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  1. #1
    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    The liberal left gave us HMO's - Kennedy wrote the bill

    This is not "news", notice the dates of the articles but I think some folks may find it interesting. It is the same thing that is going on right now with quotes like this one from Kennedy.

    "We need legislation which reorganizes the system to guarantee a sufficient volume of high quality medical care, distributed equitably across the country and available at reasonable cost to every American. It is going to take a drastic overhaul of our entire way of doing business in the health-care field in order to solve the financing and organizational aspects of our health crisis. One aspect of that solution is the creation of comprehensive systems of health-care delivery."

    "Health Care Crisis in America."

    We all got HMO's......and now they want to make us pay for foreign citizens.

    Read if you like.

    Take note of Kennedy's speech, it is the same ting we are hearing today. I wonder how many of our congresspeople have stock in HMOs.

    Blame Congress for HMOs
    by Twila Brase
    Published in Ideas on Liberty
    by the Foundation for Economic Education
    February 2001

    Only 27 years ago, congressional Republicans and Democrats agreed that American patients should gently but firmly be forced into managed care. That patients do not know this fact is evidenced by public outrage directed at health maintenance organizations (HMOs) instead of Congress.

    Although members of Congress have managed to keep the public in the dark by joining in the clamor against HMOs, legislative history puts the responsibility and blame squarely in their collective lap.

    The proliferation of managed-care organizations (MCOs) in general, and HMOs in particular, resulted from the 1965 enactment of Medicare for the elderly and Medicaid for the poor. Literally overnight, on July 1, 1966, millions of Americans lost all financial responsibility for their health-care decisions.

    Offering "free care" led to predictable results. Because Congress placed no restrictions on benefits and removed all sense of cost-consciousness, health-care use and medical costs skyrocketed. Congressional testimony reveals that between 1965 and 1971, physician fees increased 7 percent and hospital charges jumped 13 percent, while the Consumer Price Index rose only 5.3 percent. The nation's health-care bill, which was only $39 billion in 1965, increased to $75 billion in 1971.1 Patients had found the fount of unlimited care, and doctors and hospitals had discovered a pot of gold.

    This stampede to the doctor's office, through the U.S. Treasury, sent Congress into a panic. It had unlocked the health-care appetite of millions, and the results were disastrous. While fiscal prudence demanded a hasty retreat, Congress opted instead for deception.

    Limited by a noninterference promise attached to Medicare law--enacted in response to concerns that government health care would permit rationing--Congress and federal officials had to be creative. Although Medicare officials could not deny services outright, they could shift financial risk to doctors and hospitals, thereby influencing decision-making at the bedside.

    Beginning in 1971, Congress began to restrict reimbursements. They authorized the economic stabilization program to limit price increases; the Relative Value Resource Based System (RVRBS) to cut physician payments; Diagnostic-Related Groups (DRGs) to limit hospitals payments; and most recently, the Prospective Payment System (PPS) to offer fixed prepayments to hospitals, nursing homes, and home health agencies for anticipated services regardless of costs incurred. In effect, Congress initiated managed care.

    National Health-Care Agenda Advances
    Advocates of universal coverage saw this financial crisis as an opportunity to advance national health care through the fledgling HMO. Legislation encouraging members of the public to enter HMOs, where individual control over health-care decisions was weakened, would likely make the transition to a national health-care system, where control is centralized at the federal level, less noticeable and less traumatic. By 1971, the administration had authorized $8.4 million for policy studies to examine alternative health insurance plans for designing a "national health insurance plan."2

