Herman Cain’s ascendant Presidential campaign brings into focus the limited health policy thinking that has dominated the campaign so far.
Here are our current major health policy challenges:
- Reversing the trend toward lower investments in the public health and prevention activities that have accounted for half of our increased longevity in the last century;
- Assuring fair coverage of the chronic conditions, including mental illness, cardiovascular disease, and cancers, that affect 60% of our population;
- Giving even the uninsured 16% of our population access to high quality, comprehensive, integrated primary, specialty, and hospital care; and
- Figuring out how best to pay for all this.
Despite the urgency of these challenges, the current health policy debate can be condensed into a four word sound bite – “Repeal Obamacare Individual Mandate.”
Here are the specifics of what the candidates have been talking about the past couple of weeks.
Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich are fighting over whether Romney got the idea for the “individual mandate” from Gingrich or the Heritage Foundation. (Both, it seems, from their exchange in the last debate.)
Ron Paul wants to abolish our health care system in its entirety and replace it in part with free care “as a charitable benefit provided by doctors” for all poor people.
Rick Perry’s first national health policy headline came when he advocated eliminating the Medicaid program that pays for long-term nursing and home care for elders and people with disabilities. His last came this past weekend when he questioned Hawaii’s vital statistics record-keeping – at least where Barack Obama’s birth certificate is concerned.
And Herman Cain, the self-proclaimed a “problem solver,” solved his business’s financial problems in part by helping to pay for health insurance for only 17% of his employees.
As Cain’s sketchy health care plan shows, his plans for what he would do for the other 83% are few and far between.
First, he wants to sell insurance across state lines. The Affordable Care Act already will permit this, but there’s a catch. The only policies that could be sold across state lines must meet minimum coverage standards.
He opposes this. So when he favors selling insurance across state lines, he doesn’t care if it actually covers anything for which you might need insurance, such as cancer, heart disease, mental illness, comprehensive primary care, drugs, or even most hospital stays.
Second, even though it would violate his 9% flat tax proposal, he wants to allow individuals who buy insurance to be able to deduct it from their income tax.
Why? So that businesses could eliminate group health insurance from their employee benefits package – as Cain himself did – and let employees pay for the more expensive individual plans on their own.
Third, he wants to expand the use of health savings accounts, into which individuals and families would have to deposit their own money to cover the thousands of dollars of deductibles in the stripped down insurance policies that would flood the market if his “across state lines” plan passed.
They might get a tax deduction for this – if he violated his 9% flat tax policy again – but that’s just another way of shifting even more of the cost of health care to individuals and the federal government.
Citizen Cain refers to these proposals as “patient-centered” reforms. But patient-centeredness involves most everything that is absent from “Cainsian” health economics.
It is about promoting health and well-being and improving access to affordable, quality care, not making insurance companies more profitable.
At least Cain offers a plan on his web site, unlike family-first candidate Rick Santorum. And in a nod to Michele Bachmann, Cain did acknowledge in a recent debate – without mentioning her – that he lifted much of his health plan from legislation co-sponsored by Bachmann (HR3400) in 2009.
Herman Cain talks a good game about the “sacred patient-doctor relationship,” but his slapped-together health plan is little more than a slap in the face to people with serious health and wellness needs. There’s nothing in it about wellness, prevention, or chronic disease management. There’s nothing about access and quality.
It’s all about stringing together a few of the worst proposals for individuals, families, and taxpaying citizens, and dressing them up as an alternative to the Affordable Care Act.
Even raising Cain to new poll heights won’t make him able to sell this.
If you have questions about this column or would like to receive an email notifying you when new Our Health Policy Matters columns are published, please email gionfriddopaul@gmail.com.
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