C-SPAN/NEWSMAKERS
Host: Susan Swain
Guest: Karen Ignagni, President and CEO of America’s Health
Insurance Plans
Reporters: Jennifer Haberkorn, Ezra Klein
SUSAN
SWAIN, HOST CSPAN NEWSMAKERS: Karen
Ignagni is our guest on Newsmakers this week, President and CEO of America’s
Health Insurance Plans, a trade organization here in Washington which she has
headed since it was founded in 2003.
Ms. Ignagni has spent her entire career in health policy. Thank you for joining us…
KAREN
IGNAGNI, PRESIDENT AND CEO, AMERICA’S HEALTH INSURANCE PLANS: Thank you very much.
SWAIN: …this week.
Let me introduce our two reporters.
Jennifer Haberkorn is a Congressional Reporter for The Washington Times
and part of the reporting team following healthcare this year. Ezra Klein, Domestic Policy Reporter and
political and policy blogger for The Washington Post and
WashingtonPost.com. Thanks to both of
you.
Let’s
start with you, Jennifer, please.
JENNIFER
HABERKORN, CONGRESSIONAL REPORTER, THE WASHINGTON TIMES: Now, you’ve been quoted as saying August is
going to be a make-or-break month for healthcare. The president has said the same thing. So far in lot of these town halls we’ve seen a lot of anger, a
lot of hostility, a lot of questions on what exactly is in the bill.
If
it continues at this pace through the entire month, what impact do you think
that’s going to have when Congress returns in September?
IGNAGNI: I think this is a very important question
you’re asking. I think if it continues
down this path, August will be a lost opportunity to develop the consensus that
needs to be developed on the part of the American people. And I think the important and crucial thing
for the president and for leaders on Capitol Hill – on both sides – is to break
down the components of healthcare reform and talk about where there is
consensus because frankly people aren’t getting a sense that there is consensus
and there is on important elements, which I know we’ll talk about.
Unfortunately
all of the stories are process stories about who’s disagreeing with whom as
opposed to where do people agree. And
in my view – and I’m hoping we’re going to be talking about this – we’re
agreeing throughout the country on about 80 percent of what’s necessary.
And
looking back over history, we’ve really never come this far. This is certainly not the case for 1993,
’94. It is the case today, and it would
be a terrible lost opportunity. So I
think rather than villainizing (ph), rather than conflict and focusing on
conflict, a real strong commitment needs to be made to educate and to help
build that consensus so that when members come back, they get a sense of yes,
we can, basically.
HABERKORN: At the same time, insurance companies have
been vilified through this process and have been accused of stirring up some of
this hostility in the town halls this year as well as in ’93, ’94. Is that the case?
IGNAGNI: It is not the case. In fact, we put out a statement – a very
clear statement – last week. I sent a
letter to the four leaders on Capitol Hill at the top of this week. We want people to know that our members are,
in fact, men and women who work in our industry, who get up in the morning and
do disease management and care coordination and help people navigate through a
complicated delivery system, are angry about what’s been said about them,
number one. Number two, we have urged
them to go to town meetings, tell their story about what they are doing every
day and participate in the dialogue.
We
are not responsible for unfortunate tactics that are going on. And we’ve made that very clear. There have been a number of assertions out
there with no evidence, and we want to make sure that people hear from us directly
about what we’re doing and what we are not doing.
We
feel strongly about the issues. But we
also feel strongly that there is a responsibility for comporting oneself in a
particular way which is respectful, providing information, and again, helping
to shed light on the fact that our industry strongly supports the elements that
the president is talking about today, this weekend, and this week, about
insurance market reform. We’ve offered
those proposals. We believe in those
proposals. We stand behind those
proposals.
SWAIN: Ezra Klein.
EZRA
KLEIN, DOMESTIC POLICY REPORTER, THE WASHINGTON POST: Let’s talk about some of those insurance market reforms…
IGNAGNI: Sure.
