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MineralMan

(146,288 posts)
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 04:41 PM Nov 2013

Imagine Single-Payer Healthcare and what the reaction would be.

Single-Payer healthcare is by far the best way to distribute healthcare among a population. No question about that at all, and most of the industrial world has already implemented it. So, why don't we have that?

Simple. It's tax-supported healthcare. Like Social Security and Medicare, we pay into it and everyone in the program benefits from it. And that's the issue that would bring screams from the Right. A lot of people would be covered who would be unable to contribute to their coverage. Poor people. Old people. Struggling people. And yet, a Single-payer universal healthcare system, like the ones in most of the western world, would cover healthcare costs for those people, just as much as it would cover healthcare for everyone else.

We're getting complaints from the libertarians, the Republicans, the young, in some cases, and others about the unfairness of mandatory health insurance in the ACA. Imagine what we'd be hearing if real tax-supported single-payer universal healthcare were being implemented this year. Everyone pays according to their income and everyone benefits according to their need. That's the idea. You pay now, while you're healthy, and get healthcare when you're not, and maybe even when you are no longer paying into the system.

But, we're impatient, selfish, and short-sighted. That's obvious from the complaints about ACA. Had this year been the first year of tax-supported single-payer universal healthcare, I can promise you that the screaming would be many decibels louder, and it would be coming from the same voices who are screaming now about ACA.

We must decide, as a nation, whether we want healthcare to be a right, not a privilege. We must decide and we must accept that we all have to pay the costs of it. Until we do, we will not have single-payer universal healthcare. Until we become a nation that accepts that we must think long-term instead of short-term and that those in need today may be us tomorrow. We must develop a better social consciousness than we have now. We must grow.

Bottom line: The complaints, whining, and screaming we're hearing now about ACA would be ten times louder if single-payer universal healthcare was being implemented this year. That is why we do not have it. To get it, we are going to have to make a shift in our way of looking at a lot of things.

45 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Imagine Single-Payer Healthcare and what the reaction would be. (Original Post) MineralMan Nov 2013 OP
I think you are exactly right. Everyone's thinking -providers, government, even consumer/patients Hoyt Nov 2013 #1
Companies would drop health insurance coverage for almost EVERYONE if Single Payer passed. NOVA_Dem Nov 2013 #14
Of course they would because no one would need insurance at all. TheKentuckian Nov 2013 #31
If we are going to have the complaints, whining and screaming anyway, it would have been nice Bluenorthwest Nov 2013 #2
I'd rather have that, too. But the reason we don't have it is MineralMan Nov 2013 #5
No, we got something far to the right of what the nation was asking for. woo me with science Nov 2013 #12
Yes, I know that's your opinion. MineralMan Nov 2013 #13
Nothing is possible when it is quietly and deliberately taken off the table. woo me with science Nov 2013 #26
We didn't hear about it because the richest folks don't support it - TBF Nov 2013 #29
I think you're right for the most part. woo me with science Nov 2013 #36
While I agree,he was going to be accused of sufrommich Nov 2013 #3
The President of The United States cannot make laws. MineralMan Nov 2013 #7
Yes,I'm aware of that. Obamacare is called sufrommich Nov 2013 #9
He chose not to fight for a public option woo me with science Nov 2013 #10
100% pure woo. nt tridim Nov 2013 #19
Message auto-removed Name removed Nov 2013 #20
Welcome to DU arcane1 Nov 2013 #25
Maybe the leaders/corps would be screaming but the people would be happy. polichick Nov 2013 #4
Not all of the people. I can promise that. MineralMan Nov 2013 #6
+1000000 woo me with science Nov 2013 #8
I suspect if people knew how expensive Medicare for all would be, they'd still gripe. Hoyt Nov 2013 #22
Other than the insurance industry,I doubt that most sufrommich Nov 2013 #11
I think you're right. I'd also add much of the healthcare provider industry and MineralMan Nov 2013 #15
I'm not really disagreeing with you,I just sufrommich Nov 2013 #21
Obamacare looks very much like means-tested Medicaid. FarCenter Nov 2013 #32
That's who I meant - the insurance companies, the ones who helped write the ACA. polichick Nov 2013 #18
That's why I think the path to single payer goes through a public option path. JoePhilly Nov 2013 #16
I'm certain it will have to be a process. MineralMan Nov 2013 #17
A voluntary public option may sufrommich Nov 2013 #23
yup ... once you put it in the State exchanges, you have the competition you need. JoePhilly Nov 2013 #24
That matters little. What we need is universal subsidized access to the exchanges TheKentuckian Nov 2013 #45
I know some American expats in Japan who hated the national health system when Lydia Leftcoast Nov 2013 #27
Yes. You pay for MineralMan Nov 2013 #41
"and everyone benefits according to their need" FarCenter Nov 2013 #28
Need? If you are sick you get care. MineralMan Nov 2013 #40
Most of the Industrial world does not in fact have 'single payer'. n/t PoliticAverse Nov 2013 #30
We have the network in place and it's very popular Chisox08 Nov 2013 #33
Exactly. MineralMan Nov 2013 #39
I know what my reaction would be. Deep13 Nov 2013 #34
"Everyone pays according to their income and everyone benefits according to their need." Martin Eden Nov 2013 #35
I think we need Marx in both places - TBF Nov 2013 #37
Yes. Healthcare should be a socialist system. MineralMan Nov 2013 #38
If our tax structure were more progressive, only the wealthy would complain. Laelth Nov 2013 #42
We don't have it because too many of our leaders truebluegreen Nov 2013 #43
Nonsense. The ACA is a corporate first model first proposed by Mitt Romney. Romulox Nov 2013 #44
 

