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A Moment for Real Reform

by: Jonathan Alter  |  Newsweek

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President Obama, leaving a meeting with representatives of doctors, insurance companies, hospitals and drug makers last week. Advocates of health reform worry that Congress and Obama may soften their proposals to meet the demands of the health care industry. (Photo: Getty Images)

    Now is not the time to compromise on health care.

    The latest buzz on President Obama's health-care plan is that the White House is in über-pragmatic mode. Their favorite cliché is that we shouldn't let the perfect be the enemy of the good. Something, we're told, is better than nothing.

    Well, maybe not. At the very least, that shouldn't be the administration's negotiating position going in. Here the New Deal experience on health care might be instructive.

    In 1933, Franklin Roosevelt told his Labor secretary, Frances Perkins, that he believed in "cradle-to-grave coverage" under a public insurance model. But he asked Perkins to wait a couple of years before he introduced Social Security. First, he wanted Perkins to build support for it by traveling around the country.

    That turned out to be a sensible strategy. Even though the original 1935 Social Security Act displeased a lot of New Dealers because it didn't cover farmers or domestic servants (essentially excluding blacks), it was a start - and about the best that could make it through Congress at the time.

    But on health care, FDR punted. We don't know why, but I have my suspicions. The Roosevelts' first-born son, James, was married at the time to the former Betsey Cushing, one of the legendary Cushing sisters of Boston, famous for their beauty and class (Betsey was later married to Jock Whitney and her sister, Babe, married William Paley). Their father was Harvey Cushing, arguably the most eminent doctor in the United States. Cushing had invented many surgical techniques and enjoyed wide respect.

    Like other doctors, he loathed the idea of national health insurance. One day, he went to the White House to dine alone with President Roosevelt, and that was the last anyone heard of health care being included in Social Security. Harry Truman tried it in 1948 and got beat by the AMA. LBJ had partial success with Medicare, but Nixon, Carter and Clinton were all stymied.

    A big reform this year is likely, but a half or quarter loaf won't cut it. If Congress rejects a public option - the only real way to control costs - and Obama goes along, a great moment will have been lost. Moving toward universal coverage and ending discrimination against those with preexisting conditions are important, but they will expand costs, not restrict them. "Comparative effectiveness" studies and electronic records are no panacea, as Yale's Theodore Marmor has shown. The problem is the very insurance model FDR pioneered. For all the nice cooperative comments on Monday at the White House, the excessive costs in the system are directly connected to the huge profits of the health-insurance industry and the nation's hospitals, even those that are ostensibly nonprofit.

    So reform without a public option isn't terribly meaningful. And the costs of modest reform are high, not just in dollars but in lost opportunity. It will be quite a while before the country has the appetite to confront this issue again. This time, the perfect or near perfect (there is no perfect, not even single payer) should, at least temporarily, be the enemy of the good, because the merely good isn't good enough.

  

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Comments

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Amen. Take it all the way to

Amen. Take it all the way to undiluted single payer, or why bother. Why is it that in this 'democracy' the majority can't get what they want, and need?

Because giving people what

Because giving people what they want isn't always in the best interest of the nation. Just because I want a pony doesn't mean I should get one. Hey, in Germany 1933, the majority wanted Adolph Hitler, and they got what they wanted.

That was the reason that

That was the reason that Senator Ron Wyden gave for voting for Medicare D-that something was better than nothing. I didn't agree with him then & I still don't. Nothing would've been better than an alleged drug insurance program that cannot use the weight of large numbers of covered individuals to obtain better prices, that leaves people without coverage for part or most of a year (the famous "doughnut hole"), that ostensibly wasn't going to discourage the private sector from continuing to offer coverage (i.e., former employers of retirees) but of course and very predictably has had just that effect and let's not forget what a nice GIANT subsidy it's been for Big Pharma. And has Congress revisited Medicare D in any way but to wring its hands with "how expensive these entitlements are getting"! NO. A 1/4 of a loaf is it. Medicare D isn't being revised to make it better--for the public who uses it. Let's start talking about how expensive those "entitlements" (of a global power) of war & the military defense complex are--and how really, it's just more then the US can afford. Yes to single payer national health insurance, no to anything that includes the private health insurance industry. If the rich want to pay for private health insurance, fine, but that should be in addition to paying in to an insurance pool that covers EVERYONE and that everyone pays into.

Amen again. It is the only

Amen again. It is the only way that we can all be covered economically and fairly. The new sliding-scale charges are fair enough and should continue to protect the people now on medicaid, thereby balancing the State inputs as well as being fair to all. The notion that medicine is a profit-making venture is obscene. I have no problem with Drs and other providers being paid fairly. I do have a problem with out-of-control insurance companies. And if you think that they will control either their own profits or medical costs, I have a bridge to sell you. There is also no reason for the single-payer system to avoid reasonable deductibles, again on a sliding scale basis. ONE BUREAUCRACY IS ENOUGH.

The reason that things don't

The reason that things don't happen the way they should in a democracy is that the corporations control too much and have too much money. As Obermann said, " Break up the Trusts". It's time the corporations were held accountable and that the CEO's were held accountable and if they mislead and commit fraud, they go directly to jail and all their assets are sold off and used to pay down the debt.

If only sick people went to

If only sick people went to the doctor, we wouldn't have this AMA wealth disparity. We don't like the industry? We can't effectively vote it away? Well, how about we take a healthier lifestyle and dump the sick care folks? Sure, they're needed for a lot of things, but they're is no elbow room in they're offices. Many people go for check ups that are unnecessary. I have gone to doctors that could have told me a simple remedy over the phone. I see that as a rip off. Herbs do a far better job of healing than does anything humans devise. I have cured the incurable more than once in myself. Mostly reactions to the polluted environment and substandard foods. Maybe we should get smarter than the dummies that lead us.

"Hey, in Germany 1933, the

"Hey, in Germany 1933, the majority wanted Adolph Hitler, and they got what they wanted." Actually, the majority of Germans never wanted Adolf Hitler. Hitler's Nazi Party never managed to get a majority in the Reichstag. Hitler had to resort to passing an "enabling act" to get the Reichstag's authority overriden. As for getting rid of healthcare, well, the big HMOs and pharmaceuticals more or less "own the place" just as Wall St. bankers do. Barring major changes, universal health care will not be a reality.