Log in

View Full Version : analysis: Health care & profits



Communist
25th February 2010, 07:20
.
Health care & profits (http://www.workers.org/2010/editorials/health_care_0304/)
Feb 24, 2010

Shockwaves rippled through California when Anthem Blue Cross, the largest for-profit health insurance company in the state, announced increases in premiums of up to 39 percent. This would affect 800,000 individual policyholders.

Why the increase? To increase profitability! WellPoint, of which Anthem Blue Cross is a subsidiary, promised its shareholders higher earnings. Although the company claims it has to charge higher rates because it’s losing healthy clients and paying out more for sicker policyholders, it won’t disclose any information to validate this claim.

There has been such a loud uproar over the rate hike that state officials and the Obama administration have criticized it and are investigating the corporation’s action.

What angers policyholders and health care activists even more is that WellPoint earned record profits of $4.7 billion last year, twice what it garnered in 2008. It raked in $2.7 billion in profits in the last quarter of 2009 alone.

National Nurses United (http://www.nationalnursesunited.org/), the largest nurses’ union in the U.S., blasted Anthem Blue Cross and said the rate increase is “not out of character for an industry [that] engages systemically in price gouging and denial of care.”

Anthem Blue Cross (http://www.anthem.com/wps/portal/ahpvisitor?content_path=visitor/nh/f6/s0/t0/pw_ad077962.htm&state=nh&label=Contact%20Us) is notorious for canceling policies of pregnant women and chronically ill people. The NNU says the company denied 27 percent of claims in the first nine months of 2009.

WellPoint, the largest insurer in the U.S., annually pays its CEOs millions of dollars. The corporation spent $9.5 million in 2009 to lobby against any federal health care plan, however modest, and utilized 33 lobbying groups in Washington, D.C., to do so.

These huge rate hikes are not unique to California. They are occurring across the country, along with increasing claim delays and outright denials by insurance company administrators whose sole purpose is to do just that in order to boost profits.

And profits are skyrocketing. The top five insurers — UnitedHealth Group (http://www.unitedhealthgroup.com/main/ContactUs.aspx), WellPoint (http://www.wellpoint.com/contact/default.asp), Aetna (http://www.aetna.com/about-aetna-insurance/contact-us/forms/about/contact_us.html), Humana (http://www.humana.com/about/company_information/contact_us.asp) and Cigna (http://www.cigna.com/contacts/index.html) — have had soaring profits during the economic crisis. In 2009 they had the best year ever, setting record profits totaling $12.2 billion.

Meanwhile, another 2.7 million people lost health care coverage last year, as layoffs cut workers from employer-sponsored plans and incomes decreased for others who could no longer afford private policies.

Nearly 50 million people in the U.S. are uninsured and millions more are underinsured. They go without critical medical care because they can’t afford it. At least 45,000 people will die in 2010 due directly to lack of health care because they don’t have insurance.

These tragic numbers will also rise because Medicaid is on the chopping block in many states, which will harm millions of poor, unemployed and disabled people.

The health care system is terribly broken. We join with activists across the country who are organizing and calling for a single-payer system: improved Medicare for all.

We’d (http://www.workersworld.net/wwp/pmwiki.php/Main/Background) like to see the end of private, for-profit health care altogether and the demise of insurance companies, which serve no useful social purpose.

We (http://www.workersworld.net/wwp/pmwiki.php/Main/AboutThisSite) support a health care system where human needs always come first, where all people get the maximum medical care they need, simply because they need it. We struggle for socialized medicine because health care is a universal human right.


________________________



©1995-2010 Workers World (http://www.workers.org/). (http://wwppitt.weebly.com/)
Verbatim copying and distribution
of this article is permitted in any
medium without royalty provided
this notice is preserved.

Communist
26th February 2010, 03:28
.
Marching on Washington DC For Health Reform (http://blog.healthcareforamericanow.org/2010/02/24/marching-on-washington-dc-for-health-reform-time-to-get-it-done-now-and-get-it-done-right/) -
Time To Get It Done Now and Get It Done Right

February 24th, 2010
by Jason Rosenbaum


Today, over a million people marched on Washington.

Five hundred people were physically in DC. They met
Melanie's March - a group of health insurance company
abuse survivors who walked for eight days and 135 miles
from Philadelphia, PA to the nation's capitol in honor
of Melanie Shouse, an Obama volunteer and health care
activist who died because she didn't have affordable
health care - at Union Station and walked the last leg
together to Capitol Hill.

We arrived at Dirksen Senate Office Building for a
rally with Majority Leader Reid, among others:

And we laid carnations symbolizing every life lost
because we don't have health reform over the course of
the eight day march - one thousand in all.

Inside the halls of power, we heard from Senators Reid,
Dodd, Harkin, Casey, and Sherrod Brown, Representative
Andrews, SEIU President Andy Stern, Families USA head
Ron Pollack, and more.

These Senators and Representatives also heard directly
from insurance company abuse survivors. People like
Regina Holliday, who's husband, dying of cancer, was
kicked out of hospital after hospital because their
insurance company wouldn't cover his care. Or Marcus
Grimes, who's blind because he couldn't pay the $3,000
it would have taken to save his eyesight and he didn't
have coverage. And they heard from Steve Hart, Melanie
Shouse's life partner, who said, "The worst part about
losing Melanie was that she would be here today if
health care in this country was fixed."

These people sent the message Senator Reid directly:
It's time to listen to the people and not the insurance
companies. It's time to get health reform done right.

Senator Reid, accepting 30,000 condolences collected
upon Melanie Shouse's death, said he would take the
names and messages with him to the White House summit
on health reform tomorrow. And he told the crowd that
we're going to get reform done.

While we were marching, one million people were backing
us up. Led by MoveOn.org, the virtual march on DC has
succeeded in sending over 1 million messages to
Congress since 8 am this morning, tying up phone lines
and fax machines all over Capitol Hill. And the calls
and faxes keep coming in!

Today, the people marched. It's time for the leadership
and Congress to deliver.

_____________________________________________