ACA: 2 W.Va. Liberals Fight Law; Want Insurance Firms Out Totally
| By Paul J. Nyden; Paul J. Nyden Staff writer | |
| Proquest LLC |
Two
That requirement under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which
A coalition of medical doctors and nonprofit groups filed the friend-of-the-court brief Monday. They argue that the requirement to buy private insurance "exceeds the limits of
Unlike many of those who have challenged the Affordable Care Act in federal court, Haning and Mokhiber argue that a single-payer system - like the
"The only solution to the healthcare crisis in
Under that system, one public agency would handle all billing and administrative tasks, the brief points out.
Mokhiber said, "Under Obama's law, individuals are required to purchase health insurance from a private health insurance company. This is the first time the federal government has ever required people to buy a health-insurance product from a private corporation."
"That is very, very unpopular," Mokhiber said. "Most Republicans and conservatives want to knock out that mandate, while Democrats and liberals have supported it.
"We are the only liberal, left-of-center group that says this requirement should be knocked out. And we believe there is a growing public sentiment supporting that. This law [ACA] keeps the insurance industry in the game."
"I have been a strong supporter of single-payer health care for a long time. It is the only way we will be able to take care of all of our citizens and be able to afford it," Haning said.
"We pay twice as much for our health care in this country as many other industrialized countries do, but ... we are far down the list in terms of results. Something you hear all the time is that we have the best health-care system in the world. We do not.
"Forcing uninsured Americans to buy health insurance is a very bad way to go to try to take care of everybody. The purpose of health insurance corporations is to make money. And they make money by not taking care of sick people," Haning said.
The brief states: "Nearly 50 million Americans risk denial of essential healthcare services because they lack insurance from private insurance companies."
Many of those 50 million are working people paid low wages.
Haning said, "We are dealing with the corporate takeover of medicine.
"We have alternatives.
The brief also points out, "
Adopting a single-payer system would not increase the costs of health care, the brief says.
The ACA, the brief argues, "does little to reduce the cost of healthcare administration, which accounts for 31 percent of all health spending in
"Instead, it entrenches, by force of federal law, the private insurance companies that comprise the greatest source of administrative waste in the current system."
The administrative costs for
"By contrast, private insurance companies estimate that their administrative costs, including 'commission, premium tax and profit,' range as high as 16.7 percent of overall spending."
Today, salaries paid to some insurance executives range between
Haning said, "I practiced medicine for over 40 years and still have not gotten used to what the costs are. Some young women pay
"Many medications have been around for a long time. They are not expensive medications. There is no excuse for how much people have to pay."
Reach
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| Wordcount: | 785 |



Obituaries: ; Obit [Charleston Gazette, The (WV)]
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