The Battle for Vermont’s Health
You can’t see them. They’re hidden from view and probably always will be. But the health insurance industry’s big guns are in place and pointed directly at the citizens of Vermont.
Health insurers were not able to stop the state’s drive last year toward a single-payer health care system, which insurers have spent millions to scare Americans into believing would be the worst thing ever. Despite the ceaseless spin, Vermont lawmakers last May demonstrated they could not be bought nor intimidated when they became the first in the nation to pass a bill that will probably establish a single-payer beachhead in the U.S.
When he signed Act 48 into law on May 27, surrounded by dozens of state residents who worked for many years to achieve universal coverage, Governor Peter Shumlin expressed great pride in what had been accomplished.
“We gather here today to launch the first single payer system in America, to do in Vermont what has taken too long—to have a health care (system) that is the best in the world, that treats health care as a right and not a privilege, where health care follows the individual, not the employer,” Shumlin said.
The problem for Shumlin and his allies is this: it will take five years before Vermont can fully implement its new system, partly because the federal health care reform law prohibits states from undertaking more far-reaching reforms until 2017 unless granted waivers from the feds to do so. And though Vermont’s Congressional delegation is on board to pursue a waiver that would let the state set up a single payer system two years from now, the insurance industry’s friends in Washington are not keen to let that happen. That’s because they want to use those five years to persuade Vermonters that they really don’t want to go the single payer route after all.
During my 20 years as a health insurance PR executive, I was involved in numerous efforts to make the very term “single payer” toxic to most Americans. We even spent hundreds of thousands of premium dollars in 2007 to help finance the operation of a front group, called Health Care America, for the sole purpose of trashing a movie — Michael Moore’s “Sicko” — that put single payer systems abroad in a favorable light. You can rest assured that the industry will spend much, much more to make sure that Vermont does not succeed.
I have observed in Vermont over the past several days just how the invisible hand of the insurance industry is working. Insurers know their efforts will be more effective if they can get others — third party advocates, they call them — to carry out them out. I recognized the campaign because the tactics are the same as those used in previous attempts to kill reforms insurers don’t like.
Part of the strategy is to get key groups of individuals to begin raising doubts, to get Vermonters to second-guess themselves. Among the first groups the insurers have targeted are those most easily spooked — certain business owners and physicians, especially specialists who thrive in the current system.
Last Wednesday, legislators got a sampling of what they’re in for. At a hearing on creation of the state’s health care exchange, or marketplace — mandated by the federal reform law — employers worried about losing the ability to choose from numerous competing insurers. And they worried too about not being able to shift their employees into benefit plans with high deductibles. Insurers and employers have been collaborating for the past several years in a mutually beneficial effort to shift more of us into high-deductible policies. The higher the deductible, the less insurers and employers have to pay for our care. This collaboration has been so successful that increasing numbers of American families filing for bankruptcy are, at least theoretically, insured.
At a hearing a few days earlier in Rutland, this one for health care providers, several physicians were, wittingly or not, using some of the same industry talking points I used to write for insurers’ allies.
Dermatologist Dan McCauliffe was one of several doctors there who suggested that patients needed to pay more — not less — out of their own pocket for care. Ironically, this skin doctor joined other physician specialists in arguing that health care costs would never stabilize until patients had “more skin in the game,” a term my former colleagues used frequently as we tried to spin the “advantages” of high-deductible plans. According to statistics from the American Medical Association, dermatologists are among the highest paid specialists, making on average more than $230,000.
So why do insurers care so much about Vermont? Even though Vermont is a small state where most for-profit insurers have little business, the insurers don’t want a single state to go single payer. Just last week, single payer advocates in California fell just a few votes short of getting a bill to the floor of the Senate for a vote. If Vermont succeeds, California lawmakers might actually get the votes they need.
Health insurers make enormous amounts of money off of us, something they cannot do so effectively in other countries, especially Canada. The four largest insurers, United, WellPoint, Aetna and CIGNA, reported earning a combined $11 billion on nearly $220 billion in revenues last year. For years insurers have been successful in persuading Americans to believe something that is at best debatable — that they play a useful role in the U.S. health care system. They are nervous that if Vermont proves to the rest of the country that health insurers are about as useful as teats on a boar, they might have to figure out another way to make a few billion bucks.