    Senator Edward M. Kennedy, a longtime advocate of national health care, proceeded to hold three months of extensive hearings in 1971 on what was termed the "Health Care Crisis in America." Following those hearings, he held a series of hearings "on the whole question of HMO's."
    Introducing the HMO hearings, Kennedy said,"We need legislation which reorganizes the system to guarantee a sufficient volume of high quality medical care, distributed equitably across the country and available at reasonable cost to every American. It is going to take a drastic overhaul of our entire way of doing business in the health-care field in order to solve the financing and organizational aspects of our health crisis. One aspect of that solution is the creation of comprehensive systems of health-care delivery."3
    In 1972, President Richard M. Nixon heralded his desire for the HMO in a speech to Congress: "the Health Maintenance Organization concept is such a central feature of my National Health Strategy."4 The administration had already authorized,without specific legislative authority, $26 million for 110 HMO projects.5 That same year, the U.S. Senate passed a $5.2 billion bill permitting the establishment of HMOs "to improve the nation's health-care delivery system by encouraging prepaid comprehensive health-care programs."6
    But when the House of Representatives refused to concur, it was left to the 93rd Congress to pass the HMO Act in 1973. Just before a voice vote passed the bill in the House, U.S. Representative Harley O. Staggers, Sr., of West Virginia said,"I rise in support of the conference report which will stimulate development of health maintenance organizations. . . . I think that this new system will be successful and give us exciting and constructive alternatives to our existing programs of delivering better health services to Americans."7
    In the Senate, Kennedy, author of the HMO Act, also encouraged its passage: "I have strongly advocated passage of legislation to assist the development of health maintenance organizations as a viable and competitive alternative to fee-for-service practice. . . . This bill represents the first initiative by the Federal Government which attempts to come to grips directly with the problems of fragmentation and disorganization in the health care industry. . . . I believe that the HMO is the best idea put forth so far for containing costs and improving the organization and the delivery of health-care services."8 In a roll call vote, only Senator Herman Talmadge voted against the bill.
    On December 29, 1973, President Nixon signed the HMO Act of 1973 into law.

    As patients have since discovered,the HMO--staffed by physicians employed by and beholden to corporations--was not much of a Christmas present or an insurance product. It promises coverage but often denies access. The HMO, like other prepaid MCOs, requires enrollees to pay in advance for a long list of routine and major medical benefits, whether the health-care services are needed, wanted, or ever used. The HMOs are then allowed to manage care--withhold access to dollars and service--through definitions of medical necessity, restrictive drug formularies, and HMO-approved clinical guidelines. As a result, HMOs can keep millions of dollars from premium-paying patients.

    HMO Barriers Eliminated
    Congress's plan to save its members' political skins and national agendas relied on employer-sponsored coverage and taxpayer subsidies to HMOs. The planners' long-range goal was to place Medicare and Medicaid recipients into managed care where HMO managers, instead of Congress, could ration care and the government's financial liability could be limited through capitation (a fixed payment per enrollee per month regardless of the expense incurred by the HMO).

    To accomplish this goal, public officials had to ensure that HMOs developed the size and stability necessary to take on the financial risks of capitated government health-care programs. This required that HMOs capture a significant portion of the private insurance market. Once Medicare and Medicaid recipients began to enroll in HMOs, the organizations would have the flexibility to pool their resources, redistribute private premium dollars, and ration care across their patient populations.

    Using the HMO Act of 1973, Congress eliminated three major barriers to HMO growth, as clarified by U.S. Representative Claude Pepper of Florida: "First, HMO's are expensive to start; second, restrictive State laws often make the operation of HMO's illegal; and, third, HMO's cannot compete effectively in employer health benefit plans with existing private insurance programs. The third factor occurs because HMO premiums are often greater than those for an insurance plan." 9

    To bring the privately insured into HMOs, Congress forced employers with 25 or more employees to offer HMOs as an option--a law that remained in effect until 1995. Congress then provided a total of $375 million in federal subsidies to fund planning and start-up expenses, and to lower the cost of HMO premiums. This allowed HMOs to undercut the premium prices of their insurance competitors and gain significant market share.

    In addition, the federal law pre-empted state laws, that prohibited physicians from receiving payments for not providing care. In other words, payments to physicians by HMOs for certain behavior (fewer admissions to hospitals, rationing care, prescribing cheaper medicines) were now legal.

    The combined strategy of subsidies, federal power, and new legal requirements worked like a charm. Employees searching for the lowest priced comprehensive insurance policy flowed into HMOs, bringing their dollars with them. According to the Health Resources Services Administration (HRSA), the percentage of working Americans with private insurance enrolled in managed care rose from 29 percent in 1988 to over 50 percent in 1997. In 1999, 181.4 million people were enrolled in managed-care plans.

    Once HMOs were filled with the privately insured, Congress moved to add the publicly subsidized. Medicaid Section 1115 waivers allowed states to herd Medicaid recipients into HMOs, and Medicare+Choice was offered to the elderly. By June 1998, over 53 percent of Medicaid recipients were enrolled in managed-care plans, according to HRSA. In addition, about 15 percent of the 39 million Medicare recipients were in HMOs in 2000.10

    HMOs Serve Public-Health Agenda
    Despite the public outcry against HMOs, federal support for managed care has not waned. In August 1998, HRSA announced the creation of a Center for Managed Care to provide "leadership, coordination, and advancement of managed care systems . . . [and to] develop working relationships with the private managed care industry to assure mutual areas of cooperation."11

    The move to managed care has been strongly supported by public-health officials who anticipate that public-private partnerships will provide funding for public-health infrastructure and initiatives, along with access to the medical records of private patients.12 The fact that health care is now organized in large groups by companies that hold millions of patient records and control literally hundreds of millions of health-care dollars has allowed unprecedented relationships to form between governments and health plans.

