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How to Achieve True Health Care Reform
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
(Peter Beilenson, MD, MPH) --
As the 2008 presidential election approaches,
many policy wonks and advocates are
pontificating on how best to achieve true
health care reform in the United States.
So here are some of my thoughts on the
issue!
Although organizations with which
I have been associated have primarily been
advocating universal health coverage—and I
have become known for supporting the same goal
for over a decade—I have come to the
conclusion that campaigning predominantly for
health care for all is not the most effective
route to political success in reforming the
American health care system. Now, don't
get me wrong—I still believe, passionately,
that access to health care is a fundamental
human right---I just think there may be a more
direct way to reach this goal. What
brought me to this fundamental change in
approach is the following fact. Despite
widespread, bi-partisan support for universal
health coverage, as evidenced by poll after
poll over the past decade, we actually have
almost 33% more uninsured Americans today than
we did at the time of the Clinton
Administration's failed health care reform
effort of 1993 (47 million vs. 36 million,
according to the U.S. Census Bureau). If
the public truly felt strongly about this
issue, certainly politicians would have
responded by now. Yet, not only
have there been no serious federal proposals to
reduce the number of the uninsured—in fact,
the current Administration has done everything
in its power to make it harder to obtain health
coverage for the most vulnerable among us, with
very little public outcry.
The
problem, paradoxically, is simply that too few
Americans (less than a fifth of us) currently
lack insurance. So, although many more
are worried about the potential of losing their
coverage (i.e. that their employer may drop
coverage, or they lose their job), not enough
are directly affected by lack of health
coverage to overcome the natural human fear of
change. In other words, the devil they
know (the current health care system with all
its many faults) is better than the one they
don't (some type of untried health care
reform). Thus, the continued attempt to
achieve universal health coverage as the
primary goal of health care reformists is
doomed to continued failure.
I
believe that the way to true health care reform
is to re-frame the issue to one that affects
virtually all Americans—addressing runaway
health care costs. There are several
major reforms that would save significant
amounts of money and dramatically increase the
quality of care given: a) promoting
health information technology—which will
dramatically decrease duplication of tests and
procedures; b) value-based purchasing—a new
idea where there would be economic incentives
to purchase medications, screenings, or
procedures that are less costly but more
effective than other commonly available
alternatives; c) strong efforts to address the
obesity epidemic and tobacco addiction, which
contribute to much of the burden of preventable
conditions; d) changing the payment structure
of Medicare to both allow for negotiated
prescription drug pricing and to pay physicians
for episodes of care rather than
fee-for-service; and e) probably the most
important source of savings: affordable
health coverage for all! The
Commonwealth Fund, one of the most respected
health care-related foundations in the country
estimates that these and a handful of
additional reforms could save approximately
$1.5 trillion (with a "t") over the next ten
years. These savings would allow for a
dramatic slowing of the expected inexorable
rise in health care costs over that
period. Tying these reforms together as a
cost-saving package would potentially
accomplish what hasn't truly happened to date:
the development of a strong, loud public outcry
for health care reform, with universal health
coverage the most important byproduct.