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L.A. BRONCOS FAN
04-28-2006, 05:48 PM
Business as usual in Bushistan...

Greed thrives in our health care system

By Dave Zweifel

http://www.madison.com/tct/opinion/column/index.php?ntid=81491&ntpid=0

Here's another one to remember when someone tells you that our "private" health care system works:

The Wall Street Journal ran a front-page story last week with the headline that said it all: "As Patients, Doctors Feel Pinch, Insurer's CEO Makes a Billion."

The story, datelined Minnetonka, Minn., was about William McGuire, a doctor who stopped practicing in 1986 to take a management job with UnitedHealth Group Inc., one of the largest HMOs in the country.

He's now the chief executive officer of the corporation, makes $8 million a year in salary plus bonus, has personal use of the company's private jet and has amassed what the Journal describes as "one of the largest stock options fortunes of all time."

According to the newspaper, those options total $1.6 billion.

"Even celebrated CEOs such as General Electric Co.'s Jack Welch or International Business Machines Corp.'s Louis Gerstner never were granted so much during their time at the top," the WSJ story said.

But the gist of the story is that while McGuire and other UnitedHealth execs are raking in millions, their company is putting the squeeze on everyone else.

"Dr. McGuire's story shows how an elite group of companies is getting rich from the nation's fraying health care system," the bible of the business world reported. "Many of them aren't discovering drugs or treating patients. They're middlemen who process the paperwork, fill the pill bottles and otherwise connect the pieces of a $2 trillion industry."

The newspaper's research shows that UnitedHealth has particularly benefited in recent years as health care inflation eased somewhat.

Insurers still raised premiums at double-digit rates. At UnitedHealth, for example, its stock price tripled from January of 2003 to January of this year and its net income rose to $3.3 billion. Hence, the nice board-of-director-approved windfall for McGuire. (Interestingly, former UW-Madison Chancellor Donna Shalala is a member of UnitedHealth's board.)

"In Minnesota, such riches have infuriated some people," the story continued. "Joel Albers, a Minneapolis pharmacist, regularly impersonates Dr. McGuire at state fairs, donning a tuxedo, holding up an enlarged picture of Dr. McGuire on a stick and handing out leaflets denouncing corporate greed."

Of course, this is just one more anecdote that serves to describe our broken health care system, which leaves more than 40 million Americans without coverage and an embarrassment of riches for those who know how to milk that system.

On one hand we have Medicare, which provides universal single-payer coverage to all Americans over age 65 at about a 2 percent administrative cost. On the other hand we have a hodge-podge of plans with layer after administrative layer that gobbles up close to 20 percent in overhead costs (Dr. McGuire's just a piece of that) and leaves millions out in the cold.

How hard can it be to choose in which direction we need to go?

Bronco_Beerslug
04-28-2006, 05:57 PM
The health care system is on the verge of crippling this country.

Bronx33
04-28-2006, 06:07 PM
The health care system is on the verge of crippling this country.

Now all it needs is a buttload of illegal immigrants flooding it.

W*GS
04-28-2006, 11:15 PM
The health care system is on the verge of crippling this country.

Indeed - health care is far too important and critical to have craven and corrupt politicians involved.

Medicare and Medicaid cost us $476 billion in 2005. In five years, 2011, those two programs alone are projected to cost $750 billion. We can't afford State-run health care. It's killing us.

enjolras
04-28-2006, 11:18 PM
My healthcare benefits went up 10% (again) this year...

W*GS
04-28-2006, 11:39 PM
We switched to a high-deductible HSA health plan last year because of the increase in the cost of our old HMO-style plan. The drawback is that you're responsible (in our plan) for the first $2,700 in costs for each person covered, up to $5,400 for the whole family.

There's a lot more freedom (no PCP, no co-pays, etc.) but our medical expenses so far are a little over $2,800. That's out of the HSA I put into with each paycheck. Still less than what the old plan would have cost us if we'd kept it since Jan 2005.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
04-29-2006, 12:23 AM
The health care system is on the verge of crippling this country.

Yep. Crippling the country while transferring its wealth to people like this McGuire schmuck has been Dumbya The Corporate Sock Puppet's only discernible healthcare 'plan' for the past six years.

And people like W*GS seem to love it.

W*GS
04-29-2006, 12:33 AM
Yep. Crippling the country while transferring its wealth to people like this McGuire schmuck has been Dumbya The Corporate Sock Puppet's only discernible healthcare 'plan' for the past six years.

And people like W*GS seem to love it.

Medicare and Medicaid cost us $476 billion in 2005. In five years, 2011, those two programs alone are projected to cost $750 billion. We can't afford State-run health care. It's killing us.