Tag: 2020 elections

  • A Guide to Following the Health Debate in the 2020 Elections

    Voters have frequently complained that the debate has been confusing and hard to follow. Here are six things to know as you tune in to the increasingly frenzied primary race.

    Health has been a top issue in the presidential campaign during the past year: Not only do the Democratic candidates disagree with President Donald Trump, but they also disagree among themselves.

    Voters have frequently complained that the debate has been confusing and hard to follow. Most of the attention so far has been focused on whether the U.S. should transition to a “Medicare for All” program that would guarantee coverage to all U.S. residents — and result in higher taxes for most people. But there is far more to the health debate than that.

    The campaign is nearing some key moments — the caucuses in Iowa next week, the New Hampshire primary Feb. 11, voting in Nevada and South Carolina later in the month. By March 3, Super Tuesday, Democrats will have chosen a third of all delegates.

    Here are six things to know as you tune in to the increasingly frenzied primary race.

    Universal coverage, Medicare for All and single-payer are not all the same thing.

    Universal coverage is any method of ensuring that all of a country’s residents have health insurance. Other countries do it in various ways: through public programs, private programs or a combination.

    Single-payer is a system in which one entity, usually but not always a government, pays for needed health care services. Single-payer is NOT the same as socialized medicine. The latter generally refers to a system in which the government pays all the bills, owns the health facilities and employs the health professionals who work there. In a single-payer system, such as Medicare in the U.S., the bills are paid by the government but the delivery system remains mostly private.

    Medicare for All is a proposal that was originally developed in the late 1980s. Building on the popularity of the Medicare program for senior citizens, the idea was originally to extend that program to the entire population. However, since Medicare’s benefits have fallen behind those of many private insurance plans, the later iterations of Medicare for All would create an entirely new, and very generous, program for all Americans.

    Voters are more concerned about health care costs than health care coverage.

    While Democrats fight over how best to cover more people with insurance, the majority of Americans already have coverage and are much more worried about the cost. A recent survey of voters in three states with early contests — Iowa, South Carolina and New Hampshire — found voters in all three ranked concerns about high out-of-pocket costs far ahead of concerns about insurance coverage itself.

    It’s the prices, stupid.

    There’s a good reason voters are so concerned about what they are being asked to pay for medical services. U.S. health spending is dramatically higher than that of other industrialized nations. In 2016 the U.S. spent 25% more per person than the next highest-spending country, Switzerland. Overall U.S. health spending is more than twice the average of other Western nations.

    But that’s not because Americans use more health services than citizens of other developed nations do. We just pay more for the services we use. In other words, as the late health economist Uwe Reinhardt once famously quipped in the title of an academic article, “It’s the Prices, Stupid.” A later paper published last year (the original is from 2003) confirmed that is still the case.

    Drug companies and insurers aren’t the only ones responsible for high prices.

    To listen to many of the candidates’ messages, it may seem drug companies and health insurers are together responsible for most — if not all — of the high health spending in the U.S.

    “The giant pharmaceutical and health insurance lobbies have spent billions of dollars over the past decades to ensure that their profits come before the health of the American people,” says Sen. Bernie Sanders on his presidential campaign website. “We must defeat them, together.”

    Most insurance spending, though, actually goes for care delivered by doctors and hospitals. And some of their practices are far more gouging to patients than high prices charged by drugmakers or administrative costs added by insurance companies. Wall Street firms that have bought physician groups are helping block a legislative solution to “surprise bills” — the often huge charges faced by patients who inadvertently get care outside their insurance network. And hospitals around the country are being called out by the news media for suing their patients over bills almost no patient can afford.

    Democrats and Republicans have very different views on how to fix health care.

    To the extent health has been covered in the presidential race, the story has been about disagreements between Democrats: Some want Medicare for All, while others are pushing for less sweeping change, often described as a “public option” that would allow but not require people to purchase a government health plan.

    There are much bigger divides between Democrats and Republicans, however. Democrats nearly all support a larger role for government in health care; they just disagree on how much larger it should be. Meanwhile, Republicans generally want to see less government and more market forces brought to bear. The Trump administration has already either implemented or proposed a variety of ways to decrease regulation of private insurance and is weighing whether to allow states to effectively cap their Medicaid program spending.

