On Health Reform, Will All Roads Meet in the Middle? — Opinion from Drew Altman

| June 4, 2009

Ultimately, U.S. health care reform will be a compromise that will leave many activists, both on the left or the right, unsatisfied, writes Drew Altman, president and CEO of the Kaiser Family Foundation, in this column.

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“In the end, however, if legislation passes, the American people will not think about it as liberal, or centrist, or conservative, and they do not have an expert position on what constitutes optimum policy,” Mr. Altman writes. ”They will view it through their own more pragmatic lens and ask: will my health care be more affordable now than it was before?”

On Health Reform, Will All Roads Meet in the Middle?

A few weeks ago a small group of upset single-payer advocates followed Senator Baucus into the parking garage of our D.C. building as he was arriving to do one of our health reform newsmaker breakfasts, cosponsored by Families USA and the National Federation of Independent Business.

altmanThey were angry because they feel that single payer is not receiving enough attention in the current debate, and it is true that it is not getting a lot of attention.

But it could equally have been a group of upset conservatives in the garage that day; their favorite consumer-driven market-based solutions, advanced with great fervor in the Bush administration just a few years ago, are largely off the table. 

It has been clear for some time that if there is to be a deal on health reform in this Congress it will be a centrist deal, one that neither purists on the left nor the right will be truly enthusiastic about. 

It will build on the current system of employment-based insurance and public programs, contain a heavy dose of private insurance and market mechanisms and lots of delivery and payment reforms aimed at achieving future savings, and allow people to keep their current doctors, hospitals and insurance coverage if they want to.

The Democratic majority in the Congress has little interest in the directions championed in the Bush years, but by the same token conservative Democrats and deficit hawks will be leery of a larger government role and will try to minimize future spending obligations.

And many Democrats will not want to be vulnerable to being tarred as big-government, big-spending liberals in the next campaign when they go after independent voters to win reelection.

Ultimately, political leaders will balance optimal policy as they see it and political needs as the election gets closer.   
 
Much of the jockeying we are seeing can be viewed as the fine tuning of a centrist compromise with elements both the right and the left will not like.

Putting together such a centrist bargain on health reform is precisely what my home state of Massachusetts did, although it bears noting that while states have their politics, politics at the state level are more pragmatic and less driven by ideological differences than politics in Washington are.

Here are some possible elements of a health reform bargain the right and left may not like:

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It is certainly not the time for groups to stop fighting for positions and ideas they believe in. It is too early in the process and the push and pull from all sides is how our system works.

But it is also true that the voices on the edges tend to be stronger, and their beliefs more strongly held than those in the middle who are trying to craft a compromise rather than advance deeply held positions.

In the end, however, if legislation passes, the American people will not think about it as liberal, or centrist, or conservative, and they do not have an expert position on what constitutes optimum policy.

They will view it through their own more pragmatic lens and ask: will my health care be more affordable now than it was before?

The question is not whether the public will go for a deal in the middle, it is whether Washington and Congress as currently structured can, while at the same time satisfying enough of the public that they will come out ahead and holding the remainder of the population harmless.

Read other “Pulling It Together” columns by Drew Altman by visiting the Kaiser Family Foundation Web site.

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Category: Health Insurance, Health-care Policy, Insurance

Comments (3)

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  1. Just_Bob says:

    The one lie I wish would be put to rest is that single payer would take decision making away from you and your doctor – the insurance companies ended that long ago. Ultimately somewhere an insurance troll will make the decision. Unfortunately, they can do this after the work is done and the expenses incurred.

    Anyone that trusts an insurance company over anybody, hasn't dealt with an insurance company lately. Get serious. Talk to you kids, parents or neighbors – you will hear stories that curl your hair.

    Having lived and worked in several countries with universal health coverage, I have never had a person express concerns about being wiped out financially because of illness or injury. Everybody complains about the cost, but only here can we die from lack of coverage.

    I probably owe my life to universal health care while working in South Africa, a second world country at best. Far better, more personal, care than I have ever had here. No fancy architecture, no famous artwork – just good, friendly patient-focused healthcare.

  2. Right on. Single Payer health care is not the traditional "socialism". Doctors, hospitals and clinics remain private. All we do is get rid of the parasitic class of corporate middlemen and replace them with one insurance co like the rest of the civilized world has. That way, Docs, nurses,and others spend the lions share of their time with the patients and not coping with a blizzard of paperwork.

    But unfortunately a sizeable number of Americans are meaner than a nest of rattlesnakes and want the system they have because they would just hate to see
    someone they dont like (ie,a minority or lower class person) getting the same health care they have.

  3. As far as concerns the Corporate Insurance Co's ANYTHING in the "middle of the
    road" is a Yellow Line or a dead Armadillo