The Hidden History of American Healthcare: Why Sickness Bankrupts You and Makes Others Insanely Rich
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About this ebook
"For-profit health insurance is the largest con job ever perpetrated on the American people—one that has cost trillions of dollars and millions of lives since the 1940s,” says Thom Hartmann.
Other countries have shown us that affordable universal healthcare is not only possible but also effective and efficient. Taiwan's single-payer system saved the country a fortune as well as saving lives during the coronavirus pandemic, enabling the country to implement a nationwide coronavirus test-and-contact-trace program without shutting down the economy. This resulted in just ten deaths, while more than 500,000 people have died in the United States.
Hartmann offers a deep dive into the shameful history of American healthcare, showing how greed, racism, and oligarchic corruption led to the current “sickness for profit” system. Modern attempts to create versions of government healthcare have been hobbled at every turn, including Obamacare.
There is a simple solution: Medicare for all. Hartmann outlines the extraordinary benefits this system would provide the American people and economy and the steps we need to take to make it a reality. It's time for America to join every industrialized country in the world and make health a right, not a privilege.
Thom Hartmann
Thom Hartmann is the host of the nationally and internationally syndicated talkshow The Thom Hartmann Program and the TV show The Big Picture on the Free Speech TV network. He is the award-winning New York Times bestselling author of 24 books, including Attention Deficit Disorder: A Different Perception, ADHD and the Edison Gene, and The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight, which inspired Leonardo DiCaprio’s film The 11th Hour. A former psychotherapist and founder of the Hunter School, a residential and day school for children with ADHD, he lives in Washington, D.C.
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Reviews for The Hidden History of American Healthcare
7 ratings4 reviews
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5He is a "progressive". Which means he has an agenda and it aligns closer to communism than democracy.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Healthcare consumes 24% of GDP? That's wrong. The correct figure is about 18%.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Why does every major industrialized country, except America, have some sort of national health insurance system? This book attempts to answer that question.In the early 20th century, around 1915, the Woodrow Wilson Administration attempted to bring national health insurance to America (based on the German model under the Kaiser). It's failure can be blamed on Frederick Hoffmann of the Prudential Insurance Co, of America. He wrote all sorts of articles and pamphlets, emphasizing all the bad parts of the German system, and the British, which had started a few years previously. National health insurance would supposedly destroy the Daniel Boone spirit of individuality in America (sound familiar?). Today, the insurance industry has plenty of money to spend on Washington lobbyists to make sure that it stays that way.Everyone has seen, or read, ads for Medicare Advantage health plans. The compete with, but have no connection to, traditional Medicare. Such plans get a lump-sum reimbursement each year from the government, so it is in their interest to make their patients look as sick as possible. Patients get a yearly visit from a nurse. A slight anomaly in a patient's heart rhythm, which doesn't affect the patient at all, is listed as Heart Attack (more money). An emotional problem that lasts more than 2 weeks becomes Major Depressive Episode (more money). This goes along with the usual denial of coverage the first time around. A number of sources report the government overpayments to these plans is in the billions of dollars each year. Also, switching from Medicare Advantage to traditional Medicare is impossible; you are locked in.This is a short book, but it is a huge eye-opener. It is highly recommended for all Americans, and gets more than 5 stars.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5In my early twenties, I decided to devote my life to bettering American healthcare. I gained exposure to the system as a medical student and still contribute professionally by bettering medical research through software development. My experiences show that many inefficiencies and much greed exist in the system. As Hartmann attests to in this book, so many people angle to profit off of citizens’ health needs. It’s sad, but the political will and personal wills to change systems are lacking. The author aims to change that by giving American readers a more informed picture of efforts to improve the American healthcare system.Hartmann, a progressive radio host by trade, does so by a deep exploration of the history of the system. He explains how time after time, entrenched economic interests skewers any attempts to cut down on inefficiencies. That’s why, as is often told, the American system costs significantly more than any other nation’s but still produces subpar results. Although every other developed country favors a state-run solution, the American government consistently resists it. Solutions like Medicare for All (advocated for in this book) are relatively popular among the people, but monied interests loudly raise their voices whenever their piece of the pie is cut.This book functions mostly as a political tract supported by history instead of a history of politics. Hartmann takes direct aim at what he views as the enemy – Reaganism and those who raise placards against “socialized medicine” every time reforms are suggested. He contends that Medicare for All will actually cost less money than the current system.Perhaps this position is a bit idealistic. Those who are “losers” in such a schematic change will have to funnel their self-interest into other ventures. Indeed, it would upend the economy significantly, and the change could not happen overnight, much like getting rid of slavery took decades to overcome (if it ever has). That said, I believe he’s correct that getting rid of the excess capitalism is the right move to make economically and humanely. However, deeper study into a transition (whose absence is glaring here) might help alleviate future pain.I’m not sure an American conservative would like reading this book because it brings out a view contrary to their party line. In contrast, American progressives would eat it up. What’s needed socially, however, is a healthy exchange of ideas among the camps. In an era of hyper-partisanship, I’m not sure Hartmann facilitates such dialogue. He merely pushes for his ideological position without calling his presuppositions into question. A little humility would make his argument stronger and his potential audience grow. Nonetheless, his approach will probably delight his radio audience and go to market well. From what I can gather from this radio star, I don’t think that hits too far from his intended target.