KLEIN: …because in the past month, the White House
has refocused healthcare reforms and the messaging on your industry and begin
calling it health insurance reform as opposed to healthcare reform. And they’ve really begun to emphasize very
strongly essentially policies that would curb the excesses of your industry
decision, pre-existing condition discrimination, you know moving towards
community rating.
But
what’s interesting is that you have agreed to most of these regulations. And…
IGNAGNI: All of these regulations.
KLEIN: …all of them, right, aside with the one
notable argument being over the public option, but besides that.
So
let me ask you, why did this have to happen in a political context? Why couldn’t this have been done voluntarily
within the industry and past due (ph) as if it was recognized as problematic?
IGNAGNI: This is a very important question you’re
asking. And I think as you know, a
number of states have actually moved forward with market reforms over a period
of about 10 to 12 years. And actually
we’ve done a very thorough analysis of what happened.
Massachusetts
is a great case in point. Prior to the
passage of the legislation everyone’s familiar with in Massachusetts, they
tried insurance market reforms without getting everyone in, without having
everyone participate. Essentially the
market blew up. People who were in the
market, individuals who were getting insurance, ended up with very high rate
shock because the folks who had the lowest risk decided not to participate.
So
a number of states – you can talk about Kentucky and you can talk about
Washington State and a number of the other New England states – we’ve learned –
and Massachusetts learned from its own experiences which is why they were so
focused on getting everyone in. When we
saw what happened in Massachusetts – this is why it’s such an important
question you’re asking – we realized that we could bring reform to the
political system, springing off the platform that Massachusetts really shed a
light on what was possible, that the people in that state recognized that it
was unfair to subsidize people who refused to participate.
Once
that principle of getting everybody in is established, it changes everything
fundamentally. And indeed we challenged
ourselves. Last year we went out on a
listening tour, about a year ago this year, all across the country. We presented our proposals and we heard very
clearly that people wanted us to do more.
They wanted us to talk about guarantee issue, getting everybody in and
making sure they stayed in. They wanted
us to talk about portability, and they wanted us to make not a voluntary
contribution or commitment to that, but they wanted us to be clear and
transparent that we would support legislation to do exactly that.
That
had a material impact in all of our processes and all of our discussions. And indeed at the end of this year – last
year, excuse me – at the end of last year in December we came forward with a
very comprehensive program which in fact are the building blocks of what
members of Congress are talking about today in the area of insurance reform.
So
we’re proud of that. We can contribute
to it. We can help educate people on
the importance of this and how it works.
KLEIN: So to be – to be sure I understand it, your
argument is that universality is the game changer that allows for insurance
market reform.
IGNAGNI: Yes.
KLEIN: But once you have everybody in the system
then you can begin to restructure the market entirely around that. But until then, if that condition is not met
then these insurance market reforms won’t work because sick people or the
healthy people won’t come in and there will be risk selection in the system.
IGNAGNI: And this isn’t a hypothesis on our
part. This is a view that now has been
borne out with experience in a large number of states. We’ve done a report – it wasn’t done by
us. We had a third-party do it to make
sure that it was being objectively looked at.
And if you go around to the various states that had it going down this
role without having everyone in, that’s the experience that was found time and
time again. It wasn’t just one time,
time and time again.
The
other thing to talk about, particularly for viewers, is we are talking not of
course, as all of you know, not about the employer market. We’re talking about the individual market
where people are choosing for themselves to have coverage. There’s about 17 to 18 million people in
that market. That’s the conversation
that all these issues are about.
HABERKORN: Well, some of the insurance companies
weren’t the first to offer some of these proposals for reform. The former (ph) makers, specifically Senator
Schumer, has said that you know the insurance industry needs to pony up some
dollars. We’ve seen the pharmaceuticals
and hospitals saying we’re going to contribute X amount of money to healthcare
reform efforts.
Was
the insurance sector ever approached with any kind of deal from the White House
or the Senate Finance Committee or was that ever discussed?
