Tooth decay begins,
typically, when debris becomes trapped
between the teeth and along the ridges and
in the grooves of the molars. The food rots.
It becomes colonized with bacteria. The
bacteria feeds off sugars in the mouth and
forms an acid that begins to eat away at the
enamel of the teeth. Slowly, the bacteria
works its way through to the dentin, the
inner structure, and from there the cavity
begins to blossom three-dimensionally,
spreading inward and sideways. When the
decay reaches the pulp tissue, the blood
vessels, and the nerves that serve the
tooth, the pain starts—an insistent
throbbing. The tooth turns brown. It begins
to lose its hard structure, to the point
where a dentist can reach into a cavity with
a hand instrument and scoop out the decay.
At the base of the tooth, the bacteria
mineralizes into tartar, which begins to
irritate the gums. They become puffy and
bright red and start to recede, leaving more
and more of the tooth’s root exposed. When
the infection works its way down to the
bone, the structure holding the tooth in
begins to collapse altogether.
Several years ago, two Harvard
researchers, Susan Starr Sered and Rushika
Fernandopulle, set out to interview people
without health-care coverage for a book they
were writing, “Uninsured in America.” They
talked to as many kinds of people as they
could find, collecting stories of untreated
depression and struggling single mothers and
chronically injured laborers—and the most
common complaint they heard was about teeth.
Gina, a hairdresser in Idaho, whose husband
worked as a freight manager at a chain
store, had “a peculiar mannerism of keeping
her mouth closed even when speaking.” It
turned out that she hadn’t been able to
afford dental care for three years, and one
of her front teeth was rotting. Daniel, a
construction worker, pulled out his bad
teeth with pliers. Then, there was Loretta,
who worked nights at a university research
center in Mississippi, and was missing most
of her teeth. “They’ll break off after a
while, and then you just grab a hold of
them, and they work their way out,” she
explained to Sered and Fernandopulle. “It
hurts so bad, because the tooth aches. Then
it’s a relief just to get it out of there.
The hole closes up itself anyway. So it’s so
much better.”
People without health insurance have bad
teeth because, if you’re paying for
everything out of your own pocket, going to
the dentist for a checkup seems like a
luxury. It isn’t, of course. The loss of
teeth makes eating fresh fruits and
vegetables difficult, and a diet heavy in
soft, processed foods exacerbates more
serious health problems, like diabetes. The
pain of tooth decay leads many people to use
alcohol as a salve. And those struggling to
get ahead in the job market quickly find
that the unsightliness of bad teeth, and the
self-consciousness that results, can become
a major barrier. If your teeth are bad,
you’re not going to get a job as a
receptionist, say, or a cashier. You’re
going to be put in the back somewhere, far
from the public eye. What Loretta, Gina, and
Daniel understand, the two authors tell us,
is that bad teeth have come to be seen as a
marker of “poor parenting, low educational
achievement and slow or faulty intellectual
development.” They are an outward marker of
caste. “Almost every time we asked
interviewees what their first priority would
be if the president established universal
health coverage tomorrow,” Sered and
Fernandopulle write, “the immediate answer
was ‘my teeth.’ ”
The U. S. health-care system, according
to “Uninsured in America,” has created a
group of people who increasingly look
different from others and suffer in ways
that others do not. The leading cause of
personal bankruptcy in the United States is
unpaid medical bills. Half of the uninsured
owe money to hospitals, and a third are
being pursued by collection agencies.
Children without health insurance are less
likely to receive medical attention for
serious injuries, for recurrent ear
infections, or for asthma. Lung-cancer
patients without insurance are less likely
to receive surgery, chemotherapy, or
radiation treatment. Heart-attack victims
without health insurance are less likely to
receive angioplasty. People with pneumonia
who don’t have health insurance are less
likely to receive X rays or consultations.
The death rate in any given year for someone
without health insurance is twenty-five per
cent higher than for someone with insur-ance.
