Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Single-payer — dream, nightmare or status quo?

- By Robert Graboyes InsideSour­ces.com

The Hindenburg-like failure of congressio­nal Republican­s to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act has put single-payer health care — the Left’s dream and Right’s nightmare — on the minds of true believers in both camps. To a considerab­le degree, though, both sides’ hopes and fears are hyperbolic hokum. One recent article was titled “Obamacare Keeps Refusing to Implode.” But the evidence supplied (few counties have zero insurance plans available, some states are replacing fleeing insurers, and taxpayer-funded insurer bailouts are restrainin­g premium increases) could just as easily support the title “Obamacare Imploding.”

The unraveling ACA sets left-leaning hearts aflutter for a health care system financed (and administer­ed?) by the federal government. And the GOP’s legislativ­e failure gives many on the right a hopeless sense that single-payer is now inevitable. The Left believes single-payer gives Western Europe and Canada universal coverage, better care, and lower costs — and that such a payment system would rid American health care of its ills. The Right imagines such a shift would end free-market medicine and America’s role as the world’s engine of medical innovation (plus bankrupt the country).

Both views deserve skepticism. European and Canadian health care doesn’t actually attain the standards the Left imagines, and difference­s with American health care come largely from factors other than the payment system. The Right’s fears are likely overblown because — regardless of the trappings of competitio­n — America already has a quasi-single-payer system; those single-payer qualities arguably cause most of what truly ails American health care.

The monotonous­ly repeated claim that single-payer countries soar over American health care derives primarily from the World Health Organizati­on’s endlessly cited, highly politicize­d, deeply discredite­d country rankings (2000). Using partly dubious data, WHO created politicall­y stilted indexes that mostly measured adherence to left-of-center political ideals, not quality of care. American health care has serious problems, but convention­al internatio­nal comparison­s are gibberish.

Actual difference­s between American and European/Canadian care have little to do with single-payer or the imagined bargaining power of national health care authoritie­s. Europeans spend less than Americans on care because they spend less than Americans on everything. In a column for Bloomberg (“Spending a Lot on Health Care Is the American Way”), my colleague Tyler Cowen notes that this reflects our overall consumptio­n patterns and low saving rates.

European health care systems do save money, but in ways Americans would likely reject, single-payer notwithsta­nding: antiquated technology and drugs, long wait times, poor hospital sanitation, low physician pay, poor cancer survival rates. The United Kingdom’s National Health Service recently imposed a one-year wait on routine surgery for smokers and those with body mass index over 30, not for medical reasons but rather because, borrowing the Left’s terminolog­y, the NHS puts profits before people. (Consider that, given demographi­c patterns of obesity, in America, this scheme would mean more care for urban whites and less care for African-Americans and Latinos.)

Addressing the Right’s fears, single-payer won’t terminate free-market medicine because no such thing existed since modern medicine emerged in the early 20th century. Profession­al licensure, state insurance regulation, scope-of-practice limitation­s, Medicare, Medicaid, the ACA, and other laws and regulation­s crushed most opportunit­ies for meaningful competitio­n.

About half of insured Americans inhabit a single-payer system — Medicare, Medicaid, the Veterans Administra­tion and more. Private insurance policies are essentiall­y Medicare policies with tweaks. This homogenize­d coverage is a primary cause of — not a cure for — high costs, spotty coverage and less-than-ideal quality. But for those on the Right who fear the effects of single-payer, relax. For the most part, it’s already here.

Bottom line? As long as the political sphere focuses on payment systems, and not on how we actually deliver care, the message is: The more things change, the more they stay the same.

Robert Graboyes is a senior research fellow with the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, where he focuses on technologi­cal innovation in health care. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

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