IGNAGNI: I’m really glad you asked this
question. There are three points that I
want to make. One, we were – our
members, our board members and our community, were the first to step up with
saying that we were proposing a comprehensive overhaul of the way the insurance
market works. No industry has proposed
a comprehensive overhaul of how it works.
We’re
proud of that. We think it’s
important. It needs to be done. And we’re squarely behind it.
Two,
we have been – our industry was one of the first in working with consumer
advocates on the concept that as a country that the president said that
healthcare costs are crushing the American economy is true, that we strongly
believe that we need to have cost containment and bend the cost curve. We’re one of the first in line there.
In
the process we joined with a number of other groups in a coalition. And as part of our contribution to that
coalition, we pledged that we would support comprehensive administrative
simplification. From that time – that
was in June – we’ve been working with the various committees on Capitol Hill,
and as all the bills come out people will see that our commitment will be
fulfilled. We said it shouldn’t be a
voluntary effort. It should be
required. And it will be part of the
proposals that will be moving forward on Capitol Hill.
It’s
in the health committee draft. It’s in
the tri committee drafts on the House side, and there’ll be even more
administrative simplification savings in the finance committee proposal. We’ve been working hard to contribute to
that, hard to identify those savings.
I
think the only disappointing thing – and I think this is a disappointing thing
associated with the whole issue of cost containment – CBO can only score what
is on-budget costs. We know from David
Cutler at Harvard, we know from Deloitte that looked at a number of studies, we
know from McKenzie (ph), we know from a number of consulting firms, that what
we are putting on the table will amount to hundreds of billions of dollars over
10 years in system wide savings, really streamlining everything, the way
eligibility is determined, the way claims are queried from a physician
perspective and doing it in a synergistic way, real-time adjudication – which
won’t mean a lot to lay folks listening to this program but will mean a lot to
physicians and hospitals.
Those
are the kinds of things that we’ve committed to fair game changing. We’ve been standing behind them. You’ll see this as part of what emerges.
And
then finally, we’ve been looking at ways to try to help in the transition as we
move people into a system who have never been part of the system to make sure
that underlying costs don’t rise for people who are already there. And you’ll see aspects of these particular
pieces of legislation that will involve our taking responsibility to help
smooth that path.
So
we’re very proud of that. We’re going
to be talking a lot about that. And
it’s a variant, Ezra, of a question you just asked me as well. So all of those things we committed to in
the context of the cost containment coalition, and you’ll see that as part of
the pieces of legislation which are moving forward.
SWAIN: I have a question. Just to take on your point that the media is too consumed with
process, I still want to understand the process point. Given what you’ve just described as your
seat at the table, working with committees all this year, why is it that your
industry was specifically singled out by the Speaker of the House for
criticism?
IGNAGNI: Well, I think I have this old-fashioned rule
which has served me very well. I pass
it on to my family, my son. I think one
should never answer for someone else.
You should pose that question to the Speaker.
I
hypothesize that it is consultant driven, poll driven, it’s a page out of the
1990s approach to healthcare except we’re on a different page in our
industry. We’ve worked hard to hear,
learn what the American people had to say.
And
they sent a strong message to us and frankly other business leaders this
year. They said we expect business
leaders to stand up and identify solutions to problems. So we didn’t put our head under a blanket
and decide to dodge and wait and then comment and maybe be able to productively
comment or maybe oppose. We went on a
quest to contribute to healthcare reform.
We’ve taken that very seriously.
We’ve offered comprehensive proposals all the way through.
The
country can, in fact, learn and take advantage of the cost containment
proposals that we have implemented on the private sector side and incorporate
them in Medicare. So there’s still much
more to be done in the area of cost containment. We continue to talk to members of Congress.
So
why the decision was made? I think it
is a distraction that unfortunately masks the fact that there is consensus on
elements, key architecture elements, for healthcare, getting everybody in,
providing the kinds of insurance market reforms the president is talking about
that we support and that a number of republicans and democrats support, making
sure there are subsidies for working families and expanding Medicaid.
