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Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop
16 Feb 2012
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Bottom Line for the Already Insured

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The hardest group to sell on national health reform is those who don't desperately need it. That would include Americans who already have coverage through a workplace, about 160 million in all, and are reasonably happy with their deal.

The comfortably insured are always the target for scare-talk about rationing, loss of choice, higher taxes and government takeovers of health care. After all, they're the ones with something to lose, or so they've been led to believe.

Fifteen years ago, the Clinton administration unveiled a plan for universal health coverage, and its foes went to work. The insurance industry unleashed a battalion of negative advertising so effective that it has entered political lore. We speak of the Harry and Louise ads on TV.

Authoritative male voiceover: The government may force us to pick from a few health plans designed by government bureaucrats.

Louise: Having choices we don't like is no choice at all.

Harry: They choose.

Louise: We lose.

Of course, people covered by employers don't have unlimited choice, either. They pick from a pre-determined list of plans, if they're lucky enough to have more than one option.

And let's put in a kind word for government bureaucrats. They designed Medicare, and the beneficiaries love it.

Such realities get lost in the haze of half-truths. To win, reformers must avoid wonkery and answer this simple question: "What's in it for me?"

For starters, more money. Your company health plan does not come free. Part of your compensation package, its cost gets subtracted from your paycheck. Employer-provided health coverage cut cash wages by nearly 8 percent last year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

A bipartisan heath-care proposal introduced by Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, and Bob Bennett, a Utah Republican, would put the numbers right under everyone's nose.

It would work as follows:

You pick a private-health plan from a state-compiled list. You cover your premiums through an add-on to your taxes. In the first two years, your company must give you a raise for the cost of health benefits it no longer provides. (Thereafter, employers contribute to an insurance pool.)

The plan has another virtue in these days of job insecurity. It de-links coverage from place of employment.

Any rational program would also curb waste. America spends $8,000 per person on health care, about twice the rich-country average. There's lots of room to save money without sacrificing quality. Bear in mind that America's tendency to over-treat people does not produce outcomes superior to the best European systems. And lowering premiums ends up as money in your pocket.

What about freedom to choose providers and treatments? Well, private insurance also sets rules on what it will cover and typically provides lists of preferred doctors and hospitals. If your plan lets you go out of the network, you have to pay extra for the privilege. Nothing wrong with that, but we must drop the romantic notion that private coverage affords total freedom at popular prices.

Contrary to the propaganda, a government plan doesn't tell you what you can have. It tells you what it will pay for. You can buy whatever you want with your own money. And any well-designed plan would allow people to purchase private insurance to cover things the government plan doesn't. (Over 90 percent of the people in the French system have supplemental insurance.)

So what's in it for me, the contentedly covered? If the plan is done right, I am left healthy and wealthier. And if I ditch my job — or my job ditches me — I can find affordable coverage. That should not be a hard sell to anybody.

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

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Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
It may be easier to convince people now than during the Clinton administration. Most of us are, know, or are related to someone who has lost his job and insurance by now. The attitude of "I got mine, to hell with everybody else" is not so easy to hold onto if you or one of your children becomes "everybody else." We would all be better off if we were on Medicare and paid the premiums ourselves. At least, Medicare doesn't waste the money private insurance does by hiring people to find "reasons" to deny claims.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Paul M. Petkovsek
Tue Apr 21, 2009 1:27 PM
I enjoyed your article on the already insured. I have another angle that needs to be looked into. What about insurance companies that raise the premiums when the person gets a serious illness. I have cancer, the insurance company that I've had for years raised my premim 38% this year. My husband and I own our own small business. We are in a group insurance program. So when my premium went up, his went up the same amount. He has never put in a claim to this insurance co. I feel they are trying to get rid of us, and they said I would never get any other insurance company to insure me. What are we to do? I am 61 and he is 64, If he goes to Medicare, I lose my insurance.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Diane Nelson
Sat Apr 25, 2009 6:42 AM
Re: Diane Nelson You have my sympathy, Diane. I faced a similar problem before the health insurance portability act was passed (Clinton administration). I wanted to change jobs, but because of a "preexisting condition" I would have had to COBRA my insurance from my old job for twelve months. I was not able to change jobs because I couldn't afford the premiums. Generally speaking, I have the same view of corportations as Andrew Jackson: You can't kill a corporation because it has no heart and you can't damn it to Hell because it has no soul. Young, healthy people really need to pay close attention to their health insurance.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Paul M. Petkovsek
Sat Apr 25, 2009 1:36 PM
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