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ED RENDELL’S HEALTHCARE HOAX (AND THE SINGLE-PAYER SOLUTION)
by Jerry Policoff Sun Mar 16, 2008,
Op-Ed News
With Pennsylvania Governor Ed
Rendell's Prescription For Pennsylvania all but dead in its
original form, his political allies in the State Legislature, led
by Todd Eachus, a member of the Democratic Leadership in the
House, seem intent upon salvaging what they can via an amended
bill they hope will pass the Pennsylvania House this Monday, March
17th. Gone is "Cover All Pennsylvanians," a title that was never
even remotely appropriate. In its place comes "Pennsylvania Access
to Basic Care" (PABC), an even weaker program that is being
baselessly hailed by its proponents as a "huge" step forward
toward insuring all Pennsylvanians.
Before examining the new Rendell/Eachus
legislative initiative and the accompanying full court press to
pass it – with an assist from predominantly favorable, even
sycophantic media coverage -- some background regarding the
original Rendell plan might prove helpful and enlightening.
STRANGE BEDFELLOWS
Governor Rendell unveiled
Prescription for Pennsylvania amidst much national and local
fanfare on January 17, 2007 in the spacious and historically
decorated conference room adjacent to his Capitol office in The
Harrisburg, Pa. State Capitol Building. "We can no longer stand by
while health care costs spiral out of control," he said at the
time, promising to expand "access" to affordable health care to
most of the "767,000 adult Pennsylvanians" who lacked health
insurance. That is the number of uninsured Pennsylvania adults the
Governor has cited ever since (though the number mysteriously
morphed down to 747,000 in the PABC initiative launched earlier
this week). It is a number the media has accepted virtually on
faith and seemingly never challenged, or questioned, but more
about that later.
There was something of a carnival
atmosphere in that large, yet surprisingly packed chamber that
day. The media was there en masse, but they were clearly
outnumbered. The room was virtually swarming with men and women in
business attire whose round colored pins identified them as
lobbyists, mostly from the health insurance and related healthcare
industries. The Governor also chose to have someone by his side on
the podium that day to share this historic moment with him. It
wasn’t another politician or some trusted aide, nor his wife, nor
some other loved one. It was Anita M. Smith, CEO of Capitol Blue
Cross, a major Pennsylvania Health Insurance company with
headquarters in Harrisburg. Although the Governor introduced Ms.
Smith to the assembled crowd very early in his opening remarks few
subsequent media accounts of the press conference mentioned her
prominent role at the Governor’s side. The media also took little
interest in the generous campaign finance support Governor Rendell
had received from the health care industry including well over $1
million in contributions to underwrite the $2.5 million cost of
his inaugural ceremonies held the same week he unveiled his health
care initiative. Such donations are not regulated by the State
Election Bureau because they are not considered campaign
contributions. Capitol Blue Cross, Independence Blue Cross,
Keystone Health Plan, United Health Group, Highmark Blue Shield
and the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center each contributed
$50,000 toward the inaugural festivities while Blue Cross of
Northeastern Pa,, GlaxoSmith Kline and Shire Pharmaceuticals
contributed a more modest $25,000. One might be forgiven for
wondering whether the Governor’s efforts to bring so-called
"universal" health care to Pennsylvania would inflict much pain on
the health insurance or pharmaceuticals industries, both of which
have contributed toward making American Healthcare by far and away
the most expensive in the world while leaving 47 million uninsured
and millions more underinsured.
HOW MANY UNINSURED? GOVERNOR
RENDELL’S FUZZY MATH
To hear Governor Rendell tell it
Pennsylvania is pretty well off when it comes to health care,
having one of the lowest uninsured rates in the country. The fact
that his estimate of 767,000 uninsured adults is based upon a
highly dubious 2004 survey and is contradicted by other surveys
that utilized far more orthodox methodology does not seem to
bother him, nor the media, which has apparently has never heard of
the Census Bureau or of Google.
The uninsured statistics Rendell
regularly cites come from a survey commissioned by the
Pennsylvania Insurance Bureau in 2004. The methodology utilized in
that survey borders on the bizarre if the true goal was to get
accurate and reliable estimates. This writer feels compelled to
wonder if the true objective in commissioning that survey was not
a quest for accurate data, but rather an attempt to come up with
more conservative numbers than had been arrived at by the Census
Bureau, numbers that would make the problem appear less severe
than it is, and hence make the Governor’s proposed reforms appear
to be more wide-reaching than they really are.
