Chicago Sun-Times

Single payer offers better patient care

- PHIL KADNER Email: philkadner@ gmail. com

Most doctors believe a single- payer system “would offer the best health care to the greatest number of people,” according to a survey by the Chicago Medical Society.

More than 1,000 doctors from the Cook County region participat­ed in the survey, and 77 percent of those responding had an unfavorabl­e view of the American Health Care Act passed by the U. S. House of Representa­tives as a replacemen­t for Obamacare, also known as the Affordable Care Act.

In addition to supporting singlepaye­r national health care, the doctors also expressed support for the Affordable Care Act, with 62 percent saying they had a “generally favorable” opinion of Obamacare.

Two out of three doctors, 67 percent, said they had a “generally favorable” view of a single- payer financing health care system.

The U. S. Senate version of health care reform had not been unveiled at the time of the survey, but given the response of the doctors, I think it is fair to say that it would not have received significan­tly greater support than the House version.

Dr. Ted Brown, president of the Chicago Medical Society, emphasized that the survey focused primarily on three options: Obamacare, AHCS — what is being called Trumpcare — and singlepaye­r national health insurance.

I asked Brown why he believes most of the doctors responding to the medical society’s survey chose single- payer health insurance, which is available in the rest of the industrial­ized world.

His answer is likely to shock those who believe private industry is more efficient than the federal government.

Brown said that trying to comply with the regulation­s and paperwork required by dozens of private insurance companies offering hundreds of policies, along with Medicaid and Medicare, is burning doctors out and taking time away from patient care.

“As much as anything, it’s an administra­tive problem,” Brown said. Doctors may be required to take an opioid training course, for example, eight or nine times to satisfy eight or nine different insurance companies.

They would much rather have one administra­tive mandate handed down from the federal government.

The federal government? Can that be right.

“I don’t think I’ve ever heard a doctor complain about Medicare regulation­s,” Brown said. “They’re simple. They’re easy to under- stand. It’s easy to get an answer if you have a question.”

An astonishin­g 87 percent of the doctors surveyed agreed that in an ideal system, basic health care would be available to all individual­s as part of the social contract, a right similar to education, or police and fire protection.

I think the majority of people who oppose national health care don’t understand that private health insurance companies now dictate medical practice to doctors, and many of their decisions are based on profit motives, having nothing to do with patient care.

And in many cases no one — including your doctor — knows who is actually making the health care decisions at the insurance companies.

Doctors are being forced to join health care groups and close their private practices because they do not have the time or the financial resources to comply with the paperwork demands of the private insurance companies.

And if doctors defend their patients too vigorously and refuse to comply with the demands of the insurance providers, they are cut out of the system.

“The results of the survey are very significan­t,” said Dr. Claudia Fagan, national coordinato­r for Physicians for a National Health Care Program, which has led the fight for single- payer universal health care.

“Practicing physicians do not want to see ACA repealed, and they believe the best approach is single- payer.”

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 ??  ?? Retired ER doctor James Winkler protests Friday in Denver. | AP
Retired ER doctor James Winkler protests Friday in Denver. | AP

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