- Chapter 6 - - The Best Health Care for Every American - nAmerican citizens are rightly up in arms about the crisis in the U.S. health care system. Prices for everything from medication to physician services are soaring beyond the means of an increasingly impoverished citizenry, while the cost of health insurance is going sky high, forcing employers and employees alike to drop coverage in order to stay financially solvent. At the same time, health insurers, led by Medicare and Medicaid, are covering fewer and fewer categories of treatment, while paying medical providers lower proportions of their costs and demanding ever-higher premium payments. They are forcing sick patients out of hospitals and financially strapped hospitals out of business. The ones that remain have had to limit or deny treatment for those without insurance. But the crisis in U.S. health care is not just one of affordability. The fact is that our health care system is in a {breakdown crisis,} caused by the accelerating collapse of the entire U.S. economy from nearly 30 years of incompetent economic policies and financial swindles. This breakdown is embodied by the now-evident reality of the 1980s Reagan-Bush ``recovery'': the surge in diseases like syphilis and hepatitis, the epidemic emergence of new diseases--most notably AIDS--and the re-emergence of long-dormant strains like measles and turberculosis ({Figure 1}). The failure to maintain basic public health screening and treatment practices--especially in regard to AIDS--and to provide elementary preventive medical services like vaccinations, has put the United States on the verge of a biological holocaust. Furthermore, there is a dire shortage of hospitals and hospital beds, by even normal standards. Up until the ascendancy of Ronald Reagan and his bogus free-market economics in 1980, the U.S.A. had steadily increased the number of general hospital beds, to attain 97% of the postwar standard of 4.5 beds per 1,000 population ({Figure 2}). By 1990, the nation had only 83% of the beds needed; 761 hospitals had been shut down. While there is no doubt that improved medical technologies have reduced hospital stays, the main driver has been cost-cutting. In West Germany, which arguably has the best overall health care in the world today, there are more than 7.4 beds per 1,000 people, which is nearly {double} that of the United States. Far worse is the inability to care for the growing number of our aging citizens and for those who are mentally disabled. Since 1950, the number of beds for chronic long-term care patients has dropped by 65% to a mere 25,000--barely 5% of the 500,000 needed. Similarly, the number of beds in mental institutions has dropped by 78% since 1960, to just 160,000 out of the 1.25 million needed in 1990. On top of this is the murderous closing of 65 trauma units, which have reduced the trauma death rate by 64%. Lack of funds endangers the remaining 370 centers. In our largest cities, overwhelmed hospital emergency rooms treated more than {twice} as many patients in 1990 as in 1980. Each day, they are besieged with AIDS victims, the homeless, the chronically mentally ill, and drug-induced or violence-related emergencies, as well as sick, uninsured patients who lack access to primary care. In California, where 56 hospitals have closed in the last decade, more than a dozen other hospitals have shut their emergency rooms permanently. Ambulances carry patients to four or more hospitals before finding an available bed. Los Angeles emergency room doctors acknowledge that their patients have died on gurneys in the halls while waiting for beds. In 1989, while emergency room patients lined the walls of New York City hospitals waiting for beds, over 1600 beds were certified and available but closed due to lack of nurses. In a New York State Health Department survey of city hospitals at midnight on Jan. 10, 1989, 599 emergency room patients admitted were found waiting for a bed. One year later, on Jan. 10, 1990 at midnight, another state audit found 960 admitted patients waiting for beds. - Prescription for Death - Every candidate but LaRouche has ignored this breakdown. Almost nowhere can one find even a mention of the necessity for the enormous {expansion} of our collapsing health care system. Instead, the focus of the health crisis debate is on the form and cost of insurance coverage that should be provided, the means of reducing treatment in order to control costs, and the measures for increasing ``cost efficiency'' of the ``delivery system.'' {Every single one of these so-called solutions--including the push for ``universal'' or ``national health care,'' ``managed care,'' and so-called ``pay-or-play'' options for employers--would only further wreck health care in the United States.