Townhall...
It
Should All Be Free
By Mona Charen
7/22/2011
Free
medicine! That’s what Obamacare
has brought you -- or should bring you, at least according to CNN.
The
story’s opening sentence set the
tone: “Contraceptives, sterilization and reproductive education should
be
covered by health insurance plans with no cost to patients under the
health
reform law, a new report recommends.”
In
a tone that can only be called
cheerleading, CNN tells its audience that the Institute of Medicine has
made
these recommendations to the secretary of Health and Human Services.
“Historic”
is the way HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius described the report, adding
that
“we will release the Department’s recommendations of what additional
preventive
services for women should be covered without cost sharing very soon.”
Now,
why, you may wonder, does the
secretary of Health and Human Services get to decide whether to adopt
the
report’s recommendations? Well, under Obamacare, health care has been
nationalized.
Among the roughly 700 references in the law to “the Secretary shall” is
one
mandating that the secretary shall decide which health care plans are
acceptable in America and which are not. If a plan does not comply with
HHS
mandates, companies and individuals who purchase their products will
have to
pay a fine. In other words, under Obamacare, the secretary of HHS
decides who
gets covered for what.
The
secretary is now considering
whether all health plans in America will have to cover birth control,
annual
HIV tests, well-woman care visits, annual counseling on sexually
transmitted
diseases, breastfeeding support and counseling including rental of
breast
pumps, and screening and counseling for interpersonal and domestic
abuse. These
services should be covered “without any co-pays or deductibles,” the
report by
the Institute of Medicine urges. In other words, these products and
services
should be “free” for all women, not just for the poor.
CNN
quotes the president of The
American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Dr. James Martin
Jr., who
believes that “unimpeded access to affordable contraceptives for all
women is
foundational.”
But
why stop there? The biggest killer
of women is heart disease. Shouldn’t cholesterol tests, EKGs and stress
tests
be covered by insurance at no cost to the women themselves? And surely
counseling about the risks of a high-fat diet and sedentary lifestyle
should be
included, too, no? At no cost to the patients, of course. And then
there’s
cancer, the second biggest threat to women’s health. So mammograms and
annual
doctor visits should be free. And certainly counseling about the
dangers of
smoking, excessive drinking and poor diet should be “fully covered,” as
well.
Come to think of it, gym memberships should definitely be covered at no
cost to
the women.
But
what about men? Men are far less
likely than women to seek medical treatment. And men are dropping every
year
from heart attacks, strokes, accidents and cancer. Surely if their
“well-man”
annuals were “free,” they would be more likely to get the treatment and
preventive care they need.
And
what about helpless children?
Surely only an ogre would want to charge children a fee to get their
vaccinations, checkups and medicine. And certainly adolescents should
receive
counseling about sexuality, date rape, drugs and alcohol. Shall we say
monthly?
Perhaps weekly?
Sebelius
praised the IOM report as
“based on science and existing literature.” By literature, she perhaps
means
Cinderella, in which a kindly fairy grandmother waves a magic wand and
produces
dresses, coaches and jewels “at no cost” to Cinderella. She surely
cannot mean
the medical literature.
Though
the Obama administration never
tires of repeating this falsehood, the science does not support the
claim that
increased spending on preventive care reduces overall costs. The
journal Health
Affairs has studied the literature and concluded, “Over the four
decades since
cost-effectiveness analysis was first applied to health and medicine,
hundreds
of studies have shown that prevention usually adds to medical costs
instead of
reducing them. Medications for hypertension and elevated cholesterol,
diet and
exercise to prevent diabetes, and screening and early treatment for
cancer all
add more to medical costs than they save.”
An
administration that preens about
its “evidence-based” policymaking constantly errs about what medical
research
has shown. But even more flagrantly, it fails to grasp the very first
lesson of
economics: Nothing is free. Someone will pay. As the great P.J.
O’Rourke put it
many years ago, “If you think health care is expensive now, just wait
till it’s
free.”
Read
it at Townhall
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