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Public Option Waffling Enrages Left Wing

By Ken Terry | Aug 18, 2009

Now that the Obama Administration has signaled its willingness to back off from a “public option” and accept nonprofit cooperatives in its place, the left wing of the Democratic party is going ballistic. Former Vermont Governor Howard Dean has said reform is dead without the public option, and Ariana Huffington recently wrote on the Huffington Post that the Administration’s retreat on the public option and on having the government negotiate prices with the drug companies means that reform has already died.

Caught between this “progressive” backlash and solid conservative opposition to the idea of a public option, President Obama and Congressional Democrats, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, say that they still support a public plan. But it’s clear, as Sen. Kent Conrad (D-ND) pointed out last weekend, that there aren’t enough votes in the Senate to pass it.

What version of the coop idea will garner enough votes to be adopted as part of reform legislation is far less certain. A coop could simply be a consumer-owned insurance company, or it could be a group-model HMO in the mold of Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound in Washington State. In either case, however, the coop approach faces big obstacles, including building provider networks in markets dominated by the private insurers. Even if a coop could gain traction, there’s no reason to think that it would have any impact on the growth of health costs.

The same is true of the public option. As embodied in current House and Senate bills, the public plan would neither contain costs nor create additional competition for the big insurance companies. The crucial missing element: the bills would not compel doctors and hospitals to be in the public plan network as a condition for Medicare participation. Unless the government can force physicians to participate in a public plan and to accept Medicare rates, as I have noted before in this space, the public plan will be unable to undercut private insurers on price. It will have to negotiate rates with providers, and it will try to pay out as little as possible on claims, just as private insurers do.

In its original form, the public option was never about competing with the private plans on a level playing field. It was a bone thrown to the supporters of a single-payer system, which has otherwise not gotten a hearing in the health-care reform debate in Washington. And the disappointment of left-wingers at the President’s backtracking on the public option can be traced to their hope that it would eventually lead to a single-payer system. In fact, when John Edwards ran for President, promoting a healthcare agenda very similar to the current Democratic one, his campaign said, “Over time, the system may evolve toward a single-payer approach if individuals and businesses prefer the public plan.”

That’s not going to happen under the current political regime. It’s not just because of the power of the insurance and drug lobbies—although they certainly are having an effect. It’s because Americans are not ready for a government takeover of healthcare.

So it’s time for the progressive allies of reform to face the fact that they’re not going to get what they want. But that is no reason for them to pick up their marbles and go home. If they are farsighted, they will realize that the reforms now being advocated in Washington, while far short of what we need, will advance us on the road toward real reform, which will require an entirely different kind of government intervention.

Ken Terry, a former senior editor at Medical Economics Magazine, is the author of the book Rx For Health Care Reform. follow all BNET Healthcare posts on Twitter.

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  •  
    1

    Ann Malone RN

    08/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Public Option Waffling Enrages Left Wing

    RE "there aren?t enough votes in the Senate to pass it....

    It?s because Americans are not ready for a government takeover of healthcare."

    I am compelled to rescind my comment posted earlier today thanking Ken Terry for his work. I made that comment b/c his articles that I have read over many months have been unbiased and very informative--an unusual (these days) and useful combo. But this article is loaded with bias as evidenced by the sentences quoted that are totally opinion at this point in time but that Mr. Terry presents as fact.

    Creating an improved Medicare-like public option that is OPTIONAL is not synonymous with "a government takeover". BNET readers are not stupid.

    Very disappointing; readers expect better from Ken Terry and from BNET.

  •  
    2

    c.marasco

    08/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Public Option Waffling Enrages Left Wing

    But it?s clear, as Sen. Kent Conrad (D-ND) pointed out last weekend, that there aren?t enough votes in the Senate to pass it.

    Kent Conrad speaks for himself and maybe 6 other Senators. And his mathematical skills are in doubt. He recently admitted that co-ops probably won't bring the cost savings everyone wants.

    As for telling progressives to realize they're not going to get what they want, there is no reason to think that 1/3 of a loaf is better than no loaf at all. Howard Dean is correct in saying that a public option component makes reform meaningful; anything else just tinkers around the edges and we're left with the same abusive insurance system. What do you tell the 20k+ people who die every year and those who suffer medical bankruptcies? We'll fix it later. Don't worry; be happy.

    Furthermore, equating a public option with "government takeover of healthcare" is a Republican talking point. While you're happy to tell progressives to take what they get and don't get upset, what about those who say "no government takeover of healthcare and, by the way, keep your hands off my Medicare"?

    This is an extremely poor article that insults its readers.

