(Canadians, who enjoy single-payer national health care, are appalled that the family of deceased Canadian skier Sarah Burke was handed a medical bill for $550,000 to cover her nine days of intensive care in Utah. "Burke’s case should be a sobering reminder to Canadians of what could happen in a privately-insured market, rather than a public system where everyone is insured against a catastrophic event." What's even more appalling is that Americans tolerate our own disastrous private health insurance system, and many even believe it's superior to health care in Canada. Nor will this situation change under Obamacare. -- Scott McLarty, Green Party Media Coordinator)
Calgary Herald
With the family of deceased Canadian skier Sarah Burke facing a U.S. medical bill topping the value of an average Calgary home, I was reminded Friday of a quote by the late Justice Emmett Hall, a crusader for Canada’s public health-care system.
“We as a society are aware that the trauma of illness, the pain of surgery, the slow decline to death are burdens enough for the human being to bear without the added burden of medical or hospital bills penalizing the patient at the moment of vulnerability,” Hall wrote in a 1979 review of publicly funded health insurance.
To help Burke’s husband Rory Bushfield pay an expected $550,000 medical bill for nine days of intensive care in Utah, a website was set up by Burke’s agent asking for donations. The site had reached nearly $200,000 as of this writing Friday afternoon, prompting the Canadian Freestyle Ski Association to announce that the amount was enough that her family “will not have any financial burden related to her care.”
The association’s statement seemed odd, considering that the website was $350,000 short of its intended goal, but not if you understand the vagaries of a private health system dominated by big private insurers.
In the U.S. health system, “nobody pays the sticker price, except for those who are squeezed, which is normally the uninsured,” says Steve Morgan, a health policy analyst with the University of British Columbia’s Centre for Health Services and Policy Research.
“Big insurance doesn’t pay retail,” Morgan says of the U.S. health system. Typically, he says a hospital will present a bill big enough to choke a horse and the insurance company will negotiate it down. Individuals without insurance, or those who are under-insured, have little or no negotiating power and often end up paying bills that are financially devastating, Morgan said.
Burke was apparently not adequately insured in the U.S. Her ski association only covers sanctioned events. Because the event at which she was injured and subsequently died was an unsanctioned competition put on by her sponsor, Monster Energy Company, the ski association’s insurance did not cover her.
It was not clear if Burke’s family thought she was adequately covered, or if Monster had insurance for her. The company did not say if it would help cover her medical bills, which Morgan says is not surprising.
Monster, he said, could have negotiated behind the scenes to get the price down. The Canadian Freestyle Ski Association said the family had not yet received a final bill for her hospitalization, but that it is expected to be approximately $200,000, roughly the amount that had already been collected.
Morgan says Burke’s case should be a sobering reminder to Canadians of what could happen in a privately-insured market, rather than a public system where everyone is insured against a catastrophic event.
In 2000, the U.S. health policy journal Health Affairs wrote about the issue under the heading “Gouging the Medically Uninsured: A Tale of Two Bills.”
“Overcharging the uninsured is one of the many unintended and largely overlooked results of our decade-long obsession with curbing health-care costs,” it said. “Powerful interest groups — government, employers, insurers, hospitals, medical equipment vendors, and health care professionals — have fought vigorously to protect their interests. The uninsured, with no organized voice, emerge as losers.”
Since 2001, family health insurance premiums in the U.S. have increased 113 per cent, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, with annual premiums for employer-sponsored family health coverage growing to $15,073 in 2011. Due to the economic downturn, the number of Americans going without insurance has grown by one million to 49.9 million people.
We complain of health-care costs and outcomes in Canada, but the U.S. ranks behind Australia, Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand and the U.K. in five areas of health system performance: quality, efficiency, access to care, equity and mortality, according to a report by the Commonwealth Fund.
“Our failure as a country to ensure basic health care for all of its citizens is in part to blame,” Glenn D. Braunstein, chairman of the Department of Medicine at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, wrote Friday in the Huffington Post.
It is, indeed, a sobering reminder to Canadians how lucky we are. As one commentator wrote of the Burke family’s experience with the U.S. system: “We are sorry for your loss. Here’s your bill.”