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health inequality

The Battle For Equality In Health Is A Battle For Equality In Life


There’s a fair amount of fear on display these days from some of the most powerful people and institutions on the planet. Trump's afraid of Nancy Pelosi. Billionaires at Davos are afraid of Ocasio-Cortez. Microsoft’s afraid of affordable housing and homeless advocates. And the health care status quo is afraid of losing its ability to charge whatever it wants for its products and services. If history is any indication, this high-powered group of scaredy-cats will ignore their opposers or attempt to appease them with small (in proportion to their total resources) gestures.

Just look at how they've responded so far.

Appease: Trump, unwilling to admit defeat to Nancy Pelosi, agrees to temporarily not get his way.

Ignore: Michael Dell, CEO of Dell Technologies and billionaire attendee at Davos, says voluntary philanthropy is a better solution to inequality than taxing the uber rich. (Like that's worked so far.) He also falsely claimed that increasing rich peoples’ taxes hurts economic growth. Bottom line: Mr. Dell thinks that he knows better than the government how to “fix” inequality.

Appease (with a catch): Microsoft, responds to years’ of criticism for exacerbating the affordable housing crisis in the city of Seattle, by creating a multi-hundred-million-dollar housing loan program, along with a much smaller grant to address homelessness. This is a loans-to-pay-for-future-loans program in lieu of higher taxes; with a much smaller grant program thrown in to make it appear more generous. (Where does this I know how to address housing policy issues better than government attitude come from?)

Appease (latch onto): Health insurers and hospitals, in an attempt to forestall Medicare For All, are rolling out small-scale programs to address social determinants of health—‘the circumstances in which people are born, grow, live, work, and age’ that affects their health status and leads to health inequality. (Marmot, Sir Michael, The Health Gap (The Challenge Of An Unequal World): Bloomsbury Press, 2015). By making a small financial commitment now against health care inequality, which was never a major concern of theirs, health insurers and hospitals, hope the public will ignore their ever-increasing, opaque prices and poor health outcomes, on the part of hospitals and doctors. Continue Reading...

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