Hoyt

(54,770 posts)
1. I think you are exactly right. Everyone's thinking -providers, government, even consumer/patients
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:03 PM
Nov 2013

will need to change.

NOVA_Dem

(620 posts)
14. Companies would drop health insurance coverage for almost EVERYONE if Single Payer passed.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:33 PM
Nov 2013

I'm for single payer but if you think the political blowback now is bad wait until companies decide to shed the expense of employer contributions to health insurance and pocket it as profit.

TheKentuckian

(25,024 posts)
31. Of course they would because no one would need insurance at all.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:59 PM
Nov 2013

You levy a tax on employers to get their systemic contribution.

I don't grasp your point, the idea of single payer is to the rid of the cartel and have a pool of everyone.

 

Bluenorthwest

(45,319 posts)
2. If we are going to have the complaints, whining and screaming anyway, it would have been nice
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:07 PM
Nov 2013

if it was over something excellent rather than this monument to mediocrity in service to moderation. The part you leave out is that if this had included even a public option, the right wing complaints would have to drown out the cheers of those who actually liked it. But people don't go cheering and banging the drum for just muddled mediocrity , so every peep out of the right wing resounds in an arena devoid of the masses who might be cheering for a less confusing, less profit driven system.

MineralMan

(146,288 posts)
5. I'd rather have that, too. But the reason we don't have it is
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:12 PM
Nov 2013

because we, as a nation, aren't ready to accept it, and we don't have a government capable of putting into effect. All for the reasons I described, I think. As for its effects on individuals, we're beginning to hear about the people who are finding relief in the ACA. My wife is one of those. She's quite pleased. So are others.

I want single-payer, taxpayer-funded universal healthcare. We can't have that right now. There's not a chance anything of the sort will be enacted. Hell, we barely got this ACA. Change is slow, particularly in people's attitudes. That's where the change needs to happen. Government can't do that.

woo me with science

(32,139 posts)
12. No, we got something far to the right of what the nation was asking for.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:28 PM
Nov 2013

Polls at the time showed strong support for a public option.

That momentum could have been used to create a national conversation and demand for something better. Instead, the President quietly scrapped that option in backroom deals.

MineralMan

(146,288 posts)
13. Yes, I know that's your opinion.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:32 PM
Nov 2013

Polls also do not make laws. Congress makes laws. A public option, and much less a single payer system simply was not possible at the time. Congress would not have passed any such thing.

So, we have ACA. It's something. It benefits some a great deal. Others, not so much.

Single-payer is what is needed. It's a while off, though, I suspect strongly.

I don't make laws, either.

woo me with science

(32,139 posts)
26. Nothing is possible when it is quietly and deliberately taken off the table.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:53 PM
Nov 2013

It was a perfect opportunity to exert pressure and move the national conversation leftward.

Corporate Democrats do not hesitate to join complaints about how about Republicans use relentless repetition and Fox News brainwashing to perpetuate their lies and move the national consciousness rightward, but let a real Democrat suggest that our politicians make a sustained effort to COUNTER the lies and advocate publicly for policies that would actually help people, and the whining and scolding begin about "not possible."

Our President and corporate Democrats make soaring speeches about the need to eat austerity peas or spy on the entire US population. However, they cannot seem to muster the will to passionately advocate a policy that will actually help Americans...EVEN when they already control the Presidency and half of Congress, and EVEN when the country clearly supports the policy and could be rallied behind it.

We didn't hear about it BECAUSE the country supported it. That is the sad, ugly truth.

