Anger and debate over health care will continue after CEO’s killer is sent away
The arrest in the slaying of UnitedHealthcare CEO
Another wave of criticism rose against
A new extreme in the diatribes online emerged: entrepreneurs selling fake
In a column last Friday, I tried to place the "absence of empathy" for Thompson in the context of other news events, ranging from mass shootings to goof-ups by athletes in their sport. I also tried to convey the powerlessness that many Americans feel about health care. And I ended by writing that killing people and acting rudely online are unlikely to solve the problems.
Readers stuffed my email box with feedback, the most for anything I've written this year. I took that as another sign of the strong feelings and conflict surrounding health care in America. While some readers said I conveyed the tension well, more wrote that I seemed oblivious to the anger people feel towards those with power over them in health care.
"To tell people they should be sad or respectful when someone they view as bad dies, just makes it seem like they should forget all the harm caused," reader Emily R. from
"For people still paying off piles of medical debt because of denied claims, people who lost someone because they could not afford insulin or other meds, it is the only sense of justice that they will ever get. Then you came along and scolded them for being mean," she added.
"I encourage you to tune out that critical noise that we're hearing right now," Witty told employees. "It does not reflect reality. It is simply a sign of an era in which we live. What we must do is focus on what we know to be true. And what we know to be true is that the health system needs a company like
In another part of the video, Witty said, "We guard against the pressures that exist for unsafe or unnecessary care."
There is no doubt that doctors and hospitals sometimes push more treatments on people than needed, and insurers' role is to push back and prevent overspending. The FBI estimates fraud and abuse amount to 10 percent of health care costs, and other estimates say fraud goes as high as 15 percent.
That power struggle will outlast this moment. But consumers are always left to wonder: Why do publicly traded insurers get to decide when care is warranted, when they may be more motivated by investors' interests than patients'?
Americans pay the highest prices for care in the world, but their health outcomes are not the best. No one really knows what services cost and why, and no one is certain what insurers will cover and when.
Grief over Thompson's death will last for a long time, particularly with the people at
The vitriolic response to Thompson's death put in a crucible all that's going wrong.
Witty, a Brit knighted in 2012 for a distinguished career that led him to the top of
Gallup, the opinion research firm, on Friday announced its latest survey of Americans' attitudes on the quality of health care showed them to be at the lowest point since it started the annual survey in 2001.
As I heard from more readers through the weekend, a few suggested other tensions at play. Some cited the tone of the presidential campaign, particularly President-elect
He wrote, "When I did my job right, trains stayed on the tracks and had a smooth ride. There was no performance bonus. As a worker I was regarded as an expense rather than an asset."
He then added, "When the insurance CEO did his job well, people were denied payment for the health care they received or were denied the health care because it was not covered for some reason, even though it was warranted by the treating physician. People suffered and the insurance company's profit went up. Not one thin dime of health insurance profit ever did anything to benefit a person's health. Good health is as much a strategic good for a nation as a strong military force and a sound manufacturing base."
German central bank cuts growth forecasts as headwinds intensify
Novant Health, Blue Cross NC Agreement Strengthens Access to Care
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News