US healthcare corporations reap profit from human misery

Spread the love

Original article by Natalia Marques republished from peoples dispatch under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA) license.

Slain health CEO Brian Thompson’s tenure was marked by skyrocketing prior authorization denials, leading to increased profits

Brian Thompson, slain CEO of UnitedHealthcare, was responsible for skyrocketing prior authorization denials (Photo: UnitedHealthcare)

The assassination of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson on December 4 has sparked a reaction that few may have suspected. The perpetrator has received an outpouring of popular support, and a profound debate on the brutality of the US for-profit healthcare system has been sparked, with many accusing healthcare corporations of reaping their profits directly from human misery.

Thompson was shot and killed while heading to an investors meeting in Midtown Manhattan on December 4. Police have arrested 26-year-old Luigi Mangione in connection with the crime, who quickly has become a working class hero in the eyes of many in the US public, especially after his alleged manifesto revealed that he was motivated by outrage towards healthcare corporations. “A reminder: the US has the #1 most expensive healthcare system in the world, yet we rank roughly #42 in life expectancy,” reads the alleged manifesto, which law enforcement claim to have found in his backpack. “It is not an issue of awareness at this point, but clearly power games at play. Evidently I am the first to face it with such brutal honesty.”

The reactions to Thompson’s death show that this outrage is echoed by the US public. UnitedHealthcare had to remove a Facebook post mourning Thompson after it received over 42,000 laughing reactions. Comments on social media regarding Thompson’s death made insurance-related quips including “unfortunately my condolences are out-of-network,” and “thoughts and deductibles to the family.”

Health beyond the for-profit system

People in the US are increasingly demanding alternatives to the present for-profit healthcare system. A Gallup poll taken shortly before Thompson’s assassination shows that the highest percentage of US adults in over a decade believe it is the government’s responsibility to ensure that people have healthcare coverage—62%, as opposed to 36% who insist it is not the government’s responsibility. Gallup data also indicates that most in the US have a negative view of the healthcare industry. 

Data for Progress polling indicates that people across the political spectrum support policies that make healthcare more equitable, with 75% of both Democrat, Republican, and independent voters opposing allowing insurers to deny coverage or charge more based on pre-existing conditions. Also across party lines, 70% of voters oppose stopping Medicare (US public insurance) from being able to negotiate lower costs for drug prices.

The unpopularity of the healthcare insurance industry becomes obvious when one examines how exactly insurance companies wield their power over the healthcare system to extract profits from working people. 

Cost cutting through denial of service

Shortly before Thompson’s killing, another insurance corporation, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, announced that it would not pay for the complete duration of anesthesia for surgical procedures. This move was denounced by the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA). “This is just the latest in a long line of appalling behavior by commercial health insurers looking to drive their profits up at the expense of patients and physicians providing essential care,” said Dr. Donald E. Arnold of ASA. “It’s a cynical money grab by Anthem, designed to take advantage of the commitment anesthesiologists make thousands of times each day to provide their patients with expert, complete and safe anesthesia care. This egregious policy breaks the trust between Anthem and its policyholders who expect their health insurer to pay physicians for the entirety of the care they need.” 

Following Thompson’s assassination and the subsequent outrage over the state of the healthcare industry, Anthem walked back this decision, with a company spokesperson stating that “there has been significant widespread misinformation about an update to our anesthesia policy. As a result, we have decided to not proceed with this policy change.” 

Regardless of Anthem’s flip-flopping, the corporation was willing to cut anesthesia for patients mid-surgery simply to cut costs. This is only one example of how health insurance companies are able to reap their enormous profits from policies which maximize human misery. 

Under the current privatized healthcare system in the US, working people and their employers pay hundreds of billions of dollars to private insurance companies in the hopes of receiving adequate coverage when most needed. Insurance companies, which under a capitalist system exist only to make a profit, not to actually provide coverage, do whatever they can do to deny coverage to patients in their hour of need—enabling them to pocket the billions they receive from people in the US and increase their revenue. 

