Archive for February, 2008

Health care reform-Part III

Monday, February 4th, 2008

Part I is a post on Evidence Based Medicine.

Part II is here.

The SEIU is planning a big push for universal healthcare in this election cycle. The time seems to be here when we have to think about this.

There is a pretty good post over at Megan McArdles blog with the comments as interesting as the post. She links to Paul Krugman, often a source of misinformation. The topic is the Massachusetts Plan that is seeing cost overruns. Every new health care entitlement, from the National Health Service in England to Medicare here, has seen huge increases in cost that were not predicted. There are a number of reasons. One is the moral hazard problem, in which people will sign up for anything that is free.

One of the comments actually poses a nice outline for a solution:

Response to liberalrob’s question “what’s your solution…”:

Sign up everybody who makes above a certain income threshold for some kind of minimal national health plan that covers ONLY catastrophic health costs. Make the cost based on age, and deduct it automatically from their paycheck like Social Security.

Make it voluntary, but auto-opt-in– that is, you’re signed up unless you fill out a form and say “Thanks, but no thanks.”

If you opt-out, decide not to buy insurance, and get sick– tough cookies.

Everybody who makes below a certain income threshold gets automatically signed up for Medicaid, at no cost.

Oh, and of course either get rid of the employer tax deduction for health insurance or extend it so the employees get the same tax break if they buy their own insurance…

Posted by Gavin Andresen

Let’s take these one at a time:

Sign up everybody who makes above a certain income threshold for some kind of minimal national health plan that covers ONLY catastrophic health costs. Make the cost based on age, and deduct it automatically from their paycheck like Social Security.

I am coming to the reluctant conclusion that a single payer plan of some sort is going to be necessary. The German system has two types of insurance, the state system which is deducted from your paycheck, and private insurance, which is available to those with high incomes who choose to opt out of the state system. The original German system had a number of health plans, some employer based and some community-based, but all had to join one unless your income was quite high, at which point you could opt out. The state system deduction is income determined and is about 14% of gross income. The private system is more like American insurance and is risk-determined, by age and state of health. The Clinton Plan in 1994 was supposed to be based on the German system. This is an attractive option for several reasons.

The present American system has a real problem with “free riders.” These are usually young people who are healthy, could afford insurance but choose to go without because they know that, if disaster strikes, they will be cared for and they can evade the cost of emergency care by bankruptcy if necessary. Some years ago, when I was still in practice, the employee of a colleague, a vascular surgeon who had once been in practice with me, contacted my office because she needed gall bladder surgery. She informed my staff that she had no health insurance even though she was employed full-time. I was very annoyed at my colleague for allowing an employee to be uninsured until I learned that she had opted out because she would rather have the extra money as salary. I don’t know that I would have allowed this but, at least, it wasn’t through any greed of his.

There is the classic free-rider. The famous “47 million uninsured” includes millions of these, as many as a third of the uninsured. Federal laws require that doctors and hospitals care for these people in cases of emergency and emergency is pretty broadly defined. The law is quite onerous and carries severe criminal penalties. Therefore, free riders can be assured of care by specialists and hospitals when emergencies require it.

The consequences for everyone else is the removal from the insurance pool of healthy young adults who would be expected to contribute and would have a low level of utilization. The same factors that make them choose free rider status make them attractive for the general pool of subscribers. This is a classic situation of tragedy of the commons. The sheep herder who grazes his sheep in the communal pasture, depletes the resources of the village without contributing his share. He will profit from this free riding until the system collapses, at which point he may make use of the resources he has taken from the common pool and go on his way leaving others to cope with disaster, or he may suffer the same fate, probably blaming ill luck rather than his own anti-social behavior.

This issue raises the question of mandates. Mandates that everyone buy insurance are part of Hillary Clinton’s plan and not Obama’s plan. Krugman says this will make Obama’s plan fail due to the free rider problem and, for once, I agree with Krugman.

There is another group of uninsured and we will deal with them next.

