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How Government Solved the Health Care Crisis

9 comments, 212 views, posted 3:13 am 25/06/2012 in History by Quaektem
Quaektem has 12861 posts, 1579 threads, 361 points, location: James Cameron doesn't do what James Cameron does for James Cameron...

How Government Solved the Health Care Crisis

Medical Insurance that Worked — Until Government "Fixed" It
by Roderick T. Long

Today, we are constantly being told, the United States faces a health care crisis. Medical costs are too high, and health insurance is out of reach of the poor. The cause of this crisis is never made very clear, but the cure is obvious to nearly everybody: government must step in to solve the problem.

Eighty years ago, Americans were also told that their nation was facing a health care crisis. Then, however, the complaint was that medical costs were too low, and that health insurance was too accessible. But in that era, too, government stepped forward to solve the problem. And boy, did it solve it!

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, one of the primary sources of health care and health insurance for the working poor in Britain, Australia, and the United States was the fraternal society. Fraternal societies (called "friendly societies" in Britain and Australia) were voluntary mutual-aid associations. Their descendants survive among us today in the form of the Shriners, Elks, Masons, and similar organizations, but these no longer play the central role in American life they formerly did. As recently as 1920, over one-quarter of all adult Americans were members of fraternal societies. (The figure was still higher in Britain and Australia.) Fraternal societies were particularly popular among blacks and immigrants. (Indeed, Teddy Roosevelt's famous attack on "hyphenated Americans" was motivated in part by hostility to the immigrants' fraternal societies; he and other Progressives sought to "Americanize" immigrants by making them dependent for support on the democratic state, rather than on their own independent ethnic communities.)

The principle behind the fraternal societies was simple. A group of working-class people would form an association (or join a local branch, or "lodge," of an existing association) and pay monthly fees into the association's treasury; individual members would then be able to draw on the pooled resources in time of need. The fraternal societies thus operated as a form of self-help insurance company.

Turn-of-the-century America offered a dizzying array of fraternal societies to choose from. Some catered to a particular ethnic or religious group; others did not. Many offered entertainment and social life to their members, or engaged in community service. Some "fraternal" societies were run entirely by and for women. The kinds of services from which members could choose often varied as well, though the most commonly offered were life insurance, disability insurance, and "lodge practice."

"Lodge practice" refers to an arrangement, reminiscent of today's HMOs, whereby a particular society or lodge would contract with a doctor to provide medical care to its members. The doctor received a regular salary on a retainer basis, rather than charging per item; members would pay a yearly fee and then call on the doctor's services as needed. If medical services were found unsatisfactory, the doctor would be penalized, and the contract might not be renewed. Lodge members reportedly enjoyed the degree of customer control this system afforded them. And the tendency to overuse the physician's services was kept in check by the fraternal society's own "self-policing"; lodge members who wanted to avoid future increases in premiums were motivated to make sure that their fellow members were not abusing the system.

Most remarkable was the low cost at which these medical services were provided. At the turn of the century, the average cost of "lodge practice" to an individual member was between one and two dollars a year. A day's wage would pay for a year's worth of medical care. By contrast, the average cost of medical service on the regular market was between one and two dollars per visit. Yet licensed physicians, particularly those who did not come from "big name" medical schools, competed vigorously for lodge contracts, perhaps because of the security they offered; and this competition continued to keep costs low.

The response of the medical establishment, both in America and in Britain, was one of outrage; the institution of lodge practice was denounced in harsh language and apocalyptic tones. Such low fees, many doctors charged, were bankrupting the medical profession. Moreover, many saw it as a blow to the dignity of the profession that trained physicians should be eagerly bidding for the chance to serve as the hirelings of lower-class tradesmen. It was particularly detestable that such uneducated and socially inferior people should be permitted to set fees for the physicians' services, or to sit in judgment on professionals to determine whether their services had been satisfactory. The government, they demanded, must do something.

And so it did. In Britain, the state put an end to the "evil" of lodge practice by bringing health care under political control. Physicians' fees would now be determined by panels of trained professionals (i.e., the physicians themselves) rather than by ignorant patients. State-financed medical care edged out lodge practice; those who were being forced to pay taxes for "free" health care whether they wanted it or not had little incentive to pay extra for health care through the fraternal societies, rather than using the government care they had already paid for.

In America, it took longer for the nation's health care system to be socialized, so the medical establishment had to achieve its ends more indirectly; but the essential result was the same. Medical societies like the AMA imposed sanctions on doctors who dared to sign lodge practice contracts. This might have been less effective if such medical societies had not had access to government power; but in fact, thanks to governmental grants of privilege, they controlled the medical licensure procedure, thus ensuring that those in their disfavor would be denied the right to practice medicine.