Because the uninsured are sicker than the
rest of us, they can’t get better jobs, and
because they can’t get better jobs they
can’t afford health insurance, and because
they can’t afford health insurance they get
even sicker. John, the manager of a bar in
Idaho, tells Sered and Fernandopulle that as
a result of various workplace injuries over
the years he takes eight ibuprofen, waits
two hours, then takes eight more—and tries
to cadge as much prescription pain
medication as he can from friends. “There
are times when I should’ve gone to the
doctor, but I couldn’t afford to go because
I don’t have insurance,” he says. “Like when
my back messed up, I should’ve gone. If I
had insurance, I would’ve went, because I
know I could get treatment, but when you
can’t afford it you don’t go. Because the
harder the hole you get into in terms of
bills, then you’ll never get out. So you
just say, ‘I can deal with the pain.’ ”
One of the great mysteries of political life in the
United States is why Americans are so
devoted to their health-care system. Six
times in the past century—during the First
World War, during the Depression, during the
Truman and Johnson Administrations, in the
Senate in the nineteen-seventies, and during
the Clinton years—efforts have been made to
introduce some kind of universal health
insurance, and each time the efforts have
been rejected. Instead, the United States
has opted for a makeshift system of
increasing complexity and dysfunction.
Americans spend $5,267 per capita on health
care every year, almost two and half times
the industrialized world’s median of $2,193;
the extra spending comes to hundreds of
billions of dollars a year. What does that
extra spending buy us? Americans have fewer
doctors per capita than most Western
countries. We go to the doctor less than
people in other Western countries. We get
admitted to the hospital less frequently
than people in other Western countries. We
are less satisfied with our health care than
our counterparts in other countries.
American life expectancy is lower than the
Western average. Childhood-immunization
rates in the United States are lower than
average. Infant-mortality rates are in the
nineteenth percentile of industrialized
nations. Doctors here perform more high-end
medical procedures, such as coronary
angioplasties, than in other countries, but
most of the wealthier Western countries have
more CT scanners than the United States
does, and Switzerland, Japan, Austria, and
Finland all have more MRI machines per
capita. Nor is our system more efficient.
The United States spends more than a
thousand dollars per capita per year—or
close to four hundred billion dollars—on
health-care-related paperwork and
administration, whereas Canada, for example,
spends only about three hundred dollars per
capita. And, of course, every other country
in the industrialized world insures all its
citizens; despite those extra hundreds of
billions of dollars we spend each year, we
leave forty-five million people without any
insurance. A country that displays an almost
ruthless commitment to efficiency and
performance in every aspect of its economy—a
country that switched to Japanese cars the
moment they were more reliable, and to
Chinese T-shirts the moment they were five
cents cheaper—has loyally stuck with a
health-care system that leaves its citizenry
pulling out their teeth with pliers.
America’s health-care mess is, in part,
simply an accident of history. The fact that
there have been six attempts at universal
health coverage in the last century suggests
that there has long been support for the
idea. But politics has always got in the
way. In both Europe and the United States,
for example, the push for health insurance
was led, in large part, by organized labor.
But in Europe the unions worked through the
political system, fighting for coverage for
all citizens. From the start, health
insurance in Europe was public and
universal, and that created powerful
political support for any attempt to expand
benefits. In the United States, by contrast,
the unions worked through the
collective-bargaining system and, as a
result, could win health benefits only for
their own members. Health insurance here has
always been private and selective, and every
attempt to expand benefits has resulted in a
paralyzing political battle over who would
be added to insurance rolls and who ought to
pay for those additions.
Policy is driven by more than politics,
however. It is equally driven by ideas, and
in the past few decades a particular idea
has taken hold among prominent American
economists which has also been a powerful
impediment to the expansion of health
insurance. The idea is known as “moral
hazard.” Health economists in other Western
nations do not share this obsession. Nor do
most Americans. But moral hazard has
profoundly shaped the way think tanks
formulate policy and the way experts argue
and the way health insurers structure their
plans and the way legislation and
regulations have been written. The
health-care mess isn’t merely the
unintentional result of political
dysfunction, in other words. It is also the
deliberate consequence of the way in which
American policymakers have come to think
about insurance.