But
we’ve never come this far. So to have
the focus now be on that covering the vilification and the who shot John and
who’s saying what at town meetings, no individual around the country is getting
the message that there is strong support for reform. And that is a shame. And
we can’t afford that because when members of Congress come back from recess,
they’re not going to have very much time.
If they come back with a message that it’s just going to be too hard
because people don’t support basic elements, that’s a lost opportunity.
SWAIN: Half way through.
KLEIN: Let’s talk a bit about that 1994 playbook
and the differences from there to today.
So one of the reasons that Speaker Pelosi and others mistrust your
industry is that in 1994 you were behind the famed Harry and Louise ads and
that you were sort of a real opponent of reform.
And
this year, as you’ve said, you’ve been much more engaged in the process and
constructive and have been very clear that you think it is essential that
something does pass and we do move forward on this issue.
So
what are you actually putting behind that?
I mean, do you deny contributions to members who aren’t being
constructive or you run ads against them?
What is sort of the meat of that commitment to reform? And is there any reverse Harry and Louise
strategy that people can look forward to here?
IGNAGNI:
This is a very – I appreciate this
question. We made the commitment to
play a productive role from the beginning of this year. The president invited us to the healthcare
summit, and we stated very, very clearly that our members were committed to
contributing to the process. We have
held to that all the way through.
As
part of that there was a technical component which we fulfilled identifying a
way to achieve insurance market reforms and cost containment. And frankly, the country has just scratched
the surface on cost containment, and I hope we’ll talk about that. But we need to if we’re going to have a
sustainable system.
The
third issue is making sure that we stand behind what we say. So more than now two and a half weeks ago,
toward the third – I believe the end of the third week of July – we put up a
commercial that talks about the fact that illness has no geographic boundaries,
no boundaries with respect to economic status or race or whatever but it
affects everybody. And we are
committed. We know there are important
things that can be done by way of getting everyone into the system, keeping
them there, and making sure they have a safety net. And the end of the commercial indicates we’re for bipartisan reform.
So
taking all of the work that we’ve done, packaging it, and putting real dollars
around a commercial that communicates to the American people about where we are
and what we support. So it’s just
taking this outside the beltway of people inside the beltway are familiar with
what we’re doing. But that we thought
was very important for the August recess.
HABERKORN: One of the bipartisan proposals being put
forward in the Senate Finance Committee is cooperatives, establishing insurance
cooperatives, assigning (ph) the alternative to the public option which you
guys have spoken out against and republicans don’t seem to want to
support.
Is
that – are cooperatives something you guys can support? And how do you think that would play against
private insurers?
IGNAGNI: Well, there’s no way to know what – how
these entities will be defined. So let
me give you just a broad answer because until we see details obviously I can’t
give a specific answer.
But
they will be under the auspices in some way of the government, whether they’re
at the federal level or the state level.
Government per se has no ability to negotiate with providers, with
doctors or hospitals. The only arrow
and quiver is basically to use administered pricing.
So
we fear that although the terminology is more benign than a government-run
program, the affect is pretty much the same.
And that we’ve been talking about and we’ve been very consistent about
because we don’t think that government has the ability to negotiate.
And
so we’ve been very clear from the beginning, very out front, about our concerns
about a government-run option, and we’re going to be similarly clear about the
concerns about if you have – we can have benign language but if it gets down –
it devolves down to the same thing then we’re going to have similar concerns.
And
by the way, now it’s taken a bit but physicians around the country and a number
of hospitals around the country and certainly employers have expressed some of
the same concerns that we’ve been expressing about a government-run program. So this is a discussion that members of
Congress need to have. And we support
the fact that they need to have this discussion straight up.
KLEIN: Let’s talk a bit about the government-run
program.
IGNAGNI: Sure.
KLEIN: (inaudible) – obviously the insurance
industry has been you know steadfastly opposed to it. And the counter argument about it of course is that we are having
this discussion because the insurance industry has failed to reign in costs for
(ph) the last couple of years that there have been a number of practices that
you agree are you know should be – should be curbed.
