The latest version of Bernie Sanders’ Medicare for All plan
(MFA) has a lot to like. Sanders is right, America needs a healthcare system
more like those of other wealthy countries. But, if you like Medicare for all,
please stop calling it “single payer.” The single-payer label distracts
attention from the main goal of healthcare reform, it energizes the opposition,
and it is not an accurate description of the Sanders plan.
The goal is universal
access
Single-payer is not the goal of healthcare reform. The goal
is universal access to health care. No, not “access” in the sense some Republicans
use it, that is, as the opportunity to buy into the system if you can afford
it. True universal access would mean a system in which anyone who needs health
care can go to the doctor’s office, the hospital, or the pharmacy and get what
they need with the certainty that they can
afford it, no matter how modest their means.
Single-payer is better understood as one way of getting to the
goal of universal access. Under a true single-payer system, when you went to get
care of any kind, you would just show your healthcare ID card and the
government would directly reimburse the provider in full. That would be nice.
The problem is, no such system exists anywhere. Not even in the universal
access systems we admire most—Sweden, the UK, New Zealand, or whichever is your
favorite. In all of those countries, the government pays some of the healthcare
bills and private sources pay some. As the chart shows, the government
contribution is greater than it is in the United States almost everywhere, but
it is not 100 percent anywhere.
- In the Bismark model, hospitals and doctors are private. Payments are made through private, closely regulated, not-for-profit insurance funds. Prices are closely controlled. The funds are financed by a mixture of taxation and individual contributions. Germany, Japan, France, and Switzerland, among others, follow variants of the Bismark model.
- In the Beveridge model, named after the founder of Britain’s National Health Service, many (but not all) doctors are government employees and many (but not all) hospitals and clinics are publicly owned. The government pays for services from tax revenues. This system, used with variations in the UK, Scandinavia, Spain, and New Zealand, is what most Americans think of when they say “single payer” or “socialized medicine,” but even in these countries, there is some decentralization and a smaller, parallel, system of private, for-pay healthcare.
- In the National Health Insurance model, providers are private but fees are paid by a national insurance fund. Providers are subject to cost controls. Canada and Korea use this system. Canada’s is decentralized by province.
Few if any of these systems provide coverage as broad as
that envisioned by Sanders’ MFA. For example, Canada has limited coverage of
prescription drugs (although the government does control prices), and many
countries do not fully cover long-term care, mental health care, eye care, or
dental care. Some of the countries listed have co-pays or deductibles for some
services.
There are, in addition, other proposals for universal
healthcare access do not fit easily into the above classification. Universal
catastrophic coverage, an idea advocated for years by various American
reformers, is one of them. Another example is Singapore’s
unique system, which features mandatory private insurance with subsidies for
the poor.
In short, there are many routes to the goal of universal
healthcare access. Americans, in their wisdom, may decide to adopt something
like the Sanders plan, but if they were to get the same result in a different
way, there would be no great reason to be disappointed.
Even Sanders’
Medicare for All is not a true single-payer system
Another reason to drop the single-payer term is that it is
not even an accurate description of Sanders’ MFA proposal itself. MFA, in which
providers would remain mostly private, is closer to the national insurance
model than it is to the Beveridge model, where providers are more often
government employees and institutions.
Also, Sanders’ plan allows for parallel, private healthcare
outside the framework of MFA. Sec. 303 of the draft bill,
“Use of Private Contracts,” gives providers the choice of working within MFA or
opting out and entering into private contracts with patients. The only real restrictions
on private contracts are that they must be all or nothing. A provider cannot
accept the standard reimbursement for a treatment from MFA and then collect an
additional fee from the patient for the same treatment.
There are several reasons that some patients and providers
might prefer private contracts. For example:
- MFA guarantees coverage only of services deemed “medically necessary” (Sec. 202). Presumably, some kinds of alternative medicine, some experimental treatments with unproved effectiveness, and some purely cosmetic procedures would be deemed not medically necessary, but providers could still offer them through private contracts.
- Some providers might develop exceptional reputations (deserved or undeserved) for the quality or effectiveness of their treatments. If so, they could very likely attract enough wealthy patients to earn more outside MFA than within it.
- In some cases, MFA patients might encounter waiting periods. Private contracts would offer a way for those willing to pay extra to get desired treatment sooner.
Just how widespread the use of private contracts might be
would depend, in large part, on how generously or tight-fistedly MFA as a whole
were administered. If medical necessity were interpreted broadly, reimbursement
rates were generous, and funding
sufficient to ensure timely access to care, then for-contract healthcare
would probably be a small niche market, as it is in the UK. If aggressive cost
controls excluded too many treatments, made participation unattractive to
providers, and led to long waiting periods, Sec. 303 might give rise to a
substantial parallel healthcare system, with MFA itself used mainly by
low-income households.
The single-payer
label is a political distraction
A third reason to drop the single-payer label is that it is
a political distraction. A recent Pew
survey shows that 57 percent of Americans, including 30 percent of
Republicans, think that it is the government’s responsibility to make sure that
everyone has access to healthcare. However, fewer than half of Democrats (43
percent) and very few Republicans (10 percent) favor a single, national system.
The others say they would prefer a mix of government and private programs.
Calling Sanders’ plan “single payer,” then, makes it an
unnecessarily hard sell. With its predominantly private providers and its
allowance for a parallel private payment system, MFA is, in truth, a mixed
system. If the Pew numbers are accurate, swapping the “single-payer label” for
“universal access” would more than double its support among both Democrats and
Republicans.
Furthermore, backers of Sanders’ plan should seize on the
fact that Republicans are already on record as favoring universal healthcare access.
Their 2017
House Policy Brief on repeal and replace specifically endorses “a
patient-centered health care system that gives Americans access to quality,
affordable care” and promises “coverage protections and peace of mind for all
Americans—regardless of age, income, medical conditions, or circumstances.”
True, judging by their votes on recent bills that would have reduced healthcare
coverage, rather than expand it, many Congressional conservatives don’t take this
language seriously. Still, as long as it remains the official party line, Democrats
can point out that MFA only fulfills a universal access pledge that the GOP
itself has made.
The bottom line
The introduction of Sanders’ Medicare for All has triggered
a debate within the Democratic party. Many of the most likely 2020 presidential
candidates have endorsed the bill. None of them wants to be outflanked on the
left, so why be satisfied with a healthcare proposal that merely matches the
performance of Germany, France, or the UK? Why not leapfrog our European peers
and introduce a system that offers broader coverage, less cost sharing, and
more centralization than any of them?
At the same time, even some dedicated progressives have
doubts. “Is this really where progressives want to spend their political
capital?” asks Paul Krugman in his New
York Times column. Writing for Axios,
Drew Altman, a strong supporter of universal access, worries that “single
payer” offers Republicans too easy a way to change the subject. More narrowly
tailored policy ideas could still be popular on the left and in the center, he
says, while offering far smaller targets for opponents than a sweeping
single-payer plan would.
It is too early to tell how this debate within the
progressive camp will turn out. I do have one word of advice, however. Whether
you fully support Sanders’ bill or want to narrow it down, don’t call it single
payer. Call it universal access. That’s what it is, that’s what a majority of
the electorate wants, and that’s the way to sell it!
Reposted with minor edits from NiskanenCenter.com
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