“Moral hazard” is the term economists use
to describe the fact that insurance can
change the behavior of the person being
insured. If your office gives you and your
co-workers all the free Pepsi you want—if
your employer, in effect, offers universal
Pepsi insurance—you’ll drink more Pepsi than
you would have otherwise. If you have a
no-deductible fire-insurance policy, you may
be a little less diligent in clearing the
brush away from your house. The
savings-and-loan crisis of the
nineteen-eighties was created, in large
part, by the fact that the federal
government insured savings deposits of up to
a hundred thousand dollars, and so the newly
deregulated S. & L.s made far riskier
investments than they would have otherwise.
Insurance can have the paradoxical effect of
producing risky and wasteful behavior.
Economists spend a great deal of time
thinking about such moral hazard for good
reason. Insurance is an attempt to make
human life safer and more secure. But, if
those efforts can backfire and produce
riskier behavior, providing insurance
becomes a much more complicated and
problematic endeavor.
In 1968, the economist Mark Pauly argued
that moral hazard played an enormous role in
medicine, and, as John Nyman writes in his
book “The Theory of the Demand for Health
Insurance,” Pauly’s paper has become the
“single most influential article in the
health economics literature.” Nyman, an
economist at the University of Minnesota,
says that the fear of moral hazard lies
behind the thicket of co-payments and
deductibles and utilization reviews which
characterizes the American health-insurance
system. Fear of moral hazard, Nyman writes,
also explains “the general lack of
enthusiasm by U.S. health economists for the
expansion of health insurance coverage (for
example, national health insurance or
expanded Medicare benefits) in the U.S.”
What Nyman is saying is that when your
insurance company requires that you make a
twenty-dollar co-payment for a visit to the
doctor, or when your plan includes an annual
five-hundred-dollar or thousand-dollar
deductible, it’s not simply an attempt to
get you to pick up a larger share of your
health costs. It is an attempt to make your
use of the health-care system more
efficient. Making you responsible for a
share of the costs, the argument runs, will
reduce moral hazard: you’ll no longer grab
one of those free Pepsis when you aren’t
really thirsty. That’s also why Nyman says
that the notion of moral hazard is behind
the “lack of enthusiasm” for expansion of
health insurance. If you think of insurance
as producing wasteful consumption of medical
services, then the fact that there are
forty-five million Americans without health
insurance is no longer an immediate cause
for alarm. After all, it’s not as if the
uninsured never
go to the doctor. They spend, on average,
$934 a year on medical care. A moral-hazard
theorist would say that they go to the
doctor when they really have to. Those of us
with private insurance, by contrast, consume
$2,347 worth of health care a year. If a lot
of that extra $1,413 is waste, then maybe
the uninsured person is the truly efficient
consumer of health care.
The moral-hazard argument makes sense,
however, only if we consume health care in
the same way that we consume other consumer
goods, and to economists like Nyman this
assumption is plainly absurd. We go to the
doctor grudgingly, only because we’re sick.
“Moral hazard is overblown,” the Princeton
economist Uwe Reinhardt says. “You always
hear that the demand for health care is
unlimited. This is just not true. People who
are very well insured, who are very rich, do
you see them check into the hospital because
it’s free? Do people really like to go to
the doctor? Do they check into the hospital
instead of playing golf?”
For that matter, when you have to pay for
your own health care, does your consumption
really become more efficient? In the late
nineteen-seventies, the
rand
Corporation did an extensive study on the
question, randomly assigning families to
health plans with co-payment levels at zero
per cent, twenty-five per cent, fifty per
cent, or ninety-five per cent, up to six
thousand dollars. As you might expect, the
more that people were asked to chip in for
their health care the less care they used.
The problem was that they cut back equally
on both frivolous care and useful care. Poor
people in the high-deductible group with
hypertension, for instance, didn’t do nearly
as good a job of controlling their blood
pressure as those in other groups, resulting
in a ten-per-cent increase in the likelihood
of death. As a recent Commonwealth Fund
study concluded, cost sharing is “a blunt
instrument.” Of course it is: how should the
average consumer be expected to know
beforehand what care is frivolous and what
care is useful? I just went to the
dermatologist to get moles checked for skin
cancer. If I had had to pay a hundred per
cent, or even fifty per cent, of the cost of
the visit, I might not have gone. Would that
have been a wise decision? I have no idea.
