Government-Run and It Works!
Published on September 3rd, 2009 @ 11:20:14 am , using 503 words
Nicholas Kristof in today's NY Times reminds us of health programs that actually work. He argues that we have government-run fire departments, police, education, libraries, postal service. etc. Why so many people keep parroting the failure of government to do good things for the people is a form of hysteria. Take a look at this and tell us what you think. BP
Take the hospital system run by the Department of Veterans Affairs, the largest integrated health system in the United States. It is fully government run, much more ?socialized medicine? than is Canadian health care with its private doctors and hospitals. And the system for veterans is by all accounts one of the best-performing and most cost-effective elements in the American medical establishment.
A study by the Rand Corporation concluded that compared with a national sample, Americans treated in veterans hospitals ?received consistently better care across the board, including screening, diagnosis, treatment and follow-up.? The difference was particularly large in preventive medicine: veterans were nearly 50 percent more likely to receive recommended care than Americans as a whole.
?If other health care providers followed the V.A.?s lead, it would be a major step toward improving the quality of care across the U.S. health care system,? Rand reported.
As for the other big government-run health care system in the United States, Medicare spends perhaps one-sixth as much on administration as private health insurers, although the comparison is imperfect and controversial.
But the biggest weakness of private industry is not inefficiency but unfairness. The business model of private insurance has become, in part, to collect premiums from healthy people and reject those likely to get sick ? or, if they start out healthy and then get sick, to find a way to cancel their coverage.
A reader wrote in this week to tell me about a colleague of hers who had health insurance through her company. The woman received a cancer diagnosis a few weeks ago, and she now faces chemotherapy co-payments that she cannot afford. Worse, because she is now unable to work and has to focus on treatment, she has been shifted to short-term disability for 90 days ? and after that, she will lose her employer health insurance.
She can keep her insurance if she makes Cobra payments on her own, but she can?t afford this. In her case, her company will voluntarily help her ? but I just don?t understand why we may be about to reject health reform and stick with a dysfunctional system that takes away the health coverage of hard-working Americans when they become too sick with cancer to work.
On my blog, foreigners regularly express bewilderment that America may reject reform and stick with a system that drives families into bankruptcy when they get sick. That?s what they expect from the Central African Republic, not the United States.
Let?s hope we won?t miss this chance. A public role in health care shouldn?t be any scarier or more repugnant than a public fire department.
Nicholas Kristof
NY Times , 9-3-09


