From Deseret News archives:
Single-payer health plan best
With an estimated 300,000 Utahns without health insurance, medical costs are the leading cause of Utah bankruptcy filings, and Utah businesses are hard-pressed to keep up with employee health benefit premiums with increases of 16 percent a year. With 45 million Americans uninsured, can we set aside the argument about when life begins and instead ask ourselves why life has to prematurely end for some 18,000 uninsured Americans per year? If the United States had an infant mortality rate as good as Cuba's, we would save an additional 2,212 American babies a year. Can any of us with insurance feel certain we will have coverage should we develop a chronic illness or experience a job change?
Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. set a goal of reducing the number of uninsured Utahns by 50 percent in five years at his Utah Summit on Health Insurance for the Uninsured on May 3. He is sincere and has challenged State Health Department Director David Sundwall to put together a plan. Following state legislative scrutiny, Intermountain Health Care has demonstrated an attitude adjustment regarding its billing policies. The recent announcement of the launch of another free clinic (Maliheh Free Clinic) is commendable. But let's be real; we are rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic if we don't admit that our market-driven health insurance system is driving up the cost of health care with administrative costs of 25 to 30 percent. Private insurers compete by creating a risk pool that turns away people with chronic illnesses and by refusing to pay claims.