And
at the same time, Medicare has you know has its own problems but does have a
higher satisfaction rate than private health insurance and has done at least an
arguably better job controlling cost growth over the past few decades. And so they say why should we trust you to
do this. If you can out compete the
government option that would be great and we’d much prefer to be with the
cheaper Aetna which has better service than any sort of lumbering slow
government option but if it goes the opposite way, that there’s not been a
record of success here that makes us believe that we should throw in all our
chips with you.
IGNAGNI: I’m sorry.
Did I step on your last line (ph)?
KLEIN: And so – no, not at all. And so I guess the argument there is why is
that not correct right? Why should
people believe that they don’t need this sort of potential emergency exit from
the system?
IGNAGNI: Well, I think the first thing is a number of
individuals that began several years ago to develop a government option had no
idea that our community would come forward for such aggressive regulation. And I think had they, they may have gone in
a different direction.
So
the question is if you have regulation of the type we have endorsed that’s
transparent where we are accountable, the question is why is it needed, number
one? Number two, in terms of – let’s
take it (inaudible). In terms of
satisfaction rate, if you compare traditional Medicare to Medicare Advantage,
which is people over 65 to people over 65, you will find very similar
satisfaction rates, in some cases higher satisfaction with Medicare Advantage
if you compare the specific co-population cohorts.
If
you look at the kinds of cost containment and quality improvements, none of the
elements that we have introduced with physicians in a collaborative way –
namely disease management, care coordination, paying for quality – has been
actually successfully introduced in Medicare.
GAO just did a study saying that imaging in Medicare is rising, excess
utilization in traditional Medicare, and they ought to adopt the techniques
that private sector plans have.
Unfortunately
a number of members of Congress have just written to Medicare saying over their
dead body. Don’t incorporate those
techniques.
So
government has a difficult time getting through to politics. During patient protection, we brought
healthcare costs – this is post the ’93, ’94 period – we brought healthcare
costs down to zero and in some cases below zero. The message we got from politicians was that we were too
aggressive in using utilization review and networks and the kinds of things
that people now seek to replicate in accountable healthcare organizations and
so on.
So
what we did was – well, first of all we sent a message that if we take off all
these tools, healthcare costs will soar.
We were right. So now we’ve
begun to reintroduce the tools. And if
you look at the rates of increases in healthcare premiums over the last six
years, you’ll see them coming down gradually.
We’ve taken pharmaceutical expenditures from 20, 15 to 20 percent year
over year down to 4 and 5. That’s a
very significant reduction. Some
employers are getting three because we’ve encouraged generics, we’ve done
tiering, not taking tools away, we’re not taking options away from individuals
but letting them weigh the consequences.
That’s one example.
Care
coordination, Ken Thorpe has written so compellingly about the importance of
doing care coordination in Medicare.
Well, I can show you now we’re just about to release a study which looks
at arc (ph) data, which is government data, comparing care coordination and
what we’re doing to get unnecessary utilization down post 30 – the
hospitalization within 30 days down, how we’re getting emergencies use down and
days per thousand down in Medicare Advantage versus fee for service for all of
it because we are coordinating care for people with chronic heart problems,
diabetes, et cetera, et cetera.
And
we work with physicians in a collaborative way. Government’s using none of these tools. So I think in terms of sustaining the healthcare system, we need
to have a balance of public and private.
Nobody
in our system would disagree with that.
We want to try to get the best of both.
We think the private sector tools could be embedded in Medicare, but
it’s going to be difficult to get through the politics to actually do
that. We think having a regulatory
system that’s clear and transparent will allow – we’re only talking about the
individual market here because the employer market is guarantee issue. So it’s the individual market we’re 17
million and maybe going up to 25, 30.
But they will make sure that they have peace of mind.