Such licensure laws also offered the medical establishment a less overt way of combating lodge practice. It was during this period that the AMA made the requirements for medical licensure far more strict than they had previously been. Their reason, they claimed, was to raise the quality of medical care. But the result was that the number of physicians fell, competition dwindled, and medical fees rose; the vast pool of physicians bidding for lodge practice contracts had been abolished. As with any market good, artifical restrictions on supply created higher prices — a particular hardship for the working-class members of fraternal societies.

The final death blow to lodge practice was struck by the fraternal societies themselves. The National Fraternal Congress — attempting, like the AMA, to reap the benefits of cartelization — lobbied for laws decreeing a legal minimum on the rates fraternal societies could charge. Unfortunately for the lobbyists, the lobbying effort was successful; the unintended consequence was that the minimum rates laws made the services of fraternal societies no longer competitive. Thus the National Fraternal Congress' lobbying efforts, rather than creating a formidable mutual-aid cartel, simply destroyed the fraternal societies' market niche — and with it the opportunity for low-cost health care for the working poor.

Why do we have a crisis in health care costs today? Because government "solved" the last one. D

This article was published in the Winter 1993-94 issue of Formulations by the Free Nation Foundation

http://www.freenation.org/a/f12l3.html

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Viscera (25)

Comments

0
4:04 am 25/06/2012

bytehead

Quote by Quaektem:
Physicians' fees would now be determined by panels of trained professionals (i.e., the physicians themselves) rather than by ignorant patients.


When were fees ever decided by patients, ignorant or otherwise?

The costs of medical care (regardless if you want to call it health insurance, which is merely a way to pay for it, or anything else) has been going up faster than inflation for decades. I don't really see the government or "free" market pressure fixing it one way or another.

0
4:31 am 25/06/2012

z0phi3l

Quote by bytehead:
Quote by Quaektem:
Physicians' fees would now be determined by panels of trained professionals (i.e., the physicians themselves) rather than by ignorant patients.

When were fees ever decided by patients, ignorant or otherwise?

The costs of medical care (regardless if you want to call it health insurance, which is merely a way to pay for it, or anything else) has been going up faster than inflation for decades. I don't really see the government or "free" market pressure fixing it one way or another.



Medical costs only started to skyrocket once the Feds in the case of the US got involved, before that it was fairly stable, but hey if you want to believe otherwise, knock yourself out

0
10:40 pm 25/06/2012

thomasslavin

0
3:15 am 26/06/2012

bytehead

Quote by z0phi3l:
Medical costs only started to skyrocket once the Feds in the case of the US got involved,


That's an interesting conjecture. Just when DID the US government get involved in "interfering" with medicine such that costs started to skyrocket?

And where are you getting this data?

Medical costs are going up, that certainly is a fact, and evidently one that we both agree on.

Now, exactly who is at fault seems to be the question. Putting the entire blame on government may sound good in your ears, (and knock yourself out and keep believing it?), but you'd better reread what I wrote. By stating that it's a helluva lot more complex than blaming either the guvmint or the free marionettes, or anything that either can do anything about, let alone fix, I suggest that it simply isn't as one sided as you think it is.

There is also no denying that we spend more money on health care per person than any other country. And we really aren't seeing anything for that money being spent. That these two facts are probably related comes to mind.

1
5:28 am 26/06/2012

Quaektem

Quote by bytehead:
That's an interesting conjecture. Just when DID the US government get involved in "interfering" with medicine such that costs started to skyrocket?



The first time government interference had an effect was by freezing wages during WWII. Companies had to come up with other perks to entice employees, one of which became insurance. Why do you think the majority of plans are centered around your employer and not personal choice?

Quote by bytehead:
By stating that it's a helluva lot more complex than blaming either the guvmint or the free marionettes, or anything that either can do anything about, let alone fix, I suggest that it simply isn't as one sided as you think it is.



I agree, the amount of time that it's been since the majority of people were expected to actually pay for their medical costs has allowed private entities to continually jack up prices. Patients with a $100 co-pay don't care if the bill is $150 or $1500 so hospitals, pharmacies and drug companies can freely jack up costs. Meanwhile Insurance companies don;t answer to individuals, but rather sell group plans to companies (who make decisions on what coverage there employees have access too) manipulating premiums to ensure constant profit. States step in with mandated coverage that justifies even higher premiums across the board while those specialized procedures no longer have to be priced competitively.

