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| Obama Attacks Healthcare Studies | | Print | |
| Written by Thomas R. Eddlem | ||||||
| Saturday, 17 October 2009 17:00 | ||||||
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President Obama noted that in the next few years, according to a study by the Business Roundtable, “The cost per person for health insurance will rise by almost $18,000. That’s a huge amount of money. That’s going to mean lower salaries and higher unemployment, lower profits and higher rolls of uninsured. It is no exaggeration to say, that unless we act, these costs will devastate the US economy.” The insurance industry is rolling out the big guns and breaking open their massive war chest — to marshal their forces for one last fight to save the status quo. They’re filling the airwaves with deceptive and dishonest ads. They’re flooding Capitol Hill with lobbyists and campaign contributions. And they’re funding studies designed to mislead the American people.... It’s smoke and mirrors. It’s bogus. And it’s all too familiar. Every time we get close to passing reform, the insurance companies produce these phony studies as a prescription and say, "Take one of these, and call us in a decade." Well, not this time. But were the insurance industry studies “phony”? Did the Congressional Budget Office contradict the healthcare industry-funded studies? And did the industry studies deliberately distort the bill's impact on overall medical cost? The answers to these questions, respectively, are “no,” “no,” and “possibly.” The studies were actually produced by independent organizations, not the health insurance industry itself. And no one has impeached the data the studies have produced. The controversy is about what meaning the studies have in the debate over the ever-changing legislation in the Senate would impact consumers compared to the status quo. The PriceWaterhouseCoopers study concluded that the mandates in the bill would increase the cost of health insurance by $4,800 per family per year by 2019 over and above healthcare inflation expected under current law. But the PriceWaterhouseCoopers study examined only certain elements of the changing health care initiative, a fact the authors acknowledged. So the net effect of the Senate health care package is not necessarily an average increase of $4,800 per family. A PriceWaterhouseCoopers spokesman acknowledged to an Associated Press fact checker that healthcare exchanges would tend to bring the costs of healthcare down through more competition and “would offset some of the impacts we have estimated.” A study by Oliver Wyman (funded by Blue Cross and Blue Shield) also openly aknowledged that it did not take the impact of healthcare exchanges into account: We have not explicitly modeled the impact of health insurance exchanges. However, Oliver Wyman issued a report in 2008 on this subject that found that exchanges were unlikely to reduce health insurance premiums for individuals and small employers. That was a key objection Obama made to the studies, and its worth a deeper look into what the data means. President Obama also claimed that the Congressional Budget Office “found that reforms will lower premiums in a new insurance exchange.” And technically, Obama's statement is true. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) did conclude that opening up competition to non-profit exchanges would have a tendency to lower premiums. The Oliver Wyman study noted that the “The Congressional Budget Office's analysis of the Senate Finance Committee proposal indicates that exchanges could reduce premiums by 4-5 percent in the individual health insurance market.” But President Obama's words could also be considered misleading, as the CBO did not conclude the impact of healthcare exchanges would cause the overall legislation to lower premiums compared to the current law. To the contrary, the CBO concluded that because of the mandates and other parts of the healthcare plan, “premiums in the new insurance exchanges would tend to be higher than the average premiums in the current-law individual market — again with other factors held equal — because the new policies would have to cover preexisting medical conditions and could not deny coverage to people with high expected costs for health care.” In other words, the CBO has concluded the same thing as the health insurance industry: Obama's plan would increase the health care costs of most Americans. Between April of 2008 and March of 2009, about 40% of the people who purchased individual insurance from Harvard Pilgrim stayed covered by us for less than 5 months. Even more amazing, they incurred, on average, about $2,400 per person in monthly medical expenses — roughly 600% higher than what we would have expected. The Oliver Wyman report concluded: “Lacking strong penalties, we expect similar types of behavior would occur in the reformed individual market — resulting in significantly higher premiums for those that are insured.” Reform of medical malpractice law would be another positive step. Because it is so easy to sue a physician and win an outlandish judgement, many physicians pay more than $100,000 per year in premiums for malpractice insurance, costs that are passed on to patients. Many physicians also order unnecessary tests for their patients in order to create a paper trail in order to prevent a lawsuit, a practice called “defensive medicine.” The Congressional Budget Office estimates that even modest reform of medical malpractice law could save 0.5 percent of total medical costs in the country. Trackback(0)
Comments (3)
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Flu-Bird
said:
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Animal Farm So OBAMA the head pig gose to the big sty in NEW YORK(UNTED NATIONS) and oinks to them all and they award him with a undeserved peace prize Now what will they give him for this lie a OSCAR perhaps |
Bonnie
said:
Smoke and mirrorsThey’re filling the airwaves with deceptive and dishonest ads. They’re flooding Capitol Hill with lobbyists and campaign contributions. And they’re funding studies designed to mislead the American people... "They" are the current administration. It’s smoke and mirrors. It’s bogus. And it’s all too familiar. These exact statements can be made by constitutional conservatives in a case AGAINST socialized medicine (which is what the healthcare reform touted by the current occupant of the White House amounts to). |
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