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A modern hospital building of
the United Kingdom's National
Health Service in Norfolk. The
UK operates a system of
publicly-funded, single-payer
health care, free for everyone
at the point of use. |
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Single-Payer Health Care from
Wikipedia
WASHINGTON (Wikipedia) December 12,
2008
—
A modern hospital building of the
United Kingdom's National Health
Service in Norfolk. The UK operates
a system of publicly-funded,
single-payer health care, free for
everyone at the point of use. Single-payer
health care is an American term
describing the payment for doctors,
hospitals and other providers of
health care from a single fund.
Single-payer health care is one of
the systems used with universal
health care. Australia's Medicare,
Canada's health care system, the
United Kingdom's National Health
Service, and the United States'
Medicare, Medicaid, and TRICARE are
examples of single-payer health
care. Single-payer universal health
care on a national level is
sometimes referred to in the U.S. as
Medicare for All.
According to the National Library of
Medicine's Medical Subject Headings
(MeSH) thesaurus, a "Single-Payer
System" is an approach to health
care financing with only one source
of money for paying health care
providers. The scope may be national
(the Canadian System), state-wide,
or community-based. The payer may be
a governmental unit or other entity
such as an insurance company. The
proposed advantages include
administrative simplicity for
patients and providers, and
resulting significant savings in
overhead costs.
Some writers argue that the single
payer is the government, but the
preceding definition as well as some
single-payer proponents in the U.S.
leave the government's role open to
interpretation. However, the term
"single payer" is never used to
indicate that the patient bears sole
responsibility for all payment.
Single-payer health care pays health
professionals that are either in the
private or public sector. It is also
used to pay both privately and
publicly owned health care
facilities.
Single payer is one alternative
proposed for reforming the U.S.
health care system. Proponents argue
that it would provide universal
coverage with at least the same
quality and greatly lower costs.
Critics argue that single payer
would harm quality of care and
medical innovation, and instead
advocate tax incentives and free
market approaches.
Types and variations
The United States, Canada and
Australia have single-payer health
insurance programs named Medicare;
however, Australia's program
provides universal health insurance,
while U.S. Medicare is only for
senior citizens and some of the
disabled. Government is
increasingly involved in U.S. health
care spending, paying about 45
percent of the $2.2 trillion the
nation spent on medical care in
2004.
According to Princeton University
health economist Uwe E. Reinhardt,
Medicare, Medicaid and SCHIP
represent "forms of 'social
insurance' coupled with a largely
private health-care delivery system"
rather than forms of "socialized
medicine." In contrast, he describes
the Veterans Administration
healthcare system as a pure form of
socialized medicine because it is
"owned, operated and financed by
government."
The Veterans Administration is a
single-payer system and provides
excellent quality, said Reinhardt.
In a peer-reviewed paper published
in the Annals of Internal Medicine,
researchers of the RAND Corp.
reported that the quality of care
received by Veterans Administration
patients scored significantly higher
overall than did comparable metrics
for patients in the rest of the U.S.
health system.
Some writers describe publicly
administered health care systems as
"single-payer plans." Some writers
have described any system of health
care which intends to cover the
entire population, such as voucher
plans, as "single-payer plans,"
although this is an uncommon usage.
Canada
Canada's system is an example of
single-payer health care. The
national government provides part of
the funding, provincial governments
manage the hospitals and provide the
brunt of the funding, and doctors in
private practice contract with the
government for fee-for-service
payments. Many Canadian citizens
have supplemental health insurance,
which covers expenses not covered by
Canadian Medicare. Fees for doctors,
hospitals and other providers are
set by negotiations among doctors'
associations, provincial or regional
governments, and the national
government. Global budgets eliminate
the cost of billing individually for
huge numbers of products and
services.
The provision of health care in
Canada is done mostly via private
practitioners, although most
hospitals are public. Patients may
go to any doctor or hospital in the
country.
Proponents and intent
One of the leading organizations in
support of single-payer health care
in the U.S. is Physicians for a
National Health Program (PNHP),
which seeks to establish a system
similar to that in Canada. The
American Medical Student Association
is also a strong supporter of
single-payer.
In Congress, Rep. John Conyers, Jr.
(D-MI) has introduced The United
States National Health Insurance Act
(HR 676). As of August 2008, HR 676
had 91 co-sponsors.
Converting to a single-payer system
is seen by proponents as a solution
to the flaws in the current U.S.
system. The U.S. health care system
is the most expensive in the world
on both a per-capita basis and as a
percentage of GDP. Despite this
expenditure, the current U.S. system
fails to provide universal coverage.
More than 45 million Americans,
about 15 percent of the population,
lacked health insurance in 2007. The
lack of universal coverage
contributes to another flaw in the
current U.S. health care system: on
most dimensions of performance, it
under performs relative to other
industrialized countries. In a 2007
comparison by the Commonwealth Fund
of health care in the U.S. with that
of Germany, Britain, Australia, New
Zealand, and Canada, the U.S. ranked
last on measures of quality, access,
efficiency, equity, and outcomes.
For example, U.S. ranks 22nd in
infant mortality, between Taiwan and
Croatia, 46th in life expectancy,
between Saint Helena and Cyprus,
and 37th in health system
performance, between Costa Rica and
Slovenia.
The U.S. system is often compared
with that of its northern neighbor,
Canada (see Canadian and American
health care systems compared).
Canada's system is largely publicly
funded. In 2005, Americans spent an
estimated US $6,401 per capita on
health care, while Canadians spent
US $3,326. This amounted to 15.3% of U.S. GDP in that year, while Canada
spent 9.8% of GDP on health care.