Look at two areas insurance doesn't usually cover, lasic eye correction and plastic surgery. The quality of both has gone up while costs have fallen because, when people pay out of pocket they make decisions based on (among other things) price.

Yes, this is very complicated and there is no easy fix. Nationalizing the problem is going to result in crippling costs or rationing, those are the only two possible outcomes.

0
11:24 pm 27/06/2012

bytehead

Quote by Quaektem:
Why do you think the majority of plans are centered around your employer and not personal choice?

Actually, my last job gave me like five different plans to chose from. And The Rose's current plan still has something like 3 or 4 different options this year.

But that's been going on for 70 years now. It's only been since about '80 when costs started to get out of align with the rest of the OECD countries. That's according to the 7/2011 Scientific American.

Quote by Quaektem:
Nationalizing the problem is going to result in crippling costs or rationing, those are the only two possible outcomes.


There already is rationing. Except for the the things that aren't covered by insurance like Lasik and plastic surgery (which fall into the same basic subcategory) which are actually rationed by whether or not you can afford those procedures.

0
11:58 pm 27/06/2012

Quaektem

5 different plans huh? How many different insurance providers? Could you sign up to a plan from an insurance company of your choice? Some large corporations do have a variety of options, but the majority of employers do not. Consider yourself very fortunate.

Quote by bytehead:
It's only been since about '80 when costs started to get out of align with the rest of the OECD countries.



Correct. In the 1980's we started to 'reap the rewards' of Ted Kennedy's first overhaul of the health care system (The Health Maintenance Organization Act of 1973). In other words, government became more involved and costs further increased.

Quote by bytehead:
There already is rationing. Except for the the things that aren't covered by insurance like Lasik and plastic surgery (which fall into the same basic subcategory) which are actually rationed by whether or not you can afford those procedures.



ra·tion noun
1. a fixed allowance of provisions or food, especially for soldiers or sailors or for civilians during a shortage: a daily ration of meat and bread.
2. an allotted amount: They finally saved up enough gas rations for the trip.
3. a. provisions: Enough rations were brought along to feed all the marchers.
b.Chiefly South Atlantic States. food or meals: The old hotel still has the best rations in town.
4. to supply, apportion, or distribute as rations (often followed by out): to ration out food to an army.
5. to supply or provide with rations: to ration an army with food.
6. to restrict the consumption of (a commodity, food, etc.): to ration meat during war.
7. to restrict the consumption of (a consumer): The civilian population was rationed while the war lasted.

Heath care is not rationed, it is available to those that can afford it. Because of government interference, the number of people who can afford healthcare has plummeted. I am loathe to hand the responsibility of fixing a system to those that are destroying it.

For real rationing... look up what happened in the late 70's to gasoline under Carter. I can't wait for Obamacare to have the same effect on the available of medical care!

1
4:15 am 29/06/2012

bytehead

Quote by Quaektem:
5 different plans huh? How many different insurance providers?

5 different ones. Maybe 4, one insurance company may offered the standard old style insurance and another HMO/PPO plan.

Now my previous employers, with many more employees and and lower average wage, only offered me one plan. Now when I went from one division to another (from Radio Shack to GRID), that was certainly a much better plan. Of course, Tandy had just acquired GRID, and decided not to scare the existing employees away.

Quote by Quaektem:
The Health Maintenance Organization Act of 1973

7+ years is quite a leap. Just as it is for being from the 1940s.

Quote by Quaektem:
Heath care is not rationed,


How many pay their health care with pure cash?

If you use insurance to pay for health care, something that most of Americans do, then yes, the insurance company is very much rationing care.

If you have the money, you're going to have whatever it is, regardless if it's rationed or not.

0
6:57 pm 29/06/2012

Quaektem

Quote by bytehead:
5 different ones. Maybe 4, one insurance company may offered the standard old style insurance and another HMO/PPO plan.



Very fortunate, very atypical.

Quote by bytehead:
7+ years is quite a leap. Just as it is for being from the 1940s.

It takes time for the full effects of policy to become apparent, in this case, that it was evident in only seven years demonstrates how bad of an idea it was... when you push the gas pettle down further, the car arrives at it's destination faster.

Quote by bytehead:
How many pay their health care with pure cash?
If you use insurance to pay for health care, something that most of Americans do, then yes, the insurance company is very much rationing care.



So, by your reasoning everyhing is rationed from houses to candy bars. Kinda defeats the purpose for having a word for that at all

Insurance companies provide coverage of 'X' for '$Y'. If your need does not fit into the plan you signed up for, how is that rationing?

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