mirror of
https://github.com/opsxcq/mirror-textfiles.com.git
synced 2025-09-09 05:41:00 +02:00
426 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
426 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
from Libertarian Labor Review #16
|
|
Winter 1994, pages 10-14
|
|
|
|
The Health Care Crisis
|
|
|
|
No country in the world spends as much on health care as the
|
|
United States, or gets as little for its money. In 1992, fully 14
|
|
percent of U.S. Gross Domestic Product (about $2,700 per person per
|
|
year--though by no means do all people receive health care) was
|
|
spent on health care, and yet a recent study of seven
|
|
industrialized countries found the U.S. dead last in basic health
|
|
indicators. We have fewer doctors per capita, higher infant
|
|
mortality, and shorter lives. And nearly 100 million people went
|
|
without any health insurance for part or all of the year. Surveys
|
|
find that people are quite worried about their access to health
|
|
care--two-thirds fear they couldn't afford long-term care, and
|
|
almost half worry that they couldn't finance a major illness. The
|
|
crisis is particularly severe for the unemployed and for those in
|
|
low-paying jobs--precisely those in the worst position to cover
|
|
medical expenses, and the most likely to get ill.
|
|
The costs of operating this for-profit health system are
|
|
rising sharply, far ahead of the inflation rate. Much of this
|
|
spending does not go into treatment--about one out of eight dollars
|
|
spent by the health insurance companies goes to administrative
|
|
costs, nearly ten times what it costs Canada's nationalized system
|
|
(the world's second most expensive) for paperwork. U.S. doctors are
|
|
better paid than their counterparts in other countries, drug costs
|
|
are higher, and insurance and hospital profits are soaring. Only
|
|
people's health lags behind.
|
|
As costs rise, insurance companies get pickier about whom
|
|
they'll cover, and make workers pay a growing share of health care
|
|
costs through higher deductibles, rising premiums, co-payments, and
|
|
reduced coverage. Insurers avoid entire industries as too risky,
|
|
and refuse to insure people who get sick. Similarly, HMOs avoid
|
|
rural areas and economically depressed inner cities where it is
|
|
more expensive to provide care and where people are more likely to
|
|
need medical treatment. And growing numbers of employers reserve
|
|
the right to cancel workers' health insurance if their treatment
|
|
gets too expensive (or threatens to).
|
|
The health care industry has proven incapable of providing
|
|
even basic medical services to most people, but it has been one of
|
|
the few economic sectors to create new jobs even during the current
|
|
recession. The health business added 3 million new jobs between
|
|
1980 and 1991, according to the November 1992 Monthly Labor Review,
|
|
and health care wages grew at 6 times the national average (though
|
|
this is in part the result of low-paid service workers unionizing
|
|
and demanding a living wage). Employment in health insurance
|
|
offices led the pack as thousands of auditors and other paper
|
|
pushers were hired in a desperate attempt to take charge of
|
|
escalating costs by close monitoring of health care providers.
|
|
Capitalism Cannot Work
|
|
Even the capitalists are forced to admit that the healthcare
|
|
marketplace simply does not work. As corporations have found
|
|
themselves paying ever-escalating insurance premiums, the country's
|
|
largest corporations have joined the call for health care reform.
|
|
A front-page article in the New York Times termed health care an
|
|
"economic outlaw," because medical insurance served to insulate
|
|
consumers from rising costs. "Americans have every incentive to
|
|
seek additional medical care, even if the benefit they stand to
|
|
gain is modest compared with the total cost..." (The extent to
|
|
which this is true is quite limited. Not only are many people
|
|
excluded from health care because they have inadequate or no
|
|
coverage, but for several years employers have been pushing an
|
|
ever-increasing share of expenses onto workers.) Nor does the
|
|
alleged "invisible hand of the market" function--sick people are in
|
|
no position to shop around for a better deal and rarely have the
|
|
expertise to evaluate the quality or necessity of their
|
|
treatment.