Book preview
The Hidden History of American Healthcare - Thom Hartmann
The Hidden History of American Healthcare
The Hidden History of American Healthcare
Copyright © 2021 by Thom Hartmann
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed Attention: Permissions Coordinator,
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First Edition
Paperback print edition ISBN 978-1-5230-9163-8
PDF e-book ISBN 978-1-5230-9164-5
IDPF e-book ISBN 978-1-5230-9165-2
Digital audio ISBN 978-1-5230-9166-9
2021-1
Book production: Linda Jupiter Productions. Cover design: Wes Youssi, M.80 Design.
Interior design: Good Morning Graphics. Edit: Elissa Rabellino.
Proofread: Mary Kanable. Index: Paula C. Durbin-Westby.
To our children, Kindra, Justin, and Kerith, who make their parents so proud by (among other things) all working in public health.
We pledge ourselves to work unceasingly in State and Nation for . . . [t]he protection of home life against the hazards of sickness, irregular employment, and old age through the adoption of a system of social insurance adapted to American use.
What Germany has done in the way of old age pensions or insurance should be studied by us, and the system adapted to our uses, with whatever modifications are rendered necessary by our different ways of life and habits of thought.
—Theodore Roosevelt, 1912
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION: HOW A SINGLE-PAYER HEALTHCARE SYSTEM HELPED STOP COVID-19
Medicare for All—Why?
Medicare for All—How?
PART ONE: HOW BAD THINGS ARE IN AMERICA
How the Insurance Industry Bought Joe Lieberman and Killed the Public Option
Obamacare: Rube Goldberg Meets Health Insurance
Wendell Potter: A Good Man in a Bad Job
Dollar Bill
McGuire and the Privatization of Medicare
The Advantage
War against Medicare
You Are Locked-in to Medicare Advantage
Rick Scott Killed Charlene Dill
Work to Live, or Live to Work?
PART TWO: THE ORIGINS OF AMERICA’S SICKNESS-FOR-PROFIT SYSTEM
Germany Gets the World’s First Single-Payer System in 1884
America, the Land of the Sick
Frederick Ludwig Hoffman Makes a Discovery
Race Traits and Tendencies of the American Negro
From Scientific Racism to Libertarianism
New York Shakes Up the Insurance Industry
From Scientific Racism to No Compulsory Healthcare!
Prudential Helps Kill America’s First Healthcare-for-All Campaign
PART THREE: THE MODERN FIGHT FOR A HUMAN RIGHT TO HEALTHCARE
Is Healthcare a Right or a Privilege?
Why Social Security Doesn’t Already Include a Right to Healthcare
Healthcare to Defeat Fascism
The Beveridge Report: The British Plan for Defense and Welfare
How Canada Won a Right to Healthcare
LBJ Takes It to Reagan and the Doctors
Medicare: America’s Most Successful Racial Integration Program
Medicare Inspectors
Defeat Goldwater’s Racists
Medicare Ends Segregation in America’s Hospitals
Ted Kennedy’s Fight for Expansion
PART FOUR: SAVING LIVES WITH A REAL HEALTHCARE SYSTEM
Undoing Reaganomics and Reducing Inequality Would Save Lives
Buy the Insurance Companies!
Medicare for All: The Losers
The Impact of Medicare for All on Business
Want a Green New Deal? Get Medicare for All First
It Takes a Crisis
NOTES
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INDEX
INTRODUCTION
How a Single-Payer Healthcare System Helped Stop COVID-19
Healthcare systems can also be national security systems. Just ask anyone from Taiwan.
On January 20, 2020, the United States recorded its first known case of COVID-19 infection. The following day, Taiwan got their first, too.
By the end of April, over a million Americans were infected with the virus,¹ but Taiwan had recorded only 388 infections and their last case of local transmission on April 12. (A few had arrived on aircraft from other countries; all were contained by quarantine.)²
As of this writing in September 2020, there hadn’t been a single new case or a single death in Taiwan since April. The economy never shut down and, at this writing, was projected to have grown nearly 2 percent in 2020; business, restaurants, theaters, and sports events were all open. Life was back to normal (albeit a mask-wearing normal).
And it was made possible by their national single-payer healthcare system and their citizens’ willingness to do their bit for the collective good.
Back in the 1980s, Taiwan was on the edge of moving toward a democracy (after a military coup in the 1960s), and about 40 percent of Taiwanese people didn’t have health insurance. If somebody in a family got sick, the cost of care often wiped out the family, and demands for reform were loud across the nation.
Uwe Reinhardt was a German-born healthcare economist married to a Taiwanese woman, and he attended a conference on healthcare in Taipei in 1989. His presentation impressed representatives of the government in attendance, and while he was still in town for the conference, they asked him for his best suggestion for a national healthcare system.