Companies such as UHC, which is the nation’s largest health insurer with over 15% of the market share, cut costs by denying coverage to patients, including through a process called prior authorization, a process which insurance companies utilize to determine if they will cover a prescribed procedure, service, or medication. Prior to  Thompson’s tenure as UHC CEO, which began in 2021, the rate of prior authorization denials was 8%. By 2022, the rate of denial had skyrocketed to 22.7%. According to personal finance platform ValuePenguin, UHC denies Medicare and non-Medicare insurance claims at a rate that is double the rate of the national average. 

UHC’s prior authorization denials increased so sharply that they prompted an investigation by media outlet ProPublica as well as the US Senate. ProPublica found that UHC had culled therapy expenses by using an algorithm to restrict mental healthcare coverage. A report by the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations found that UHC used artificial intelligence to deny claims at an increasing rate. In November of 2023, UHC was hit by a class action lawsuit filed by the families of two former UHC beneficiaries, which alleged that the company had illegally denied “elderly patients care owed to them under Medicare Advantage Plans” by utilizing an AI algorithm with a 90% error rate.

“The elderly are prematurely kicked out of care facilities nationwide or forced to deplete family savings to continue receiving necessary medical care, all because [UHC’s] AI model ‘disagrees’ with their real live doctors’ determinations,” said the complaint.

These sharp increases in claim denials served a particular purpose: under Thompson’s leadership, UHC profits increased from USD 12 billion in 2021 to USD 16 billion in 2023. UnitedHealthcare Group, of which UHC is a part, is now the largest health insurance company is the US, with an annual revenue of over USD 189 billion.

Hey @UHC. Completed a hysterectomy yesterday afternoon, discharged her home in the evening (saving @UHC and everyone some money). Discharge medications included 12 Vicodin. (retail cost $30). Vicodin DENIED pending prior authorization. Patient in pain all night. Way to go.

— DrByronHapner (@DrByronHapner) December 10, 2024

As health insurance companies extract their enormous profits from those left without coverage, some are seeking to propose and organize alternatives to the for-profit healthcare system. Progressive demands for Medicare for All, a single-payer healthcare program in which the costs of essential healthcare for all US residents are covered under a public health plan that would replace almost all other existing public and private health plans, have reignited following Thompson’s assassination. Organizations such as Physicians for a National Health Program have advocated for such a policy. As PNHP outlines, under a single-payer program, “over $500 billion in administrative savings would be realized by replacing today’s inefficient, profit-oriented, multiple insurance payers with a single streamlined, nonprofit, public payer.”

“There is no justification for violence,” said California Representative Ro Khanna, who supports the policy. “But the outpouring afterwards has not surprised me.

Original article by Natalia Marques republished from peoples dispatch under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA) license.

Continue ReadingUS healthcare corporations reap profit from human misery

For the First Time, Scientists Observe One of Earth’s Largest Glacial Floods in Greenland

Spread the love

https://www.ecowatch.com/glacial-flooding-greenland-2024.html

Catalina Lake in East Greenland, where scientists recently observed glacial flooding in real time, photographed in 2013. NASA

Scientists have, for the first time, observed the unleashing of an enormous glacial lake flooding event in East Greenland. The rare outburst involved 3,000-plus billion liters of meltwater bursting forth in a matter of weeks.

Witnessed by researchers from the University of Copenhagen, the natural phenomenon provides insight into the powerful and potentially dangerous forces that can be released by meltwater, a press release from University of Copenhagen’s Niels Bohr Institute said.

“Imagine an enormous bathtub atop a mountain filled with water equivalent to three times Denmark’s annual water consumption, and then suddenly bursting. This is essentially what happened when the massive Catalina Lake in East Greenland released 3.4 cubic kilometers of meltwater — 3,000 billion liters — into the Scoresby Sound fjord,” the press release said.

The enormous volume of water released by the lake made it one of the three largest events of its kind ever to be documented.

