Title: Health Care Reform and You
1Health Care Reformand You
- How to get from the mess were in to the only
solution that makes sense
2What were about to see
- History of labor and universal health care
- Current state of the US health care system
- Universal health care legislation in California
- What we can do to make things better
3A brief history of labor and health care
1915
American Association for Labor Legislation
- Submits model plan to state legislatures
- WWI intervenes
- AMA flip flops
- Plan defeated
4A brief history of labor and health care
1935
- Early version of bill includes national health
insurance - Killed by AMA and insurers
5A brief history of labor and health care
1943 - 48
AMA postcard, front side
The Murray-Wagner-Dingell Bill
6A brief history of labor and health care
1943 - 48
AMA postcard, back side
Keep Politics Out of This Picture When the life
or health of a loved one is at stake, hope
lies in the devoted service of your Doctor. Would
you change this picture? Compulsory health
insurance is political medicine. It would bring
a third party a politician between you and
your doctor. It would bind up your familys
health in red tape. It would result in heavy
payroll taxes and inferior medical care for you
and your family. Dont let that happen here!
The Murray-Wagner-Dingell Bill
7A brief history of labor and health care
- 1940s Defeat of national health insurance
- 1950s Collective bargaining-based health care
for union members, and political advocacy on
behalf of non-union workers - 1960s onward employment-based
- health care in America
81965
A brief history of labor and health care
9America Different, but it worksfor a while
- The only employment-based health care system in
the advanced industrial world - Supplemented by Medicare and Medicaid
- England National Health Service
- Canada Single payer system
- Other European countries one or the other, or
some combination of the two
101980s Problems begin to mount
- Increasing co-pays for office visits, medicines
- Higher deductibles
- Employee share of premium grows
- Losing pay increases to maintain health coverage
- Less dependent coverage
- Paying for growing numbers of uninsured and
underinsured
11The sincerest form of flattery...
12Sounds Great.How About Political Reality?
131994
Ballot initiative Proposition 186
Us
Them
Insurance company red alert CMA stays
neutral Arguments government intrusion, high
taxes, bureaucratic nightmare 30 million dollars
- Grass roots education and
- fundraising strategy
- 1500 house parties
- 2.5 million dollars raised from
- unions, community groups, health
- care organizations, and individuals
14Percent of Firms Offering Health Benefits
Declined Over 20002005
Source Kaiser Family Foundation, Employer
Health Benefits 2005 Annual Survey
15The Union Advantage
Your union membership stands between you and the
trend of declining workplace-based health care
coverage
16Current state of the US health care system
- Growing numbers of uninsured
- Rising costs
- Employers shifting higher share of coverage onto
workers - No transparency of procedures and outcomes
- Fragmentation of delivery
172007
(California 7 million)
18Profile of the Uninsured
- 46 million non-elderly Americans
- 64 from low-income families
- 81 from working families
- 80 adults
- 52 ethnic minorities
- 79 American citizens
- More likely to be employed in small businesses,
- service industries, blue collar jobs, and work
part-time
19The Human Cost Personal Bankruptcies
54
N1771 bankruptcy filers Health Affairs,
February 2, 2005
20Health care per capita by country
Source OECD Health Data 2006 (in U.S. dollars
adjusted for purchasing power parity)
21What are we getting for our health care dollar
now?
22The Health Care Americans Get
- One-third uninsured or underinsured
- HMOs deny care to millions more with expensive
illnesses - Death rates higher than other wealthy nations
- 20 of health care dollar goes to
administration - Destruction of the doctor-patient relationship
23Insurance Overhead Spending
OECD, 2003
24Covers 38 of employees
The future of workplace-based health care?
25The Problem Summarized
- Too expensive and costs rising
- Uneven quality of care with no transparency
- One third uninsured or underinsured
- Declining numbers of workers covered through the
workplace collective bargaining now a
problematic way to deliver health care - Administrative waste for profit executives and
investors making billions
26Would you prefer the current system or national
health insurancelike Medicarerun by
governmentfinanced by taxpayers?
Washington Post/ABC News Poll, 2003
27What is being proposed in 2007?
