Not much system
To our care;
Can't find treatment
Anywhere.
To our care;
Can't find treatment
Anywhere.
It's great living here in our rich country, as long as you're
rich yourself. Take our health care system. Unlike other wealthy countries, our nation's medical
apparatus allows those at the top to receive top-notch care, while the working
class has to scrounge to survive.
Meanwhile, the lucky among us continue to live longer and add to
the national health tab, increasing Medicare costs.
But in this era of corporate obsession with efficiency, the
health care system is a paragon of waste. Instead of a streamlined system,
every insurance company operates according to its own prerogative. Doctors'
offices are now filled with more clerks than white coats. In 2011, American
doctors spent $27 billion more on bureaucratic
paperwork than our Canadian neighbors operating under a single-payer system.
Canadians, like most everyone else in rich countries, appreciate their
universal care and scratch their heads in disbelief at our nation's medical
free-for-all.
Another of our mind-boggling ineptitudes is that we pay medical
providers according to how often they see us and the procedures they perform.
They should earn more for keeping us healthy than simply treating our
ever-rising number of ailments and administering increasingly pricey tests.
With no incentive to get the job done right the first time around, savvy docs
set up their own clinics to refer us to, while hospitals load up on snazzy
equipment to test us excessively.
Many of the CEOs of our nation's top hospitals rake in salaries well over the million-dollar
mark. The health industry is about making money, not healing. And it's a big
business.
And let's not forget the drugmakers.
Their wares are keeping us alive longer too, if we can afford them. But keep in
mind that their industry spends more on marketing than it does on research. One study found that for every $19 Big
Pharma spends on advertising and marketing, only $1 goes to funding basic
research. And our rigid patent system favors these medical moneymakers by
granting drug developers patents for 20 years. This allows companies to jack up
drug prices and prevents low-income patients from accessing cheaper
alternatives to drugs they depend on. The FDA also makes it illegal for individuals
to purchase prescription drugs abroad at much lower prices.
But one thing the medical mob can't yet keep you from doing is
seeking treatment and procedures in other countries. Asia and South America
have become hotbeds of American medical tourism. And if we are allowed to
travel to close-by Cuba and use its state-runhealth care system in the future, you
can bet we'll flood that country too.
As always, those at the bottom of the economic ladder are hit
the hardest by the health industry's incompetency. If you're poor, maybe you
qualify for Medicaid, or maybe you don't. Maybe there's a neighborhood clinic
near you, or maybe not. Maybe you're fortunate enough to be healthy, or maybe
you inherited a gene that triggered a costly chronic illness.
President Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act is already helping people obtain
or maintain health insurance and by January 1, 2015 it's supposed to be fully
implemented. But don't get too excited — an estimated 26 million Americans will remain
uninsured by 2020, according to the Congressional Budget Office's calculations.
OtherWords columnist
William A. Collins is a former state representative and a former mayor of
Norwalk, Connecticut. OtherWords.org