But if one of those moles really is
cancerous, that simple, inexpensive visit
could save the health-care system tens of
thousands of dollars (not to mention saving
me a great deal of heartbreak). The focus on
moral hazard suggests that the changes we
make in our behavior when we have insurance
are nearly always wasteful. Yet, when it
comes to health care, many of the things we
do only because we have insurance—like
getting our moles checked, or getting our
teeth cleaned regularly, or getting a
mammogram or engaging in other routine
preventive care—are anything but wasteful
and inefficient. In fact, they are behaviors
that could end up saving the health-care
system a good deal of money.
Sered and Fernandopulle tell the story of
Steve, a factory worker from northern Idaho,
with a “grotesquelooking left hand—what
looks like a bone sticks out the side.” When
he was younger, he broke his hand. “The
doctor wanted to operate on it,” he recalls.
“And because I didn’t have insurance, well,
I was like ‘I ain’t gonna have it operated
on.’ The doctor said, ‘Well, I can wrap it
for you with an Ace bandage.’ I said, ‘Ahh,
let’s do that, then.’ ” Steve uses less
health care than he would if he had
insurance, but that’s not because he has
defeated the scourge of moral hazard. It’s
because instead of getting a broken bone
fixed he put a bandage on it.
At the center of the Bush Administration’s plan to
address the health-insurance mess are Health
Savings Accounts, and Health Savings
Accounts are exactly what you would come up
with if you were concerned, above all else,
with minimizing moral hazard. The logic
behind them was laid out in the 2004
Economic Report of the President. Americans,
the report argues, have too much health
insurance: typical plans cover things that
they shouldn’t, creating the problem of
overconsumption. Several paragraphs are then
devoted to explaining the theory of moral
hazard. The report turns to the subject of
the uninsured, concluding that they fall
into several groups. Some are foreigners who
may be covered by their countries of origin.
Some are people who could be covered by
Medicaid but aren’t or aren’t admitting that
they are. Finally, a large number “remain
uninsured as a matter of choice.” The report
continues, “Researchers believe that as many
as one-quarter of those without health
insurance had coverage available through an
employer but declined the coverage. . . .
Still others may remain uninsured because
they are young and healthy and do not see
the need for insurance.” In other words,
those with health insurance are overinsured
and their behavior is distorted by moral
hazard. Those without health insurance use
their own money to make decisions about
insurance based on an assessment of their
needs. The insured are wasteful. The
uninsured are prudent. So what’s the
solution? Make the insured a little bit more
like the uninsured.
Under the Health Savings Accounts system,
consumers are asked to pay for routine
health care with their own money—several
thousand dollars of which can be put into a
tax-free account. To handle their
catastrophic expenses, they then purchase a
basic health-insurance package with, say, a
thousand-dollar annual deductible. As
President Bush explained recently, “Health
Savings Accounts all aim at empowering
people to make decisions for themselves,
owning their own health-care plan, and at
the same time bringing some demand control
into the cost of health care.”
The country described in the President’s
report is a very different place from the
country described in “Uninsured in America.”
Sered and Fernandopulle look at the billions
we spend on medical care and wonder why
Americans have so little insurance. The
President’s report considers the same
situation and worries that we have too much.
Sered and Fernandopulle see the lack of
insurance as a problem of poverty; a third
of the uninsured, after all, have incomes
below the federal poverty line. In the
section on the uninsured in the President’s
report, the word “poverty” is never used. In
the Administration’s view, people are
offered insurance but “decline the coverage”
as “a matter of choice.” The uninsured in
Sered and Fernandopulle’s book decline
coverage, but only because they can’t afford
it. Gina, for instance, works for a beauty
salon that offers her a bare-bones
health-insurance plan with a thousand-dollar
deductible for two hundred dollars a month.
