Whistleblower Speaks Out On What Really Happens in US Healthcare

by sammielee24 107 Replies latest jw friends

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    For those of you in other countries - how many times have you seen thousands of your own countrymen lying outside in a field waiting for health care? sammieswife.

    Whistleblower tells of America's hidden nightmare for its sick poor

    When an insurance firm boss saw a field hospital for the poor in Virginia, he knew he had to speak out. Here, he tells Paul Harris of his fears for Obama's bid to bring about radical change

    Patients without health insurance get dental care at a free clinic in Wise, Virginia, held every July for the past three years. More than 25,000 were treated in a weekend Photograph: John Moore/Getty Images

    Wendell Potter can remember exactly when he took the first steps on his journey to becoming a whistleblower and turning against one of the most powerful industries in America.

    It was July 2007 and Potter, a senior executive at giant US healthcare firm Cigna, was visiting relatives in the poverty-ridden mountain districts of northeast Tennessee. He saw an advert in a local paper for a touring free medical clinic at a fairground just across the state border in Wise County, Virginia.

    Potter, who had worked at Cigna for 15 years, decided to check it out. What he saw appalled him. Hundreds of desperate people, most without any medical insurance, descended on the clinic from out of the hills. People queued in long lines to have the most basic medical procedures carried out free of charge. Some had driven more than 200 miles from Georgia. Many were treated in the open air. Potter took pictures of patients lying on trolleys on rain-soaked pavements.

    For Potter it was a dreadful realisation that healthcare in America had failed millions of poor, sick people and that he, and the industry he worked for, did not care about the human cost of their relentless search for profits. "It was over-powering. It was just more than I could possibly have imagined could be happening in America," he told the Observer

    Potter resigned shortly afterwards. Last month he testified in Congress, becoming one of the few industry executives to admit that what its critics say is true: healthcare insurance firms push up costs, buy politicians and refuse to pay out when many patients actually get sick. In chilling words he told a Senate committee: "I worked as a senior executive at health insurance companies and I saw how they confuse their customers and dump the sick: all so they can satisfy their Wall Street investors."

    Potter's claims are at the centre of the biggest political crisis of Barack Obama's young presidency. Obama, faced with 47 million Americans without health insurance, has put reforming the system at the top of his agenda. If he succeeds, he will have pushed through one of the greatest changes to domestic policy of any president. If he fails, his presidency could be broken before it is even a year old. Last week, in a sign of how high the stakes are, he addressed the nation in a live TV news conference. It is the sort of event usually reserved for a moment of deep national crisis, such as a terrorist attack. But Obama wanted to talk about healthcare. "This is about every family, every business and every taxpayer who continues to shoulder the burden of a problem that Washington has failed to solve for decades," he told the nation.

    Obama's plans are now mired and the opponents of reform are winning. The Republican attack machine has cranked into gear, labelling reform as "socialist" and warning ordinary Americans that government bureaucrats, not doctors, will choose their medicines. The bill's opponents say the huge cost can only be paid by massive tax increases on ordinary Americans and that others will have their current healthcare plans taken away. Many centrist Democratic congressmen, wary of their conservative voters, are wavering. The legislation has failed to meet Obama's August deadline and is now delayed until after the summer recess. Many fear that this loss of momentum could kill it altogether.

    To Potter that is no surprise. He has seen all this before. In his long years with Cigna he rose to be the company's top PR executive. He had an eagle-eye view of the industry's tactics of scuppering political efforts to get it to reform. "This is a very wealthy industry and they use PR very effectively. They manipulate public opinion and the news media and they have built up these relationships with all these politicians through campaign contributions," Potter said.

    Potter was witness to the campaign against Michael Moore's healthcare documentary Sicko. The industry slammed the film as one-sided and politically motivated. Secret documents leaked from the American Health Insurance Plans, the industry's lobby group, detailed the plan to paint Moore as a fringe radical. Potter now says the film "hit the nail on the head". "The Michael Moore movie that I saw was full of truth," he admits.

