December 15, 2009
from Pajamas Media
ObamaCare: Tightening the Noose
Around Private Health Care
By Paul Hsieh
The U.S. Senate is making increasingly Byzantine backroom deals in an attempt to
pass some form of universal health care by the end of the year. But even though
the final bill isn’t settled yet, one fact is becoming increasingly clear. Any
plan they pass will result in the government seizing an unprecedented degree of
control over previously private health spending decisions.
Two of these proposed new controls are worth highlighting, because they are not
often discussed in most mainstream media reports.
First, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) will be setting the
rules for what sorts of preventive health care insurance companies
must offer.
According to Dr. Delia Chiaramonte, the proposed law states [1]:
A group health plan and a health insurance issuer offering group or individual
health insurance coverage shall provide coverage for and shall not impose any
cost sharing requirements for evidence-based items or services that have in
effect a rating of “A” or “B” in the current recommendations of the United
States Preventive Services Task Force.
In other words, health insurers must pay for preventive services that the U.S.
Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommends. Such mandated benefits will
inevitably raise the costs of health insurance nationwide as they have already
done in states like Massachusetts [2].
The USPSTF is also the government task force that aroused such controversy when
it recently recommended restricting screening mammograms to women over age 50
[3], even though professional medical societies such as the American Cancer
Society and American College of Radiology have long recommended women undergo
routine mammography starting at age 40, based on years of peer-reviewed medical
research.
The USPSTF has been sharply criticized for basing its decision on old and
unreliable scientific data [4]. But there’s also a more fundamental moral
question of whether the federal government should be setting guidelines that
essentially put a price on a human life.
The USPSTF argued that eliminating mammograms on women between age 40 and 49
would only result in one additional cancer death per 1,900 women screened — a
level they apparently considered acceptable [5]. In contrast, they still
supported mammograms for women over age 50 because that would prevent one cancer
death per 1,300 women screened.
Hence, the government is saying that it’s “cost-effective” to spend money for a
mammogram that will save the life of a 50-year-old woman — but not the life of
her 48-year-old younger sister.
Second, government rules may make it more difficult for patients to receive
medical care outside of government payment guidelines.
Sue Blevins of the Institute for Health Freedom notes the following [6]:
Regardless of whether you agree or disagree with the U.S. Preventive Services
Task Force’s recommended changes for mammograms, its recent proposal raises
important questions for all Americans: Do you want government panels making
preventive health care decisions for you? And do you want government to outlaw
private payment for preventive care? Government could end up with both powers
under the health-reform bills being considered. …
[T]he House version could prevent Americans from paying privately for covered
preventive care. That’s because H.R. 3962 states that there shall be no
cost-sharing for covered preventive services. (The Senate bill includes a
similar provision.) The definition of cost-sharing appears to include
out-of-pocket spending. Thus without further clarification, this provision could
be interpreted to prevent anyone from paying out of pocket for covered
preventive care.
Similar restrictions against “cost-sharing” or out-of-pocket spending are
already established policy for Medicare — the federal government’s “universal
heath care” program for the elderly.
Under current federal law, if a doctor accepts Medicare patients (i.e., he is
a “participating physician”), he must accept the payment set by Medicare. If the
doctor can’t make ends meet on the low Medicare fees, then that’s his problem.
Medicare rates are currently so low that many physician practices would go under
if they had to rely solely on Medicare — which is why many doctors currently
limit the number of Medicare patients they are willing to accept [7].
But suppose a patient tells his doctor, “I know that Medicare doesn’t pay you
enough to cover your costs of performing the surgery which you and I both agree
is necessary. I’ll pay you extra in addition to Medicare to get it done.”
By law, the physician cannot accept this offer. If he did, he could face stiff
fines (or possibly jail) for illegal “cost-sharing.” As long as he is a
“participating physician” in Medicare, he may not accept any out-of-pocket money
from his patients for covered Medicare services.
In theory, physicians and patients can opt out of Medicare. But the government
makes that difficult for both parties. Health attorney Kent Masterson Brown
warns physicians [8]:
Under Section 4507 [of the 1997 Balanced Budget Act], if a physician provides
even a single Medicare-covered service to a single self-paying Medicare
beneficiary, that physician is completely barred from Medicare for a period of
two years.
Participating physicians may not enter into self-pay private contracts with
Medicare patients on a case-by-case or patient-by-patient basis.
Brown concludes [9]:
[A]s Medicare’s fiscal pressures mount Congress eventually will reduce provider
payments, which will reduce beneficiaries’ access to care. If and when that
occurs, Section 4507 will deny care to Medicare beneficiaries, because it will
prevent beneficiaries from going outside Medicare to purchase those services
themselves.
Similarly, the government makes it extremely difficult for patients to opt out
of Medicare. Seniors who choose to forgo Medicare benefits must also lose their
Social Security benefits.