What’s her total income? Nine hundred
dollars a month. She could “choose” to
accept health insurance, but only if she
chose to stop buying food or paying the
rent.
The biggest difference between the two
accounts, though, has to do with how each
views the function of insurance. Gina,
Steve, and Loretta are ill, and need
insurance to cover the costs of getting
better. In their eyes, insurance is meant to
help equalize financial risk between the
healthy and the sick. In the insurance
business, this model of coverage is known as
“social insurance,” and historically it was
the way health coverage was conceived. If
you were sixty and had heart disease and
diabetes, you didn’t pay substantially more
for coverage than a perfectly healthy
twenty-five-year-old. Under social
insurance, the twenty-five-year-old agrees
to pay thousands of dollars in premiums even
though he didn’t go to the doctor at all in
the previous year, because he wants to make
sure that someone else will subsidize his
health care if he ever comes down with heart
disease or diabetes. Canada and Germany and
Japan and all the other industrialized
nations with universal health care follow
the social-insurance model. Medicare, too,
is based on the social-insurance model, and,
when Americans with Medicare report
themselves to be happier with virtually
every aspect of their insurance coverage
than people with private insurance (as they
do, repeatedly and overwhelmingly), they are
referring to the social aspect of their
insurance. They aren’t getting better care.
But they are getting something just as
valuable: the security of being insulated
against the financial shock of serious
illness.
There is another way to organize
insurance, however, and that is to make it
actuarial. Car insurance, for instance, is
actuarial. How much you pay is in large part
a function of your individual situation and
history: someone who drives a sports car and
has received twenty speeding tickets in the
past two years pays a much higher annual
premium than a soccer mom with a minivan. In
recent years, the private insurance industry
in the United States has been moving toward
the actuarial model, with profound
consequences. The triumph of the actuarial
model over the social-insurance model is the
reason that companies unlucky enough to
employ older, high-cost employees—like
United Airlines—have run into such financial
difficulty. It’s the reason that automakers
are increasingly moving their operations to
Canada. It’s the reason that small
businesses that have one or two employees
with serious illnesses suddenly face
unmanageably high health-insurance premiums,
and it’s the reason that, in many states,
people suffering from a potentially
high-cost medical condition can’t get anyone
to insure them at all.
Health Savings Accounts represent the
final, irrevocable step in the actuarial
direction. If you are preoccupied with moral
hazard, then you want people to pay for care
with their own money, and, when you do that,
the sick inevitably end up paying more than
the healthy. And when you make people choose
an insurance plan that fits their individual
needs, those with significant medical
problems will choose expensive health plans
that cover lots of things, while those with
few health problems will choose cheaper,
bare-bones plans. The more expensive the
comprehensive plans become, and the less
expensive the bare-bones plans become, the
more the very sick will cluster together at
one end of the insurance spectrum, and the
more the well will cluster together at the
low-cost end. The days when the healthy
twenty-five-year-old subsidizes the
sixty-year-old with heart disease or
diabetes are coming to an end. “The main
effect of putting more of it on the consumer
is to reduce the social redistributive
element of insurance,” the Stanford
economist Victor Fuchs says. Health Savings
Accounts are not a variant of universal
health care. In their governing assumptions,
they are the antithesis of universal health
care.
The issue about what to do with the
health-care system is sometimes presented as
a technical argument about the merits of one
kind of coverage over another or as an
ideological argument about socialized versus
private medicine. It is, instead, about a
few very simple questions. Do you think that
this kind of redistribution of risk is a
good idea? Do you think that people whose
genes predispose them to depression or
cancer, or whose poverty complicates asthma
or diabetes, or who get hit by a drunk
driver, or who have to keep their mouths
closed because their teeth are rotting ought
to bear a greater share of the costs of
their health care than those of us who are
lucky enough to escape such misfortunes? In
the rest of the industrialized world, it is
assumed that the more equally and widely the
burdens of illness are shared, the better
off the population as a whole is likely to
be. The reason the United States has
forty-five million people without coverage
is that its health-care policy is in the
hands of people who disagree, and who regard
health insurance not as the solution but as
the problem.