TBF

(32,056 posts)
29. We didn't hear about it because the richest folks don't support it -
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:58 PM
Nov 2013

it has nothing to do with what the rest of us need or want.

woo me with science

(32,139 posts)
36. I think you're right for the most part.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 06:45 PM
Nov 2013

I suspect it would have been quietly removed even if the public hadn't been in support, for the reason you mention.

However, Corporate Dems do occasionally take the opportunity to pretend to advocate progressive policies, to sustain the illusion of working for the 99 percent.

IMO, that's *least* likely to happen when the public is primed to rally behind a policy and exert pressure that might change votes.

sufrommich

(22,871 posts)
3. While I agree,he was going to be accused of
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:09 PM
Nov 2013

being a closet socialist anyway. He also won his first election promising single payer healthcare.

woo me with science

(32,139 posts)
10. He chose not to fight for a public option
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:23 PM
Nov 2013

after he had promised to do so, when polls showed that the country was strongly behind it, and when public opinion could have been mobilized to demand it.

The truth is that he was working for the insurance companies' version all along.

Response to woo me with science (Reply #10)

MineralMan

(146,288 posts)
6. Not all of the people. I can promise that.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:13 PM
Nov 2013

Both sides of the political spectrum are quick to refer to "The American People." There really is no such collective thing. That is what needs to change.

woo me with science

(32,139 posts)
8. +1000000
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:21 PM
Nov 2013

Once people see comprehensive coverage for much, much less money and pain, the complaints would die down very quickly.

Support for Medicare is overwhelming across party lines. It is only the corporate propaganda that keeps the small fraction of protest alive.

 

Hoyt

(54,770 posts)
22. I suspect if people knew how expensive Medicare for all would be, they'd still gripe.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:45 PM
Nov 2013

Medicare has no annual cap on out-of-pocket-costs, and the government couldn't develop the systems necessary to administer it without insurance companies. In the best of worlds it would be 10, maybe 15% less than exchange policies right now. People would scream more than they are now. Longterm, we could probably do more to control costs, but not right now.

Personally, I think we are better off letting insurance companies take the risks, invest in the systems, take the heat, etc., in shortterm and then dump them for single payer if they can't keep up with what is needed to provide affordable care.

sufrommich

(22,871 posts)
11. Other than the insurance industry,I doubt that most
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:27 PM
Nov 2013

corporations would have a problem with national healthcare,it certainly doesn't effect them in other countries.

MineralMan

(146,288 posts)
15. I think you're right. I'd also add much of the healthcare provider industry and
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:35 PM
Nov 2013

the pharmaceutical industry to the list of those who have the most to lose. I have no answer for that. Change to a single-payer system is going to have to come from the grassroots, and we're still living in a country that is deeply divided on such issues. We have to change the minds of those who oppose single-payer somehow.

I still think a Medicare expansion is the answer. It could even be staged incrementally, I believe. Once people experience the Medicare system, they begin to understand. We could even use the current method of supplemental insurance with the expansion, which the insurance companies would like. They sure try hard to get people to pay that $100 to cover the 20% Medicare Part B doesn't pay. I've long been puzzled by that, but there it is. They spend enormous amounts of money to get those premiums and competition for that market is intense.

sufrommich

(22,871 posts)
21. I'm not really disagreeing with you,I just
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:42 PM
Nov 2013

wish Obama would have at least forced congress to have a real debate about single payer,win or lose. It would be very easy to make the argument that most people would pay less in new taxes to cover their healthcare than they pay in monthly premiums because we pay insurance companies to act as a middle man.

 

FarCenter

(19,429 posts)
32. Obamacare looks very much like means-tested Medicaid.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 06:01 PM
Nov 2013

At least in this state, the state contracts with 4 insurance companies to administer Medicaid benefits. Medicaid is essentially a state-funded insurance policy.

With the expansion of Medicaid and the subsidy for low income people, there is sort of a smooth transition between Medicaid's policies which are 100% state/federal funded and people more than 400% of poverty level who thereafter pay the full premium.

JoePhilly

(27,787 posts)
16. That's why I think the path to single payer goes through a public option path.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:37 PM
Nov 2013

We can't jump all the way to the end.

1) The ACA sets up state and federal exchanges. Not perfect, but much better than what we had.
2) Blue states add public options to their exchanges. This makes things even better in those states.
3) The Federal exchanges (after some screaming from the right) adds a public option, perhaps as a buy-in to Medicare.
4) Insurers struggle to compete in the blue states.
5) Insurers struggle to compete in the red states.
6) State plans and Federal plan compete with each other ... they improve as a result.
7) We reach a point where insurance companies give up.

I won't be surprised if we end up with a Federal plan and then an array of state plans.

