
Washington Post (3/11/17), like many outlets, focused on an unrepresentative 2 percent of the American people.
The recent collapse of Republican efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act demonstrated that the GOP’s tireless obsessions—free market platitudes and tax cuts for the wealthy—contribute absolutely nothing to fixing the American healthcare system.
Unfortunately, that was the only thing made clear by media coverage of the healthcare debate.
Looking back, we are struck by the degree to which the media’s fixation on a narrative that mocks a small slice of American voters—pro-Trump voters who had new ACA coverage—deflected attention from the frustration of millions of American workers who have struggled with healthcare problems the ACA either failed to address or exacerbated.
The truth is our healthcare system is sick, and the Affordable Care Act has been little more than a bandage on a compound fracture. The ACA cut the rate of the uninsured to an all-time low, and limited the health insurance industry’s most outrageous consumer abuses, both important steps forward. At the same time, 29 million people remain uninsured, most of the non-elderly population who have employer-paid coverage are increasingly underinsured, and costs continue to soar at 200–400 percent of inflation. (See sidebar.)

Atlantic (2/23/17)
Instead of taking a serious look at the flaws in the ACA, and the deep impact they have on the lives of working-class Americans, reporters covering the healthcare repeal saga spent untold hours and column inches seeking out a tiny slice of the electorate for “reporting” that amounted to little more than mockery. Less than 2 percent of the American people both got new coverage under the ACA and voted for Donald Trump. Yet major media outlets obsessively sought out this sliver of the electorate, to ask, in the words of the Atlantic’s Olga Khazan (2/23/17),
a question that’s baffled health reporters in the months since the election: Why would people who benefit from Obamacare in general—and its Medicaid expansion specifically—vote for a man who vowed to destroy it?
Vox’s Sarah Kliff found these voters in Kentucky, more than once. Abby Goodnough and Reed Abelson did too in North Carolina for a front-page Sunday feature in the New York Times (3/7/17). Jessica Contrera found them in West Virginia for the Washington Post (3/11/17). The LA Times’ Noam Levy (2/24/17) found them in Florida. The Kaiser Family Foundation held monthly focus groups with them in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Michigan, allowing KFF president Drew Altman to opine on the Times’ op-ed page (1/5/17). Like Kliff, ABC (2/27/17) found them in Kentucky, and CNN’s Dr. Sanjay Gupta (1/6/17) went to Florida. Reporting stimulated comment from the Post’s Dana Milbank (12/20/16) to the Times’ Paul Krugman (3/14/17) to influential liberal sites like Daily Kos (1/28/17), Salon (12/15/16) and Digby’s Hullabaloo (3/13/17).
Khazan’s “baffling” question has a simple answer. Trump did not promise to “destroy” Obamacare, he promised to give people better health plans (a promise broken, obviously). Many people can’t afford ACA exchange coverage, made clear in the Kaiser focus groups:
They spoke anxiously about rising premiums, deductibles, co-pays and drug costs. They were especially upset by surprise bills for services they believed were covered. They said their coverage was hopelessly complex. Those with marketplace insurance—for which they were eligible for subsidies—saw Medicaid as a much better deal than their insurance and were resentful that people with incomes lower than theirs could get it. They expressed animosity for drug and insurance companies, and sounded as much like Bernie Sanders supporters as Trump voters.
Most people’s healthcare left out of discussion
The most damaging effect of singling out this minuscule fraction of the electorate and questioning their motives was the license it gave media to ignore the realities faced by the rest of American working families and to distort the politics of the Affordable Care Act.
Here’s who the media failed to cover: the 177 million Americans who get their insurance through job-based coverage. They are Clinton voters, Sanders voters, Johnson voters, Stein voters and, yes, Trump voters. Media generally overlook the crushing impact the ACA has had on their health insurance. To the extent people with employer-provided insurance are interviewed on healthcare, they are often wrapped in the wrong frame—that their concerns about the ACA are irrational, because the ACA didn’t impact people who were already covered.
This is just a little of what has actually happened across political, racial, economic and gender divisions to the millions of Americans with employer-sponsored health insurance since the ACA was implemented in 2010:
- The ACA imposed an excise tax on their benefits, the simple threat of which caused 73 percent of employers to cut benefits, raise out-of-pocket costs or make plans to do so.
- Their premiums went up more than 3 times faster than inflation. (See sidebar.)
- Their deductibles increased 89 percent, while their compensation went up just 14 percent.
- When they can afford to get care, they see a stranger: 15 percent of Americans lost access to one of their doctors because their insurance network changed in just the last year.
- Even though the US has the lowest rate of un-insurance in our lifetimes, 31 percent of Americans told Gallup they either skipped or delayed necessary medical care last year because of costs, the majority for serious conditions.