Point two:

Make it voluntary, but auto-opt-in– that is, you’re signed up unless you fill out a form and say “Thanks, but no thanks.”

If you opt-out, decide not to buy insurance, and get sick– tough cookies.

This is attractive emotionally but is a non-starter because of federal laws that will never be repealed. In the old days of 50 years ago, doctors and hospitals could afford to provide a modest amount of free care to the poor because care was mostly not that expensive for the provider. It was time and not material. Now, much of what is provided to the sick and indigent is expensive and the margin of profit to pay for these cases is far smaller than it once was. There has to be a way to eliminate the majority of the uninsured to prevent bankruptcy of the entire system.

A big share of the problem is illegal immigration. A single payer system without barriers to care would be a further incentive for illegal aliens, especially from Mexico, to seek care in the US. There is already a bus service from Tijuana to Los Angeles County Hospital for Mexican mothers of children who are US citizens to obtain US care for these Medicaid-eligible children. Many suspect pregnant women of entering the country to have “anchor babies” in US hospitals. The 14th Amendment guarantees citizenship for all born in the US. This will never be repealed so provision has to be made for the illegals, another large share of the uninsured.

I spend a day a week at LA County Hospital and about 60% of the patients are Spanish speaking, most of those non-citizens who would not join a single payer plan that required contribution from salary. Just as the federal government has to be the only agency that chooses to enforce the border, they are the only agency to pay for the care of those here illegally. Other community services (like schools) are impacted but we are limiting our comments to health care.

What to do with the poor ?

Everybody who makes below a certain income threshold gets automatically signed up for Medicaid, at no cost.

One problem with Medicaid that few understand is where the money goes.

Medicaid

A huge proportion of Medicaid dollars goes to nursing homes and care of the poor elderly. This will rise as the population ages. The rest goes to pregnant women and children with single men being the least likely to participate. Other conditions like mental health and the disabled from other causes round out the rest of the Medicaid population. Medicaid is not just a program for the poor children. What will we do with the nursing home population ? England does much better with home care than we do. Why ? Much of the population of Britain outside of London lives in villages and small cities that lends themselves to residential care. We have more tendency to warehouse elderly poor, perhaps because our population is more mobile and tends to sever ties with the communities we were born in. We may be more likely to end up alone with no family nearby.

Is the present system, such as it is, less expensive than a government program would be ?

That is a big question and will be Part IV.

A loss of history-updated

Monday, February 4th, 2008

ANOTHER UPDATE: No wonder the British teenagers don’t know any history. They are listening to the BBC.

I previously posted a bit about the loss of history in school curricula. I don’t expect much of American public schools anymore but Britain has a much longer history and I have found much more interest in such subjects as medical history in Britain than in the USA. That may be changing as British teenagers increasingly believe that historical figures are fictional and vice versa.

Despite his celebrated military reputation, 47 per cent of respondents dismissed the 12th-century crusading English king Richard the Lionheart as fictional.

More than a quarter (27 per cent) thought Florence Nightingale, the pioneering nurse who coaxed injured soldiers back to health in the Crimean War, was a mythical figure.

In contrast, a series of fictitious characters that have featured in British films and literature over the past few centuries were awarded real-life status.

King Arthur is the mythical figure most commonly mistaken for fact – almost two thirds of teens (65 per cent) believe that he existed and led a round table of knights at Camelot.

Twenty percent of British teens believed that Winston Churchill is a fictional character.

On the medical front, female Muslim medical students are refusing to scrub their forearms because of “modesty rules.”

Minutes of a clinical academics’ meeting at Liverpool University revealed that female Muslim students at Alder Hey children’s hospital had objected to rolling up their sleeves to wear gowns.

Similar concerns have been raised at Leicester University. Minutes from a medical school committee said that “a number of Muslim females had difficulty in complying with the procedures to roll up sleeves to the elbow for appropriate handwashing”.

No doubt Allah will prevent MRSA infections.

Thanks to Eric Blair for the tip to that story.

