LONG BEACH— The push for universal health care is a push I am entirely against, if for no other reason than the government stinks at everything it does. Here is an analysis I found.
How Washington Rations
ObamaCare omen: a case study in ‘cost-control.’
Wall Street Journal, May 19, 2009Try to follow this logic: Last week the Medicare trustees reported that the program has an “unfunded liability” of nearly $38 trillion — which is the amount of benefits promised but not covered by taxes over the next 75 years. So Democrats have decided that the way to close this gap is to create a new “universal” health insurance entitlement for the middle class.
Such thinking may be a non sequitur, but it will have drastic effects on the health care of all Americans — and as it happens, this future is playing out in miniature in Medicare right now. Desperate to prevent medical costs from engulfing the federal budget, the program’s central planners decided last week to deny payment for a new version of one of life’s most unpleasant routine procedures, the colonoscopy. This is a preview of how health care will be rationed when Democrats get their way.
At issue are “virtual colonoscopies,” or CT scans of the abdomen. Colon cancer is the second leading cause of U.S. cancer death but one of the most preventable. Found early, the cure rate is 93%, but only 8% at later stages. Virtual colonoscopies are likely to boost screenings because they are quicker, more comfortable and significantly cheaper than the standard “optical” procedure, which involves anesthesia and threading an endoscope through the lower intestine.
.Virtual colonoscopies are endorsed by the American Cancer Society and covered by a growing number of private insurers including Cigna and UnitedHealthcare. The problem for Medicare is that if cancerous lesions are found using a scan, then patients must follow up with a traditional colonoscopy anyway. Costs would be lower if everyone simply took the invasive route, where doctors can remove polyps on the spot. As Medicare noted in its ruling, “If there is a relatively high referral rate [for traditional colonoscopy], the utility of an intermediate test such as CT colonography is limited.” In other words, duplication would be too pricey.
This is precisely the sort of complexity that the Democrats would prefer to ignore as they try to restructure health care. Led by budget chief Peter Orszag, the White House believes that comparative effectiveness research, which examines clinical evidence to determine what “works best,” will let them cut wasteful or ineffective treatments and thus contain health spending.
The problem is that what “works best” isn’t the same for everyone. While not painless or risk free, virtual colonoscopy might be better for some patients — especially among seniors who are infirm or because the presence of other diseases puts them at risk for complications. Ideally doctors would decide with their patients. But Medicare instead made the hard-and-fast choice that it was cheaper to cut it off for all beneficiaries. If some patients are worse off, well, too bad.
Medicare is already the country’s largest purchaser of health care. Private carriers generally adopt its rates and policies, and the virtual colonoscopy decision may run this technology out of the marketplace. Now multiply that by the new “public option” that Democrats favor, which would transfer millions of patients to a new insurance program managed by the federal government. Washington’s utilitarian judgments about costs would reshape the practice of medicine.
Initially, the open-ended style of American care will barely be touched, if only for political self-preservation. Health planners will adjust at the margins, as with virtual colonoscopy. But scarcity forces choices. As the Medicare trustees note in their report, the tax increases necessary to fund merely the current benefit schedule for the elderly would cripple the economy. The far more expensive public option will not turn into a pumpkin when cost savings do not materialize. At that point, government will clamp down with price controls in the form of lines and rock-bottom reimbursement rates.
Mr. Orszag says that a federal health board will make these Solomonic decisions, which is only true until the lobbies get to Congress and the White House. With virtual colonoscopy, radiologists and gastroenterologists are feuding over which group should get paid for colon cancer screening. Companies like General Electric and Seimens that make CT technology are pressuring Medicare administrators too. More than 50 Congressmen are demanding that the decision be overturned.
All this is merely a preview of the life-and-death decisions that will be determined by politics once government finances substantially more health care than the 46% it already does. Anyone who buys Democratic claims about “choice” and “affordability” will be in for a very rude awakening.
I like the following logic provided by the democrats:
1) “The emergency rooms are over crowded, there are too few doctors and too few nurses.”
2) “Let’s add fifty million new patients into the system.”
3) “Let’s down grade that system to prevent expensive treatments.”
The result: Over crowded, under staffed, and cheap service. Sounds great doesn’t it?
All I see is FEMA in New Orleans. The government promising to do all the work. But there is still not enough help for people in need and when it comes, the people in need get formaldehyde covered housing because it is less expensive.
Um…this post is just to easy. I can’t resist…
Basically, the government is saying bend over, lub up, and take it up the _____ (um…colon).
Why people want to do this with their health is beyond me. Everyone knows the government can’t do anything right and now the government is pushing to be in control of your health… what a nightmare.
“If you haven’t got your health, you haven’t got anything”
>As the Medicare trustees note in their report, the tax increases necessary to fund merely the current benefit schedule for the elderly would cripple the economy.
This is among the more frightening to me. Politicians have no restraint. Over promise, over promise, over promise.
The average American isn’t even aware this report exists, in my opinion. They aren’t aware of the future havoc MediCare is going to bring on the economy, if major entitlement reform isn’t enacted.
No doubt a new public option will infinitely worse. I’d love to see the government move efficiently from region to region to find cost cutting measures to spread through the system and then to actually get doctors in other regions to follow the cost cutting prescriptions, all without raising costs, harrassing doctors into retirement, and (worst of all) misapplying medical care and causing great health problems to arise.
Orzag is a true believer- and an utter fool in my opinion. Conservatives need to draw him out of the background and into the forefront. Some of the things he has been suggesting since being appointed are downright foolish and ideological.