Health Care Reform will be a long shot in 2009

GreenSky

Guru
5000 Post Club
15,319
Henderson, NV
Health Care Policy and Marketplace Review: Health Care Reform Will Be a Long Shot in 2009
Thursday, April 24, 2008

Health Care Reform Will Be a Long Shot in 2009


Many people, me included, have compared the recent resurgence in calls for health care reform with the big debate we had in 1993 and 1994 and the expectation back then that we would see major health care reform. Of course, all of that focus on the issue ended with the failed Clinton Health Care Plan derailing health reform for at least 15 years--and counting.

Each of the remaining candidates for president--Clinton, Obama, and McCain--have major health reform proposals. Health care continues to register as one of the major issues voters want addressed and expectations are rising again.

But the chance for major health care reform in 2009--or 2010--is a long shot.

The problem is that the country is divided right down the middle on which very different direction to go on the issue. As high as health insurance costs are and as dissatisfied as consumers are with the system there is no consensus on what should change and no real willingness for any of the major stakeholders to compromise.

I don't know who will be elected president in November. But I am confident that whoever it is the vote will be another very close election with about half of the people on one side and half on the other. While the Congress will probably continue to be Democrat controlled, there will be no big majority wanting to take the country in one health care reform direction over another.

Something as big as health care reform requires a clear consensus--among voters and therefore in the Congress. We have nothing close to that today irrespective of the apparently strong commitment to health care change among the candidates for even incremental health care reform.

Jay Rockefeller is a Senate Democrat that has been working on health care reform for 20 years and he's an Obama supporter. About the $100 billion both Democratic candidates want to spend on health reform he says, "We all know there is not enough money to do all this stuff. What they are doing is...laying out their ambitions."

No one is a bigger supporter of Hillary Clinton than fellow New York Senator Chuck Schumer. He doesn't see any consensus on how to get health reform done either saying he's "not sure we have the big plan on health care." He goes on, "Health care I feel strongly about, but I'm not sure we're ready for a major national health care plan."

The next Congress, and likely the new President, will be ready to deal with a permanent extension and expansion of the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) and they will be forced to make some necessary decisions about how Medicare pays physicians and potential cuts to private Medicare plans to pay for them. But the $100 billion expansion of health care Obama and Clinton want, or the abandonment of the longtime employer tax exemption and new emphasis on the individual market that McCain wants, are way beyond any kind of consensus we have among voters and in the Congress.

As bad as things are, they aren't bad enough.

Detailed analysis each of the candidates health care reform plans:

An Analysis of Senator Hillary Clinton's Health Plan Proposal

An Analysis of Senator John McCain's Health Care Reform Plan

A Detailed Analysis of Barack Obama's Health Care Reform Plan
 
Even if this is true, I would be seriously concerned about all of the halfway measures that get put into place in lieu of real reform, just as more guaranteed issue, more fed and state subsidy for programs that cut agents out, more pieces of the system put out to bid and gravy limited to the winner/carrier and reduced commissions to be competitive. It's all of the creeping incrementalism in lieu of outright reform that kills the market as you currently know it. Of course, I live in a guaranteed issue state so the market for agents is long, long gone. Hillary and Obama are both advocating nationwide guaranteed issue even if they cannot accomplish a national healthcare system. They are likely to get some pieces of reform even if the public does not buy into the whole enchilada. I would worry about what that might look like. It's a loose cannon on the deck regardless of who is elected. As established here many times before, many have a vested interest in believing that the whole issue will just blow over. It won't. Even if true reform is defeated, there will be heavy, heavy tinkering to appease the masses.

Winter



Health Care Policy and Marketplace Review: Health Care Reform Will Be a Long Shot in 2009
Thursday, April 24, 2008

Health Care Reform Will Be a Long Shot in 2009


Many people, me included, have compared the recent resurgence in calls for health care reform with the big debate we had in 1993 and 1994 and the expectation back then that we would see major health care reform. Of course, all of that focus on the issue ended with the failed Clinton Health Care Plan derailing health reform for at least 15 years--and counting.

Each of the remaining candidates for president--Clinton, Obama, and McCain--have major health reform proposals. Health care continues to register as one of the major issues voters want addressed and expectations are rising again.

But the chance for major health care reform in 2009--or 2010--is a long shot.

The problem is that the country is divided right down the middle on which very different direction to go on the issue. As high as health insurance costs are and as dissatisfied as consumers are with the system there is no consensus on what should change and no real willingness for any of the major stakeholders to compromise.

I don't know who will be elected president in November. But I am confident that whoever it is the vote will be another very close election with about half of the people on one side and half on the other. While the Congress will probably continue to be Democrat controlled, there will be no big majority wanting to take the country in one health care reform direction over another.

Something as big as health care reform requires a clear consensus--among voters and therefore in the Congress. We have nothing close to that today irrespective of the apparently strong commitment to health care change among the candidates for even incremental health care reform.

Jay Rockefeller is a Senate Democrat that has been working on health care reform for 20 years and he's an Obama supporter. About the $100 billion both Democratic candidates want to spend on health reform he says, "We all know there is not enough money to do all this stuff. What they are doing is...laying out their ambitions."

No one is a bigger supporter of Hillary Clinton than fellow New York Senator Chuck Schumer. He doesn't see any consensus on how to get health reform done either saying he's "not sure we have the big plan on health care." He goes on, "Health care I feel strongly about, but I'm not sure we're ready for a major national health care plan."

The next Congress, and likely the new President, will be ready to deal with a permanent extension and expansion of the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) and they will be forced to make some necessary decisions about how Medicare pays physicians and potential cuts to private Medicare plans to pay for them. But the $100 billion expansion of health care Obama and Clinton want, or the abandonment of the longtime employer tax exemption and new emphasis on the individual market that McCain wants, are way beyond any kind of consensus we have among voters and in the Congress.

As bad as things are, they aren't bad enough.

Detailed analysis each of the candidates health care reform plans:

An Analysis of Senator Hillary Clinton's Health Plan Proposal

An Analysis of Senator John McCain's Health Care Reform Plan

A Detailed Analysis of Barack Obama's Health Care Reform Plan
 
Government does such a WONDERFUL and EFFICIENT job of administering things that you REALLY think that is the answer?

One of the founding fathers said that democracy fails when the masses figure out that they can "vote themselves money from the public coffers." "What have you given us sir?" "A Republic madam, if you can keep it."

This generation of degenerate whiners will be the destruction of the republic.
 
Hi

Health care reform is a general rubric used for discussing major health policy creation or changes—for the most part, governmental policy that affects health insurance delivery in a given place. Health care reform typically attempts to:
  • [FONT=&quot]Broaden the population that receives health care coverage through either public sector insurance programs or private sector insurance companies[/FONT]
  • [FONT=&quot] Expand the array of health care providers consumers may choose among[/FONT]
  • [FONT=&quot] Improve the access to health care specialists[/FONT]
  • [FONT=&quot] Improve the quality of health care[/FONT]
  • [FONT=&quot] Decrease the cost of health care[/FONT]


Okay thanks. Looks like General Rubric needs to put his cigarette down and take charge here if it is going to happen.
 

This Bob Laszewski guy who analyzed candidate Barack Obama's health reform plan deserves an award. He was spot-on with how it will crash and burn under its own weight. It's too bad Congress didn't take his blog seriously. -ac
 
Back
Top