SEARCH
Sick in America? You’re on Your Own |
|
![]() |
|
Rose Ann DeMoro, executive director of the California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee (CNA/NNOC), knows what ails the nation’s sick health care system. The AFL-CIO Executive Council member says Republican presidential candidate John McCain’s health proposals don’t even come close to a cure.
In this crosspost from Huffington Post, DeMoro dissects McCain’s health care plans and finds they are “grounded in the failed health policies of the Bush administration.” She says McCain’s health care slogan should be, “Don’t Get Sick in America, or You’re on Your Own.”
With all the fireworks over health care in the Democratic primaries, John McCain’s health care views should be considered in the context of the tanking economy.
Household mortgage and consumer debt now add up to an unfathomable $12 to $13 trillion, and millions of American families are faced with foreclosure of their homes.
Even before this meltdown, one in six insured Americans were having “substantial problems” paying their medical bills, not to mention the 47 million with no health coverage and little prospect of getting it.
The constellation of foreclosures and staggering consumer debt with unpayable medical bills is a chilling prospect. The 1930s images of soup kitchens and Hoovervilles come to mind. We might have to start talking about McCainvilles with his open embrace of market-based approaches that will offer little relief to those staring into the abyss.
Nowhere is that more evident than in his health care proposal, which is grounded in the failed health policies of the Bush administration and its advocacy of market-based schemes like high-deductible health savings accounts.
McCain’s main health care ideas are increased corporate competition to supposedly limit rising costs and tax credits to encourage the uninsured to buy insurance. Neither will do any more than perpetuate the dismal status quo.
Once-a-year tax credits mainly help the healthy and well-off, the same people who benefited from the Bush tax cuts he supported. Those who need coverage most will still be unable to afford premiums that now average over $12,000 per family, not including skyrocketing deductibles, co-pays, drug and hospital charges, and other fees.
McCain’s view that increased competition will constrain costs is equally suspect. Under the stewardship of a market friendly administration the past decade, premiums have jumped 87 percent, far outpacing inflation and wage increases. Insurance companies don’t compete by delivering more care or lowering prices. They compete by harvesting more customers and slashing their costs.
The most extensive assessment of McCain’s record has been compiled by the AFL-CIO which warns that his plan “undermines existing employer-based health care and pushes workers into the private market to fight big insurance companies on their own. It will reduce benefits, increase costs and leave many with no health care at all.”
How does it do all that?
First, the small tax credit he proposes is insufficient to cover the current or future cost of premiums. Individuals will bear a greater burden for their health care costs, encouraging more to face financial distress while also worrying about their job, mortgage or rent, or they will self-ration needed care.
Second, McCain wants to promote the selling of insurance policies “across state lines,” code talk for deregulating existing protections that a number of states have established to set some minimum standards in quality and benefits. The inevitable consequence would be to undermine current standards and reduce quality coverage and public protections. Deregulation, of course, is always about the third word out of the mouths of Republicans and their neo-liberal Democratic counterparts.
Third, McCain says he wants to “eliminate the bias” toward employer-sponsored health benefits, by cutting tax advantages employers receive for offering coverage. It’s not hard to guess where this will lead—a tsunami of employers dropping their health coverage and pushing their employees into the private market to fend for themselves.
Fourth, his advocacy of health savings accounts, a boondoggle created by Bush that primarily benefits wealthier and healthier people and, of course, the banks and other financial institutions. By siphoning off that population, HSAs deplete funds for other insurance risk pools, which then have a higher concentration of sicker and lower-income people—yet more encouragement for those insurers to further jack up their charges, pricing more people out of access to care.
Finally, nothing in McCain’s approach stops the disgraceful abuses intrinsic to the insurance-based system, including the routine denials of needed medical care and refusal to assure coverage to people who are sick or have pre-existing conditions. The insurance companies will continue to make out like bandits, while the fraying of the social safety net grows and ever more people are abandoned.
To sum it all up, the McCain campaign could just as well use these simple marketing slogans for their plan: Don’t Get Sick in America, or You’re on Your Own.
6 Comments
Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.











or who can forget?
“The immediate goal is to make sure there are more people on private insurance plans. I mean, people have access to health care in America,” he said. “After all, you just go to an emergency room.”
George W. Bush on Health care in America
or better:
The Bush Universal Affordable Health Care Act:
All persons, regardless of age, sex, race, or income will, for a nominal fee, be issued a Band-Aid, two aspirins, a Tums, A wallet-size card illustrating the Heimlich Maneuver, a recipe for chicken soup, and a leech.
All should be contacting the candidates and ask them to seriously look at single payer health care. 387 union locals, and 33 state
AFL-CIOs have endorsed HR 676. Come January ‘09, it could be the same business as usual…
Endorse H.R.676
I read almost every article that I can, regarding health care. I am 54 years old and retired from state service. I lost my health care insurance shortly after retirement. I lost it because of affordability.
I agree with everything that you have written. And it is a sad commentary for our country when the people who have given so much to this country that we cannot even see a doctor.
My personal opinion is that everyone in America should cancel their health insurance tomorrow. Take the money away from the insurance companies and the health care industry itself and I guarantee something will be done when the fat at the top starts to get hungry. I say this as a radical idea, because I see no way of correcting the present mess without collapsing the whole thing and starting over.
But as you have written, this may occur anyway.
I have just been looking at the HR 676 site and found the article by Dr. Howard Green. He has the only sensible solution to the rotten medical insurance problem: a major house cleaning and streamlining the whole system. The FDA, big pharma, private health insurance programs and greedy malpractice lawyers have made a nightmare of the system and the Obama, Clinton and McCain health care ideas are only putting a band-aid on a bloody and infected wound…. http://www.hr676.org
Do Obama or Clinton support HR 676 or is Ralph Nader the only candidate who supports single payer? If we are serious about health care reform, we’d be strongly endorsing HR 676 and Ralph Nader for president (as the CNA did in 2000 and all unions should do in 2008).
McCain and CLinton have mandates, in other words you WILL buy health insurance. OK, if you are unemployed or homeless, how in the world do buy insurance when you have no income? You don’t comply, are they gooing to incarcerate you?
Granny http://www.hr676.org is a very good site, try
http://www.healthcare-now.org
HR 676 has been endorsed by 389 union organizations in 48 states
including 97 Central Labor Councils and Area Labor Federations and 33 state AFL-CIO’s (KY, PA, CT, OH, DE, ND, WA, SC, WY, VT, FL, WI, WV, SD, NC, MO, MN, ME, AR, MD-DC, TX, IA, AZ, TN, OR, GA, OK, KS, CO, IN, AL, CA & AK)
Please join AFL-CIO President John Sweeney for an exclusive, free conference call next Tuesday, March 25, at
8 p.m. EDT. President Sweeney will discuss the Health Care Survey results, our broken health care system and the next steps to win health care reform that works for everyone.
Time to tell Sweeney that HR 676, single payer health care; The national Health Care Act is the solution, not the band -aid they seek.