    And in the biggest difference of all for the coming campaign, the Trump administration and a group of GOP-led states are, again, challenging the entire Affordable Care Act in court, arguing that it is unconstitutional based on the 2017 tax law’s zeroing out of the tax penalty for failing to maintain insurance coverage.

    The Supreme Court has opted not to decide the case in time for the 2020 election, but it is likely to continue to be a major issue in the campaign.

    There are important health issues beyond insurance coverage and costs.

    While Medicare for All and drug prices have dominated the political debate during the past year, other critical health issues have received far less attention.

    Some candidates have talked about long-term care, which will become a growing need as baby boomers swell the ranks of the “oldest old.” Several have addressed mental health and addiction issues, a continuing public health crisis. And a few have laid out plans for the special needs of Americans in rural areas and those with disabilities.

    HealthBent, a regular feature of Kaiser Health News, offers insight and analysis of policies and politics from KHN’s chief Washington correspondent, Julie Rovner, who has covered health care for more than 30 years.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • 2020 Presidential Candidates Detail How They'd "Turn The Tide" On Addiction Crisis

    2020 Presidential Candidates Detail How They'd "Turn The Tide" On Addiction Crisis

    All of the candidates approached the drug crisis as a public health issue, emphasizing the need for comprehensive treatment options.

    The 2020 presidential election is just over a year away.

    Ahead of the much-anticipated event, the Mental Health for U.S. coalition posed 11 questions about mental health and substance use disorder to the presidential hopefuls.

    Not every candidate answered, including former Vice President Joe Biden, former Massachusetts governor Bill Weld (a Republican) and President Donald Trump.

    But among the six who did, we focused on question number 2: “Every hour, eight people in America die of drug overdose, from opioids and increasingly from other drugs as well. What would your administration do to turn the tide on the addiction crisis?”

    Holding Big Pharma Accountable

    U.S. Senators Cory Booker, Kamala Harris and Bernie Sanders said they would hold drug manufacturers and distributors accountable for their role in exacerbating the drug crisis.

    “This epidemic, caused by the greed of pharmaceutical companies, is ravaging communities across America,” said Sanders.

    “Our response to the addiction crisis must start by tackling the very thing that fueled it in the first place: reckless pharmaceutical companies that marketed dangerous drugs they knew could be highly addictive in order to profit,” said Harris.

    “In the Senate, I called for bringing pharmaceutical CEOs to Capitol Hill to testify about their role in the opioid crisis,” said Booker.

    Investing In A Solution

    Booker and Harris referred to their co-sponsorship of the Comprehensive Addiction Resources Emergency (CARE) Act. The legislation would “authorize $100 billion over 10 years to combat drug addiction and funnel money to cities, counties and states… to boost spending on addiction treatment, harm reduction services and prevention programs,” as Booker outlined.

    Treat It as a Public Health Crisis

    All of the candidates approached the drug crisis as a public health issue, emphasizing the need for comprehensive treatment options.

    Mayor Pete Buttigieg emphasized expanding access to medication-assisted treatment (MAT), the “gold standard” of treatment for opioid use disorder.

    Sen. Amy Klobuchar, using funding from her opioid tax, would expand prevention and treatment initiatives, including mental health support, “giving Americans a path to sustainable recovery.”

    Sanders would guarantee substance use disorder and mental health services through Medicare-for-all, which emphasizes health care “as a right, not a privilege.”

    Other elements of the candidates’ plans included investing in the research of opioid alternatives for pain management, harm reduction programs like syringe exchange, and ensuring the availability of mental health and substance use disorder services for incarcerated individuals, a demographic of people mired by these issues.

    Addressing Trauma 

    Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s response stood out from the rest. She focused her strategy on addressing the root causes of substance use disorder and mental illness: trauma.

    “To start, we need to support our very youngest,” she said. “We know that adverse childhood experiences, like poverty, homelessness, violence in the community or in the home, family separation, or a caretaker with a substance use disorder, can affect brain development and have an impact on mental health in the teen years and beyond. My plans on gun safety, housing, immigration and the opioid crisis confront many of the conditions that can cause childhood trauma.”

    View the original article at thefix.com