The best argument for McCain

Monday, February 4th, 2008

This writer, a professor at the Naval War College, states the best argument for McCain even though he is not supporting him. I have been disillusioned since 2000.

The immigration bill he sponsored with Ted Kennedy, is the worst blot on his record as a conservative. Libertarians support open borders (although Ron Paul now opposes unlimited immigration) but they usually hedge this with reservations about the welfare state that is so easily accessed by the illegals. I have spent many a long night repairing the damage to these people, usually a consequence of alcohol and ignorance, both well recognized as features of their culture. In 1900, millions came from Europe, were processed through Ellis Island where medical exams and some degree of screening for criminals existed, and allowed to strive for survival and even success in a country that had few safety nets for failure. Today, we see millions arrive with no screening, infected with sometimes exotic variants of infectious disease and who possess a fine sense of their “rights” as enumerated by various political pressure groups.

I do some reviews of Workers Compensation claims in California. I was very nearly terminated by a major Workers Compensation carrier for commenting on a report that the claimant, an illiterate illegal alien with chronic back pain at age 28, was probably not a candidate for vocational rehabilitation. The fact that the observation was true was not a defense. Even the fact that the observation was a justification for more medical treatment was barely adequate to avoid punishment. The rights claimed by illegals are supported by various political groups who hope to profit from their presence. Some, mostly Democrats although I suspect there are some delusional Republicans among them, expect gratitude expressed at the ballot box. Others, like NY City Mayor Mike Bloomberg, simply want cheap labor.

McCain would be better than the Democrat alternatives, although I doubt the topic of illegal immigration is an example of where.

President Obama

Sunday, February 3rd, 2008

UPDATE: This story suggests a growing bandwagon for Obama is starting to roll.

The polls are suggesting that Obama may be the Democratic nominee. I don’t like McCain’s chances against a charismatic young man who would also be the first black president. Let’s do a mental exercise and consider a President Obama. He has no executive experience of any kind but neither do Hillary or McCain. That is not that unusual but governors have generally done better on presidential politics for this reason. The last two Democrats to be elected president, Carter and Clinton, were former governors. On the other hand, we have seen that the federal bureaucracy is a Democrat-voting institution so maybe Democrats have to rely less on managerial skills since their agenda is aligned with the bureaucracy’s agenda. Bush has failed to get a lot of things done because the State Department and CIA were actively working to thwart him. That would not be a problem for Obama. He and State and CIA are in agreement. What do they agree on ?

First, the Iraq War was a mistake. Second, the Afghan War is a mistake. Third, the Global War on Terror is a mistake. Oh, they don’t exactly say that. Kevin Drum thinks they say that and he is a supporter. What does Obama say ? He answered a question at a campaign stop.

In prepared remarks that his campaign released, Mr. Obama plans to propose sending two additional troop brigades to Afghanistan and making military aid to Pakistan contingent on whether that country makes “substantial progress in closing down the training camps, evicting foreign fighters, and preventing the Taliban from using Pakistan as a staging area for attacks in Afghanistan.

What does this mean ? If Mushareff cannot stop the Taliban from using the tribal areas for a base of operations, will Obama stop aid to Pakistan ? We recently attacked a Taliban leader in Pakistan using a Predator drone. Does Obama support the Bush administration in this ? Why not say so?

When I am president, we will wage the war that has to be won, with a comprehensive strategy with five elements: getting out of Iraq and on to the right battlefield in Afghanistan and Pakistan; developing the capabilities and partnerships we need to take out the terrorists and the world’s most deadly weapons; engaging the world to dry up support for terror and extremism; restoring our values; and securing a more resilient homeland.

What does that mean ? If we get out of Iraq, won’t that be seen as a defeat ? Osama (not Obama) has been quoted as saying, “when people see a strong horse and a weak horse, by nature, they will like the strong horse.” Wouldn’t a precipitous retreat from Iraq, followed by chaos and an al Qeada revival, be seen as the acts of a “weak horse?”

