We could do so much better
Claudia Fegan in Common Dreams
How should we react when a man is shot to death on the street on his way to work? Our humanity tells us that we should be shocked and horrified—and feel that something is deeply wrong with such a brazen act of murder. Ideally, we would do what we could to help sooth the survivors, condemn the violence, and bring the perpetrator to justice.
So why did hundreds of thousands of people have the exact opposite reaction when
UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was executed in New York City last month?
Because Americans are furious with health insurance corporations—and they have
every right to be.
In the immediate aftermath of the shooting, many Americans took to social media not to mourn, but to celebrate. Caustic posts about prior authorization and denied medical claims were common. Sympathetic statements were met with rancor—and in the case of UnitedHealth Group’s own statement, over 70,000 “laugh reactions” before the company made that tally private. Even verbose political figures like Elon Musk and President-elect Donald Trump declined to comment for days. This shooting touched a raw nerve.
As a physician who’s treated countless victims of gun violence, and who’s life’s work is to care for all of my patients, I found this response to be deeply unnerving. But I also can’t waive it away with simple explanations like online radicalization or trolling. Something much deeper is at play.
For decades, health insurance corporations like United have been growing more powerful and more profitable. How do they generate these profits? By taking in as much money as possible in premiums and paying out as little as possible in medical claims.
Over time, they have tried everything from requiring “prior authorization” of care, to excluding high-quality providers from their networks, to imposing a Byzantine series of charges including ever-growing copays, coinsurance, and deductibles. When all else fails, many insurers simply deny claims.
Behind each of these practices are millions of Americans who
are made to suffer. I hear these stories routinely in my practice, and they
never become easier to stomach. I have seen patients with aggressive cancer who
avoided seeing a doctor for months because they feared bankruptcy; patients
with chronic conditions like diabetes who are denied treatments that would
improve their quality of life; and gunshot victims whose fight to recover and
gain a semblance of normalcy is complicated by their health plans saying no,
no, and no again.
I have seen patients suffer and die in order to pad the
bottom lines of corporate health insurers—and in recent years I have seen this
problem getting much worse.
These are the stories that Americans are sharing in this
fraught moment. We have to ask ourselves: Are we listening? And what are we
going to do about it?
Insurers like UnitedHealthcare will have their own
responses. Their PR teams will no doubt work overtime to marginalize aggrieved
voices and to highlight what they consider to be the “value” of their health
plans. Expect to see glossy commercials and towering billboards touting the
“peace of mind” that Americans should enjoy knowing that their medical needs
are “covered.” But the health insurance industry doesn’t have a communications
problem, it has a profiteering problem—and no amount of marketing will convince
people who have already been burned.
Behind the scenes, corporate insurers will no doubt lobby
for the preferential treatment they have come to expect. Our newly elected
Congress may acquiesce, or they may decide that the industry needs to be
regulated—a strategy that has failed to live up to its promise.
Republicans and Democrats have made separate attempts to
combine federal requirements with federal largesse in order to make corporate
health insurers play nice. But both the Affordable Care Act and
the Medicare Advantage program
have only succeeded in ballooning the profits of firms like United—without
improving Americans’ health or sparing their wallets.
It’s also clear that violence is not the answer, both on a
purely human level and because corporate insurers will simply not be moved.
UnitedHealthcare will have a new CEO in short order, and it will be that
person’s responsibility to boost profits and make shareholders wealthier.
Responding to patients’ cries will not serve these ends, so it is not in the
cards.
What would help is a proven reform proposal
that is long overdue: a single-payer national health program. Such a system
would provide universal coverage and comprehensive benefits—with zero
out-of-pocket costs. It could be easily implemented given
the gargantuan sums we spend on healthcare in this country, and it would be a
boon for those who are suffering, and for those who are fearful.
Americans are crying out in pain—and are recognizing that
they are not alone in their pain. We should listen to these cries and we should
finally, after decades of delay, do something about it.
Claudia Fegan, M.D. is the longtime national coordinator of Physicians for a National Health Program, a Chicago-based nonprofit advocacy organization whose 25,000-plus members across the U.S. support single-payer healthcare reform.