Tag Archives: health insurance

A Short History of Health Insurance

Universal coverage in the United States goes back at least to Teddy Roosevelt but the opposition has always been fierce. The American Medical Association called the idea “socialized medicine.” Ronald ReagReagan-LPcoveran said it was the first step towards Socialist America, warning “We are going to spend our sunset years telling our children and our children’s children, what it once was like in America when men were free.” We’d all be getting the same, substandard care from government-employed doctors in dreary Soviet-era clinics taking numbers and waiting months, if not years, for lifesaving care.

Prior to the 1930s workers bought “sickness insurance” to cover economic losses if the breadwinner fell ill.  If you were sick, you stayed home or you went to the hospital to die. The Great Depression changed the doctors’ and hospitals’ attitudes; they struggled to survive because few could afford health care.   The cost of medical care and training new physicians began to rise, as a result of advances in medicine and the Flexner report on medical education.  By the 1930s, medical costs were 20% higher than lost wages, making health insurance, as oppose

In 1929 Baylor University Hospital provided Dallas schoolteachers up to 21 days of hospital care for fifty cents per person per month—the precursor to Blue Cross.  Prepaid hospital plans grew throughout the Great Depression, allowing patients to cover expenses while insuring a steady income stream for hospitals.  Hospitals agreed to provide benefits regardless of reimbursement levels.

Commercial insurers’ big break came during World War II. On October 3, 1942, Roosevelt issued the Stabilization WWII ProductionAct, freezing wages and prices, but not insurance and pension benefits. In 1943 the National War Labor Board and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) exempted benefits from the freeze, allowing employers to entice desperately needed workers with health insurance. The post-war National Labor Relations Board (NLRB ruled pensions and health benefits could be included in collective bargaining in 1948, a ruling the Supreme Court upheld in 1949.  In 1954, the IRS determined employer contributions to health employee health insurance plans were deductible as a business expense and not taxable income to employees. And so began our employer-based health insurance system which we assumed would last forever.

Blue Cross/Blue Shield’s federally-sanctioned non-profit status gave it an unfair advantage over commercial insurers by allowing the Blues to avoid insurance regulations. The government required the Blues to use “community rating” when calculating premiums; that is, everyone paid the same premium regardless of health status.  Commercial insurers used “experience rating”, basing individuals’ premiums on their health history; sicker people paid more.  Commercial insurers targeted employers of large groups of healthy people, undercutting Blue Cross in many markets.blue-cross-730171

The Blues reimbursed physicians’ “usual, customary and reasonable” (UCR) charges which effectively meant physicians could charge whatever they wanted.  Hospitals received “cost-plus reimbursement”—whatever they charged and a little extra. Commercial insurers followed, lest it be left in the dust.

President Lyndon Johnson signed Medicare and Medicaid into law in 1965.  Medicare was a federal health insurance program covering seniors’ health care expenses; Medicaid, a state program for the indigent. The Federal government became the single largest health care purchaser in the country.  Physicians, initially resistant, fell in love with the programs, figuring they’d get paid for care they had previously rendered for free.

Santa Rosa HospitalAnd what’s not to love?  Medicare adopted “cost-plus” reimbursement,” dr-kildarepaying doctors and hospitals what they charged.  Patients didn’t worry because someone else was picking up the tab.  Physicians routinely admitted patients to the hospital “so we can run a few tests.” As one retired hospital administrator explained, “Being an administrator was never easier! If a doctor wanted a new piece of equipment, we said, ‘yes,’ especially if a hospital across town had the same equipment.  The more we did, the more we got paid. It was a great time to be in health care!”

So what happened?  Stay tuned for the rest of the story.

Freedom’s Just Another Word For Everything To Lose

September 27, 2013

Ted Cruz’s phony filibuster on September 24, 2013, was ostensibly about “freedom.” Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council said, “… the greatest threat to our faith, our families and our freedom is Obamacare”  And one internet troll complained, “Thanks to Obamacare, I’m losing all my choices?

Oh, really? And what freedoms are you losing?

The freedom to let other people absorb that $79 billion a year in uncompensated care for the uninsured?

The freedom to wait several hours in someone’s emergency room for routine care because you are uninsured and none of the doctors in town will see you?

The freedom to go bankrupt because the cost of the care for your catastrophic illness exceeded your insurance policy’s lifetime cap?

The freedom to be uninsurable because you developed cancer, lost your job and then lost your insurance?

The freedom to put a pickle jar on the local convenience store counter asking for donations for your child’s surgery because you make too much to qualify for Medicaid but can’t afford insurance on the individual market?

The freedom to stay in a soul-crushing job under a boss you hate and you would leave in a heartbeat if it wasn’t for the the health insurance benefits you desperately need?

If you are fortunate enough to have heavily subsidized health insurance through the generosity of your employer you can keep it. Thanks to Obamacare, you have additional proctections – insurance companies can’t drop you because you actually needed your insurance. So stop complaining that 30 million people will now get something you’ve taken for granted.