and logic and we may work this out.

by Mary Pitt

At long last, the age-old problem of health care for the poor and near-poor is being discussed in open forum. The problem has existed since the ethos of class differentiation was begun with the invention of wampum. In this modern age, it is only through the acivities of individual greed that it continues, despite the glaring fact that one solution is the only alternative.

Mitt Romney’s Massachusetts experiment has already been exposed as a failure as will be any other program for “mandatory insurance”. As with the assistance that is provided to the elderly holders of policies for Medicare Part D, recipients of the plan must be totally destitute in order to be free of the required “deductible and co-payment” muddle. Even if they have “insurance coverage” they still cannot afford the cash outlay that is necessary in order to obtain the necessary treatment.

How, then, to be sure that even those who are marginally above the “poverty level” can have the health care they need? How do we care for those who are ill before the condition creates a crisis? How to keep the healthy in good condition so that they can continue to lead productive lives?.

Half a century ago, a good businessman named Henry Kaiser joined other automobile and equipment manufacturers in ceasing the making of their former product in order to make the needed equipment that the country needed in order to effectively engage in World War II. He built huge shipyards on the West Coast and people poured in from all over the beleaguered nation to work in them. Soon it was apparent that these folks were physically devastated by the medical neglect, malnutrition, and other maladies inflicted by the Great Depression. The absenteeism troubled him until he reached one infallible conclusion: “It is less costly to keep people healthy than to get them well once they become ill.”

On that philosophy he built his own clinics and hospitals where employees of his operations could receive physical check-ups regularly, necessary medications, dental care, and visual examinations and treatments. A small amount was deducted from the paychecks of the workers and Kaiser workers bcame healthy, happy, and productive. Only later did the Bess Kaiser Memorial Hospital system become the largest Health Maintenance Organization on the West Coast. With the end of the war and the closure of the shipyards, the program became open to other employers on a group plan, though only those who were employed by such an employer could benefit from the total coverage, the excellent care, and the reasonable cost. With the advent of other, similar companies, Kaiser became just another HMO in order to deal with the competition.

But the principle that was discovered by Henry Kaiser remains as true now as then. Even with the S-CHIP program, small chidren must either attend or miss school while suffering from an ear infection or a bad cough while his working father, mother, or both, must wait for a payday so they will have the necessary nine or ten dollars to make the “co-payment”in order to see a doctor. Employees go to work feeling ill but “toughing it out” because they cannot afford to risk a hospital stay for fear of the “deductible” and its devastating effect on the family budget. What we have is not working and the plans that are proposed will not work. The news site, Alternet, has done a good series on the problem which may be read here. http://www.alternet.org/healthwellness/.

There are many arguments from those who oppose the Universal Health Care plans as proposed by Dennis Kucinich and others. One is that it would raise taxes. Horrors! Have you computed the amount that you pay in insurance premiums each year? The insurance companies have been “taxing” you for half a century and you take it in stride. The added taxes to cover your health care would not be likely to be more than you are paying now to the insurance company and the coverage would be better.

Another is that it would “destroy an industry”. Perhaps an unfeeling industry should be brought to account for the exhorbitant profits that they have amassed as the result of denying care, requiring co-payments and deductibles to deter people from fully utilizing their benefits, and refusing coverage to “high-risk individuals”. Let them go back to insuring lives and property, cars, houses, and business liabilities.

The third argument against free universal health care is that it would cost too much. This argument is the least effective when viewed in the light of realism. The insurance companies declare an annual profit of some Ten Billion Dollars! How many of the 40% of Americans without adequate health care could be kept healthy by the addition of that amount to be paid to physicians, hospitals, and pharmacists?

It is time that the American people take a clear-eyed look at the reasons why our children are being weakened, our workers hindered, and our elderly going without medications at the end of the year because of the dread “donut hole”while we bear the burden of making the rich even richer. We manage our personal budgets with care to be sure that we spend our money in the most efficient and cost-effective manner. Why should we ask less of those firms that are stealing our health care dollars while leaving us without that for which we are paying? As they “cream the market”, insuring only the healthy and discontinuing coverage for those with serious illnesses, those left uninsured must liquidate their homes and other assets to pay for their own medical care until they are destitute and qualify for Medicaid and welfare.

That is why our nation, which spends more for health care than any other can only rank 45th in the quality of care. Those who can afford it have access to the most modern technology and life-saving procedures where those who cannot are left with medical care that is reminiscent of the nineteenth century. This is the great shame of our vaunted democracy where we expound that “all men are created equal”. The big lie is exposed when you learn that the rich get the best while the poor are shunted aside to die of neglect. When a plan is suggested that would care for the poor while costing the rich no more, we owe it to ourselves to give it serious consideration.

The author is a very “with-it” old lady who aspires
to bring a bit of truth, justice, and common sense
to a nation that has lost touch with its humanity in
the search for societal “perfection.”

 
Comments
1.
On December 27th, 2007 at 8:33 am, Mike Folkerth said:

Mary,
The Kaiser story is semi-correct, but was set in another time.

Mr. Kaiser was the corporate elitist that many complain about today. He was charging the government for the tab along with his contract to build war ships. Nearly all of Mr. Kaiser’s fortune was made with government contracts including Grand Coolee dam.

The healthcare system that bears his name was in no way Mr. Kaisers idea, but rather a doctor Sidney Garfield. Kaiser was obligated under Workers Comp to provide care and Garfield found a way to accomplish it. Mr Kaiser never founded any principals and nearly drove Kaiser Permanente to bankruptcy.