Article continues at https://www.ecowatch.com/glacial-flooding-greenland-2024.html

Continue ReadingFor the First Time, Scientists Observe One of Earth’s Largest Glacial Floods in Greenland

Government unveils plans for a low-carbon electricity grid by 2030

Spread the love

https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/government-unveils-plans-for-a-low-carbon-electricity-grid-by-2030

A child rides a bike at Whitelee Windfarm in East Renfrewshire, July 2015

But Unite warns that Labour has ‘missed a golden opportunity to bring the national grid under public ownership’

THE government announced plans for a new era of “clean energy” today.

Labour has pledged to create a 95 per cent low-carbon electricity grid by the end of the decade.

Energy Secretary Ed Miliband described the transition as the “social justice fight of our time” and that it aimed to shield working people from the “ravages of global energy markets.”

New measures will deregulate to speed up planning decisions on critical infrastructure and give ministers, rather than local councils, the final say on approving large projects such as onshore wind farms.

Just Stop Oil, which has 16 members serving a combined 41 years of jail time over protests demanding an end to oil and gas, said: “Whatever the Labour Party does, the world is going to pass through 2°C of heating in the 2030s.

“To pretend that ‘clean electricity’ will protect us from the consequences of this is to lie to, and to betray the British people.

“The predicament we find ourselves in needs the Labour Party to change everything to defend our values and hard won rights.

“It requires us to mobilise the country as if going to war, and the starting point is planning to end oil and gas extraction and use by 2030, while adapting our villages, towns and cities to the weather extremes coming our way.”

See original article at https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/government-unveils-plans-for-a-low-carbon-electricity-grid-by-2030

Carbon Brief: Analysis: How the UK plans to reach clean power by 2030

Continue ReadingGovernment unveils plans for a low-carbon electricity grid by 2030

Jamaica tables bill to remove King Charles as head of state

Spread the love

https://www.thenational.scot/news/24795208.jamaica-tables-bill-remove-king-charles-head-state

King Charles III during an audience with Alexander Williams, the High Commissioner of Jamaica (Image: Yui Mok)

JAMAICA has introduced a bill to remove King Charles at its head of state and become a republic.

Charles is currently King of Jamaica, but the country’s prime minister Andrew Holness is pushing ahead with plans to make the realm a republic.

The Jamaican government announced in February that it had begun the first step in the legislative process of constitutional reform, with the preparation of the Constitution of Jamaica (Amendment of Section 61) Bill.

It said establishing Jamaica as a republic would be a priority over the coming year.

Now, the bill has been tabled and will be reviewed by joint committees, a parliament vote and a national referendum.

Continue ReadingJamaica tables bill to remove King Charles as head of state

UK retailers accused of recruiting young shop workers without rights over Christmas

Spread the love

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/dec/15/uk-stores-gig-economy-workers-retailers-christmas-unions

Uniqlo is among the retailers using gig economy apps such as Temper and YoungOnes to draft in shop assistants for the busy Christmas run-up. Photograph: Iain Masterton/Alamy

Lush and Gymshark among chains using apps promoted by TikTok influencers to take on gig economy assistants lacking basic protections, say unions

Unions have accused high-street retailers of drafting in young gig economy store assistants without basic employment rights in the run-up to Christmas.

The Observer has found large brands, including Urban Outfitters, Lush, Gymshark and Uniqlo, are recruiting “freelance” shop assistants through gig apps to staff their stores during the busy festive period.

The apps are being promoted by youth influencers with hundreds of thousands of TikTok followers.

“This is a worrying new development,” said Tim Sharp, senior policy officer for employment rights at the Trades Union Congress (TUC).

“It would seem absurd to most people that someone can do a job like working in a shop and not be entitled to basic legal protections. There is a big question mark over the employment status of these supposed freelancers.”

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/dec/15/uk-stores-gig-economy-workers-retailers-christmas-unions

Continue ReadingUK retailers accused of recruiting young shop workers without rights over Christmas