For starters, the survey estimated
that 8% of the Pennsylvania population, 900,000 people, was
uninsured. The Governor’s lower number of 767,000 represents that
number less the 133,000 estimated uninsured non-adults. It is
unclear why Governor Rendell chooses to include only the number of
adults when citing the numbers of uninsured. Those non-adults are,
after all, uninsured. The survey itself was conducted by the
research group Market Decisions, utilizing a telephone sample
frame and targeting 100 households in each of Pennsylvania’s 67
counties (except for Philadelphia whose sample was 173
households). Thus Forest County with a population of 4,946 was
targeted for 100 interviews (1 in every 49 of the households in
the county); Alleghenny County (Pittsburgh), with a population of
1,281,666 was also targeted for 100 interviews (1 in every 12,817
households); and Philadelphia County with a population of
1,517,550 accounted for 173 interviews (one in every 8,772
households). The sample frame itself poses a problem because
non-telephone households tend to be poorer than the general
population with a larger percentage of ethnic minorities – the
very demographics most likely to lack health insurance. A study
that specifically examined this issue back in 1990 found that
non-telephone households were three times as likely to be
uninsured than telephone households and concluded that "there are
marked differences between the telephone and nontelephone groups,
and adjusting the former is unlikely to result in reasonable
overall population estimates or to lead to increased understanding
of being uninsured. In this case, telephone ownership appears to
introduce a bias unreconcilable by recourse to social demographic
and health status measures." Translation: Any survey attempting to
determine the extent to which a population is uninsured that
utilizes a telephone sample frame will understate the extent of
the problem.
Moreover, the spreading out of the
sample equally across the state’s 67 counties regardless of their
population virtually guaranteed a radical under-sampling of the
inner city neighborhoods in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh (as well
as other smaller cities throughout the state) where residents were
most likely to want for health insurance. Finally, Market
Decisions interviewed only one individual per household, but
collected responses relating to every member of that household
from that individual. Market Decisions’ own web site cautions that
this methodology has its drawbacks: "Respondents may not be
familiar with coverage of all members in extended household;" and
"systematic error – larger households will have a greater error
and are also associated with specific demographics." (Read: lower
income minority households). The Prescription for Pennsylvania web
site acknowledges, but is dismissive of the fact that Market
Decisions’ uninsured estimates are lower than those of the Census
Bureau. It states that "the Census Survey contacted far fewer
Pennsylvania households than the Insurance Department’s survey
did," suggesting that this in itself renders the Market Decisions
data more reliable than the Census estimates. In fact, the Census
Bureau survey consists of 6,000 Pennsylvania households per year
which, from a purely statistical viewpoint, would generate numbers
nearly as reliable as a sample of 6,700. But the Census Bureau
also samples all households, not just telephone households, and
their cooperation rate is enhanced by personal visits by Census
Bureau employees when all else fails. Moreover, the Census Bureau
encourages use of three-year rolling averages with a sample of
roughly 18,000 – far more than the 6,700 in the Market Decisions
survey. Only the homeless are excluded from the Census Bureau
sample frame, and it is likely that if the homeless were included
the estimates for the number of uninsured would increase.
At a State Democratic Committee
workshop held in Lancaster, Pa, this past January 10th, I
challenged RoseMarie B. Greco, director of the Gov.'s Office of
Health Care Reform, as to the validity of the 767,000 figure that
she, the Governor, and his other surrogates are continually
citing. She responded in a disbelieving voice bristling with
contempt: "you’re not suggesting the Census Bureau numbers are
more accurate than ours, are you," she asked? I unhesitatingly
responded: "Yes I am." She quickly moved on rather than engage in
a discussion over the accuracy of her numbers.
Susan Korbel, PhD., owner of Core
Research in San Antonio, Texas writes: "Researchers have long
known that new arrivals (read: migrants) are less likely to
participate in telephone research, especially if it sounds
official due to concerns about other governmental institutions. In
order to overcome these obstacles, it is necessary to OVERsample
urban areas, as well as those in neighborhoods more likely to have
English as a second language." She adds: "This is a very curious
sampling procedure... it does nothing for a state-wide aggregate
estimate, and weighting geographically would create very large
swings in data, especially if they also were weighting by
demographics as well." Ms. Korbel also dismisses as a "fallacy"
the notion that sample size alone "regardless of distribution" is
better, citing as an example a football stadium holding 100,000
people filled on one occasion with people who came to see the Pope
speak, and on another with people who came to see the Rolling
Stones. "Would you say that the responses of the 100,000 sample
would be similar for all questions because they were both the same
size? Probably the Pope goers would be able to represent Catholics
in the region, but if you were asking about abortion, they
wouldn't be representative of all people living in the area, any
more than the Rolling Stones fans would be representative
respondents."
