Skip to main content

The Top Health Policy Stories of 2012


Health and mental health policy stories dominated 2012.  From how the Affordable Care Act framed the health policy debate at the start of the year to how the Sandy Hook tragedy framed the mental health and public health debate at year’s end, 2012 will go down in history as the most significant year in health policy since the 1960s.

Here are summaries of a few of the biggest news stories.

The Supreme Court Decision on the Affordable Care Act.  Nothing quite compares to the drama of the day in June when the Supreme Court ruled the Affordable Care Act to be constitutional.  Few people guessed right in advance that the decision would come down to finding the “individual mandate” to be constitutional because it is a tax, but mandatory Medicaid expansion unconstitutional because it tied future federal funding for the existing state Medicaid programs to the Medicaid expansion.

People on both sides of the debate came away wanting more, and states reluctant to accept the decision waited months to see if the fall election would change the policy environment.  It didn’t.  So as the year drew to a close was whether they, or the federal government, would implement the insurance exchanges.

The Debate over the Future of Medicare.  In the campaign, we all learned more about the two major parties’ competing visions about the future of Medicare.  The Democrats want the current structure of the program preserved; the Republicans would like to make the current Medicare program just one option available to seniors among a variety of private health insurance plan choices.

When the dust settled, the Democratic vision had carried the day.  Nevertheless, Mitt Romney’s supporters argued afterwards that he actually “won” the Medicare debate when he took a majority of the vote of senior citizens.  But even that “victory” may have resulted from the fact that he opposed the $716 billion cut.

Meanwhile, a little compromise is all we really need to preserve Medicare – but not the increase in the age of eligibility policymakers have recently pushed. 

The Medicaid Expansion.  The governors of seven southern states declared in the summer that with Medicaid expansion now an option, they weren’t planning to implement it.  They cited the significant cost of doing so.  Florida, for example, said it would cost $351 million a year, and Texas trumped that with a $4.4 billion price tag. 

But by the end of the year those states were faced with the fact that it will be at least 9 times more expensive not to expand the program.  Not embracing the expansion would cost Florida at least $3.2 billion and Texas $39.6 billion in annual lost federal revenue. 

That’s a lot of money to turn down – especially when the alternative is asking state taxpayers to foot the bill.

The Cuts to State Mental Health Services.  As of 2012, the tally of state budget cuts to mental health services grew to $4.6 billion over the past four years, with no end of cutting in sight.  I wrote about the real-time effects of these cuts in Anna Brown’s Death, California Screaming, the Mental Health Policy Mistakes We Make and the Sons and Daughters Who Pay for Them, and, focusing on veterans, in Iraq and Back and Answering the Call

There’s a depressing bottom line to all these stories: people with mental illness got lip service or worse. 

Athletes – and Others – Dying Young.  When Pro Football all-star Junior Seau died in the spring, it revived talk of the Curse of the 1994 San Diego Chargers. He was the 8th member of that team to die before turning 45.  Were these deaths the cumulative effect of concussions? Or related to long-term side effects of performance-enhancing drugs that ruined the legacy of Lance Armstrong and a host of steroid-era baseball superstars, like Mark McGuire, Barry Bonds, Sammy Sosa, and Roger Clemens?

Not exactly.  At least in the case of the ’94 Chargers, former professional athletes weren’t dying young from concussions or performance-enhancing drugs, but for many of the same reasons – accidents, obesity, heart conditions, and complications from diabetes – non-athletes die young, too.  It’s avoidable, but not when we cut $5 billion from public health as we did this year.

Sandy Hook.  We need to say it again. Violence is a public health problem, not a mental health problem.  If we learn nothing else from tragedy, I hope it will be these three things: anyone of us could be a victim of violence; we can prevent much of it by treating it as a public health problem; and blaming people with mental illness for the increase in violence in America will only lead us down a dark path.

I wish you all a safe, peaceful, and Happy New Year. 

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