|
|
Indeed, capitalism inexorably lead to higher costs. Doctors
|
|
and hospitals create their own demand for services: the more
|
|
hospital beds there are in a community, the more doctors put
|
|
patients in hospitals and the longer hospitals keep them there; the
|
|
more surgeons in a community, the more operations are performed to
|
|
support them. One study found that doctors who perform their own
|
|
radiological tests prescribe such tests at least four times as
|
|
often and charge higher fees than did doctors who referred patients
|
|
to radiologists. Drug companies charge high prices for prescription
|
|
drugs to finance costly advertising campaigns to persuade doctors
|
|
to prescribe their brand-name drugs rather than cheaper generic
|
|
equivalents. Hospitals buy the latest equipment, regardless of
|
|
whether it's needed, simply to keep up with the competition--and
|
|
then charge high prices to make up for the fact that it is hardly
|
|
ever used. And as hospital admissions decline and average hospital
|
|
stays shortened, the number of employees on hospital payrolls
|
|
(largely administrators and book-keepers) soared. Between 1970 and
|
|
1989 the number of health care administrators in the U.S. increased
|
|
nearly six-fold, while growing numbers of hospital beds lie empty.
|
|
As doctors David Himmelstein and Steffie Woolhandler note, "It
|
|
apparently takes substantial administrative effort to keep sick
|
|
patients out of empty hospital beds."
|
|
The Times finds this outrageous, and for good reason (it makes
|
|
the health coverage they provide their workers more expensive). But
|
|
the most serious problem with market-based health care entirely
|
|
escapes their notice: under our capitalist health care system many
|
|
workers, and indeed entire communities, do not receive basic health
|
|
care services. Hospitals (including ostensibly non-profit ones)
|
|
refuse to treat patients who don't have health insurance or well-
|
|
paid jobs. About 300,000 people are refused care each year at
|
|
hospital emergency rooms because they are uninsured or inadequately
|
|
insured; if their lives are in immediate danger they are patched up
|
|
and shipped to often overcrowded private hospitals. And many people
|
|
go without necessary medicine because they cannot afford to pay for
|
|
it. The U.S. has the highest infant mortality rate of any
|
|
industrialized society (even developing countries such as Singapore
|
|
do better), and both men and women die at younger ages than do our
|
|
fellow workers in many other countries. Quite simply, thousands
|
|
of our fellow workers suffer and die each year because of the
|
|
capitalist health care industry and its profit motive.
|
|
Managed Care No Solution
|
|
Clinton's health care reform plan begins with the basic
|
|
assumption that Americans are overinsured, and thus focuses on
|
|
creating incentives to force us to be more cost-conscious health
|
|
care consumers. Managed competition might (depending on how tight-
|
|
fisted the government proves) end up saving money over the long run
|
|
(in the short run it means higher costs and higher profits for the
|
|
insurance industry), but only at the expense of people's health.
|
|
Clinton proposes phasing in "universal" health care over the next
|
|
four years (undocumented workers would not be covered--apparently
|
|
they will be left to die in the streets). But this "universal" plan
|
|
would offer only the most minimal coverage--co-payments of as much
|
|
of $25 per visit would discourage many people from seeing doctors,
|
|
and Medicaid and Medicare benefits would be slashed. Himmelstein
|
|
and Woolhandler describe the Clinton plan as one designed to make
|
|
insurance companies the feudal lords of American medicine,
|
|
"push[ing] all but the wealthy into a few cut-rate HMOs, owned by
|
|
insurance giants such as Prudential. Since only the wealthy could
|
|
afford higher cost plans, Managed Competition would ratify a system
|
|
of care stratified along class lines, separate and unequal."
|
|
Instead of reducing bureaucracy and administration (overhead
|
|
accounts for about 14 percent of U.S. health care costs), Clinton's
|
|
plan would add new layers to the bureaucracy, while transferring
|
|
Medicaid recipients from the relatively efficient (3.5% overhead)
|
|
public sector to inefficient private businesses. Newly created
|
|
regional health alliances would collect premiums, while a new
|
|
National Health Board would establish an overall health budget and
|
|
regulate premium levels. Workers would be required to pay income
|
|
taxes on the value of any health care benefits that exceed the
|
|
government's minimal package (mental health, vision and dental
|
|
coverage, for example). And patients would have to pay extra if
|
|
they wanted to choose their own doctor.