    Potter was also working for Cigna when it became embroiled in the case of Nataline Sarkisyan, whose family went public after Cigna refused to pay for a liver transplant that it considered "experimental" and therefore not covered by their policy. Cigna reversed this decision only hours before the Californian teenager died. "I wish I could have done more in that case," Potter said.

    Such sentiments are rare in an industry that has given America a healthcare system that can be cripplingly expensive for patients, but that does not produce a healthier population. The industry is often accused of wriggling out of claims. Firms comb medical records for any technicality that will allow them to refuse to pay. In one recently publicised example, a retired nurse from Texas discovered she had breast cancer. Yet her policy was cancelled because her insurers found she had previously had treatment for acne, which the dermatologist had mistakenly noted as pre-cancerous. They decreed she had misinformed them about her medical history and her double mastectomy was cancelled just three days before the operation.

    Last month three healthcare executives were grilled about such "rescinding" tactics by a congressional subcommittee. When asked if they would abandon them except in cases of deliberately proven fraud, each executive replied simply: "No."

    To Potter that attitude has a sad logic. The healthcare industry generates enormous profits and its top executives have a lavish corporate lifestyle that he once shared. Treating patients for their expensive conditions is bad for business as it reduces the bottom line. Kicking out patients who pursue claims makes perfect economic sense. "It is a system that is rigged against the policyholder," Potter said. The congressional probe found that just three firms had rescinded more than 20,000 policyholders between 2003 and 2007, saving hundreds of millions. "That's a lot of money that will now go towards their profits," Potter said.

    A lot of that money also goes into contributions to politicians of both parties - $372m in the past nine years - and in lobbying groups to run TV ads slamming Obama's plans. Many of these ads deploy naked scare tactics. One report said that the industry was spending $1.4m a day on its campaign. In the face of that, it is perhaps no wonder that the Senate has delayed its vote, dealing a massive blow to Obama. "I have seen how the opponents of healthcare reform go to work... they are trying to delay action. They know that if they keep the process going for months, and turn it into a big mess, then the political impetus behind it will lessen," Potter said.

    Potter, who now works at the Centre for Media and Democracy in Wisconsin, says the industry is afraid of Obama's reforms and that is why it is fighting so hard. It wants to deal him the same blow as it did Bill Clinton when it scuppered his attempt at reform in the 1990s. Potter admits that he is worried the industry might win again. "I have seen their tactics work. I have been a part of it," he said. He knows he has no chance of ever working again for a major firm. "I am a whistleblower and corporate America does not tend to like that," he said. But there is one thing Potter is not sorry about: leaving the healthcare industry and speaking out. "I have absolutely no regrets. I am doing the right thing," he said.

    Comprehensive healthcare reform in the US has been an ambition of many presidents since the early part of the 20th century. None has succeeded in creating a system that gives all Americans the right to coverage. Barack Obama, below, is desperate to avoid the same fate.

    Finding a cure

    What is the current system?
    It is a complex mish-mash of systems. Millions of Americans have their own private healthcare plans, either individually or through their employer. About 47 million Americans have none. However, systems do exist to cover the very poor and the old. The system is fiendishly complex and full of loopholes, so even those with coverage can have it withdrawn.

    How bad is it?
    US hospitals are the best in the world if you can afford them. Many cannot, and an accident or sudden illness can often bankrupt someone.

    How does it compare with other countries?
    It depends how you measure things. The US spends about 16% of GNP on healthcare, far more than France and Germany, which spend 11 to 12%. Yet those countries provide universal care.

    What is the biggest problem?
    Critics say the biggest issue is the profit motive that drives US healthcare. This ensures that costs are always rising as the incentive is there to provide expensive treatment. It also gives health insurers the incentive to refuse treatment to claimants, by seeking to withdraw their cover.

    What is Obama's solution?
    Obama has asked Congress to draw up a government option, allowing all Americans to get some sort of cover. The sheer size of the state plan should theoretically allow it to drive down costs by economies of scale.

    What's happening now?
    Obama has put his reputation on the line to persuade wavering Democrats and moderate Republicans to vote on legislation by August. The Senate has said this will not happen. That's a major blow, as it puts off the debate until September and could see the political momentum stall.