- Market-based reforms
- Employer mandate (pay or play)
- Other incremental reforms
- Unique state plans (e.g., Massachusetts)
- Universal coverage ideas
282007 California Dreamin
- Governors plan devil in the details
- Don Perata SB 48, employer mandate
- Fabian Nunez employer mandate
- Sheila Kuehl SB 840, single payer
29Governors Plan
- Every individual required to purchase coverage,
employer-provided or private with minimum 5,000
deductible - Employers with 20 or more workers provide
coverage or pay 4 of payroll (state average
8 school districts average 14) - Family of 4 with annual income between 20K and
50K required to contribute 600 - 3,000 per
year for coverage - Plan must cover physician, hospital, emergency
services and prescriptions other services at
individual expense
30Peratas Plan
- Requires workers and their dependents to have
minimum health coverage - All employers required to pay percentage of wages
or pay a higher percentage into a trust fund for
workers and dependents - Available plans to be high quality with extras
covered by individual
31Nunezs Plan
- Working individuals offered coverage by employers
must accept for coverage of workers and
dependents - Employers with 2 or more employees required to
provide coverage or pay a fee based on percentage
of payroll - If employer does not offer coverage, employee
required to pay a percentage of income
32Kuehls Plan SB 840
- Covers all Californians with comprehensive
services - One payer, one plan (Single payer)
- Employers and individuals contribute percentage
of payroll or income to pay for coverage - State uses purchasing power to pay for services,
prescriptions and equipment - Maintains choice of providers
- Portable
33What does Dobie Gillis have to do with health
care reform in California?
Author of Senate Bill 840
State Senator Sheila Kuehl (D-Santa Monica)
34What is single payer health care?
- Public financing one public payer
- Universal covers everybody
- Comprehensive covers all medical needs
- Private and public providers with individual
choice of doctors - Controls costs through global budgets and bulk
purchasing, not clinical micromanaging - Portable
- Accountable
35Every western democracyexcept one.
Who has a single payer system?
36Even we have a single payer system for part of
the population. Its called
37Labor on health care reform
- Guarantee affordable quality health care for all
Californians - Contain health care costs
- Employers and government must join workers in
sharing responsibility and risk - Ensure patient choice and protect doctor-patient
relationship - Improve quality of care
- Oppose reduction of any current and future
retiree medical benefits
Labors Principles for Health Care Reform,
California Labor Federation, 2006
38Advantages of single payer for schools
- Decreased health care costs
- More available for salaries
- More available for educational programs
- Everybody coveredfull-time, part-time,
certificated, classified, students and their
families
39Financing Universal Health Care
Medicare
Single payer health care fund
Rx
Eye Care
Medicaid
Employer payroll tax
Doctor
Employee payroll tax
Hospital
Lewin 2004
40How would the payroll tax work?
- 8.17 employer
- 3.78 employee
- 11.95 total
Estimate from Lewin Group Report, 2006
41SB 840 savings for patients
- No co-pays
- No deductibles
- No premiums
- No out of pocket expenses
42Projected savings for selected California School
Districts
- Large District example
- Los Angeles CCD (4,000 certificated)
- Employer onlysaves 40 million
- Combined employer/employeesaves 29.7 million
- Medium District example
- Berkeley USD (700 certificated)
- Employer onlysaves 4.9 million
- Combined saves2.8 million
- Small District example
- Summerville HSD (40 certificated)
- Employer onlysaves 155,000
- Combinedsaves 2,681
43But wont I have to pay more under SB 840 than I
do now?
- Your school district is spending, on average, 14
of payroll on health insurance - Under SB 840, it will pay 11.95
- The difference (2.05) can be bargained as an
immediate salary increase - As each additional years state savings is
accumulated, it will go into the Prop 98 base,
and be available for educational program and
school employee salary
44SB 840 Benefits
- Inpatient and outpatient
- ER visits
- All physician services, including pregnancy
- Prescription drugs
- Mental health and substance abuse treatment
- Rehabilitation
- Vision care, including glasses
- Hearing exams and aids
- Durable medical equipment
- Home health and adult daycare
- Dental care
- Lab and diagnostic tests
45SB 840 Eligibility
- All state residents eligible
- Individuals lacking legal immigration status
(i.e., undocumented) included if they document
residence
46Summary Universal Health Care
- Leads to better outcomes
- Would cost no more or save money
- Americans want it
- Educators want it
- Can be accomplished in California
- (SB 840)
- Can be accomplished nationally (various bills)
47What can we do?
48Fill out an SB 840 support card right now.
Dear Arnold
49Join the CFT Health Care Action Team
- Ask your school board to endorse SB 840
- Ask your local to hold a health care forum
- Come to CFT Speakers Training and go speak to
community groups - Represent CFTs position at your local state
legislators office