So just how many Pennsylvanians are
actually uninsured? Estimates vary, but there is a consensus among
all except the Governor’s office that the number is considerably
higher than 900,000 (or 767,000 adults). The most recent Census
Bureau estimate is 1,255,000, a number that includes only people
who are chronically uninsured. A study released last year by the
Center for Disease Control estimated that 10% of Pennsylvania’s
population was uninsured, which would project to 1,235,000,
virtually the same number arrived at by the Census Bureau. An
October 2005 Keystone Research Center press release concluded that
494,000 Pennsylvanians had lost their employer-sponsored health
insurance since 2000, implying that the number of uninsured might
be as high as 1.8 million. It should be noted that Pennsylvania
clearly has a lower uninsured rate than the rest of the nation,
part of which is explained by its large elderly population
resulting in a higher per capita enrollment in Medicare. Still,
any effort to bring true healthcare reform to Pennsylvania is
ill-served by the Governor’s attempts to minimize the true scope
of the problem by low-balling the estimates regarding the number
of uninsured.
A 2003 study by the Congressional
Budget Office found that Census uninsured estimates are actually
significantly under-stated because they include only people who
are uninsured for a full year or more. They concluded that the
real number, including people who were uninsured for only part of
the year, was as much as 44% higher than the published Census
figures. This is a shortcoming that researchers at the Census
bureau readily acknowledged in discussions with this writer.
"UNDERINSURED," A WORD GOVERNOR
RENDELL AVOIDS
A group often left out of the debate
over health care is the underinsured who, according to a recent
study by Consumer Reports, account for 24 % of the U.S.
population. If these numbers are accurate there are actually 50%
more people in this country who are underinsured than are
uninsured. According the Consumer Reports survey, the underinsured
have a median household income of "$58,950, well above the U.S.
median. Twenty-two percent live in households making more than
href="00,000. Still, many of the "underinsured" don’t have the
resources to keep up with the rising costs of deductibles and
co-pays, so much so that 43% reported that they postponed going to
the doctor because they couldn’t afford it." According to a recent
study by Families USA, 2.2 million Pennsylvanians are in families
that will spend more than 10% of their pre-tax income on
healthcare costs in 2008. 87.1% of them are insured. These people
live with the constant threat of being overwhelmed by their
healthcare costs, including health insurance, and when their
numbers are combined with the number of uninsured Pennsylvanians
the numbers of uninsured or underinsured Pennsylvanians starts to
look more like 4 million or more (about a third of Pennsylvania’s
population), rather than the Governor’s 767,000. The budget the
Governor submitted to the Legislature last year, but never drew
attention to publicly, and which also went unnoticed by the media,
aspired to insure an additional 359,101 uninsured Pennsylvanians
by year five if his plan passed. In his recently submitted
2008/2009 budget (which has also largely escaped notice by the
public or the media) that number had declined by more than 40% to
210,214, a number that probably represents only about 12% of
Pennsylvania’s uninsured and only about 5% of the combined
uninsured and underinsured. One wonders whatever inspired Governor
Rendell to dub this plan "Cover All Pennsylvanians." Under PABC
the year five goal has been further down-sized to 202,466 and even
that woefully small number is contingent upon the Governor getting
everything he asks for from the Legislature, assuming it even
passes. Neither the original nor the new plan does anything to
help the millions of Pennsylvanians who are insured but still face
financial ruin because of healthcare bills. Little wonder that
more than 46% of personal bankruptcies in this country are
directly caused by medical expenses.
