Op-Ed Columnist
Health Care Horror Stories
Published: April 11, 2008
Correction Appended
Not
long ago, a young Ohio woman named Trina Bachtel, who was having health
problems while pregnant, tried to get help at a local clinic.
Unfortunately, she had previously sought care at the same clinic
while uninsured and had a large unpaid balance. The clinic wouldn’t see
her again unless she paid $100 per visit — which she didn’t have.
Eventually, she sought care at a hospital 30 miles away. By then, however, it was too late. Both she and the baby died.
You may think that this was an extreme case, but stories like this are common in America.
Back
in 2006, The Wall Street Journal told another such story: that of a
young woman named Monique White, who failed to get regular care for
lupus because she lacked insurance. Then, one night, “as skin lesions
spread over her body and her stomach swelled, she couldn’t sleep.”
The
Journal’s report goes on: “Mama, please help me! Please take me to the
E.R.,” she howled, according to her mother, Gail Deal. “O.K., let’s
go,” Mrs. Deal recalls saying. “No, I can’t,” the daughter replied. “I
don’t have insurance.”
She was rushed to the hospital the next
day after suffering a seizure — and the hospital spared no expense on
her treatment. But it all came too late; she was dead a few months
later.
How can such things happen? “I mean, people have access to
health care in America,” President Bush once declared. “After all, you
just go to an emergency room.” Not quite.
First of all, visits to
the emergency room are no substitute for regular care, which can
identify and treat health problems before they get acute. And more than
40 percent of uninsured adults have no regular source of care.
Second, uninsured Americans often postpone medical care, even when they know they need it, because of expense.
Finally,
while it’s true that hospitals will treat anyone who arrives in an
emergency room with an acute problem — and it’s wonderful that they
will — it’s also true that hospitals bill patients for emergency-room
treatment. And fear of those bills often causes uninsured Americans to
hesitate before seeking medical help, even in emergencies, as the
Monique White story illustrates.
The end result is that the
uninsured receive a lot less care than the insured. And sometimes this
lack of care kills them. According to a recent estimate by the Urban
Institute, the lack of health insurance leads to 27,000 preventable
deaths in America each year.
But are they really preventable?
Yes. Stories like those of Trina Bachtel and Monique White are common
in America, but don’t happen in any other rich country — because every
other advanced nation has some form of universal health insurance. We
should, too.
All of which makes the media circus of a few days ago truly shameful.
Some
readers may already have recognized the story of Trina Bachtel. While
campaigning in Ohio, Hillary Clinton was told this story, and she took
to repeating it, without naming the victim, on the campaign trail. She
used it as an illustration of what’s wrong with American health care
and why we need universal coverage.
Then The Washington Post
identified Ms. Bachtel, the hospital where she died claimed that the
story was false — and the news media went to town, accusing Mrs.
Clinton of making stuff up. Instead of being a story about health care,
it became a story about the candidate’s supposed problems with the
truth.
In fact, Mrs. Clinton was accurately repeating the story
as it was told to her — and it turns out that while some of the details
were slightly off, the essentials of her story were correct. After all
the fuss, The Washington Post eventually conceded that “Bachtel’s
medical tragedy began with circumstances very close to the essence” of
Mrs. Clinton’s account.
And even more important, Mrs. Clinton was making a valid point about the state of health care in this country.
In
other words, this was a disgraceful episode. It was particularly sad to
see a number of Obama supporters (though not the Obama campaign itself)
join enthusiastically in the catcalls against Mrs. Clinton’s good-faith
effort to put a human face on the cruelty and injustice of the American
health care system.
Look, I know that many progressives have
their hearts set on seeing Barack Obama get the Democratic nomination.
But politics is supposed to be about more than cheering your team and
jeering the other side. It’s supposed to be about changing the country
for the better.
And if being a progressive means anything, it
means believing that we need universal health care, so that terrible
stories like those of Monique White, Trina Bachtel and the thousands of
other Americans who die each year from lack of insurance become a thing
of the past.
Correction: April 15, 2008
In his column on Friday, Paul Krugman discussed an anecdote told by Hillary Clinton about a woman in Ohio who supposedly lost her newborn child, and then her life, because of bills run up when she did not have health insurance.
Mr. Krugman relied on early news accounts of the incident, but later
accounts, including one from The Columbus Dispatch, show that those
bills did not lead to loss of care. Mr. Krugman has posted a detailed
explanation on his blog at krugman.blogs.nytimes.com.