|
|
Pilot managed care programs demonstrate that quality health
|
|
care is the last thing on the government's mind. Typically, these
|
|
systems operate under a fixed price scheme in which health care
|
|
providers get the same money whether or not they provide any
|
|
services. Some go further, paying more to doctors who spend less.
|
|
This is supposed to discourage unnecessary expense, but it is at
|
|
least as likely to discourage necessary health care. When the
|
|
Pentagon tested a managed care system on military families in
|
|
Virginia, it didn't bother to monitor the quality of care being
|
|
offered. But it definitely saved money.
|
|
Similarly, the federal government has been encouraging
|
|
Medicare patients to sign up with health maintenance organizations
|
|
(HMOs). Since HMOs provide and pay for medical services directly
|
|
(unlike insurance companies, which get billed after the fact), they
|
|
have a clear incentive to provide as little service as possible. A
|
|
study of New York City HMOs found that several did not keep
|
|
adequate patient records, showed little interest in monitoring
|
|
patient histories, spent huge amounts and marketing and advertising
|
|
that could go to care, and provided little concrete information to
|
|
patients. A 1990 General Accounting Office survey of care provided
|
|
to Medicaid recipients by Chicago-area HMOs found that required
|
|
preventive care was not provided to children, and worried that
|
|
incentive payments to cost-cutting doctors encouraged them to delay
|
|
and deny care.
|
|
Managed Care schemes cut costs in part through hard bargaining
|
|
to hold down doctor and hospital payments. HMOs skimp on doctors,
|
|
having them handle nearly twice as many patients as do doctors in
|
|
private practice, generally leading to long waits for rushed
|
|
consultations. But their centerpiece is the requirement that
|
|
doctor's visits and medical treatment be preapproved. HMOs refuse
|
|
to authorize what they considers unnecessary or inefficient
|
|
practices. For example, one HMO cut a patient's psychotherapy
|
|
benefits because the patient refused to take the mood altering drug
|
|
Prozac. Giving people drugs instead of treatment is certainly
|
|
cheaper, but is cost the primary basis upon which these decisions
|
|
should be made?
|
|
As the Left Business Observer concludes, "Providers under the
|
|
whip of profit maximization will skimp on care to fatten profits...
|
|
In health care, the market kills." But for all their skimping on
|
|
actual health care, HMO premiums have been rising even faster than
|
|
for the medical system as a whole--even without taking into account
|
|
increased co-payments and other hidden costs.
|
|
Business Unions Capitulate
|
|
The Clinton proposal has been roundly condemned by consumer
|
|
groups and the health care reform movement as a placebo at best,
|
|
and at worst a mechanism for sucking an ever-increasing share of
|
|
our wealth into the pockets of the health care profiteers. An
|
|
editorial in The Progressive, for example, praised the Clintons'
|
|
sympathetic manner but concluded that their plescription could not
|
|
solve the underlying problem:
|
|
Why won't it work? Because it deliberately and decisively
|
|
refuses to deal with the root cause of all the ailments
|
|
so admirably described by the Clintons: the fact that the
|
|
health-care system in the United States is market-
|
|
oriented and profit-driven. At every level and in every
|
|
aspect, health care in our country is provided on the
|
|
basis of someone's ability to turn a buck...
|
|
In recent years unions have been one of the leading forces in
|
|
the battle for health care reform. The rising costs of health care
|
|
benefits have been one of the factors driving corporations' all-out
|
|
assault against unions, prompting many business unions to come out
|
|
in favor of a Canadian-style single-payer system in hopes of
|
|
eliminating the non-union sectors' cost advantages. But when the
|
|
Clintons declared for Managed Competition most unions went along.
