Every year since 1994, the year in which the Clinton
Administration failed to reform the health system in the United
States (leaving in place the private health insurance industry
dominating the healthcare-delivery system), actual healthcare
coverage for people in the United States has continued to shrink.
Real costs for private health insurance companies and their profits
have skyrocketed. Higher co-pays, premiums and deductibles
for the Medicare program have been mandated by the prerogatives
of the private health insurance industry.
This is the sleazy side of the healthcare crisis
in the United States: private health insurance companies charge
more for less coverage and benefit shamelessly from the sheer
desperation of people who have no other options. In addition,
their inordinate impact on the healthcare system in the United
States has prevented the publicly funded healthcare system from
fulfilling its potential.
As a result of the dominance of the private health
insurance industry, people become impoverished, making some eligible
for the deficient Medicaid program, or they live with the extreme
anxiety of healthcare insecurity until some become old enough
or disabled enough to qualify for the deficient Medicare program,
and/or they suffer and they die prematurely from no healthcare
at all. Remember, 47 million remain uninsured and another 60 million
remain anxiously underinsured. These horrible numbers are increasing
every year.
Ironically, it was the powerful lobby of the private
health insurance industry itself that deep-sixed the flawed Clinton
plan. Historically, lassiez faire capitalism, in the area of the
United States healthcare delivery system, has failed the residents
of the United States miserably.
The thoughtful public debate over this failure
had begun in earnest by the end of the Great Depression. Many
progressives believed at that time that then president Franklin
D. Roosevelt could have federalized the US healthcare system as
a part of the social security system. However, at that time, the
powerful opposition of the American Medical Association, United
States xenophobia, and popular virulent anti-communism proved
to be insurmountable political obstacles that ultimately ensured
the entrenchment of a market-based system for the delivery of
healthcare in the United States.
Today, we suffer from the chronic triumph of ignorance,
political expediency and greed over human need.
But, the political landscape has changed dramatically.
In 2007, the people are speaking out; they are no longer willing
to tolerate the sheer economic exploitation of the private health
insurance industry, the resultant woefully substandard healthcare,
and the desperate orchestrated propaganda of the private health
insurance industry that relentlessly attempts to obfuscate and
sanitize its complicity in the healthcare crisis.
Sure, we all know about the “poor”
and the “disadvantaged.” But did you know that the
“solidly middle class” is one of the fastest-growing
groups among the uninsured; that one-third of the 47 million uninsured
in the United States has family incomes of $40,000 or more; and
that more than two-thirds of the uninsured are in households with
at least one full-time worker?
These folks are scared and these folks are mad.
These folks are you and me. And lastly, these folks are not stupid.
Today, an overwhelming majority of people in United
States knows that a federally financed national healthcare system
(single-payer) that would replace the current market-driven
system is best. This was first proposed by President Harry
Truman in the 1950’s, later proposed by Senator Edward Kennedy
(D-Mass.) in the 1970’s, and is now proposed by Congressman
John Conyers (D-Mich.). John Conyers’ Bill, HR 676,
a vastly improved and expanded Medicare for all system, is not
socialism, does not restrict consumers’ choice of a private
healthcare provider, and does not restrict competition among private
healthcare providers. HR 676 celebrates the core values of
the American people.
Ordinary people are learning that a national single-payer
system would end the healthcare nightmare in the United States;
it would control healthcare costs, guarantee full and more comprehensive
coverage to every resident in the United States from cradle to
grave, profoundly reduce racial disparities in healthcare access,
increase competition among providers, widen consumer choices,
dramatically reduce health costs for all consumers, and would
save thousands of lives while ending the suffering of millions
annually.
The profound depth of the healthcare crisis in
the United States has itself compelled ordinary people to think
for themselves and to seek alternative sources of information.
The myth-making and disinformation of the private insurance industry
are increasingly falling on deaf ears.