A 2007 review of all studies
comparing health outcomes in Canada
and the U.S. found that "health
outcomes may be superior in patients
cared for in Canada versus the
United States, but differences are
not consistent."
Proponents of health care reform
argue that moving to a single-payer
system would reallocate the money
currently spent on the
administrative overhead required to
run the hundreds of insurance
companies in the U.S. to provide
universal care. An often-cited
study by Harvard Medical School and
the Canadian Institute for Health
Information determined that some 30
percent of U.S. health care dollars,
or more than $1,000 per person per
year, went to health care
administrative costs.
Theoretically, advocates suggest,
shifting the U.S. to a single-payer
health care system could provide
universal coverage, give patients
free choice of providers and
hospitals, and guarantee
comprehensive coverage and equal
access for all medically necessary
procedures, without increasing
overall spending. Shifting to a
single-payer system could also
theoretically eliminate oversight by
managed care reviewers, restoring
the traditional doctor-patient
relationship.
Opponents and criticisms
Several criticisms have been leveled
against the idea of changing the
U.S. health care system to a
single-payer system. Some proponents
argue that perhaps the largest
obstacle is a lack of political
will. While polling data
indicate that U.S. citizens are
concerned about health care costs
and think the system needs reform
(see Polls, below) most are
generally satisfied with the quality
of their own health care. According
to a Joint Canada/United States
Survey of Health in 2003, 86.9% of
Americans reported being "satisfied"
or "very satisfied" with their
health care services, compared to
83.2% of Canadians. In the same
study, 93.6% of Americans reported
being "satisfied" or "very satisfied"
with their physician services,
compared to 91.5% of Canadians.
Some medical researchers say that
patient satisfaction surveys are a
poor way to evaluate medical care.
Researchers at the RAND Corporation
and the Department of Veterans
Affairs asked 236 elderly patients
at 2 managed care plans to rate
their care, then examined care in
medical records, as reported in
Annals of Internal Medicine. There
was no correlation. "Patient ratings
of health care are easy to obtain
and report, but do not accurately
measure the technical quality of
medical care," said John T. Chang,
UCLA, lead author.
For this reason, some U.S. reformers
argue for other, more incremental
changes to achieve universal health
care, such as tax credits or
vouchers. However, proponents of
a single-payer system, such as
Marcia Angell, M.D., former editor
of the New England Journal of
Medicine, assert that incremental
changes in a free-market system are
"doomed to fail."
Other criticisms of a potential
single-payer system in the U.S.
include:
A single-payer system could put the
government, rather than private
insurance companies, in the role of
deciding which procedures and
medications would be covered.
In a single-payer system where
hospitals and practitioners remain
private, public money goes into
private hands and therefore must be
guarded to protect public trust.
Note, however, that this issue does
not arise in total public health
care systems which may also be
single-payer where the hospitals and
/ or general practitioners work for
the government. In this case the
prioritization of access to
government funded services is done
according to the patients' needs as
judged by medical professionals.
There are no bureaucrats
cross-checking doctors' records
against either patients medical
insurance coverage (as in the
present system) or against medical
contracts (as in a single-payer
system with private practitioners).
Converting to a single-payer system
could be a radical change, creating
administrative chaos.
Polls
In recent public opinion polls,
majorities of Americans say that the
current health care system needs
fundamental changes, and that they
are dissatisfied with the quality
and costs of health care, although
they are satisfied with the quality
of their own health care. Those
polled believe the federal
government should guarantee
insurance for all Americans, even if
they had to pay higher taxes. In
some polls, respondents prefer a
universal health insurance program,
"like Medicare," even if it limited
their choice of doctors, and even if
there were waiting lists for
non-emergency treatments. But
respondents were split when they
were asked whether the federal
government should require all
Americans to participate in a
national health plan.
According to a New York Times/CBS
News poll in February 2007, 54% of
respondents said that "fundamental
changes are needed" in the health
care system, and 36% said that "Our
health care system has so much wrong
with it that we need to completely
rebuild it." 57% were dissatisfied
with the quality of health care in
this country, although 77% were
satisfied with the health care they
themselves received. 81% were
dissatisfied with the cost of health
care, and 52% were dissatisfied with
the costs of their own health care.
65% said that providing for the
uninsured was more important than
keeping costs down. 95% said that it
is a serious problem that many
Americans do not have health
insurance. 64% said that the federal
government should guarantee health
insurance for all Americans, and 60%
would pay higher taxes to do so. But
only 43% said that it would be fair
for the government in Washington to
require all Americans to participate
in a national health care plan
funded by taxpayers, compared to 48%
who said it would be unfair.
According to a Washington Post-ABC
News poll in October 2003,
62% of respondents preferred "a
universal health insurance program,
in which everybody is covered under
a program like Medicare that's run
by the government and financed by
taxpayers," compared to 32% who
preferred the current system, in
which most people get their health
insurance through employers. 56%
would support a universal health
insurance program even if it limited
their own choice of doctors, and 63%
would support it even if it meant
there were waiting lists for some
non-emergency treatments.
State proposals
Several single payer referendums
have been proposed at the state
level, but so far all have failed to
pass: California in 1994,
Massachusetts in 2000, and Oregon in
2002.
The California state legislature has
twice passed SB 840, The Health Care
for All Californians Act, a
single-payer health care plan. Both
times, Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger (R) vetoed the bill,
once in 2006 and again in 2008.
In April 2008, the Illinois House of
Representatives' Health Availability
Access Committee passed the
single-payer bill HB 311, "The
Health Care for All Illinois Act,"
favorably out of committee by an 8-4
vote.
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