} They would actually {worsen} the financial straits of hospitals and medical providers, and precipitously lower the quality and availability of medical treatment for the population. That in fact is the {intention} of George Bush and the Bush Democrats. It is the inevitable result of 30 years of pushing the United States, and the world, into the New World Order of ``post-industrial society,'' in which we have failed to invest in the basic infrastructure and industry that could have produced enough goods and services to maintain an expanding population at ever-higher standards of living. It is the result of two decades of financial speculation in real estate, commodities, and corporate mergers that have saddled our industry and citizens with $25 trillion of inflationary, unpayable debt, rendered our government and banking system bankrupt, and turned us into a debtor nation. Such a policy now deems much of this population as ``expendable,'' especially the depression's swelling ranks of unemployed who are elderly, sick, or infirm--the targets for the growing Right to Die euthanasia movement. It wasn't always that way. - Commitment to Life - On the eve of America's victory over the Nazis, Sen. Lister Hill of Alabama submitted legislation to Congress that expressed the essence of the nation's renewed commitment to the fundamental preservation and enhancement of life. The Hill-Burton Hospital Construction Act of 1946 embarked the United States on a decade of unprecedented expansion of the nation's hospital and public health system. Along with other programs, such as upgrading nursing services and locating veterans' hospitals near medical schools so that medical students could both staff and train at them, the U.S. health system became an integral feature of the postwar economic expansion and a scientific optimism that would soon enable man to soar into space. The rising standard of living and solid gains in productivity brought medical care within the budgets of more and more Americans. In 1952, for the growing number of people who purchased health insurance, the combined premiums for Blue Cross/Blue Shield hospital, surgical, and physician coverage was just $6.65 a month, or $80 a year--just over one week's wages. Back then, the average hospital stay cost just two weeks' wages for such a production worker; now it costs {12 weeks} pay, with much worse care ({Figure 3}). The free-market insanity of the Reagan-Bush administration has increasingly forced hospitals into the arms of Wall Street financial wizards, who increasingly moved in to run hospitals as a business rather than as a dedicated professional service. Far from augmenting ``efficiency,'' the cost-control measures imposed by these bloodsuckers have sent administrative costs soaring. The nitpicking over each and every medical charge, the establishment of legions of accountants and forms and financial regulations, have resulted in an 8% annual increase in administrative costs for both doctors and hospitals, {above} the inflation rate! This is {double} the average annual increase in overall medical costs. {Administrative costs now conservatively comprise 25% of medical costs.} When combined with the growing army of poor seeking medical care and government cuts in Medicare and Medicaid payments, hospitals and physicians have shifted more and more of the costs onto the shrinking base of those with insurance--to the point where the average hospital bill now costs the equivalent of more than 11 weeks of a manufacturing worker's wages. - The LaRouche Program - 1. The prerequisite for restoring our health care system is to commit the nation to LaRouche's program for building our way out of the depression: the creation of 6 million new productive jobs as the result of federalizing the Federal Reserve, and pouring low-interest credit into necessary public works. At the top of the list will be the revitalization of the combined public and private county hospital system, which once adequately served the needs of our citizens, financed from public funds garnered from an expanding tax base of employed Americans. 2. We must build more hospitals and add hundreds of thousands of beds, as part of this drive to revitalize America's economic infrastructure. We must greatly expand the number of intensive care beds, re-open closed emergency wards and trauma centers, and build new ones. A new Hill-Burton Commission shall be established to upgrade our health care system, to oversee the construction of new hospitals and medical centers and equipping them with the most advanced technology. 3. We must launch an Apollo-style, crash research program to fight degenerative diseases and epidemics with the best technology available, especially employing the frontier technology of optical biophysics to find a cure for the species-threatening AIDS virus and other infections now careening out of control. 4. Fourth, the federal government shall regulate health insurance companies to ensure full payment of medical costs and complete medical coverage for policy holders, with premium prices based on an average cost for entire communities, not on an individual's ``risk factors.'' The federal government will also provide a safety net for those without insurance, through both Medicare and Medicaid and a new catastrophic health insurance plan. ---- John Covici covici@ccs.covici.com