  • besty
  • civicsi00
    civicsi00

    It's sad, but true. The healthcare system in America is driven by greed for money, instead of desire to help heal people. When I first saw the movie Sicko earlier this year, I was stunned to find out how some of the rest of the world have universal healthcare. I spoke to an aunt in Canada, and even though the system is not perfect, it's much better than the one we have in the US. I hope to see some kind of change in the near future, but the way it's going here, I don't think it's gonna happen.

    Not only this, but the food industry has come under attack as well. A very well made documentary is currently in theatres called Food, Inc. It exposes the food industry, revealing that most food nowadays come from animals that are not fed proper food among other things. I HIGHLY recommend it!

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    Thanks for the heads up on that documentary - I would like to see Food as soon as it hits theaters around here. Anyone interested in hearing this guy Potter talk about his experiences can also find it on YouTube. The lack of morality that has taken hold of those in charge of the USA is both astounding while at the same time being sickening. We were talking to a guy in the dairy business, a small family owned farm for generations and he was gut wrenched at the fact that the family is faced now with selling off the cows and losing the farm. He cites the speculation in grains and fertilizers etc that drove up their costs and then a sudden nosedive in milk prices leaving them unable to strike a balance now - and let's remember that in the USA, subsidies to farmers are granted by acreage and not necessarily by need, thereby allocating the majority of tax dollars to the largest, most wealthy farms and little to the smalll, family farms. This poor guy was almost in tears when he talked about it - I felt bad for him.

    The same day we got a notice from our mail box holder who just started up her business half a year ago - seems the bank has cut off half of their credit used for the business and as a result they have to fold. She was really upset about it all having sunk their own money into it as well, the banks won't budge.

    These are the guys losing businesses and jobs that aren't showing up in the 7 million unemployment claims and sadly becoming just another statistic ...along with no healthcare doubles the worry. sammieswife.

  • orangefatcat
    orangefatcat

    I thank God that in Canada we have a health care system otherwise I would be living in the streets.

    My monthly medications alone are over a thousand dollars and if I lived in the US I be big trouble.

    We are blessed in many ways in Canada. Our healthcare system isn't perfect, but I won't complain after r eading this.

    Thanks for sharing.

    Orangefatcat

  • JeffT
    JeffT

    HORSESHIT!!!!

    My grandfather was a doctor, my Dad's a doctor, my brother's a doctor and my sister's a doctor. I've been around the medical world my whole life. The vast majority of medical professionals have dedicated their lives to helping people out.

    It may be expensive, but US healthcare is also the best in the world.

    I'd like to see what happens when somebody suggests that whatever you clowns do for a living ought to be given away.

  • beksbks
    beksbks

    Horseshit yourself!!

    Did you bother to read anything??? I would have to assume that the good people out there in that field giving free care are Doctors and professionals. And American health care is not neccessarily the best in the world.

    Last month he testified in Congress, becoming one of the few industry executives to admit that what its critics say is true: healthcare insurance firms push up costs, buy politicians and refuse to pay out when many patients actually get sick. In chilling words he told a Senate committee: "I worked as a senior executive at health insurance companies and I saw how they confuse their customers and dump the sick: all so they can satisfy their Wall Street investors."

  • Robdar
    Robdar

    I thank God that in Canada we have a health care system otherwise I would be living in the streets.

    My monthly medications alone are over a thousand dollars and if I lived in the US I be big trouble.

    I envy the Canadians.

    I just got my first order of a presription from a drugstore in Canada. This med at Walmart costs me $68.00 a month. I got 84 pills from Canada, almost 3 months worth, for $55.80 and that includes the shipping. The meds are made by Wyeth and there is no generic available in this country although it is available in others. I saved about $148 and I didn't get generic.

  • Mastodon
    Mastodon

    Best healtcare in the world? Hardly.

    This country has to understand at some point that, even in a capitalist system, not everything HAS to be for profit.

  • Mastodon
    Mastodon

    Best healtcare in the world? Hardly.

    This country has to understand at some point that, even in a capitalist system, not everything HAS to be for profit.

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