Conservative Denialism And The Uninsured

One tactic frequently used by the right to justify opposition to solving problems is to distort the facts to claim the problem does not exist. This is seen on a variety of issues from global warming to health care. They often down play the seriousness of having tens of millions who are uninsured or under-insured by giving false accounts of these numbers, with these distortions frequently repeated on conservative blogs. The New York Times looked at the uninsured:

Critics play down the seriousness of the problem by pointing out that the ranks of the uninsured include many people who have chosen to forgo coverage or are only temporarily uninsured: workers who could afford to pay but decline their employers’ coverage; the self-employed who choose not to pay for more expensive individual coverage; healthy young people who prefer not to buy insurance they may never need; people who are changing jobs; poor people who are eligible for Medicaid but have failed to enroll. And then there are the illegal immigrants, a favorite target of critics.

All that is true, to some degree. But the implication — that lack of insurance is no big deal and surely not worth spending a trillion dollars to fix — is not.

No matter how you slice the numbers, there are tens of millions of people without insurance, often for extended periods, and there is good evidence that lack of insurance is harmful to their health.

Scores of well-designed studies have shown that uninsured people are more likely than insured people to die prematurely, to have their cancers diagnosed too late, or to die from heart failure, a heart attack, a stroke or a severe injury. The Institute of Medicine estimated in 2004 that perhaps 18,000 deaths a year among adults could be attributed to lack of insurance.

The oft-voiced suggestion that the uninsured can always go to an emergency room also badly misunderstands what is happening. By the time they do go, many of these people are much sicker than they would have been had insurance given them access to routine and preventive care. Emergency rooms are costly, and if uninsured patients cannot pay for their care, the hospital or the government ends up footing the bill.

Plus many wind up in bankruptcy when they are hospitalized, often when they thought they had insurance coverage, and are unable to pay their bills.

After looking closer at the numbers who are uninsured and under-insured, they dispensed with another false right wing talking point in noting that none of the pending bills would cover illegal immigrants. They concluded:

If nothing is done to slow current trends, the number of people in this country without insurance or with inadequate coverage will continue to spiral upward. That would be a personal tragedy for many and a moral disgrace for the nation. It is also by no means cost-free. Any nation as rich as ours ought to guarantee health coverage for all of its residents.

3 Comments

  1. 1
    Ernie Vogel says:

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  2. 2
    ehvogel says:

    #tcot » Conservative Denialism And The Uninsured Liberal Values http://bit.ly/8wdMU

  3. 3
    Ernie Vogel says:

    #tcot » Conservative Denialism And The Uninsured Liberal Values http://bit.ly/8wdMU

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