- The Census Bureau reports that 11.2 million Americans live in poverty due to out-of-pocket medical expenses.
In short, the majority of Americans who get their insurance through work are facing an escalating crisis of underinsurance, brewing under the ACA and not addressed in the GOP’s proposed replacements. With more than a third of workers carrying deductibles of $1,000 or more, and 20 percent now in plans linked to Health Savings Accounts, few Americans’ benefits look much like 2010.
Shifting costs to patients
The deepest flaws in the ACA are the fruition of President Obama and congressional Democrats creating a law that counted on controlling costs by forcing employers to make American workers pay more so they would use less healthcare, instead of having millionaires pay their fair share. In particular, the misleadingly named “Cadillac Tax” is putting enormous pressure on workers’ out-of-pocket costs, based on the false notion that Americans use too much healthcare and that giving employers and workers more “skin in the game” will shrink overall costs—as if shifting costs to the least-powerful players in the system weren’t a recipe for boosting rather than curbing healthcare inflation.
In reality, we already pay more out of pocket than almost anyone else, but go to the hospital and see the doctor less often than the average for wealthy nations. American costs aren’t out of control because we use too much healthcare, they’re out of control because our healthcare system allows corporations to charge too much:
- Hospitals have been on a 20-year merger spree. Now they’re buying up doctors’ practices and charging monopoly prices for both hospital and physician care.
- Drug companies are gaming patent law and charging monopoly prices, refusing to reveal any justification for their larcenous prices.
- Insurance companies are passing provider and drug prices to their ratepayers and skimming billions of dollars off the top of an ever-growing pie.

Media focus on the actual problems with the healthcare system (e.g., Time, 3/4/13) is episodic, in contrast to the drumbeat of coverage of the political wrangling over healthcare.
These trends are covered, but only episodically compared to the avalanche of coverage of the ACA marketplaces and Medicaid expansion. The New York Times (12/15/15) and others covered a groundbreaking study of 3 billion insurance claims that showed that hospital market power and prices, not utilization, are the primary drivers of private-sector costs. Steven Brill (Time, 3/4/13) has relentlessly exposed extreme hospital prices, and pharmaceutical price-gouging is a national story (e.g., New York Times, 4/26/16). But overall, the media allows Washington politicians to frame the “reform” debate as a false choice between a status quo and Republican reaction—in other words, between a system that punishes working-class Americans and even more punitive proposals.
There are plenty of policy tools to combat healthcare corporate monopolies—from Nevada’s first-in-the-nation law curbing Big Pharma’s price-gouging on insulin, to Maryland’s successful hospital rate-setting system, to Hawaii’s employer mandate—or, of course, creating a universal Medicare-for-All (“single-payer”) system. However, all of these require politicians to put working-class Americans before Pharma, hospital and insurance industry profits. Unfortunately, few in Washington, DC, have a taste for any change that isn’t paid for by poor and middle-class families, and corporate media allow politicians to get away with it.
Republicans’ simplistic market nostrums and fixation on tax cuts for millionaires have already run smack into the brick wall of reality. The Democrats’ turn is coming. Standing back and watching GOP infighting may be satisfying, but until Democrats acknowledge the direct harm that their healthcare reforms have inflicted on American families, and the even greater harm that failing to include any restraint on the industry in the original bill has caused, Democrats will continue to suffer apparently mystifying failures at the ballot box.
The media’s myopic focus on a tiny slice of Trump voters, singled out for mockery and disdain, has enabled Democrats’ denial of the true practical and political consequences of a flawed law under whose purview the family fortunes of the majority of Americans have continued to decline.
Mike Casey is chair of the Healthcare Initiatives Task Force of UNITE HERE, a union of 270,000 North American hospitality workers. John Canham-Clyne is deputy director of research for UNITE HERE.
Sidebar:
No, Obamacare Has Not Reduced Premium Inflation
Former Obama administration officials and pundits of all ideological stripes insist that the rate at which employer-sponsored premiums have grown has slowed dramatically since passage of the ACA. It simply isn’t true.
One of the critical sources for this false fact is the Kaiser Family Foundation Health Research and Education Trust annual survey of employers. In the fall of 2015 and again in 2016, Obama White House Counsel of Economic Advisors Chair Jason Furman put out press releases linking to the survey with headlines like “New Data Show Slow Healthcare Cost Growth Is Continuing.” The White House line was picked up by pundits all over the internet.
The KFF/HRET data did show that the pace at which the nominal dollar cost of employer-sponsored premiums was growing had slowed dramatically. (For inflation, KFF/HRET uses the April not–seasonally adjusted CPI-U for all cities, available here.) But a freshman economics student knows that such information is meaningless unless adjusted for inflation.
