PAUL BUCHHEIT FOR BUZZFLASH AT
TRUTHOUT
Most Americans Are Getting
Poorer. How "Health Care for the Rich" Is Killing Many of Them
In his report, "This is how American health care kills
people," Ryan Cooper tells the heartbreaking story of 29-year-old Matthew
Stewart, who required emergency surgery for hepatitis-induced liver damage, but
learned that only about $10,000 of his $74,000 bill was covered by his
"gold plan" insurance policy, partly because of out-of-network rules
even in emergencies. Then, when his insurance provider decided to quit the
insurance exchange, Matthew was left without a liver specialist, and he
couldn't obtain Medicaid because his state of Texas had refused the option to carry
it. His alternative of declaring bankruptcy and leaving the state would be
delayed by a lengthy legal process exacerbated by the physical and mental
stress of his illness. But the hospitals kept sending their bills.
Evidence for the Financial
Collapse of the Great Majority of Americans
The poorest 90% of Americans
lost nearly $2 trillion in wealth in 2015-16, an average
of $8,500 per adult. Every sector of society lost money except for the
richest 1%, whose members gained an average of $1.5 million in that single
year.
Wealth is down in part because
income is down. Median household income is about $2,000 less than
it was ten years ago.
There's much more evidence for
the decline of all sectors except the upper class. Almost three-quarters of American consumers die with debt. Anywhere from two-thirds to 80% lack the savings needed for unexpected
expenses.
Pew Research recently found that major U.S.
metropolitan areas experienced significant growth in upper-income and lower-income
households since the year 2000, with a dramatic dropoff in-between. Two out of
every five middle-income households, as reported by the New York Times, have dropped out of the middle-class income
range, becoming either upper-income or lower-income. If wealth is considered
rather than income, it becomes evident that most of the middle class is heading
down rather than up, because the total net worth (home and financial assets
minus debt) of the richest adult in the bottom 70% of North Americans is
only about $150,000 (Table 6-5).
And that 'growing' job market?
A Princeton study concluded that a stunning 94 percent of the
nine million new jobs created in the past decade were temporary or
contract-based, rather than traditional full-time positions. There are a lot
of high-tech jobs with six-figure salaries available
today, but those jobs are out-of-reach for most of the new members of a swollen
lower class.
Deaths of Despair
A much-publicized study documents the early deaths of white Americans with less than a
college degree. Many of them suffer "deaths of despair" -- death
by drugs, alcohol and suicide, attributed in part to a deterioration in
economic well-being.
Drugs, Alcohol, Suicide:
Mental Health Programs Cut, Jails Expanded
One out of every six Americans
-- the great majority of them white -- has taken a psychiatric drug such as an antidepressant or sedative
in the past year. Incredibly, a half-million of our children under the age of
four are taking anxiety drugs.
The Centers for Disease
Control reported that
deaths involving opioid use have quadrupled since 1999. Drug overdoses
now kill more people than gun homicides and automobile
accidents combined. Drug overdoses killed more people in 2015 than
HIV/AIDS at its 1995 peak. In some states, there are more painkiller
prescriptions than there are people. And the painkiller plague is spreading into
previously little-touched areas. According to a new study, "large suburban metro counties went from
having the lowest to the highest rate of premature death due to drug overdose
within the past decade."
Americans are also dying
from alcoholism at a record rate. Suicide is at its highest
level in 30 years.
But despite the surge in mental health problems, especially among young
people, mental health budgets have been continually and recklessly CUT, leaving many mentally ill people in
jails -- or morgues -- rather than in psychiatric hospitals.
The president and his
Republicans could further sabotage the health care program they hate, despite
the damage such an action would inflict on millions of vulnerable people.
Possibly they will reduce federal cost-sharing, thus jeopardizing the health care of over 6
million people. Possibly they will cut Medicaid in some manner. Medicaid,
which serves more people than Medicare. The New England Journal of
Medicine published the life-saving effects of Medicaid, estimated to be nearly 44,000 lives per year. The
Centers for Disease Control builds on this, challenging the
Republican-favored block grants that would hinder cooperation among
federal and state and local health specialists.
Disposable Americans: Unworthy
of Life?
According to an analysis by the Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities, the Republican health care plan, had it passed, would have paid
more in tax cuts to the richest 400 Americans than it would have paid in health
insurance tax credits for 813,000 low-income Americans.
Depriving vulnerable people of
health care is disturbingly reminiscent of the Nazi-era "Lebensunwertes
Leben" -- Life Unworthy Of Life, based on certain groups being a drain on resources,
and thus disposable to the people in power. It's a harsh
interpretation of a troubled time in America. But it's an apt description of
reality. Health care is a human right, not just a privilege for those with
money. The merciless attacks on low-income health care programs effectively condemn
thousands of people to an early death.
Paul Buchheit is the author of
"Disposable Americans" (2017). He is an advocate for social and
economic justice. His essays, videos, and poems can be found at
YouDeserveFacts.org.
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