    For example, Minnesota's HMOs, MCOs, and nonprofit insurers are required by law to fund public-health initiatives approved by the Minnesota Department of Health, the state regulator for managed care plans. The Blue Cross-Blue Shield tobacco lawsuit, which brought billions of dollars into state and health-plan coffers, is just one example of the you-scratch-my-back-I'll-scratch-yours initiatives. Yet this hidden tax, which further limits funds available for medical care, remains virtually unknown to enrollees.

    Federal officials, eager to keep HMOs in business, have even been willing to violate federal law. In August 1998, a federal court chided the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for renewing HMO contracts that violate their own Medicare regulations.13

    The Ruse of Patient Protection
    Truth be told, HMOs allowed politicians to promise access to comprehensive health-care services without actually delivering them. Because treatment decisions could not be linked directly to Congress, HMOs provided the perfect cover for its plans to contain costs nationwide through health-care rationing. Now that citizens are angry with managed (rationed) care, the responsible parties in Congress, Senator Kennedy in particular, return with legislation ostensibly to protect patients from the HMOs they instituted.

    At worst, such offers are an obfuscation designed to entrench federal control over health care through the HMOs. At best, they are deceptive placation. Congress has no desire to eliminate managed care, and federal regulation of HMOs and other managed-care corporations will not protect patients from rationing. Even the U.S. Supreme Court acknowledged in its June 12, 2000, Pegram v. Herdrich decision that to survive financially as Congress intended, HMOs must give physicians incentives to ration treatment.

    Real patient protection flows from patient control. Only when patients hold health-care dollars in their own hands will they experience the protection and power inherent in purchasing their own insurance policies, making cost-conscious health-care decisions, and inciting cost-reducing competition for their cash.

    What could be so bad about that? A lot, it seems. Public officials worry privately that patients with power may not choose managed-care plans, eventually destabilizing the HMOs Congress is so dependent on for cost containment and national health-care initiatives. Witness congressional constraints on individually owned, tax-free medical savings accounts and the reluctance to break up employer-sponsored coverage by providing federal tax breaks to individuals. Unless citizens wise up to Congress's unabashed but unadvertised support for managed care, it appears unlikely that real patient power will rise readily to the top of its agenda.


    1. John D. Twiname, Administrator, Office of Health, Cost of Living Council, testimony before the House Subcommittee on Public Health and Environment, Hospital Cost Controls, December 19, 1973, p. 3.

    2. "OEO Transfer for Policy Research," a document included in the U.S. House of Representatives hearing on Oversight of HEW Health Programs, Subcommittee on Public Health and Environment of the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, March 1, 1973, p. 20.

    3. Senator Edward M. Kennedy (Mass.), "Physicians Training Facilities and Health Maintenance Organizations," hearing, U.S. Senate, Subcommittee on Health of the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare. p. 2.

    4. President Richard M. Nixon, "Health Care: Requests for Action on Three Programs," March 2, 1972, message to Congress on health care, Congressional Quarterly Almanac 1972 (Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly Books, 1972), p. 43A.

    5. U.S. Representative Harley O. Staggers, Sr. (W.Va.), speech on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives, Congressional Record, September 12, 1973, p. 29354.

    6. "Senate Passes Health Maintenance Organization Bill," Congressional Quarterly Almanac 1972, p. 769.

    7. Representative Harley O. Staggers, Sr., speech on floor of the U.S. House of Representatives Congressional Record, December 18, 1973, p. 42229.

    8. Senator Edward M. Kennedy, speech on the floor of the U.S. Senate, Congressional Record, December 19, 1973, p. 42505.

    9. Representative Claude Pepper (Fla.), speech on floor of the U.S. House of Representatives, Congressional Record, September 12, 1973, p. 29353.

    10. Laure McGinley and Ron Winslow, "Major HMOs to Quit Medicare Markets," Wall Street Journal, June 30, 2000.

    11. The Federal Register, August 26, 1998.

    12. "Public Health and Managed Care: Data Sharing for Common Goals," National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Chronic Disease Notes & Reports, Spring/Summer 1997.

