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NRL News
Page 19
February/March 2010
Volume 37
Issue 2-3
Massachusetts
Rationing Proposals Show Danger of Federal Bill
By Burke J. Balch,
J.D.
“Over-promising plus
under-funding forces rationing.” For months, the National Right to
Life Committee has been hammering that point, as regular visitors to
our blog at
http://powellcenterformedicalethics.blogspot.com/ know.
We have repeatedly
warned that rationing will result if the federal government creates
a major new entitlement to health insurance for the uninsured, yet
relies on vague hopes that greater efficiency will restrain health
care costs instead of providing an adequate, sustainable funding
mechanism to pay for the entitlement.
Now we are seeing
clear evidence that NRLC is not exaggerating—it comes from
Massachusetts.
In 2006,
Massachusetts enacted a widely heralded plan essentially mandating
universal health insurance coverage, with subsidies to enable the
low-income uninsured to afford it. To pay for the subsidies, the
state bill cobbled together a series of funding sources, including
federal payments, existing state funds for health care for the
uninsured, and other sources of revenue that shared one
commonality—they were not based on what people actually pay for
health care. (For background on why this is a fundamental error, see
http://www.nrlc.org/MedEthics/SaveNotRation.html and the webinar
that links to that page.)
After the first
couple of years of the new program, Massachusetts began to face a
mounting gap between the cost of health care subsidies and the
available funds. Last year it relied on one-time funding from the
federal stimulus bill to help bridge the gap.
This year, faced with
mounting evidence that the state simply cannot afford the increasing
outlays, Governor Deval Patrick on February 11 sent the legislature
a bill that embodies precisely what NRLC has warned will happen on
the federal level. Presumably to avoid a “two-tier” system in which
the subsidized health insurance would cover less than the health
care had by the rest of Massachusetts’ residents, Patrick’s bill
proposes sweeping measures to limit what any of the citizens of
Massachusetts would be ALLOWED to pay for health care!
The governor’s bill
would authorize the state’s insurance commissioner to limit what
hospitals and other health care providers, as well as insurers,
could charge. In short, it would mandate price controls for health
care services and insurance.
Now, everyone would
prefer to pay less, rather than more, for health care, just as for
everything else. So price controls sound appealing, and are often
initially popular. But what must be understood is that when the
government limits what can legally be charged for something, it is
limiting the ability and right of citizens to use their own money to
get the amount and quality of that thing they want or need.
If, concerned about
the price of food in restaurants, the government prohibited charging
more than $5 for a meal, consider what would happen. Restaurateurs
couldn’t afford to charge less for providing food than they had to
pay for its ingredients—so the only food they’d offer would be
things like hamburgers and tacos. Forget about being able to order
lobster or steak!
The same—in a far
more dangerous way—is true of health care. Limit what providers and
insurers can charge for health care, and you get less of it, and
poorer quality. Instead of allowing individual consumers and
employers to balance cost against benefit in choosing among
competing insurance plans—as they would when purchasing anything
from a car to a photocopier—the government would rob us of the
ability to get health care of higher value than it was willing to
authorize. People literally would be unable to use their own money
to save their own lives.
The whole country
must not repeat Massachusetts’ mistake. Now is the time to contact
senators and representatives to urge them to vote “no” on the
rationing proposals before the U.S. Congress—incuding the Senate
passed health care bill which Speaker Pelosi intends to take to the
floor of the House—before, as in Massachusetts, it is too late. |