So
you put that all together, we think you can structure a system that’s much
better than the one we have today, that’s more transparent, that allows the
benefit of drawing from the different areas of expertise on both sides.
KLEIN: And if I could – if I could just follow up on
that quickly. Of course the Medicare
Advantage, as you know, is 14 to 19 percent more expensive than traditional
Medicare. But what it sounded to me –
and I agreed with actually much of what you said – was that you could out
compete the government, right? You said
the government won’t be able to adopt these wonderful techniques.
So
why is there sort of the argument that there shouldn’t be the competitive
option?
IGNAGNI: In terms of head-to-head competition?
KLEIN: In terms of head-to-head, so I can choose
Aetna or I can choose a public option because if I take what you said, it’s
something you could win (ph).
IGNAGNI: Well, the last point that you made was very
important. And that’s the last thing I
didn’t comment on which is from on a head-to-head basis why is Medicare
cheaper? Medicare’s cheaper, as you
know, because it’s paying 85 cents on the dollar. So if we’re going to continue to kid ourselves that under paying
hospitals means cost containment then that’s going to put us on the path to
ruin, which is why so many hospitals have basically stood up and said if you
pay us Medicare rates or Medicare plus five, we’re going to go bankrupt. And it’s right. We’re going to dismantle the entire system.
So
the question is how do we back up and do the right thing and put together the
policy that works and frankly can get past.
We think there are key elements here that can get past.
Medicare
Advantage, I’d love to come back and talk about that issue because nobody’s
really talking about this. You quote
the MedPAC data, but they never disaggregate where members of Congress have
decided to pay more in areas which have been under served. That – if you disaggregate those you see a
very, very different picture from Medicare Advantage. MedPAC has not disaggregated that.
That’s
irresponsible in my view because millions of seniors are on the precipice of
losing their coverage, their Medicare Advantage coverage, because of what’s
been proposed in these bills. And
nobody is talking about it. But they
would be very concerned about it.
SWAIN: Jennifer, the last question.
HABERKORN: One other thing I wanted to ask, you know
you guys have implemented a lot of changes in the last couple years. The insurance industry profits have gone up
dramatically. So why not just institute
yourself some of the regulations you’re suggesting like you know no longer
denying patients on pre-existing conditions and you know community rating,
things that you guys have proposed? Why
not just do those by yourselves?
IGNAGNI: And actually I’m very glad you gave me a
chance to talk about profits. I’ll be
happy to provide all the data we’ve – we’ve gotten them all. We’ve compiled them over the last 10
years. On average, health plan profits
now are about 3.5 percent, 3.5, the number – the gross number of profits in our
industry is $20 billion and we are spending 2.4 trillion on healthcare. It’s less than one cent of every dollar of
healthcare expenditures.
We
are the smallest sector in terms of profits compared to fractions of drug
companies, any kinds of academic medical centers, imaging, that sort of
thing. So we think it’s very important
to have disclosure and that disclosure requirements ought to apply across the
board so the American people can actually get the data so they know exactly
what’s going into the system and what’s not.
In
terms of mounting an effort to do what you said, if you don’t have everyone in
– as Massachusetts found the first time it tried this – then what happens is
there’s rate shock for people who stay in the system. And that wasn’t – didn’t prove to be a responsible course, which
is why on their second try they got everybody in.
SWAIN: We’re out of time. Thank you so much for being with us.
IGNAGNI: Thank you.
SWAIN: We are back with Jennifer Haberkorn and Ezra
Klein of The Washington Times and The Washington Post, respectively, and both
very deeply involved in covering the healthcare policy debate this summer.
Let
me ask after hearing from the head of the trade association for health
insurance companies in the country, Karen Ignagni’s criticism was that the
media has been too involved in process.
Would you concur with that?
KLEIN: I would absolutely concur with that. I think that it has become a real problem,
and it’s something you see in legislation over and over again that when it
actually sits for a while you just have all these stories about whether it’s
democrats and power (ph) republicans you know committees negotiating with each
other and back-biting and getting angrier. And people just begin to forget.
