UNDERNEWS

Undernews is the online report of the Progressive Review, edited by Sam Smith, who covered Washington during all or part of one quarter of America's presidencies and edited alternative journals since 1964. The Review has been on the web since 1995. See main page for full contents

February 9, 2008

REALITY CHECK: THE FAKE DEBATE OVER HEALTHCARE

FAIR - At the end of an unusually long editorial headlined "The High Cost of Healthcare," the November 25 New York Times dismissed the idea of publicly funded universal healthcare, which all other industrialized countries use to provide medical treatment to all of their citizens while spending much less per capita than the U.S.

Framing a public health insurance system as a sentimental lefty dream, the paper's editorialists wrote that "deep in their hearts, many liberals yearn for a single-payer system." But single-payer, the paper assures us, is "no panacea for the cost problem" and has "limited political support."

Knocking down the straw man that single-payer would solve all healthcare problems isn't much of an achievement; while advocates point out that single-payer systems in other countries cost far less than the U.S.'s profit-dominated healthcare industry, the main benefit they point to of universal health coverage is that it would provide everyone with healthcare.

But the idea of "limited political support" is worth examining, because readers might be misled into thinking that means that single-payer is unpopular. To the contrary. On the rare occasions when they're questioned about it, the public seems to like it; asked in a September 2007 CBS poll, 55 percent of Americans preferred a single-payer system that would be administered by the government, with taxpayers footing the bill. Just 29 percent would keep things the way they are. So when the Times says single-payer lacks "political support," they actually mean it lacks "elite support"-too bad they don't say what they mean.

Actually, on healthcare, corporate media often say what they don't mean. When Massachusetts announced a plan to mandate health insurance for its citizens, this was widely described as a "universal" program. But the Massachusetts plan enacted by then-Gov. Mitt Romney was a requirement that all citizens (with some exemptions) obtain health insurance or face penalties, based on "the false assumption that uninsured people will be able to find affordable health plans," as critics Steffie Woolhandler and David Himmelstein noted. "A typical group policy in Massachusetts costs about $4,500 annually for an individual and more than $11,000 for family coverage. A wealthy uninsured person could afford that-but few of the uninsured are wealthy."

That requiring coverage is not the same as providing it ought to be obvious. But media have so muddied the conversation with indiscriminate use of the term "universal" that such basic facts are obscured. Thus a December 5 New York Times article, which commendably explained that "mandates rarely achieve 100 percent compliance," could still refer to Massachusetts having "enacted universal coverage," before noting, in the next sentence, that a substantial portion of the public remains uninsured. If a plan that leaves many without healthcare can be described as "universal," perhaps the Times believes the country already has one?

Advocates of publicly funded healthcare, despite their numbers, have always faced an uphill fight in elite media where obeisance to the for-profit insurance industry is an unspoken given. The resulting "debate" resembles the old joke about the man who looks for his keys under the lamppost - not because he dropped them there, but because that's where the light's better.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Health insurance is nothing more than having someone else pay your bill. Having tax payers pay by force and arms is wrong.

We should go back to no insurance. Each pays his own way.

If the government controls payment, it will control treatment. I would rather not get treatment because I could not pay than have a government official deny me treatment even if I could pay. Under a government system to control cost, the government must deny service to someone. That will be the elderly or severely handicapped, because there will be an economic decision made as to whether the treatment is worth the future tax paying ability of the individual.

This is tyranny of the majority, and it is wrong. The majority is greedy and wants others to pay the bills, so they can have their money, their medical care, but they are losing their Rights of Life, Liberty and Pursuit of Happiness.

God have mercy on us.

June 30, 2009 7:52 PM  

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