He and his wife went back to their hotel and discussed the issue in depth, finally deciding that a single-payer national system would be the most cost-effective, efficient, and comprehensive program possible. He shared his thoughts with the government representatives, and the next day he left Taiwan to go back to Princeton, where he was an economics professor.
Six months later, a representative of Taiwan’s government called him to say that they were going to take up his suggestion and asked him to help them craft their program. He enthusiastically assented, and by 1995 Taiwan had instituted one of the world’s best systems.³
Today, everybody in Taiwan is fully covered for doctor and hospital services. Everybody has a driver’s-license-like healthcare card, which accesses their entire medical history. They can book a doctor’s appointment on any computer terminal in the country, and the entire cost of the system is a bit more than 6 percent of Taiwan’s GDP (in the United States, healthcare consumes 24 percent of our GDP) because there are no insurance company intermediaries sucking profits off the system.
When COVID-19 hit, Taiwan chose not to use the blunt-force technique of shutting down their economy and locking people in. Instead, they took on the coronavirus with an aggressive, nationwide test-and-contact-trace program tied in to the national health service database. Every infected person was identified and put into a comfortable quarantine, and every person he or she had come into contact with—even very marginal contacts—was also tested and their contacts traced.
By April, just a bit more than two months after their first case surfaced, the country had the coronavirus isolated and completely under control. By quarantining inbound visitors to the island nation of 23 million, they were able (as of this writing) to keep it that way.
Maintaining public health is one of the most important functions of any nation’s healthcare system. Because America’s is so fragmented, it’s inconceivable that our nation could respond to an epidemic, a pandemic, or another public health disaster with the speed and elegance of Taiwan or any of the world’s other nations with single-payer Medicare for All types of systems.
Medicare for All—Why?
It’s like Stockholm Syndrome,
a friend who’s a psychotherapist said, describing the way that Americans have clung, for more than five generations, to for-profit health insurance while the rest of the world figured out how to provide healthcare to all citizens at a much lower price. People know it and have become familiar with it,
she added. They can’t imagine anything else.
It’s probably the largest con job ever perpetrated on the American people, one that has cost trillions of dollars and millions of lives. It’s been going on since the 1940s.
If it were a scientific experiment, it would have been shut down by the ethics review panels generations ago. This experiment in providing healthcare via a for-profit insurance system has led to the deaths of more Americans than we lost in World War II.⁴
Every year, over a half million Americans go bankrupt—often losing pretty much everything they’ve worked their entire lives for—because someone in their family got sick. That’s a half million families a year, every year, for the past few decades.⁵ And the coronavirus has only made things worse.
Perhaps most galling, this massive rip-off is costing our entire nation—and each of us individually—a fortune.
Insurance premiums right now make up 22 percent of all taxable payroll, well above what the cost of Medicare for All would be, at around 14 percent when first put into place, dropping to around 10 percent within a few years as previously uninsured people get their health needs up to date.
As the health insurance, drug, and hospital parasites pushed their suckers deeper and deeper into our body politic, spending on healthcare by Americans went up 25 percent between 2007 and 2014 at the same time that spending on housing, food, and clothing fell by 6, 8, and 19 percent, respectively.⁶
In 2018 alone, the United States wasted $256 billion on administrative expenses
associated with for-profit health insurance, including multimillion-dollar salaries and armies of bean counters who scour claims looking for reasons to reject payment of hospital, doctor, and pharmaceutical bills.⁷
American doctors and hospitals employ eight times as many people as doctors and hospitals in Canada for administration, with US doctors spending 12 percent of their total billings just on the hassle of getting reimbursed.⁸
My physician, when we lived in Washington, DC, told me about a colleague of hers who specializes in liver disease. Because the new hepatitis C drugs cost tens of thousands of dollars and the for-profit health insurance companies fight paying for them, he has two full-time nurses on staff whose only job is to constantly rebill and fight with the insurance companies so that his patients can get the therapy.
And because big drug companies charge Americans, on average, about twice what they charge Canadians or citizens of any other developed country, we pay them another roughly $200 billion a year that all goes to executive salaries and into the pockets of the investor class.
Lawrence O’Donnell told author Kurt Andersen about how, when he was an aide to Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan back in the last century, the storied senator asked him, Why don’t we just delete the words ‘age 65’ from the Medicare statute?
This question, O’Donnell told Andersen, followed twenty-four hearings studying every detail of healthcare policy.
O’Donnell noted that Moynihan hated unnecessary government complexity.
⁹
The United States has been engaged in a 70-year-long experiment to determine whether it’s ever possible for healthcare to be provided purely on a for-profit basis in a way that maximizes efficiency, fairness, and optimal outcomes.
We’ve proved that it’s not possible. And the experiment has been disastrous for Americans—particularly Americans of color—in terms of cost, lives lost, and overall quality of life.
If the goal of a healthcare system is to extend life and improve the quality of health, we have totally failed.