I
mean, you hear the pitch of these town halls out in the country, and you would
think we were talking about something so massive, I mean, death panels (ph) in
euthanasia when we’re really talking about a fairly, a fairly modest transfer
of resources from the top (ph) of the system and some from Medicare to give
people at the bottom. But for most of
us, the bill wouldn’t even have much of an impact.
So
I do think she’s right. I don’t think
people have a clear idea of what exactly is being discussed here.
SWAIN: How much responsibility do the politicians
and the political activists hold? I
mean, you’ve watched these town meetings.
How often do they start with a here’s where we agree?
HABERKORN: Not very often. Of course, it always goes straight to what we’re divided on. You know if you ask members of Congress,
most want to ban insurance companies being able to deny patients on
pre-existing conditions. And there’s a
lot of things like that they are on the same page.
But
at the end of the day it’s very easy to pass a bill that everybody can vote on
but that may not have the impact that of more controversial measure that they
say is going to have more of an impact that you know that’s going to be a
little more difficult to pass something that republicans and democrats can
agree would have some teeth.
SWAIN: You know now that I’ve criticized process,
let me ask you what you both think after watching a full month almost of town
hall meetings and the president on the road and advertisements being run all
over, your coverage on the Internet as well.
What’s it going to be like in this town in September when members come
back?
KLEIN: I think it is very hard to say. You know one thing about the town halls that
is complicated, right, is that they’re doing two things simultaneously. One is that they’re discrediting the town
halls as a sort of neutral forum for engagement. I don’t think anybody on the left or the right thinks that these
are representative of the people they know and the way the majority of the
country feels. I mean, they’re just
angry or they’re organized and that’s all fine but I think they’ve become a
little bit of a tool.
On
the other hand, though, I think that a lot of people in the public and the politicians
who know this are looking at this process and saying this is chaos. You know healthcare is delicate and it is
complex and I’m afraid about it. And
how can something secure and how can something really good come out of a
process that appears to be this dominated by the extremes?
And
so I think at the same time the town halls aren’t very trustworthy to people,
they are doing a pretty good job of delegitimizing what’s going on in this
town. And I think the degree to which
the politicians are able to say you know that wasn’t real and this is is going
to be – is very much yet to be seen.
SWAIN: So is it too soon to say whether or not
there will be a bill this year, legislation passed?
HABERKORN: I think it’s too soon to say. I mean, whether these town halls are
fabricated or totally legitimate, these people may be the ones who show up to
vote in a couple months when a lot of these members are up for
re-election. And I think the angry
person at the town hall is going to be in the back of the mind – in the back of
the member’s mind when they come back in September to talk about this and vote
about it.
So
if the town halls continue at the pace they are now, I’d say it’s not a good
sign for this bill. But we have a
month. That’s a really long time when
we’re talking about Congress.
SWAIN: Last question for you is would you give us
your perspective on the question we discussed with Ms. Ignagni and why the
speaker of the house has specifically chosen to criticize the insurance
industry?
KLEIN:
The insurance companies poll
terribly. I mean, they poll terribly
because they have a business model that is fundamentally not that productive. I mean – and Karen Ignagni made a good point
on this. She said that it’s very hard
to compete in a way that is productive when you don’t have everyone in the
system because then the healthy people can leave, the sick people come. So they risk select.
But
in doing that and taking people’s policies back and denying the people who had
pneumonia a year ago, they become really quite hated. And you know the political actors are you know simply acting on
that knowledge. I mean, the insurance
reform has (inaudible) because this is how you and I feel the system is bad to
us. It is where we see it. Our doctor’s help us. Our hospitals keep us from bleeding on the
carpet.
But
the insurers are the people who sit there on the phone and argue with us for
hours that you know we didn’t really need what the doctor said we did.
SWAIN: Well, thanks to both of you. We look forward to your continued reporting
on this.
KLEIN: Thank you.
HABERKORN: Thank you.
END