  •  
    3

    fcharding

    08/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Public Option Waffling Enrages Left Wing

    ?So it?s time for the progressive allies of reform to face the fact that they?re not going to get what they want.?
    The most casual look at our history will confirm that this nation was not founded by nor has it ever been elevated by persons who chose to ?face facts?. If we are lucky, the progressives will persevere and if we are very lucky they will prevail. This debate is not just about reforming the Health Care Insurance Industry this is also about saving it. Before; like our (free market?) Automotive and Financial Industries, it collapses under the weight of its own hubris and greed.
    Francis C. Harding,CLU,ChFC,CIC

  •  
    4

    thunder121

    08/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Public Option Waffling Enrages Left Wing

    However healthcare evolves, our government needs to
    stay out of my relationship with my physicians.
    Decisions about my physical and mental welfare are to
    be a sacred province between him/her and me. Same
    goes for my home, bedroom and kitchen.

    I believe that significant mistrust of government is the
    single most prominent obstacle to any reform of
    anything in this country. A mistrust that has been
    earned over decades. The plundering of Social Security
    Funds, Watergate, a BJ in the Oval Office, a "wide
    stance" in the mens room, Acorn, a separate health plan
    for those in government, pork, pork and more pork. Add
    to that a clearly demonstrated attitude from Congress,
    House of Representative members and their leaders of
    "we know what's good for you" continues to be the order
    of the day.

    Washington needs to clean up their act and demonstrate
    that they know for whom they work. As it stands for
    now, I pray for many many pink slips to be dispensed by
    the american public in 2010.

    Norman T. Erwin
    Affinity Healthcare

  •  
    5

    Ken Terry

    08/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Public Option Waffling Enrages Left Wing

    My post does not equate a public option with a government
    takeover of healthcare, as Ann Malone suggests. But there is
    no doubt that many progressives hope that it will lead to a
    single payer system. Based on a number of polls I have seen
    over the years, I do not believe that the American public wants
    the government to run the healthcare system. By making the
    public option the ne plus ultra of reform, progressives are
    providing fuel to the opposition, which preys on Americans'
    distrust of their government.

    But that is not the main point of my column. The point--similar
    to one made by Steve Pearlstein yesterday in the Washington
    Post--is that the public option, as embodied in current
    legislation, would neither reduce costs nor provide real
    competition to the insurance companies, because doctors and
    hospitals are not required to participate in it.

    I might add that, even if the insurance companies were
    thoroughly tamed and no longer made excessive profits, the
    challenges we would face in making our system affordable and
    accessible to all would be nearly as great as they are now.
    Let's start dealing with the real issues!

  •  
    6

    hygro1

    08/24/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Public Option Waffling Enrages Left Wing

    THe "public-option" is a trojan horse that will lead to eventually single-payer system as progressives would ideally like to acheive. By a subsidized option -- not income taxes, Congress idctating pricing, and covering the losses with tax dollars, eventually all employers and individuals won't will get a subsidized deal and no private insurer will be able to compete. Remember the cost of insurance will have to increase as the high cost patient (per-existing condition, unhealthiest patients, etc.) will now come onto the books.

    Holding Medicare up as a model of what we aspire to is very disingenuous. We have a significant deficit and costs out of control with Medicare -- doesn't anyone remember the massive deficit it is running?? But also remember that more than half of Medicare patients have supplemental Medigap policies that cover the deficiencies of Medicare. Medicare Part D, one of the most liked parts of Medicare sold through an exchange, adminsitered by private pharmacy benefits managers -- it is NOT a single payer system -- it is a confederation of public, private and regulations. But most providers find they can't cover their costs at Medicare rembursement, with constant private sector "cramdowns" on reimbursement. 40% of new or switching Medicare patients can't find a primary care doctor that will serve them.

    TennCare or MassCare have shown how single payer/government managed healthcare has led to massive deficits that have to result in some rationing. The only way that E.U. single payer programs have been able to afford their national healthcare is the implementation of a 10% Value-Added Tax on all transactions. They are cramming down all provider pricing and are now closing government operated services, cutting cancer therapy (NICE in U.K).

    We are a victim of demographics and lifestyle -- there are not enough healthy young people to cover the cost of the massive baby boomers at peak healthcare consumption -- so we will force the young to buy insurance effectively taxing them.
    We are also victims of sloth and gluttony (plus smoking). Massively expensive but preventible diseases such as Type 2 Diabetes, strokes and coronary heart disease, certain cancers are the major cost drivers.

    We can do plenty of cutting around the edges, but a single payer healthcare will result in another massive entitlement program that we have proven we can't control -- Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, Government employee health programs are ALL massively financed by taxpayers. Hate to be cynical but it is like the definition of insanity -- repeat the same behavior over and over again and expect a different outcome. Government entitlements have ALL had the same outcome of massive deficits, out of control costs and eventually decrease in benefits.

  •  
    7

    Alex0725

    08/27/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Public Option Waffling Enrages Left Wing

    Medicare-Broke?Medicaid-Broke?Social Security-Broke?enough said

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