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Tag: Policy

POLICY: Ezra Klein’s The Health of Nations

Now I’ve met Ezra I can stop calling him the young punk. He has written another excellent review of health care in universal coverage nations, including socialized medicine in the heart of America for our allegedly most treasured citizens.

It’s called The Health of Nations. Go read it.

It’s not entirely without flaws, almost all to do with the lack of good recent data that’s a problem with these comparisons and a need to conserve space. He skips over the UK’s private insurance system which enables the rich to trade up for elective surgery, and the recent increases in spending under Blair which have enable the Brits to buy spare capacity in private countries, (and ramped up GPs pay!). It would be nice to have Ezra do something similar on Japan and Holland (although Japan looks something like Germany plus a Canadian fee schedule, and Holland looks like an Enthoven-wet dream).

What’s also to some extent missing is the changes that have happened recently. Humphrey Taylor remarked to me on Sunday that Americans dont realize how much other systems are changing as ours essentially never does. The Brits have gone to 30% P4P in primary care; the Dutch to individually purchased insurance in a managed competition framework; the Danes and the New Zealanders have added rapid deployment of IT (100% EMR use in ambulatory care); whereas the Australians have added a private top up layer over their traditional socialized  medicine system; the Swiss have their individual mandate.

Of course all of these systems have their problems and all are changing; we’re stuck in 1991. And in fact the VA system, although it works very well it about to be hit with a wave of Iraq war vets who have real problems–and is unlikely to get the resources it needs to deal with them.

And although it goes without saying to those in the know, we should keep repeating that this is the only system that visits not only ill health on the unlucky but often financial disaster too.

BLOGS/POLICY: WorldHealthCareBlog

I’m in DC at the World Health Care Congress where I’m writing about speakers like George Halvorson from KP talking about health care reform (he’s right but wrong) and Tadataka Yamada from the Gates Foundation talking about health in the developing world. It’s all up on the WorldHealthCareBlog.org

POLICY: Criticizing Jonathan Cohn

OK, it’s official. All this congratulatory fawing over Jonathan Cohn and his book Sick is getting to me, and I have a real criticism about him. And it’s the topic of my column over at Spot-on today–Jonathan Cohn is Way Too Nice.

By the way, Jon is coming round for breakfast later—I’m going to interview him and see if he’s able to defend himself from that charge. Perhaps he’ll turn out to have a vicious streak that I don’t know about.

POLICY: Blue Shield dumps the realtors whereas Blue Cross dumps on Arnie

And in the kicking butt and taking names department (more great work from Lisa Girion on this), California’s big non-profit Blues plan manages to wriggle out of insuring one unprofitable group — Realtors . Whereas Wellpoint, the parent of California’s for-profit Blue’s insurer has decided that it just can’t stomach the insistence of the Governator that they spend 85% of their revenue on medical care (i.e. give up a big chunk of their profits) and is the first insurer to publicly oppose his plan. (Although I told you that was coming a while back)

Hmm….this is a deal I think they should take while it’s still on the table. They have a new CEO. I wonder how long she intends to be around? If it’s more than a couple of years I bet she’ll wish they’d not done that.

POLICY: Gratzer vs Cohn at TNR

The New Republic turned over its column to David Gratzer yesterday and today Jonathan Cohn responds. All good stuff, even if Jon yet again misses out on laying down the financial consequences of being poor and sick here. And he is a little too nice to David. Not hard because David is really nice, but all the same the positions he espouse are factually challenged and basically don’t pass the rational sniff test.

At least that’s what I thought after he and I had a more than polite agree to disagree conversation, in which I think I played Manchester United and he played Roma! Mind you they tied that first leg, so perhaps Jon is waiting till later in the week to really stick it to David!

POLICY/POLITICS: Pat Salber on gun laws

In the wake of yesterday’s massacre in Virginia, here’s Pat Salber about the gun massacre on campus.

We need to empower and fund reputable organizations to perform the research on violence and violence prevention. (It has effectively disappeared from the Center from Disease Control’s research agenda in the last six years).  We need to put the health and safety of our kids ahead any other political agenda…can we possibly value  gun ownership more than the safety of our kids at school?

If our past actions are a predictor of the future, then this is what will probably happen.  Time will pass and the rawness of our emotions, so exposed right now in the aftermass of the Virginia Tech Massacre, will dampen. We will start to waffle on any enthusiasm to pursue rational gun control…we simply won’t care as much as the folks who profit from profligate sales of firearms.   And then we will be right back to where we have been for the last twenty or thirty years, waiting for one more (short-fused) time bomb to explode onto our campuses and into our national psyches.  

How many more school kids need to get shot to death? How much more campus blood and gore do we need to see?  How many more unbearable tragedies do American families need to endure before we finally stand up and demand a change in our national firearm policy?

POLICY: My last word at TPM–competition within social insurance

So the book club at TPM is drawing to a close. Here’s my first piece trying to explain that social insurance whether voucher/competition-based or fee-schedule-based is pretty similar compared to what we have now. In fact it’s a Distinction without a Difference. But that just seemed to confuse everyone, so I tried again with a larger explanation with a longer title called Social insurance is the key–but it can handle competition, just not the type you’re used to!

POLICY: HSAs–The master speaks

Uwe skewers the HSA as a regressive tax shelter that impacts only the poor over at Health Affairs Blog. This time the cracks are at Bloomberg readers rather than certain crank health policy shops in Dallas, TX but it’s still a beautiful read.

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