    13. "Medicare patients have right to appeal HMO refusals, court says," New York Times, August 14, 1998.




    The History of HMOs
    by Scott Holleran (November 1, 1999)

    The new year begins as employees begin a process called open enrollment--when many employees designate a health plan through their employer. Unfortunately, most are forced to enroll in a managed care plan, i.e., an HMO or PPO. That's right: force actually lies at the core of today's health care system.

    From their beginnings, HMOs were designed--by Democrats and Republicans--to eliminate individual health insurance. The result is a vast network of health care collectives (HMOs, PPOs, Point-of-Service plans) created by government that are destined to do harm to individuals.

    The individual was first discouraged from buying insurance in 1942 when employee health premiums were made tax deductible to employers--not to individuals. Congress created Medicare in 1965, making individual insurance for those over 65 obsolete. Subsidized, unrestricted health care for seniors lead to an unprecedented frenzy of spending by patients and doctors.

    Costs went up, introducing an economic obstacle to individual health insurance. As costs rose, those on the New Left, including then freshman Sen. Ted Kennedy, argued that government ought to pay for everyone's health care and promoted the idea of a health maintenance organization, a term coined by a left-wing college professor.

    President Nixon appeased the left and proposed the HMO Act, which Congress passed in 1973. The law created new, supposedly cheaper health coverage with millions of dollars to HMOs, which, until then, constituted a small portion of the market. Kaiser Permanente was the only major HMO in the country by 1969 and most of its members were compelled to join through unions.

    Combined with Medicare, the HMO Act eventually eliminated the market for affordable individual health insurance.

    The new managed care plans mushroomed with federal subsidies. Employers perceived managed care as less expensive than individual insurance and stopped offering a choice of plans, making insurance more expensive for the individual. The government had effectively instituted HMOs, at the insistence of the left and the capitulation of conservatives and pragmatic businessmen.

    Nixon's HMO Act was passed 25 years ago. Since then, the individual has become a prisoner of the tax code. Covered by an employer and herded into managed care, the individual patient is powerless. Under managed care, if the patient gets sick, he or she may wander the maze of managed
    bureaucracy, be treated, or, languish in pain awaiting treatment. The patient may also be refused treatment and die.

    Premiums under managed care do not pay for an insured contract for medical care decided between the patient and the physician--premiums pay for the management of care, i.e., health maintenance, by a third party.

    Unrestricted free choice in medicine--health insurance chosen, provided and paid for by the individual--has practically vanished. A few indispensable provisions of the House GOP's recent health care proposal, crafted by prospective House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert, (R, IL), offer renewed hope.

    Hastert's proposal offers every patient a choice to purchase health insurance as an individual--neither through an employer nor through government--by legalizing Medical Savings Accounts (MSAs) for all Americans, (MSAs are currently restricted to a small group of self employed, uninsured, small business people and 390,000 Medicare recipients.)

    The GOP proposes to make every patient eligible for MSAs, lift restrictions, and grant full tax deductibility to the self-employed for health insurance premiums.

    MSA opponents, including Hillary Clinton and Kennedy, believe MSAs will attract young and healthy patients and, therefore, raise premiums for the remaining population. According to the IRS and private health plans, the opposite is true: fully one third of thousands of MSA enrollees were previously lacking any health insurance and the median age for an MSA health insurance policyholder is over 40.

    The distinct lack of a free market in individual health insurance, not a lack of regulations, lead to the domination of managed care. The next Congress, possibly under Hastert's leadership, should grant 100 percent individual tax deductibility and fully expand MSAs and it should do so immediately. Alabama Sen. Richard Shelby, an MSA proponent, ought to take the lead in proclaiming the provisions as a step toward what America's health care system needs most: health insurance which preserves the right to choose--and pay for--one's own health care.

    This column was published in the Arizona Republic in 1999. For more on MSAs please visit Americans for Free Choice in Medicine (AFCM) http://www.afcm.org/
    http://www.capmag.com/article.asp?ID=2819
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  2. #2
    Senior Member avenger's Avatar
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    Why is it health care costs so much now? One word...government!!!
    Never give up! Never surrender! Never compromise your values!*
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  3. #3
    Senior Member WorriedAmerican's Avatar
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    I listened to a youtube concerning HMO's and Nixon was the one to push it too.
    He knew it screwed the people !
    That was why he was behind it.
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