The immediate post-ACA world includes the fallout from the economic crash, followed by the historic 2014 collapse of oil prices—leading to very low, sometimes negative inflation. A look at the actual KFF/HRET data tables reveals that from 2010 to 2016, employer-sponsored health insurance premiums grew by 326 percent of the rate of general inflation (CPI-U). For the six years prior to the ACA, premiums grew at 241 percent.
—M.C. & J.C-C
Sidebar:
Factchecking the Factcheckers

The factchecking consortium’s results on ProPublica (3/22/17)
Four outlets who follow healthcare—Propublica, Vox, Stat and Kaiser Health News—teamed up to write “We Factchecked Lawmakers’ Letters to Constituents on Healthcare” (3/22/17), which stated flatly that the letters are “full of lies and misinformation.” As an example, they cited a claim to a constituent by Rep. Mike Bishop (R.-Mich.) that individual premiums are “slated to increase” under Obamacare by 73 percent, and that individual premiums for new purchasers would increase 96 percent.
The factcheckers correctly called Bishop out for citing an old 2013 study predicting that individual market premiums would be much higher upon full implementation of the ACA, and implying that it was a report on current numbers. But they went on to say:
In fact, premium increases by and large have been moderate under Obamacare. The average monthly premium for a benchmark plan, upon which federal subsidies are calculated, increased about 2 percent from 2014 to 2015; 7 percent from 2015 to 2016; and 25 percent this year, for states that take part in the federal insurance marketplace.
“Moderate”? In fact, as with employer-sponsored premiums, Obamacare premiums in the exchange marketplaces are growing at multiples of inflation:
- The 2 percent rise from 2014 to 2015 corresponded with a -0.1 percent decline in inflation.
- The ACA plans’ average 7 percent increase at the beginning of 2016 was 5 times the inflation rate (1.4 percent) for the 12 months ending January 2016.
- Leaving aside inflation, it’s unclear how a 25 percent price hike is “moderate,” but for the record, that was 10 times the 2.5 percent inflation rate for the period.
The ACA has failed to control costs and accelerated a national crisis of underinsurance. To tell readers otherwise comes across less as “factchecking” than as a partisan defense of the ACA.
—M.C. & J.C-C







One thing that is never mentioned in these discussions is Medicare. The Politicians act as if it is Free to the Retired, Social Security Recipients, but that is not true. I have co-pays, deductibles, uncovered expenses and limits, like every other Insurance Customer [I have Kaiser Advantage, BTW]. I only have it because I live in a rural area and many of the Local Providers will not accept new Medicare Patients.
Then there is Inflation! My income has not grown measurably in 15 years – yet the amount I pay for Kaiser increases yearly – like it or not. If I were to chose the regular Medicare Plan, the Co-Pays and add-on costs would bankrupt me. Even with the ‘Advantage’ Plan I certainly do not get brand name drugs without paying the exorbitant costs. Nor do I have access to a choice of Family Practitioners, if they manage to attract anyone willing to stay more that 2 or 3 years.
Do I put off treatment? Absolutely. Kaiser sucks, and I’d rather take a beating then deal with all the detours and work-arounds to get good care in my own community. Instead, I have to fly to a Metropolitan location – the plane is paid for, but I can only make a RT flight. If I stay over, it is on me, even if I am exhausted or dealing with an injury.
I forgot to mention the Premiums, which exist for regular Medicare and are about tho and a half or three times as much as the basic Medicare Premium, which I also pay!.
One would expect an improved Medicare for All system to correct the abuse of the American health care consumer by eliminating the participation by the insurance industry. The insurance industry is nothing more than a costly middle man that contributes zero to actual health care. That is the first step. Get rid of the profiteers, control their prices or both.
Nervous about Single Payer/Medicare for All. It might be used as a back door way to restrict access to abortion and contraceptives. Private companies cover these vital services, and women will lose that coverage when private insurance companies are taken away. I don’t see any Democrats concerned about this issue, yet.
Bernie Sanders’ Medicare for All bill explicitly includes coverage for all family planning services, so your fear is unfounded.
I wonder why we don’t just make healthcare government owned? Or, would that kill more people., or would it end up like the VA who screwed over all those people in Arizona? Maybe ancient China holds the amswer: the doctor was paid when the patinet was cured. : )
What will desperate parents do when the medicos won’t help. Denzel Washington was in an interesting film bout this: “John Q.” However, since the hurricanes are decimating America, I suppose that the environement will be so deadly with all of the pollutants in the air, land and water———maybe health will become an imaginery word like :unicorn.” I should probably stop as I am depressing myself now.
Thanks for a well reasoned and even tempered report, unlike others that have appeared on FAIR’s site recently.