|
|
The American Federation of Teachers, for example, ran a "special
|
|
report" arguing that securing decent health care is beyond unions:
|
|
"No matter how hard your local union fights for you, it can't give
|
|
you the security of health care that's always there. The problem's
|
|
just too big for any local union, district or national union to
|
|
solve." But for all their efforts to sell the Clinton plan,
|
|
primarily by presenting it as a minimum leaving unions free to
|
|
negotiate better deals, the AFT admits that the "pretty short" list
|
|
of excluded health benefits includes dental care, orthodontia,
|
|
hearing aids, contact lenses, psychotherapy, etc. While workers
|
|
could still choose their own doctors, they would be required to pay
|
|
more to do so. And workers would be required to pay income taxes on
|
|
any health benefits that exceed the government's stingy
|
|
package.
|
|
The situation will be even worse for part-time workers.
|
|
Employers will pay a pro-rated insurance contribution based on the
|
|
number of hours they work, part-timers will be required to come up
|
|
with the rest of the money themselves (and since coverage will be
|
|
mandatory, they will find themselves in a very deep hole indeed).
|
|
Most health care reformers call for a "single payer" system
|
|
modelled on Canada's, where basic health care services are funded
|
|
by taxes and the government pays doctors and hospitals directly.
|
|
Such a system reduces administrative overhead and paperwork by
|
|
eliminating insurance companies, as well as economic barriers to
|
|
health care access. And since the government is the sole payer of
|
|
health care bills, it can theoretically set global budgets to hold
|
|
expenditures in line. (In practice this works less well; the
|
|
Canadian system is the second most expensive in the world and
|
|
offers coverage only marginally better than that in the U.S. Since
|
|
doctors and hospitals continue to operate in a capitalist economy,
|
|
they have strong incentives to push payment levels upward; the
|
|
government must choose between limiting available health services
|
|
and taking on the powerful health care industry.)
|
|
But this also gives the government immense powers over the
|
|
lives of its citizens--the power to dictate what medical services
|
|
will be available, what drugs they will and will not take, etc. In
|
|
an era of economic decline, the government could quickly become an
|
|
HMO-like operator backed by the full coercive power of the state.
|
|
Syndicalist Approaches
|
|
In a society organized along anarcho-syndicalist lines, health
|
|
care would be one of the many necessities available to all without
|
|
charge. While we have little interest in developing a social
|
|
blueprint (the details of any free social organization must of
|
|
necessity be worked out by those who constitute it, and evolve in
|
|
accord with experience and changing needs), a syndicalist health
|
|
care system would surely be self-managed by health care workers
|
|
themselves--working through their union which would include all
|
|
workers involved in delivering health care, from those who scrub
|
|
the floors to the nurses and doctors. Health workers' unions would
|
|
federate among themselves internationally--to share and develop
|
|
their expertise, to provide training, etc.--and with other groups
|
|
in their communities to ascertain what services are needed and to
|
|
ensure that the necessary resources are provided. This would likely
|
|
involve a radical rethinking of the way in which health care is
|
|
delivered, with greater attention to preventive care (prenatal
|
|
care, routine checkups, nutrition, etc.--but also environmental
|
|
conditions) and changes in the division of labor which now
|
|
separates doctors' mental labor (diagnosis, prescription, etc.)
|
|
from hands-on treatment.
|
|
Anarchists have considered these issues before, if not in the
|
|
context of our highly technological medical system. Kropotkin
|
|
argued that the progress of civilization could be measured by the
|
|
extent to which such necessities (a term he defined broadly to also
|
|
include culture, information, etc.) were available, free of charge,
|
|
to all. G.P. Maximoff noted that medical and sanitation
|
|
services (sanitation was the preventive medicine of the day--indeed
|
|
it is only in recent decades that medicine developed the ability to
|
|
significantly improve people's health) were essential public
|
|
functions to be supported by the communal economy and administered
|
|
by the union of medical and sanitary workers. "The Public Health
|
|
service will cover the entire country with a close net of medical
|
|
and sanitary centers, hospitals and sanitoria." Alexander
|
|
Berkman argued that such needs should be met by locally based
|
|
voluntary committees, rather than by centralized structures which
|
|
were likely to overlook real needs and stifle the spirit of human
|
|
solidarity so necessary to social progress.