Sue Blevins notes [10]:
[G]overnment regulations severely penalize seniors who wish to keep their
private health insurance, rather than enrolling in Medicare Part A, the
government hospital insurance program, upon turning age 65. Little-known
administrative policies adopted by the government in 1993 and strengthened in
2002 say that seniors can’t refuse Part A coverage unless they give up their
Social Security benefits. Adding insult to injury, once enrolled in the program,
the only way seniors can withdraw from it is to repay all Social Security
benefits they received, as well as any hospitalization benefits Medicare paid on
their behalf.
Few seniors can afford to forgo their Social Security benefits, especially after
being compelled to pay into the Social Security system their entire working
lives (rather than being allowed invest that money in their own private
retirement accounts). Hence, this legal tie between Social Security and Medicare
essentially locks all but the wealthiest seniors into the Medicare system. (This
law is currently being challenged [11] by a group of five senior citizens.)
Even though recent proposals to expand Medicare to patients between ages 55 and
65 [12] appear politically dead, the provisions against “cost sharing” will
remain in force for Medicare patients over 65 and would be new restrictions for
Americans of all ages on services covered by the USPSTF.
And just as the USPSTF would be empowered to restrict services such as
mammography, the Senate bill would establish an “Independent Medicare Advisory
Board” to restrict payments “if Medicare costs grew faster than a certain rate
[13].” The exact details are still being hammered out, but any version with
teeth would likely control spending through similar “cost-effectiveness”
criteria as the USPSTF.
Such government restrictions illustrate the fundamental problem with any form
of “universal health care.” Anytime the government attempts to guarantee a
service such as health care, it must also control it. Directly or indirectly,
the government will increase its control over what care is covered, which
patients may receive it, and how much treating physicians can be paid.
Under ObamaCare, patients will be forced to pay for certain kinds of medical
care whether they want it or not — thus raising their health care costs.
And patients may not be able to pay for some medically necessary care outside of
government-set guidelines, even if they want to — a clear violation of the
rights of patients and doctors to contract for medical services on any terms
they find mutually acceptable.
Even if American health care remains technically “private,” the ever-tightening
noose of government regulation will increasingly limit the freedom of patients
to seek (and doctors to deliver) medical services based on their independent
judgment of each individual patient’s best interest. Instead, doctors will be
forced to practice according to government guidelines that maximize some
collectivist ideal of “cost-effectiveness.”
The strands of the noose are being woven by Congress as we speak — and about to
be dropped around our necks. How far will we let them tighten it?
Article printed from Pajamas Media:
http://pajamasmedia.com
URL to article: http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/obamacare-tightening-the-noose-around-private-health-care/
URLs in this post:
[1] states:
http://www.examiner.com/x-209-Baltimore-Health-Examiner~y2009m12d2-What-the-healthcare-reform-bill-says-about-preventive-care
[2] already done in states like Massachusetts: http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/Opinion/2009/0930/p09s01-coop.html
[3] restricting screening mammograms to women over age 50: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/16/AR2009111602822.html
[4] sharply criticized for basing its decision on old and unreliable scientific data: http://www.denverpost.com/opinion/ci_13827260
[5] a level they apparently considered acceptable: http://www.cancer.org/docroot/MED/content/MED_2_1x_American_Cancer_Society_Responds_to_Changes_to_USPSTF_Mammography_Guidelines.asp
[6] following: http://forhealthfreedom.org/Newsletter/December2009.html#Article2
[7] many doctors currently limit the number of Medicare patients they are willing to accept: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204884404574362543878647858.html
[8] warns physicians: http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/html/pa601/pa60100009.html
[9] concludes: http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/html/pa601/pa60100011.html
[10] notes: http://forhealthfreedom.org/Newsletter/April2009.html#Article2
[11] currently being challenged: http://forhealthfreedom.org/Newsletter/October2009.html#Article4
[12] expand Medicare to patients between ages 55 and 65: http://blogs.wsj.com/health/2009/12/09/docs-hospitals-insurers-oppose-medicare-at-55/
[13] if Medicare costs grew faster than a certain rate: http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/12/08/rockefeller-the-economists-man-in-the-senate/
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It all boils down to CONTROL. Those slimy bastard congress critters are in the process of enacting the ultimate CONTROL over us, LIFE and DEATH. They have our doctors locked by law into what they can and cannot do for us, how often they can do it, and under what conditions. It doesn't matter what they learned in years of study and experience, they can be overruled by an affirmative-action file-clerk in a cubicle somewhere. They also CONTROL how much the doctor can charge for the service or procedure, even if the charge is less than the cost of the procedure.
They CONTROL the patient. We can't go outside the system. If we do, we lose all our social security and medicare benefits and have to pay back any past benefits. How's that for a penalty? Your money or your life? Isn't that what a mugger is supposed to say? It's going to get hard to find a doctor at all because our doctors can't afford to treat us and charge less than their expenses. Some doctors are retiring or leaving the practice.
I understand the government is working on the coming shortage of doctors. We'll be seeing more doctors from 3rd world countries, and they're going to begin "affirmative-action" admissions to U.S. medical schools (watch out for Cornell grads, they've already started). Maybe they'll be willing to accept the lower government-medicare fees, because their care and services may not be up to the same standard as the full-price doctors.
As always, you the patient control witch doctor you wish to choose:
