Pro vs Con

Capping Malpractice Damages

CONservative Spin:

“Lawyers are driving good doctors out of practice. Conservatives will lower costs by capping excessive jury payouts and stopping frivolous lawsuits.”
Bill Scher's picture

PROgressive Response:

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Capping jury awards would have almost no impact on health costs, according to the Congressional Budget Office. But it would help conservatives protect insurance company profits, instead of patients victimized by fraud or negligence.

 Source

Curbing Costs and Protecting Medicare

CONservative Spin:

“If government can run health care so well, why is Medicare going bankrupt?”
Bill Scher's picture

PROgressive Response:

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Medicare has worked for 40 years. But the price pressures driving up costs in the private health care system affect Medicare as well.

Medicare actually has lower overhead than private health insurance. And if we design a comprehensive program to cover all Americans, we can save $1 trillion over the next 10 years. That will get health care costs under control and stabilize Medicare.

Rationing Care

CONservative Spin:

“Americans don’t want long waiting times and rationed health care.”
Bill Scher's picture

PROgressive Response:

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With 47 million without health insurance, and millions more underinsured, we’re tragically rationing care right now. When we guarantee quality health care for all, people will no longer be denied health care because they can’t afford it, lose their jobs or have pre-existing medical conditions.

Screaming "Socialism"

CONservative Spin:

“What they are talking about is nothing but socialized medicine.”
Bill Scher's picture

PROgressive Response:

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Conservatives opposed great reforms like Social Security and Medicare by screaming socialism. They were wrong then, and they’re wrong now.

Guaranteed affordable health insurance would not make doctors and other health care professionals work for the government. The progressive plan is about making sure you have good health insurance you can afford and the ability to go to the doctors you want.

Cutting Health Care Costs

CONservative Spin:

“You think health care is expensive now, wait until it’s 'free.'”
Bill Scher's picture

PROgressive Response:

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Guaranteeing affordable health care choices for all will require some tax revenues—$50 to 100 billion per year depending on the plan—plus modest contributions from companies and individuals. But it will save us $1 trillion in health care spending.

We’ll be able to slash administrative costs, emphasize preventative care, reduce emergency room visits and cut down on unnecessary procedures with electronic medical records.

On Choice

CONservative Spin:

“A government takeover of health care would destroy the best health care system in the world and take away your right to choose your doctor.”
Bill Scher's picture

PROgressive Response:

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With guaranteed affordable choice, if you have insurance you like, you keep it. Or, you can choose between quality private and public plans. The health care guarantee assures health plans that make sure you can pick your doctor. And it ensures that you have an insurance policy you can afford.

Health Savings Accounts: A Conservative Benefit for the Wealthy

CONservative Spin:

“Health savings accounts make health care more affordable for individuals and small businesses. A significant percentage of the people who are signing up for these accounts are people who were previously uninsured.”
Isaiah J. Poole's picture

PROgressive Response:

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There is little evidence that health savings accounts are closing the health care affordability gap between working-class individuals and individuals with six-figure salaries and greater. The Government Accountability Office reports that "tax filers who reported [health savings account] activity in 2005 had higher incomes on average than other tax filers. Among tax filers between the ages of 19 and 64, the average [annual gross income] for filers reporting HSA activity was about $139,000 compared with about $57,000 for all other filers. The income differences existed across all age groups." In addition, there is evidence in the GAO report that because of the way health savings accounts are structured, they are serving as convenient tax shelters for the well-heeled. At the same time, lower-income people find that not only are they unable to afford to make a significant contribution to their accounts, they also are finding that many employers will not contribute to their accounts, as many employers contribute to health insurance premiums. Health savings accounts are not a substitute for a true plan to make health care available to all.

 Source

Edwin Park. "GAO Study Again Confirms Health Savings Accounts Primarily Benefit High-Income Individuals." Center for Budget and Policy Priorities. May 19, 2008.