|
|
During the Spanish Revolution, our comrades faced the problem
|
|
of constructing basic medical services essentially from nothing.
|
|
(Spain certainly had doctors and hospitals, but like other social
|
|
services these were not available to most workers because of cost
|
|
and location.) As Gaston Leval wrote,
|
|
The socialization of health services was one of the
|
|
greatest achievements of the revolution... The Health
|
|
Workers' Union was founded in September, 1936... All
|
|
health workers, from porters to doctors and
|
|
administrators, were organized into the one big union of
|
|
health workers....
|
|
Before the revolution, Spain had one of the highest infant
|
|
mortality rates in Europe and vast inequality in access to
|
|
services. So it was not sufficient merely to take charge of the
|
|
existing system--it had to be (re)constructed from the ground up.
|
|
In Catalonia, the health workers' union distributed health centers
|
|
throughout the province to ensure that everyone was within easy
|
|
travelling distance. There were, of course, many difficulties:
|
|
Where there had been an artificially created surplus of
|
|
doctors serving the wealthy under capitalism, there was
|
|
now under the socialized medical system a shortage of
|
|
doctors badly needed to serve the disadvantaged masses
|
|
who never before received good medical care....
|
|
Not all health services could be entirely socialized, but
|
|
most of the dental clinics in Catalonia were controlled
|
|
by the syndicate, as were all the hospitals, clinics and
|
|
sanitariums... Private doctors still practiced, but...
|
|
the cost of operations was controlled. Payments for
|
|
treatments were made through the syndicates, not directly
|
|
to the physicians. In the new clinics, surgery and dental
|
|
extractions were free....
|
|
In the village of Albalate de Cinca, for example, the local
|
|
collective provided free health care to all, providing the town
|
|
doctor with medical supplies and books, and, of course, with the
|
|
necessities of life from their collective labor. Similar
|
|
arrangements were made throughout Aragon and Catalonia.
|
|
It is, however, relatively easy to sketch how we might provide
|
|
health care in an ideal society; given that we are not presently in
|
|
a position to socialize the health care system, the question of
|
|
what our position should be towards proposals to address the
|
|
immediate health care crisis remains open. In Britain, the
|
|
anarchist movement--while intensely critical of the many
|
|
inadequacies of the nationalized health care service and its
|
|
bureaucratic deformations--has generally opposed efforts to
|
|
reprivatize health care, recognizing that this would only worsen
|
|
the situation. Similarly, in the U.S. many anarchists have taken
|
|
part in efforts to fight the closing of public hospitals or their
|
|
privatization.
|
|
Some anarchists, such as the anarchist caucus of the
|
|
Committees of Correspondence, call for a national health plan,
|
|
apparently modelled after Canada's system. But it is far from
|
|
evident that such a system can meet people's needs. In Canada,
|
|
health care costs are rising almost as sharply as in the U.S.,
|
|
prompting government efforts to control costs by cutting back on
|
|
services. Workers (whether in health care, or in society as a
|
|
whole) have little influence over health care policy--rather the
|
|
important decisions are made by government bureaucrats, and driven
|
|
by the need to placate the health care corporations, on the one
|
|
hand, and the transnational corporations' demands for global
|
|
competitiveness on the other.
|
|
Any meaningful health care reform needs to eliminate
|
|
capitalism from the health care system and place decision-making in
|
|
local communities (though funding would need to be drawn from a
|
|
wider area, in order to address the vastly different wealth levels
|
|
and the greater health needs typically found in poor communities).
|
|
This might take the form of community-based health clinics, mutual
|
|
aid societies (of the sort that provided sickness and death
|
|
benefits to hundreds of thousands of workers in the early years of
|
|
this century), or union-sponsored facilities.