THE SINGLE-PAYER ALTERNATIVE
While the media lavishes praise on
Governor Rendell’s efforts to reform healthcare in Pennsylvania,
and unquestioningly parrots his estimate of 767,000 uninsured
adults, a better and cheaper alternative is out there virtually
pleading for media coverage. The Pennsylvania Family and Business
Healthcare Security Act would bring true comprehensive universal
healthcare to every man, woman and child in the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania. With little fanfare the act, being promoted by
HealthcareforALLPA.org (a group of unpaid citizens from around the
State which, in the interests of full disclosure, this writer is a
member of) is co-sponsored by thirty-eight members of the
Pennsylvania House (HB 1660) and six members of the Pennsylvania
Senate (SB 300). The single-payer bill would preserve privately
delivered health care, but would remove health insurance companies
from their role as gatekeepers of the healthcare system. A new
Government agency would be created to administer the system,
seeing to it that both those in need of healthcare and those
providing it are properly attended to. Under this system co-pays
and deductibles would become a thing of the past, and prescription
drugs (which would be bulk purchased by the new agency in a manner
similar to what the Veterans Administration has employed for
years) would also be covered. Virtually the entire industrialized
world operates under a single-payer universal healthcare system or
something akin to it except for the United States, whose per
capita healthcare costs are more than double those of the rest of
the world while depriving millions of adequate care. The
Pennsylvania plan would be financed with a 10% payroll tax (far
less than most businesses contribute to the health coverage of
their employees); a 3% personal income tax surcharge (again, far
less than the average person pays for insurance, co-pays,
deductibles, and prescription drugs); Federal funding that is
already available; and proceeds from the tobacco settlement.
Proponents of the plan maintain that it will save billions of
dollars a year, and while that figure is difficult to precisely
predict in the absence of an Economic Impact Study, they have long
urged Governor Rendell to commission one. Similar studies in other
states have found that a single-payer system would save hundreds
of millions of dollars, and in the case of California (which
actually passed single-payer legislation in 2006 only to see it
vetoed by Governor Schwarznegger), $8 billion.
There are some tantalizing bits of
anecdotal evidence out there suggesting that a single-payer plan
would represent a financial windfall for Pennsylvania. A recent
study by the Pew Charitable Trust reveals that the City of
Philadelphia will spend $374 million for employee health insurance
in 2008, a number that represents 26% of payroll and that they
anticipate will increase by 23% by the year 2013. The city will
spend an additional $43.5 million in 2008 for health insurance for
its retirees which brings the total Philadelphia spends for health
insurance up to $417.5 million this year alone. If a single-payer
system were currently in place in Pennsylvania where employers
healthcare obligations are limited to a 10% payroll tax,
Philadelphia’s healthcare tab in 2008 would be $146 million
dollars – a savings of nearly $272 million this year alone. That
does not include savings in administrative costs as well as
reduced Workers Compensation taxes, among other things. According
to numbers supplied this writer by the Finance Department for the
city of Pittsburgh, that city also would realize substantial
savings under a single payer system. Pittsburgh currently spends
24% of payroll on employee health insurance, a number that is
projected to increase to 27% by 2010. $136 million is currently
budgeted for Pittsburgh employee health insurance over the next
three years, a figure that would be reduced to less than $82
million under a single-payer system, for a savings of $54 million
dollars.
The Pennsylvania single-payer
advocates have one advantage other states with similar initiatives
lack. Governor Rendell has pledged to sign it if it reaches his
desk. At an April 4, 2007 healthcare forum at Franklin & Marshall
College in Lancaster, Pa., broadcast around the State by the
Pennsylvania Cable Network, Governor Rendell, while minimizing the
prospects of a single-payer bill making it through the State
Legislature, said "A single-payer system would serve America well.
Would I like to see a single-payer system? Would I sign a
single-payer bill if it got through the Legislature? Absolutely."
Expressing perhaps a bit more candor than he intended, the
Governor later in the same forum observed "Lobbyists are... very,
very, very influential... Legislators will stand up to the
lobbyists if they believe the public is angry enough. But you have
to let them know that this is important, and that you’re angry
enough."
Despite these remarks, the Governor
has consistently refused to engage the single-payer advocates and
has denied them a seat at the table on any and all discussions
regarding Legislative healthcare reform. At least one co-sponsor
of HB 1660 privately admits to having been pressured by the
Democratic Leadership not to support the single-payer bill.
DAYS OF DECISION APPROACH
Barring its revival at some future
date, Governor Rendell’s "Cover All Pennsylvanians" initiative is
dead, but the plain facts are that despite the Governor’s
inferences to the contrary, and despite his use of banner props at
rallies containing the words "Healthcare for all" ( a slogan he
borrowed from the single-payer advocates), The Governor never
aspired to cover more than a small fraction of Pennsylvania’s
uninsured population, nor to outstretch a helping hand to its
millions of underinsured. His plan did nothing to loosen the grip
of health insurance companies whose outrages and monopolistic
practices are well-documented in Michael Moore’s documentary, "SiCKO,"
or to force Pharmaceutical companies to divert some of their
immense profits and outrageous CEO compensation packages into
lowering the cost of prescription drugs.