Not to nit-pick too much here because I believe that the Media coverage of the ACA has been terrible, but speaking as someone with employer sponsored health insurance, my rate increases before the ACA were running 15-18% per annum.
So, no, I’m not thrilled at the 5-8% they have been going up since the ACA went into effect, but come on. You can’t really say “The ACA did nothing but bad things”. Actually, it cut my rate increases in half.
Does that mean we aren’t still burning up in costs? No, but you have to decide which things to be pissed about and focus your energy on.
You (and others) really need to stop saying that we are at historic lows or lowest uninsured rates ever. This is NOT true or is unknowable. The most commonly cited Gallop poll began in 2008. The other most used stat from the National Center for Health Statistics changed their methodology in 1997 prior to when employers started wholesale shedding of insured workers. The claim you (and others) make is simply not fact.
An Urgent Message About The Obamacare Repeal And Replace Debacle And The Single Payer Mass Delusion
Here is the hard scientific proof why the Obamacare disaster should absolutely and positively be repealed and certainly not be replaced. What is now happening is sobering and definitive action must be taken before it is too late to stop a national disaster.
Please let me briefly introduce myself. I am 46 year veteran and privileged insider of the healthcare industry. I have been conducting a prolific, private R&D program that started about 30 years ago in the San Diego area.
Today, this effort is undisputedly the definitive authority on the evolution, and devolution, of the provider sector of the American healthcare industry.
In short, there is now overwhelming, irrefutable, hard scientific and mathematical evidence that the entire healthcare industry has reached the most critical period in its history, is extremely unstable, and highly vulnerable to sudden and violent collapse–the tipping point. Technically, it’s a bimodal annihilation catastrophe–the little bang that triggers the big bang. For a complete explanation of this universal phenomenon, please Google the term: bimodal annihilation catastrophe.
The entire industry is demonstrably highly fragile and vulnerable to small “perturbations.” About seven decades ago the famous Harvard economist, Joseph Schumpeter, called it creative destruction. This super-critical phenomenon is, undeniably, now at the nation’s doorstep.
Extensively demonstrated in the provided link below, are a few of the scientifically legitimate, historical valid, eminently authoritative arguments that demonstrate irrefutably that the Obamacare disaster should be repealed an absolutely, positively not replaced.
Plus, the hard evidence presented in the link provided proves beyond any shadow of a doubt, that implementation of any form of Single Payer schemes will trigger the sudden and violent collapse of the mainspring Physician Services Industry. It’s huge posting annual revenues of about $500 billion.
The avalanche-like collapse of this keystone industry will in-turn trigger a domino-effect, steam-rolling catastrophe and generate killer shockwaves throughout the provider industries such as the massive hospital industry and the clinical laboratory industry. Hundreds of hospitals will close.
Next, the killer shockwaves will pulverized the tens of thousand of companies in the entire healthcare supplier industry especially the ailing pharmaceutical industry that’s already in a nosedive.
The scientific evidence is incontrovertible; it’s the highest form of evidence. Plus, it’s a ticking time-bomb. And time, precious time, is rapidly running out. The American healthcare industry has been mismanaged for about 100 years; it’s astonishing but true and easily demonstrated.
.
Fortunately, for the prudent Americans, this looming catastrophe presents an unprecedented opportunity not only to gain the admirable recognition for exposing and stopping this monstrous, steam-rolling, cataclysmic disaster, but also to harvest a vaunted leadership position in the nation and beyond.
Please take the opportunity to review the evidence presented in this draft (my apologies in advance for the typos but the urgency of the predicament took precedence). Please call anytime for further clarification of this evidence.
Here is the link:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/9hwrc685927lvda/Overshoot%202.pdf?dl=0
Respectfully submitted,
Frank Toto
San Diego area
1-858-278-5050
Does too big to fail sound familiar, Frank? The one item in this article that jumped out at me was that hospitals are buying up private medical practices. That is abundantly clear in my town. Along with the efficiencies of size comes political power of being one of the largest employers in the region and the stifling of competition. Whatever is good for monopolized health care is good for the town’s economy, even if it means draining both the resources and health of low income residents in order to increase profits. Nine out of ten politicians agree: betting on for-profit medicine brings in campaign contributions. I am not too afraid of the little explosion (revamping our health care system) that sets off the big one (economic meltdown). Typical of arguments in favor of the status quo, this one ignores our ability to actually plan for such potential consequences. The purpose, after all, is to scare us into inaction. And, it’s not the health care system that needs revamping, it is the economic system that sucks up to investor/speculators.
How is single payer a mass delusion when most of the rest of the world is already successfully using it for half the price we pay, with better health outcomes and universal coverage???