|
|
Decent health care should be available to all as a fundamental
|
|
human right. Yet infants die for lack of prenatal care, people live
|
|
in fear of being bankrupted by medical bills in the event of a
|
|
major illness or accident, many others cannot afford medications
|
|
for chronic illnesses, people die every day because there is no
|
|
profit in treating them. This is a strong indictment of our
|
|
capitalist system and its inability to meet basic human needs. But
|
|
the solution is not in strengthening the insurance companies or
|
|
more government control. Rather, we must seize control of health
|
|
care--so necessary to ensure our ability to live out our lives--and
|
|
build a health care system (and, indeed, a society) organized
|
|
around fulfilling human needs.
|
|
|
|
Notes:
|
|
|
|
1. "Paying for health," Left Business Observer #57, Feb. 16 1993,
|
|
pp. 2-7. Figures vary widely for the numbers uninsured and
|
|
underinsured; David Himmelstein and Steffie Woolhandler (The
|
|
National Health Program Book, Common Courage Press, 1994, pp. 24-5)
|
|
estimate that about 37 million Americans are uninsured at any one
|
|
time, and that 1 in 4 (63.3 million) were uninsured for at least
|
|
one month in a 28-month period from 1986-88.
|
|
|
|
2. Thomas Bodenheimer, "Health Care Reform in the 1990s and
|
|
Beyond," Socialist Review 1993(1), pp. 18-20.
|
|
|
|
3. David Rosenbaum, "Economic Outlaw: American Health Care," The
|
|
New York Times, Oct. 26 1993, pp. 1, D22.
|
|
|
|
4. Himmilstein & Woolhandler, The National Health Program Book, p.
|
|
89.
|
|
|
|
5. Himmelstein & Woolhandler, The National Health Program Book.
|
|
|
|
6. Himmelstein & Woolhandler, p. 183.
|
|
|
|
7. Robert Pear, "Congress is Given Clinton Proposal for Health
|
|
Care," The New York Times, Oct. 28 1993, pp. 1, A24-A25.
|
|
|
|
8. Judith Ebenstein, "Big Brother, Manager" (Letter), The New York
|
|
Times, Nov. 16 1993, p. A26.
|
|
|
|
9. "Cost Control," Left Business Observer #58, April 26, 1993, p.
|
|
8.
|
|
|
|
10. Himmelstein & Woolhandler, p. 188.
|
|
|
|
11. "Placebo" (Editorial), The Progressive, November 1993, p. 9.
|
|
|
|
12. "The Clinton health plan: A union Q&A," On Campus, November
|
|
1993, p. 4.
|
|
|
|
13. See my "Peter Kropotkin's Anarchist Communism," Libertarian
|
|
Labor Review 12, Winter 1992, pp. 19-24.
|
|
|
|
14. G.P. Maximoff, Program of Anarcho-Syndicalism, p. 32;
|
|
originally published in Russian in 1927. English translation by Ada
|
|
Siegel included in Maximoff's Constructive Anarchism (Maximoff
|
|
Memorial Publishing Committee, 1952). Reprinted 1985 by Monty
|
|
Miller Press, Sydney, Australia.
|
|
|
|
15. Alexander Berkman, ABC of Anarchism, London: Freedom Press,
|
|
1977 (Excerpt from 1929 edition of What is Communist Anarchism),
|
|
pp. 72-3.
|
|
|
|
16. in Sam Dolgoff, ed., The Anarchist Collectives: Workers' Self-
|
|
Management in the Spanish Revolution, New York: Free Life Editions,
|
|
1974, pp. 99-101.
|
|
|
|
17. Dolgoff, The Anarchist Collectives, pp. 119, 133-34.
|
|
|
|
18. "National Health Plan Now!@!" Black and Red #5, July/August
|
|
1993, p. 1. The article criticizes the emerging Clinton plan and
|
|
quotes several advocates of a single-payer system, but offers no
|
|
details of what sort of national play they advocate.
|
|
|