Reprinted by permission from iWatch News
CONNECT














8 comments on "The Battle for Vermont’s Health"
February 14, 2012 9:12pm
The state of Vermont has always been a bastion of critical thinking. It's hard to believe they are nestled together with fusty old New Hampshire, the 'Don't Tread On Me,' state, whose motto is so familiar at TeaParty gatherings. Excellent article by Mr. Potter, who I'm familiar with from guest appearances on television news. I've heard the complaints of friends about the cost of their health insurance policies, and of co-pays, which have risen drastically in the past year or two. Meanwhile, the four largest companies earned 11 billion dollars on a gross income of 220 billion . High salaries for CEOs and lobbyists took a good chunk of that; it certainly didn't go to improving the country's health care or the salaries and adequate staffing of nurses, who are the ones actually delivering the care. Even the usual doctors' salaries don't come close to what is earned by these other aforementioned groups. I just shake my head in disbelief.
February 11, 2012 2:07pm
Wendell,I love to read your stuff. I don't know of anyone that speaks truth to the power of health insurance companies as well as you--for obvious reasons.
But I hesitate to join you in a single payer solution and, as the dermatologist you refer to argues, I think that health care is more of an individual thing. The Canadian experience shows that costs and demand continue to escalate in a single payer system despite the savings of the single payer. The problem is that providing a service through insurance dampens, if not eliminates, the role of the individual in the cause of the condition. Exercise is valuable prevention for heart disease, diabetes, dementia and a host of medical problems that are close to epidemic, but as long as insurance pays for drugs and other medical treatments there is no pressure to prevent them. The only way I see to bring this into the equation is with individually owned, and state supported HSAs.
February 06, 2012 4:29pm
Generally health care is a service since it produces nothing
It truly is a scam, apparently unchecked by any rational market forces
February 06, 2012 3:43pm
Yes... thank you Mr Potter...
If 'as yes sow, so shall ye reap' is not just one more Madison Avenue sales slogan; How do these people who earn their living on deception, manipulation and theft, expect to avoid the consequences...
I think this is ultimately the real question to ask over the next hundred or thousand years... However long it takes, only clarifying this issue will create a world civilization of prosperity and peace.
February 06, 2012 3:37pm
Way to go Vermont!! Too bad the Democrats in the House & Senate were so concerned about getting something acceptable to Republicans that they passed the mediocre ObamaCare instead of a Single Payer system a couple years ago.
Just about every other civilized country in the world has a single payer type system. I know a lot of people in Canada and Germany and they are all very happy with their health care systems. Their average life spans meet or exceed that of the USA, so their care is no worse than here. If they are really sick they get into the hospital in a timely manner, no excessive waiting compared to the USA. When people lose their jobs they at least know they won't lose their life savings, go into permanent debt, or die because of the lack of health care coverage.
Here is an all too common scenario in the USA (and it is not only limited to those over 50). In the New America when you turn 50 you have a great chance of losing your job, having no insurance (or having to pay $800/month for coverage when you just lost your income), and having employers pass on hiring you because you are too old. Many of these folks then take demoralizing jobs so they can scrape by, hoping to make it to the age when they can collect Social Security and Medicare, wondering all the time if it will be snatched away by the Republicans before they are eligible. Should they get sick, ... who knows how bad it will get for most of them.
Wake up Americans - class warfare has been being waged for several decades now. The wealthy & powerful have been brainwashing half the population (the Republicans to be clear), and using their un-ending finances and resources to evolve the economic system and government to benefit them at the expense of the middle class and poor. The saddest part of this is they have so many of the people successfully brainwashed that they get the Joe the Plumbers to fight their battles for them. Yeah for the Occupy Wall Street folks, it is about time the 99% started to fight back against the nobles, lords, and kings of our time.
February 06, 2012 2:46pm
Making that much money for shareholders and insanely high-paid corporate execs off the back of regular people is insane and unconscionable. When will Americans wake up and begin to fight back against corporate invasions such as this. Besides the housing bubble bursting, this is one of the biggest drains on disposable income and the source of a huge transfer of wealth from people to corporations. This is how the rich get richer and the rest of us get poorer. Thank you Wendell Potter.
February 06, 2012 1:37pm
they will expect the fed gov to bail them out in a few years
February 06, 2012 1:05pm
You go Vermont!!! I would expect nothing less from the good folks who elect Bernie Sanders term after term.