The new Rendell initiative, PABC, is
even worse. It will, over a five year period, provide low-cost,
subsidized insurance to a maximum of 137,000 uninsured
Pennsylvanians whose family income is below 200% of the Federal
poverty level (up to $20,800 per year for an individual and
$42,400 for a family of four). It claims to aspire to insure an
additional 65,000 Pennsylvanians who are below 300% of the Federal
Poverty level (up to $31,200 for an individual and $63,600 for a
family of four), though at an unsubsidized year one cost of $311
per person per month, a cost one finds difficult to imagine too
many people in that wage bracket will find affordable. These are
the Governor’s own numbers, and they are maximums that assume that
that the Legislature will allow the Governor to divert $246,
million (in year one) from the fund set up by the State of
Pennsylvania to protect doctors from runaway malpractice rates (HCRPA),
and that the General Assembly will allocate an additional $120
million (again in year one) to cover the cost of the plan. The
anticipated cost of PABC is $579.2 million in year one, and $1.1
billion in year five. If the bill passes but is under-funded,
enrollment will be frozen when the available money has been spent.
Under "Cover All Pennsylvanians," families and individuals earning
between 200% and 300% of the Federal Poverty level were eligible
for subsidized coverage at a cost to them of $80 per person per
month. Under PABC it will cost them $311 in year one and perhaps
considerably more in subsequent years. Persons earning more than
300% of the Federal poverty Line will not be permitted to buy into
this plan except under extremely limited circumstances, and even
then, only at the unsubsidized year one rate of $311 per month.
Health insurance companies will continue to manage patient care
under PABC, insuring continued cost inefficiencies and continued
interference with doctors and their judgment regarding required
remedies for their patients. It is unfortunate that the forces
rallying around PABC continue to grossly exaggerate its
objectives, touting it as "a huge step forward... in the fight to
bring quality, affordable healthcare to every Pennsylvanian. It is
also worth noting that even if PABC succeeds in adding 202,000
Pennsylvania uninsured to the insurance roles in the next five
years, it is likely that at least that number will lose their
insurance during that time, and perhaps many more. In other words,
even if PABC is fully funded and delivers on all of its promises,
there will likely be more uninsured Pennsylvanians in 2013 than
there are in 2008.
For the very poor and uninsured in
Pennsylvania, PABC actually represents a step backwards for many.
PABC will replace and absorb Adult Basic, a program enacted in
June 2001 under then-Governor Tom Ridge, that invested the
proceeds of the State’s $11 billion Tobacco settlement (over 25
years). It was designed to provide subsidized basic medical
coverage to uninsured Pennsylvanians between the ages of 19 and 64
earning up to 200% of the Federal poverty level, and again was
contracted out to four "for profit" insurance companies. As of
December 2007 51,056 people were enrolled in Adult Basic while
95,649 Pennsylvanians were on the wait list (up 28% from 74,456 in
January 2007). From the inception of Adult Basic it has been
plagued by long wait lists of at least a year. On the positive
side, many of those who have endured a long wait to enroll in
Adult Basic will be able to enroll sooner in PABC, but there is a
tradeoff. The monthly cost of enrollment will increase by 19-20%
for those at 150-200% of the Federal poverty line, and any one
losing their insurance will now have to wait 180 days before
qualifying to apply for coverage under PABC – double the 90-day
wait period for Adult Basic.
The ball is now in the court of the
Pennsylvania Legislature, and in the hands of Pennsylvania voters
who now have an opportunity to press their Legislators to enact
true healthcare reform by supporting and co-sponsoring HB 1660 and
SB300. Attend hearings on the single-payer bill, due to begin in
Harrisburg this coming Wednesday, March 19th. Send money. This
effort is woefully under-funded and needs your financial support.
Pennsylvania has an opportunity to
become a shining beacon for progressive healthcare reform in this
country, and it will reap the benefits of a newly energized
economy if it does. If Pennsylvania enacts single-payer universal
healthcare other states will follow, and it will not be long
before pressure to enact it nationally becomes overwhelming. Only
then will we join the rest of the industrialized world in
providing truly civilized healthcare for all. Can we, in good
conscience, do any less?
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