Friday 27 January 2012

Healthcare In America: Its About Much More Than $$$

"Americans are playing by the rules, theyre working, theyre waking up every morning to go to their jobs and they have no health security. . . ." That statement was Kathleen Stolls, director of health policy for the consumer health group Families USA*, in response to $10B in cuts to Medicaid in 2005. And it makes a point that many of the stories written about healthcare in the U.S. do not. That is, all this discourse about money- the billions cut in Medicaid health benefits to address a 7% increase in costs, the percent of costs covered by state and local government for the uninsured (which is about 85%, by the way), the $41B in costs that hospitals absorb for the uninsured has an impact on real people. People like you and me, who play by the rules, pay their taxes, get up every morning to go to work, and come home everyday to their families.
Pain Patient
Lets consider an average family without health benefits today. John and Kate, for example. They have two children, Kate is a part-time teacher at a private pre-school where she can bring her two young children with her while she earns her teaching credential at night. She makes about ~$16K per year. John is a construction worker, which pays well (almost $5K per month), but it is seasonal work. He does well from spring to late fall. But from October to February, there isnt much work. So John picks up work as a handyman when he can. And he grosses about $40K per year. Neither of them get health benefits through their employer. So John and Kate, like more and more Americans these days have to make a choice. No not between food on the table and clothing, but between paying for adequate healthcare for their family today and INVESTING IN THEIR future. In other words, they cannot afford health benefits insurance AND tuition for Kate to get her teaching credential. What would you do? Well, John and Kate decide to roll the dice. They pay out-of-pocket to take their children to the pediatrician on a regular basis. But they decide that for them, since they are both young and strong and pretty healthy, they will skip insurance and regular medical check ups. They will only go to the doctor when it is absolutely necessary. As chance would have it, John starts feeling pain in his side. He doesnt think much about it at first. But as the days pass, it doesnt get any better. In fact, it gets worse. But he says nothing to Kate because he doesnt want to worry her (about the money it will cost for a doctor or about his health). Finally, the pain gets so bad that just touching the area causes excruciating pain. Until one day, he cant bend down to put his pants on. He cant go to work. Nothing. Kate calls an ambulance, and they rush John to emergency. Kate follows in the car with both children in tow. When she gets there she finds out that Johns appendix has burst, and they are performing an emergency appendectomy. Flash forward to the next day. Things are okay-relatively speaking. John is recovering. Kate is sitting by his bedside. The kids are with grandma. And John will go home soon enough. But they have incurred thousands of dollars in hospital costs. Some of those costs may be deferred by the hospital. But John and Kate WILL PAY a sizable amount deducted from their wages each month for a long while. Kates degree? That will have to wait. This is a sad story and not really true. But it is believable. Because that is the situation weve all been placed in, by employers who opt not to provide health plans and by our government that restricts access to subsidized health benefits. Kate and John and others (like you and me) need to look for viable alternatives to employer-backed and government-subsidized health plans. One alternative is called Consumer Driven Health Benefits. It includes vision, dental, prescription, physician care AND hospital advocacy. Which means, had Kate and John had a Consumer Driven Health Benefits package, John would have been able to visit a doctor regularly. And whether John still had to have a scheduled appendectomy or an emergency appendectomy, he would have been covered. *45.8 Million in U.S. Now Lack Health Insurance; Web Med Medical News; Todd Zwelich, Aug. 30, 2005

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