But I don't see the US jumping directly to that final step. Its going to be a process.

MineralMan

(146,288 posts)
17. I'm certain it will have to be a process.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:38 PM
Nov 2013

I don't see a path to a radical system change at this point.

JoePhilly

(27,787 posts)
24. yup ... once you put it in the State exchanges, you have the competition you need.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:47 PM
Nov 2013

Its a choice ... an option.

The insurance companies may survive, but they'll have to work harder at it.

TheKentuckian

(25,024 posts)
45. That matters little. What we need is universal subsidized access to the exchanges
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 09:41 PM
Nov 2013

it hardly matters what options are there if virtually no one can choose.

Then if competition is the idea then we would have to make sure some exists and that can't reasonably be expected without ending the predatory cartel's antitrust exeption.

Seriously, who can delude themselves that an industry allowed by law to collude, set territories, and fix prices is going to be seriously regulated and I think it is foolish at the very best to be working under the assumption that market competition will bring down prices under such an arrangement. That is way beyond wishful thinking.

Then if you are going to have a public option then it can't be handcuffed to death to prevent phony "unfair competition" to the cartel and essentially be for nothing but a coverage ghetto for the cartel to dump "undesirable" into like ours was being turned into before they just killed it completely.

Of course even before any of that an environment has to be in play that doesn't result in the inmates running the asylum. Nothing good is going to come from the industry calling the shots and their lobbyists writing the laws and regulations.
Also, not even a market based approach is going to work when regulators are afraid and vastly out resourced nor can much of anything be accomplished with the first order of business being to not disturb the status quo.

Lydia Leftcoast

(48,217 posts)
27. I know some American expats in Japan who hated the national health system when
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:55 PM
Nov 2013

they were single twentysomethings. Then they married and had kids, and they themselves grew older, and all of a sudden, they realized that there were advantages to having universal health coverage.

 

FarCenter

(19,429 posts)
28. "and everyone benefits according to their need"
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 05:55 PM
Nov 2013

How do you define 'need'?

Are the taxpayers expected to pay for the sum of the bills for all that care that doctors and hospitals can convince patients that they "need"? Or that patients can convince doctors and hospitals that they need?

Is a fiscal target set (e.g. 15% of GDP) and doctors, hospitals, etc. funded to that extent and they determine by scheduling who gets what? Who determines how many clinics and hospitals to put where and what staffing levels would be?

Chisox08

(1,898 posts)
33. We have the network in place and it's very popular
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 06:08 PM
Nov 2013

All that we need to do is lower the medicare age to birth. Follow that up by making the sign up process simple and give multiple ways to sign up, either by phone, website or mail in card.

Martin Eden

(12,864 posts)
35. "Everyone pays according to their income and everyone benefits according to their need."
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 06:34 PM
Nov 2013

Sound an awful lot like Karl Marx:
From each according to his ability and to each according to his need.

No doubt the screamers on the right would point that out in a heartbeat.

And you know what?
They'd be right, and they'd be dead wrong.
They'd be right in that the concept is Marxist, and dead wrong in their opposition to it.

We can have a capitalist economy with the profit motive and markets driven by supply & demand, and we can have universal single payer health care right alongside it. Because what makes sense for one doesn't necessarily make sense for the other, and corporate health insurance is a horrible failure in providing coverage. The corporate profit margin is DENIAL of coverage, there is a huge overhead with CEO's & major shareholders pocketing great wealth, and the people who most need medical care are least able to afford a policy based on actuarial tables.

It's going to be a rocky road to Single Payer, if we ever do get there. Critically important is how the ACA works out, both in providing health coverage and politically how it is perceived.

TBF

(32,056 posts)
37. I think we need Marx in both places -
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 07:02 PM
Nov 2013

But for those who like the free market I would think they would want health care off their plates - most of the other industrialized countries of the world provide some sort of universal care and that frees up companies from having that responsibility.

Laelth

(32,017 posts)
42. If our tax structure were more progressive, only the wealthy would complain.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 07:49 PM
Nov 2013

I wouldn't feel very sorry for them.

-Laelth

 

truebluegreen

(9,033 posts)
43. We don't have it because too many of our leaders
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 08:10 PM
Nov 2013

didn't want to disrupt the insurance biz and jeopardize contributions to their campaign chests.

Romulox

(25,960 posts)
44. Nonsense. The ACA is a corporate first model first proposed by Mitt Romney.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 08:19 PM
Nov 2013

To pretend that this is the "most liberal" plan we can get is massively disingenuous when Obamacare's private insurance mandate has its genesis in a plan first put forward by Mitt Romney and the Heritage Foundation.

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