Thursday, September 20, 2012

First He Was For It, Then He Was Against It, Now He's...Sorta Stuck...

Poor Mitt Romney has had enough trouble these last couple weeks without my help, so I thought I'd hold off for awhile before looking more closely at his latest tap dance around the question of health care reform before sounding off about his disingenuousness. But it's a slow day today, so here goes.

 As everyone paying even a LITTLE attention knows, one of the elephants in the room of the Romney campaign has been the little dichotomy between his denunciation of "Obamacare" and the fact that one of his key achievements as Governor of Massachusetts was the development of a health insurance reform plan...which served as the conceptual (if not the political) foundation of many of the insurance reforms found in PPACA. Even though the question of "How can you oppose something you took credit for creating in Massachusetts?" has dogged him since the campaign began, he never had a particularly clear answer.

Then last week, he got himself a little MORE twisted up when he suggested that, eve though he still thinks Obamacare is horrible, and needs to be repealed, there are a few parts of the law he sorta likes. They happen to be the provisions which have already been implemented in the marketplace, most notably the elimination of lifetime maximums on health policies and the extension of family health coverage to dependent kids under age 26 (for which, by the bye, our 23-year-old son is quite grateful).

He was not quite so glib about another PPACA provision: the elimination of pre-existing conditions exclusions. Apparently Governor Romney fully supports the elimination of those exclusions for those who already have health coverage, but not for those whose pre-existing coverage have thus far kept them out of the insurance pool.

Huh?...

Now The Tonight Show's Jay Leno is no investigative journalist. But during Romney's recent appearance of the show, Leno asked the obvious question: "A lot of guys I know, comedians, mechanics, waiters, who don't have health insurance now can't get it because they have some sort of pre-existing health condition. Don't we want to get them coverage?"

Romney's answer was typically maladroit: "Well, of course we want to get as many people covered as possible, but if one day a person shows up with cancer or a heart condition wanting to buy health coverage because they're sick, we want to be able to say, 'We don't play that game here.'"

Game?...

I only have three thoughts to share regarding this latest gaffe by the Republican candidate:

1) In expressing his support for the provisions he did, Romney joins the ranks of those faux-magnanimous insurance companies which pledged, even before the Supreme Court upheld PPACA, that they would not roll back the elimination of lifetime limits and the under-26 dependent provision.

In the insurers' case, it was meant to sound like a concession to the marketplace. It wasn't. The fact is that insurers have already baked the cost of these provisions into their products, and have found that those provisions haven't affected their profitability at all, and MAY have generated more cash for them. I've never known an insurer willingly to give up cash it's already collecting to reduce benefits.


Besides, lifetime limits have always been sort of bogus, and somewhere near six million generally healthy young adults who hadn't previously had health coverage have it now because of that new law...and this is PRECISELY the group which insurers want to cover, because they tend not to use health services very much; they're the "young invincibles" which insurers have wanted in their pools. They have them now, and they ain't giving them up.

For Romney, the concern is political. These are provisions of the law that have proved to be popular. And for all his rhetoric, he knows better than to be seen attacking a benefit which is already helping working families;

2) The arbitrary exclusion of some individuals from health coverage because of pre-existing conditions is one of the key reasons for our perceived health crisis. The use of health conditions to set prices in the small group and individual markets has always been a gimmick designed to benefit insurers.

I've written several times before about my case, which is typical: when my insurer found out from my medical questionnaire that I had a little hypertension (controlled with a medication which costs $3/month), a little gout (controlled with a medication which costs $4/month), and a borderline cholesterol count (also controlled with a $3/month prescription), my premiums TRIPLED over the initial quoted rate, from $600 to $1800/month. There's no excuse for that, except greed.

To be effective, health reform must reach out not just to the young and healthy, but must also provide access to coverage for those who've been excluded, AND provide some rate relief to those who are just getting screwed.

I'm not a big Obama fan. I think PPACA is a case of massive government overreach in many ways. But these insurance reforms represent good policy. Thus far, they've proven not to be costly; in fact, health costs for the last two years have risen only about a third as quickly as in the previous ten (as much a function of a recovering stock market, from which insurers get most of their profits when times are good, so they need to rely less on rates).

And insurers have had many years to see the light and enact some of these common-sense reforms voluntarily, and chose not to do so. Without the new law, it never would have happened.

3) As is the case with so many of his latest gaffes, this is an example of a presidential candidate who, whatever his core beliefs, has abandoned them for the sake of appeasing his rockhead conservative base. Most of the time, I'm guessing even HE doesn't believe what he's saying; he's just saying what his advisers brief him on. Whether on foreign policy, on health care, or on his "47%" gaffe, he's not speaking from his beliefs...he's talking back points he's heard from the people who surround him.

He's getting VERY bad advice. So when his answers sound cagey, or disingenuous, or just eye-poppingly inappropriate ("We don't play that game here"), he's only repeating what's been drilled into him by others. Sad...and scary...