Readers: 0 | Updated: 07-19

Chuck Idelson: John McCain's own "mental recession" problem on the health care crisis

Translate Into:

OK, it's easy enough to pile on ex-Sen. Phil Gramm for mocking the plight of Americans losing their homes by saying it is all a "mental recession."

Of course, from the rarefied environment Gramm rides around in, he's probably not noticed the 59 percent of Americans who told a June Kaiser Health tracking poll that they are having a "serious problem" with paying for gas, getting a decent paying job, or health care or food bills

But while John McCain tries to distance himself from the mess created by Gramm, one of his top economic advisers, the soon-to-be Republican nominee, seems to have his own "let them eat cake" perspective on one of the most critical issues of this campaign, health care.

It shouldn't be much of a stretch to discover the deepening crisis on health care felt by so many American families. Take the June report in the Wall Street Journal, a paper the McCain team no doubt manages to read, citing a survey of 18,000 Americans who said they'd delayed or gone without needed medical care due to the cost.

Or the Robert Wood Johnson study in April showing premiums for families who get employer-sponsored health coverage have jumped 10 times faster than workers' wages in this decade.

Or the New York Times report in June about the insurance companies that now reject the applications for coverage from women who given c-section births.

But with our health care safety net collapsing and more people going without health coverage and self-rationing care, McCain seems to be frozen in the abysmal status quo. His healthcare plan offers little relief from the present morass, and, if anything, is likely to make the crisis worse.

McCain's healthcare platform rests on four very wobbly legs:

Tax credits to encourage the uninsured to buy private insurance. But once a year tax credits are of minimal help for those living paycheck to paycheck, especially with no controls on ever skyrocketing premiums, co-pays, deductibles, doctor's fees, and a mountain of other out-of-pocket costs.

Expanding federal support for state "high risk pools" as the dumping ground for people with pre-existing conditions (or, as Barbara Ehrenreich calls them, prior convictions) who the insurance companies refuse to sell policies to. But, in a devastating critique of this scheme this week, the New York Times noted that the state plans are largely a failure. Almost all impose long waiting periods, up to a year, before allowing you to enroll, and all have very high costs for getting in. Florida closed its pool in 1991, and the current membership is just 313 people, rather a small percentage of the state's population. And, by the way, McCain has no proposal to pay for a federal expansion of this train wreck.

Eliminating the tax deduction for employer-sponsored coverage. The inevitable result will be to make health benefits less attractive to employers, meaning the decline of employer-based plans would become an avalanche -- and far more risk and financial burden will be shifted to families and individuals who hardly need more financial worries in the present "mental recession," as Phil Gramm puts it.

More deregulation of the insurance industry to encourage competition, McCain's prescription for controlling the ever rising costs. It's hard to imagine a more friendly administration to the avatars of deregulation than the one currently in office, during which premiums alone have gone up 78 percent the past six years for family coverage under employer plans, as the Atlanta Journal Constitution noted July 6.

Further, the notion that insurances compete by offering expanded access or reduced out-of-pocket costs requires much suspension of disbelief. Insurers compete by lowering their own costs, to increase company profits and shareholder return. How do they lower costs? By denying medical claims which they ghoulishly term "medical loss ratio," dumping enrollees when they get sick, and reducing services that are covered.

Since he is so averse to regulation, it's not surprising that McCain has nothing to offer the tens of thousands of patients and families grappling with insurance company decisions to deny medical procedures recommended by their doctors, or delay care, or reject diagnostic procedures or referrals to specialists, or impose higher charges for going "out-of-network." Apparently those problems don't even exist.

McCain hasn't yet said the nation's healthcare crisis is psychological, but it sure looks like all he's offering are words of encouragement and placebos.




From The Blogs

Socyberty

04-06
Learning Essential Helping Skills: Crisis Telephone Listening
Rape crisis line. Can I help you?The voice is tentative. According to my training, I ask her if she is in a safe place to talk. She is. I invite her to tell me what is going on. I listen to her story,... 查看全文

Parenting & Pregnancy

05-03
Children’s diet crisis & junk food
Children today are eating more and more junk food and we are slowly getting into a diet crisis, so what are the facts?The National Diet and Nutrition Survey found that:   92% of children consume more ... 查看全文

Life, Health, Furnishings

06-09
Is sexual fantasy a psychological problem?
Many people are plagued with great shame and remorse when it comes to fantasies, especially the ones they see as "perverse." However, according to the April 25th report on Fox News, educationalists ps... 查看全文

One Big Health Nut

04-22
New exercise guidelines provide the answer to weight loss and the obesity crisis.
The Center for Disease Control and the ACSM recently revised and published the newest updates to the national exercise guidelines, which were recently released to the public.  Since the updates in the... 查看全文

Socyberty

04-09
The Looming Rice Crisis
More than half the people of the world rely on rice for food. This proportion is constantly rising as people moving out of poverty can afford to substitute rice for less desirable grains - this has ha... 查看全文

The Glittering Eye

03-15
Crisis of Confidence
Are we really in the midst of “one of history’s great financial crises”? That’s what Paul Krugman thinks:I’m more concerned that despite the extraordinary scale of Mr. Bernanke’s action — to my knowle... 查看全文

Mashable!

03-09
The Problem With Microsoft’s Defensive Posturing
Late last night, the GigaOM blog published an article written by Alistair Croll delineating Microsoft’s supposed “defense strategy,” which can sensibly be partitioned into three unique models: consume... 查看全文

Steve Pavlina's Personal Development Blog

03-12
The Most Direct Solution to Any Problem
When trying to solve various problems in life, an approach I find very useful is to first identify what I’d consider the most direct solution, regardless of how I feel about actually implementing it. ... 查看全文

longooodays的BLOG

03-13
Another Problem with Biofuels?
It's called the dead zone. Agricultural fertilizer byproducts like nitrogen are running off farms and into the Mississippi River, which then spills out into the Gulf of Mexico. 查看全文

Dr. Weil Q&A

05-22
Parathyroid Problem?
I've been told that I have parathyroid disease and may need surgery. However, the endocrinologist says that we can just keep monitoring it for now. I am female, age 59. I would like to avoid surgery. ... 查看全文
More Articles