I don’t know how the elections will turn out but I do believe that a victory by Obama in the fall election will be seen as an American retreat from the world. Some people see that as positive, especially those people in Berkeley who rank Marine recruiting stations with adult bookstores. They are big Obama supporters.

We may yet get to see how the equivalent of a Henry Wallace Vice-President nomination in 1944 would have played out. Some of us have believed that FDR knew he was doomed and chose Harry Truman because he did not want to risk Henry Wallace, his Vice-President from 1940 to 1944, succeeding him. We may get a chance to find out what it would have been like, had the other scenario taken place. Obama is a former Muslim who is willing to reverse all the anti-terrorism policies of the Bush Administration. How would that work out ? We may learn.

UPDATE: His legislative record is also undistinguished.

Eurabian update.

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

A Muslim teenager was trying to mug a young German man in Cologne. The German defended himself and the Muslim was killed. Now, the Muslims are rioting and the Germans seem to be apologizing for defending themselves. I’d shoot him. No wonder the Germans are upset with us. We defend ourselves.

McCain and conservatives

Friday, February 1st, 2008

First, there is this story, about how McCain considered switching parties in 2001. I was a supporter and contributer to his 2000 primary campaign but some of his rhetoric, about tax cuts for the “rich” for example, were just gratuitously insulting and economically illiterate. Then he attacks Romney for making a profit in business. McCain has been a government employee all his life. He has never run a business or met a payroll. A medical practice is not exactly a big business but I have had the experience of not being able to pay myself a salary so I could pay my employees. I wonder if McCain knows what that feels like?

Peggy Noonan has been writing excellent columns lately, after a bit of a slump, and has this one today recommending that conservatives make their peace with McCain.

If you go by the Florida returns, maybe this year positions aren’t everything. Republicans on the ground think the conservative is the one who suffered 5½ years in the Hanoi Hilton. Republicans on the ground think the conservative is the one who has endured a lifetime in the rounds in Washington and survived as antispending, antiabortion and pro-military. Republicans on the ground think the conservative is the old fighter jock who’ll keep the country safe in a rocky time ahead. And maybe Republicans on the ground are saying: He earned it.

There is a definite place for the “He earned it” concept in the Republican Party. Nothing else can explain the nomination of Bob Dole in 1996. There may also have been a feeling that, once Clinton had outmaneuvered the Republicans on the government shutdown in 1995, the nomination wasn’t worth that much. The same sort of feeling in 1992 probably led to the nomination of Clinton when Democrats believed that Bush I was unbeatable after Gulf War I. Then along came Ross Perot and made Clinton president.

I don’t buy the rhetoric, popular on the right just now, that McCain is not a conservative. His record on that score has been pretty solid until 2000. Then he seems to have had his feelings hurt by the defeat in the primaries. The politics of John McCain has always been very personal and idiosyncratic.

Mark Levin has an opinion about the Keating Five scandal. I think McCain’s sins in the scandal were venial sins and he was dragged in by the Democratic majority to deflect criticism of clear violations of ethics and law. McCain was the only Republican and the least culpable of those involved. The result, unfortunately, has been his crusade against campaign finances which has resulted in the terrible McCain-Finegold legislation.

While Chairman of the Commerce Committee of the Senate, he learned that tobacco executives had lied before his committee. Infuriated, he began another crusade, this time against tobacco, an industry that makes a legal product. He rails against US pharmaceutical manufacturers with little insight into that industry with its huge investments in R&D.

His biggest area of concern now is illegal immigration and the probability that he has decided on total amnesty and open borders in spite of all arguments that illegal immigration is producing disproportionate costs to communities that far outweigh the theoretical benefits in cheap labor. I have speculated about his motivation. The fact remains that he is no longer to be trusted on that subject.

Is he worse than Obama or Hillary ? Probably not. He was a true conservative until the failed 2000 election campaign and he has been steady on the Iraq War. That may have to be enough but I have no enthusiasm for him as a candidate. I have already voted for Rudy as an absentee voter so I have no role to play other than this.