The enormous grassroots movement of ordinary people
is discovering that:
- Americans pay more when they get sick than
people in other western nations that have a single-payer system
but get inferior outcomes generally and receive more confused
and error-prone treatment;
- The private health insurance industry is the
prime engine accelerating healthcare costs nationally;
- Health insurance premiums continue to rise
at the same time that private health insurance companies boast
some of the largest surpluses in their history;
- Private health insurance profits reached $11
billion in 2004 and continue to rise;
- Research indicates that health plans now start
around $300 per month and family plans can run $900 to $1000
per month. Co-pays for many members of HMO plans have risen
from $10 to $40 or $50 within the past two years. The ceiling
for deductibles continues to rise ranging from $250 to $10,000;
- From 2004 to 2005, the WellPoint chief Executive,
Larry Glassock made $14.12 million in total realized compensation;
- William McGuire, UnitedHealth Group CEO made
$135.47 million; John Rowe, CEO of Aetna made $57.49 million;
Edward Hanway, CEO of Cigna made $42.13 million; and Michael
McCallister, CEO of Humana made $5.71 million;
- A typical story facing millions in the United
States: “I have worked all of my adult life, I am fifty
years old and I have cancer. I am middle-class but I can not
afford the health insurance coverage. In fact, the only health
insurance coverage I could find costs $27,000 dollars a year.
I am dying. What am I to do?; and
- Private health insurance companies profit off
sickness and desperation, stifle preventive medicine, and do
not help when help is needed the most.
The American people can no longer bear this reality.
Nearly 70% of the US citizens want a federally financed (single-payer)
national healthcare system. The overwhelming majority of physicians
are also demanding the single-payer solution to the healthcare
crisis in this country. An impressive number of hospital CEOs
want it. They are all demanding that the private health insurance
industry must no longer have a choke hold on the healthcare system
in the United States.
But where are the presidential candidates? With
the exception of Dennis Kucinich (D-OH), all want to keep the
private health insurance industry in business keeping people sick,
economically desperate, and profiting off the people’s misery.
The Republican Party candidates are actively attempting
to expand the role of the private health insurance industry. What
are Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and John Edwards doing?
Well, none of them is advocating single-payer because
it challenges the prerogatives of corporate America, a major source
of their campaign contributions. When Clinton, Obama, and Edwards
speak of the single-payer solution not being politically feasible,
they are not referring to the democratic will of the American
people. We have spoken through the polls and in the 2006 elections.
They should listen and take action. Rather, they are actually
talking only about their political careers and their need to remain
in the good graces of their financial backers. Wherever
we encounter these and other presidential candidates, through
banners and letters and phone calls to their headquarters, we
need to make perfectly clear to each of them that we want a single
payer national healthcare system.
Indeed, we have a very steep political challenge
before us. The American political system is not fair. Two recent
presidential elections were stolen; the American people have voted
against the war in Iraq; yet the war is now expanding as the American
people build a massive anti-war movement.
The American people, voting with their feet, have
always moved mountains and they will move the private health insurance
industry into the dustbin of history and win a single-payer healthcare
system in this country.
Yes, the political landscape has taken a dramatic
turn.
Not only are solid majorities in support of single-payer
and against the criminal war in Iraq, the American people now
understand the relationship between the anti-war movement and
the single-payer national healthcare movement. As a result, the
political energy of the people is qualitatively higher than it
has ever been since ordinary people dismantled Jim Crow segregation
and ended the criminal Viet Nam war.
History is now on our side. But, we can not rest.
You can help. Demand that Congress now hold full Congressional
Hearings on the Health Crisis in the United States.
Specifically, urge speaker of the House, Congresswoman
Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee,
Congressman, Charles Rangel D-NY); and Congressman, Pete Stark
(D-CA), ranking Democrat on the House Ways and Means Health Committee,
during April, the anniversary month of the assassination of Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr.; to hold full Congressional Hearings on
an Expanded and Improved Medicare for All Residents in the United
States (HR 676).
Also contact Healthcare-Now
or call us at 1-800-453-1305 so that you can learn of ways in
which you can directly support and participate in the historic
national human rights movement to guarantee that all residents
in the United States have comprehensive world class healthcare
and healthcare insurance coverage from cradle to grave.
This is our time in history. Let’s seize
it.
Here’s how: For an inspirational 7
minutes, see
this little video of Congressman John Conyers talking about
how we can win single payer.
Mr. Sankofa is a human rights public policy
specialist and community organizer. He is a national organizer
for Healthcare-Now.
He is also the strategic planning consultant for the National
Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America, Legal Defense,
Research, and Education Fund. As a former trial attorney, specializing
in complex institutional reform litigation, Mr. Sankofa, directed
the AIDS Project of the National Prison Project of the ACLU Foundation.
He is a graduate of Bowdoin College in Brunswick Maine and the
Antioch School of Law. Raised in Washington, DC, Mr. Sankofa now
lives in Brooklyn, New York. Click
here to contact Ajamu K. Sankofa, Esq. and Healthcare-NOW.
Click
here to read any of the articles in this special BC
series on Single-Payer Healthcare.
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