
Families USA, a national organization that promotes affordable health care, put out a report Thursday morning that repeatedly featured the phrase "hidden tax." Most Americans have a deep suspicion of the taxes they can see. The idea that some taxes lurk out of sight only increases their unease.
The report points to the additional premiums that insured Americans pay for the uncompensated care of the uninsured. This "hidden" health tax in 2008 amounted to:
— $1,017 for family health care coverage, and
— $368 for individual health care coverage.
According to the report, conducted by an actuarial consulting firm named Milliman, Inc., said Americans without health insurance got $116 billion in care during 2008. Hospitals, doctors and other providers recovered 63 percent of the costs through personal payments, charities, government programs and other sources. The rest, about $42.7 billion, just stood as uncompensated care.
Thus, the costs shifted to insurers and, ultimately, the insured.
"Going without health insurance profoundly affects both the economic and physical well-being of uninsured Americans," the report concludes. "But the uninsured are not the only people who bear the consequences."
Click here to read the report.
The hidden-tax aspect of this comes into play with the approaching national debate on health care coverage. President Obama and Congress look to push a sweeping plan, possibly as early as this summer.
Opponents are already gearing up their argument that the U.S. budget can't withstand reform's trillion-dollar hit. This report augurs the opposite case. Those who oppose some sort of univeral coverage will call it a tax increase, and supporters will say taxes are already in place, just hidden.
The health-care debate will have plenty of strings hanging from it. The portion about paying for the reforms will look more like a rope.
This finding is scetchy at best. The "study" was done by Milliman, Inc, which is a company that is hired to run/develop/and maintain a program called Intelliscript for the insurance companies that includes all of the histories of every insured person as far as medications and their dosages. The company also works hand in hand with the pharaceutical companies to suggest the correct medications (suggested by the companies of course) for a certain treatment.
So, a company that makes money by the amount of prescriptions sold is telling Americans that they need a standardized health plan, so more prescriptions can be sold. Wow. What a concept. I wonder if this is slightly a conflict of interest?
Agree with above comment plus this particular conservative organization is one of the top 12 healthcare lobbyists in DC. Of course, they'll sway the information to negate any hope for healthcare reform just like Fox news misleading the public regarding single payer, socialistis healthcare plan which has nothing to do with the non-profit public plan.