Fight Back Against Medicare and Medicaid Cuts

CONservative Spin:

“Government spending on Medicare and Medicaid is spiraling our of control, and the best way to address that problem in the fiscal 2009 budget is to restrict federal payments doctors and hospitals, but leave programs like Medicare Advantage, which subsidizes private insurance companies, untouched.”
Isaiah J. Poole's picture

PROgressive Response:

Cuts in payments to doctors and hospitals will only worsen the underfunding of our medical infrastructure and increase disincentives for doctors to care for Medicare and Medicaid patients. What's really needed is reform: Our country's current health care system wastes hundreds of billions of dollars in administrative and advertising expenses, and in efforts to shift or deny payment. Medicare's administrative costs are up to four times less than those of the private insurance companies subsidized by Medicare Advantage. Congress should resist the Bush administration's cost-cutting proposals and instead set the stage for real reform of our health care system.

Part-D Designed with Unnecessary Administrative Costs

CONservative Spin:

“if the federal government begins picking drugs and setting prices for all Medicare beneficiaries, administrative costs would add a new burden to taxpayers.”
 Source

Mike Leavitt, "Medicare And the Market," The Washington Post, January 11, 2007." Retrieved on December 14, 2007, from http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/10/AR2007011002020.html.

Isaiah J. Poole's picture

PROgressive Response:

The government's administrative expense to run the Medicare program accounts for only 3% of Medicare spending. By contrast, the amount of every premium dollar retained by private insurance companies for marketing, administration and profit is 14%. The CBO has projected that the marketing and the profits of the insurance industry would add $38 billion in costs in the first seven years of the program compared to a benefit that was administered through Medicare.

Question to ask: "Why was Part D designed to hit seniors and taxpayers with such high and unnecessary administrative costs?

 Source

CMS, Office of the Actuary, National Health Expenditures, Table 11. Calendar year 2005. Retrieved on December 14, 2007, from, http://www.cms.hhs.gov/NationalHealthExpendData/downloads/tables.pdf.

 Source

"Medicare For All: Quality, Affordable, Health Care for All Americans,” by the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Retrieved on December 14, 2007, from http://energycommerce.house.gov/medicare/M4A_factsheet.pdf.

 Source

Congressional Budget Office, 2004a. “A Detailed Description of CBO's Cost Estimate for the Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit,” Washington, D.C.: Congressional Budget Office, Table 3. Retrieved on December 14, 2007, from http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdoc.cfm?index=5668&type=0&sequence=0.

Veterans and the VA Formulary

CONservative Spin:

“the VA formulary excludes a number of new drugs covered by the Medicare prescription benefit.”
 Source

Mike Leavitt, "Medicare And the Market," The Washington Post, January 11, 2007." Retrieved on December 14, 2007, from http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/10/AR2007011002020.html.

Bill Scher's picture

PROgressive Response:

The 1,300 drugs on the Veterans Administration formulary account for the vast majority of prescriptions that are filled by people on Medicare - and Veterans can still get the drugs not on the VA formulary. They just need to have their doctor explain why they need the drug in question.

Additionally, no plans in the Medicare program cover all 4,300 FDA approved drugs. These plans have preferred drugs as well, which is why the typical beneficiary had to spend 8 hours last year sifting through the various options, according to a study done for the Medicare Payments Advisory Commission. Seniors with many drug needs presumably spent even more time.

Question to ask: Why has the VA received significantly higher marks than private health care in independent surveys of customer satisfaction for the past 7 years?

 Source

Baker, Dean. "Post Pushes Drug Industry Line, Again," The American Prospect Online Edition, January 13, 2007. Retrieved on December 14, 2007, from http://www.prospect.org/deanbaker/2007/01/post_pushes_drug_industry_line.html.

 Source

"VA Health Care System Outscores Private Sector Again," the Veterans Administration, January 10, 2007. Retrieved on December 14, 2007, from http://www1.va.gov/opa/pressrel/index.cfm.