In the beginning, the workers paid 5 cents per day for their insurance and the company paid $1.50 per month.

In 1944 some 90% of Americans could not afford fee based medical care.

Please provide me with the list of the 44 countries that have higher quality healthcare than the U.S.

The government has never run anything efficiently. Our tax collection system is an arcade fear based horror. The cost of collecting taxes is nearly 50% of the revenue.

Why then, would we think that this same federal government could manage healthcare?

I want a better more affordable healthcare system and have studied the problem for years.

The countries who have care for all, are all grasping for solutions to their inadequacies and spiraling costs.

So yes, we need change, but government is not the answer.

2.
On December 27th, 2007 at 5:41 pm, Billyb said:

Something I do not understand about the way people think in our society, our nation. Most, if not all of the people who write on your blog and many others are not the wealthy upper 1%.

Most surely must know that we have gone from the healthiest country (physically and economically) on the planet into debtor’s prison status. They can’t no know this!!!

So why do we as a nation (obviously a majority) keep believing that more government is the answer? That more government will get us out of this 50 trillion dollar mess they have gotten us into? And that if we keep voting for the same status quo (they exist in all party affiliations) popular candidate, the onslaught of even more government will be our salvation?

I realize I am missing something, just cannot put my finger on it.

3.
On December 27th, 2007 at 7:38 pm, Mike Folkerth said:

Billy Bob,

The connection that is missing, is the relationship of the underlying economy to government provided programs.

Without the economy, nothing is possible. The governments income stream will begin to dry up and tax based programs will suffer.

Our economy can’t grow fast enough to pay for all the CURRENT programs, let alone national health care. We have to cut government spending first, THEN deal with other issues.

We have gone to the well one too many times and we are about to pay the consequences.

If a person thinks that government is the answer, they have no idea what the question was.

4.
On December 27th, 2007 at 8:04 pm, TaxSlave said:

“Another is that it would “destroy an industry”. Perhaps an unfeeling industry should be brought to account for the exhorbitant profits that they have amassed as the result of denying care, requiring co-payments and deductibles to deter people from fully utilizing their benefits, and refusing coverage to “high-risk individuals”.”

That sounds like an indictment of an insurance industry gone mad with government regulation that pays them and protects them from competition along with a court system that encourages a lawsuit for every bad outcome.

But your solution is unfeeling towards me, the patient, and my doctor, a man whom I respect. I pay him man-to-man, and your solution would send a bureaucrat with a gun to separate us, prevent us from dealing privately, and tell him who he must serve and for how much.

As Mike points out above, your prescription has already been applied in too many other sectors of the economy, and now the government cannot tax or print the money to pay for it. So if you get your way, doctors will quit rather than work for substandard pay, with substandard equipment, giving substandard care. Those who are left will not be the kind of doctors or the kind of system I want to depend on. And that modern technology and life-saving procedures you mention? All progress on that will wither and stagnate as well. The brain does not invent at the point of a gun.

Go ask your doctor what he (or she) thinks of HMO’s. Ask him what happened to quality of care when they were instituted. And ask him what he thinks will happen when lazy, incompetent, evil, slothful, cruel bureaucrats (of the government kind, worse than the ones they already have) take them over. The problems we have now are the result of government interference. Shall we give the patient a gallon of poison after a teaspoonful made him sick?

Thanks for your kind invitation to join you, Mike.

5.
On December 28th, 2007 at 1:20 am, redsecoy said:

The real answer to our health care problem is an American non profit group to get involved. It seems that the super rich of America are spending big dollars and time on better health care for other countries. Maybe some of these philanthropic types just are not aware of the huge problem right here in America. If they were more aware maybe they could give fund raisers,concerts, for their fellow Americans. The only way the government should be involved is by stopping the pharmaceutical companies from raping us.

6.
On December 28th, 2007 at 7:24 am, Mike Folkerth said:

Tax Slave
I do understand when people want more affordable healthcare, but then government has made our healthcare unaffordable with induced inflation.

So even in my wildest search for an answer, can I think that Government is the answer to anything.

I have spent hours with my doctor talking about the problem. He is an adapt economist and returned to Harvard for a year to study medical economics.

The math for total access to the highest level healthcare possible, is impossible. So your point that socialist healthcare would devastate the quality of our system is accurate.

We could all share equally in a bad system.

I lived and worked in Sweden for a period of time back in the late 60s. When it comes to actual knowledge of socialism, I’m armed and dangerous. Thanks for joining the group.

7.
On December 28th, 2007 at 7:34 am, Mike Folkerth said:

Good Morning Red,

How are things in Alaska? Government regulation, taxation, inflation, liability requirements, physicians requirements, and general bureaucratic oversite has raised the cost of medical care in the U.S. to a point that few people can pay for their own care.

The advent of organ transplants, complex surgery, prosthetics, and an endless list of other advances, has also added to the affordability issue.

The drug companies spend years in research and testing mandated by the FDA to bring a drug to market, that may never work out or pass.

For all of those who think that we should buy our drugs in Canada, I think they should only buy those drugs developed by Canadians.

The drug companies do make too much money. Why? The screwed up Government system of Medicare pays for those excesses without question.

So how can a government program be the answer to anything?

What do you think? Leave a comment.

Please Register First by entering a username and email address. Your password will be emailed to you, then you can login to leave comments. Thanks, Mike

You must be logged in to post a comment.