Skip to main content

The War on Health

Policymakers across the country have declared war on health.  You may have missed the headline, but this is a war with many casualties.
Its objective is to topple health care as we know it.  When health care falls, our health will be the victim.
Battles are raging in many states to cut the legs out from under health care financing.
The Arizona Senate Appropriations Committee recently voted to eliminate the Medicaid program.  This would make 1.3 million people uninsured and cost the state $7.5 billion in federal funding. 
A Florida Senate leader has threatened to eliminate Medicaid unless the federal government agrees to massive changes.  This would cost Florida over $10 billion, and make 3 million people uninsured.
Wisconsin’s Governor has proposed dropping over 60,000 people from Medicaid because they are too rich.  “Too rich” means a two-person household income of less than $29,100.     
Medicaid isn’t the only target. 
Pennsylvania just cancelled its state-funded health insurance plan for low income residents.  As a result, 42,000 people lost their insurance.  A half million more on the waiting list have to fend for themselves.
New Jersey’s Governor proposed a 15% reduction in state health appropriations this year, six times greater than the overall reduction in his budget in his recent speech to the Legislature.
Florida’s Governor proposed eliminating state-run health department clinics, even when they generate revenue.  In Palm Beach County alone, this would cost 60,000 people their regular source of care.    
This war began quietly while the eyes of the public were focused on federal health reform.  The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities has detailed a number of battles we have already lost:
  • New Jersey lowered income limits and reduced eligibility for the state’s Children’s Health Insurance Program.  50,000 more people are uninsured as a result.  
  • Mississippi reduced its mental health budget by 22% in the last two years. 
  • Illinois and Ohio cut community mental health services for children and reduced or eliminated community mental health services for adults who are not on Medicaid.
Elected officials declared this war on health by suggesting that health care was the weapon of mass destruction of our state economies.  It wasn’t.  The real weapons were the war in Iraq and Afghanistan at a total cost of over $1 trillion (and counting), for which the federal government did not have the courage to pay, and the greed of a financial industry which fattened our burst housing bubble. 
Health care is not a foe of the state, and people who need it should not be treated as enemy combatants.
However, people with mental illness are this war’s prisoners, often jailed instead of given the care they need.  This is not an exaggeration. The three largest mental health institutions in the country are Riker’s Island, the Cook County Jail, and the Los Angeles County Jail.  The largest mental health institution in Texas is the Harris County Jail.  It has 2,400 “patients” on any given day. 
In 2011, Texas is considering cutting $1.1 billion from state mental health services.  
According to the US Bureau of Justice Statistics, in 2005, more than half of over 2 million prison and jail inmates had mental health problems.    Over 1.25 million Americans are being “treated” for mental illness in our prisons and jails.
Elderly women and children are this war’s hostages. 
The Medicaid program funds 68% of the 1.8 million nursing home beds in the U.S.  Almost a million people live their lives in these beds.
650,000 of them are women, the vast majority over 75 years old and widowed.  In his recent speech, New Jersey Governor Christie articulated a fearful future for them.  Others share his vision “to move our aged, blind, and disabled [Medicaid] recipients into modern managed care.” 
These sick, elderly women suffer the indignity of being blamed for the state budget crisis they had nothing to do with creating.  If the Governor’s vision becomes reality, they won’t just have to cope with incredible health challenges.  They will be put at the mercy of the discredited “modern managed care” denial system.
Mostly under the radar, 31 states have already implemented cuts in children’s health programs.  As representatives of the Iowa Child and Family Policy Center and Voices for America’s Children note in their recent publication, The Healthy Child Story Book, for the first time in our history children may live shorter and less healthy lives than their parents.
Meanwhile, legislative bodies in Ohio, Louisiana, and Arizona have found the time to pass laws banning animal-human hybrids.  This is no joke.  The Louisiana bill’s sponsor, State Senator Danny Martiny, said the Louisiana Conference of Catholic Bishops asked him to introduce it.    
Louisiana ranks 49th among the states in health, ahead of only Mississippi.  While imaginary beings occupy the attention of political and religious leaders, this war will produce millions of all-too-real casualties.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Veterans and Mental Illness

On a sultry June morning in our national’s capital last Friday, I visited the Vietnam Veterans Memorial .   Scores of people moved silently along the Wall, viewing the names of the men and women who died in that war.   Some stopped and took pictures.   One group of men about my age surrounded one name for a photo.   Two young women posed in front of another, perhaps a grandfather or great uncle they never got to meet. It is always an incredibly moving experience to visit the Wall.   It treats each of the people it memorializes with respect. There is no rank among those honored.   Officer or enlisted, rich or poor, each is given equal space and weight. It is a form of acknowledgement and respect for which many veterans still fight. Brave Vietnam veterans returned from Southeast Asia to educate our nation about the effects of war and violence. I didn’t know anything about Post Traumatic Stress Disorder when I entered the Connecticut Legislature in the late 1970s.   I had only vag

Scapegoats and Concepts of a Plan: How Trump Fails Us

When a politician says he has “concepts of a plan” instead of a plan, there is no plan. And yet, that’s where we are with Donald Trump, nine years after he first launched a political campaign promising to replace Obamacare with something cheaper and better, nearly four years after he had four years to try to do just that. And fail. Doubling down during Tuesday’s debate, he claimed he had “concepts of a plan” to replace Obamacare. Really? He’s got nothing. In fact, he sounds just like Nixon sounded in 1968, when he claimed he had a “secret” plan to get us out of Vietnam. That turned out to be no plan at all (remember “Vietnamization?”) and cost us seven more years there and tens of thousands of lives. The Affordable Care Act, about which I wrote plenty in this blog a decade or more ago, wasn’t perfect. But it was a whole lot better than what we had before it – and anything (save a public option) that has been proposed since. Back then, insurers could deny coverage because of pre-exi

Anxiety and the Presidential Election

Wow. Could the mainstream media do anything more to raise our anxiety levels about the 2024 election? And diminish or negate all the recent accomplishments in our country? Over the past three-and-a-half years, our nation’s economy has been the strongest in the world. Unemployment is at record lows, and the stock market is at record highs. NATO – which last came together to defend the United States in the aftermath of 9/11 – is stronger than ever. Border crossings are down. Massive infrastructure improvements are underway in every state. Prescription drug costs are lower. We finally got out of Afghanistan – evacuating more than 100,000 U.S. citizens and supporters – with just a handful of deaths. Inflation – which rose precipitously in the aftermath of the pandemic – has come back down, and prices in many areas have even begun to decline. And yet, all the media commentators can talk about these days – and they are not “reporters” when they are clearly offering opinions to frame the