If rising costs, declining quality, administrative hassles, and
coverage gaps aren't reasons enough to reform American health care,
here's one more: conscience concerns.
Consider this: 46 percent of American workers participate in
employer-sponsored health-care plans that subsidize abortion. That
means many Americans praying on Sunday for the protection of unborn
children are paying on Monday with their insurance dollars for
others to abort them.
Freedom of conscience for physicians and pharmacists is a familiar
concept. Now it's time for patients to have a conscience option
when it comes to choosing health coverage. Freedom of conscience --
for both provider and patient -- should be the rule in health care,
one of the most sensitive areas of human life.
Reforming health care is about more than reducing costs and
expanding individual coverage, important as those are. Health care
reform should empower Americans to choose plans that are
affordable, high-quality and consistent with their ethical and
religious convictions.
Part of the problem is that Americans don't have direct control
over issues of either cost or conscience. Third-party
decision-makers do. They are at the fulcrum of the current
health-care system, setting the rules for coverage. The kinds of
benefits financed through health insurance are determined largely
by employers, insurance executives, managed-care network, officials
or government officials. Patients' personal choice is very
limited.
As biomedical advances push us into increasingly murky ethical
depths about everything from prenatal to end-of-life decisions, the
moral map should not be left to the third-party decision-makers.
Even worse is the prospect of handing the moral compass to
anonymous bureaucrats in a single-payer government system. There's
more to be feared about a national health system than poor quality
care and rationing.
With moral dilemmas looming large in areas like genetic
engineering, human embryo research and end-of-life treatment,
patient empowerment is more vital than ever. Public consensus in
law should be achieved where possible -- on issues such as human
cloning and the creation of animal-human hybrids. But the variety
of ethical issues involved in personal care will be difficult to
resolve in legislatures, and undesirable to leave to court
decisions. Instead, they should be put to the test of individual
conscience. If individuals and families had control of their health
care dollars, they could "vote with their feet" when choosing which
health plans and medical procedures to subsidize with their
insurance premiums.
Once empowered with the freedom to choose their health coverage,
families need safe havens to which they can turn. They need new
arrangements that aren't feasible under the present system. For
example, plenty of Americans have moral qualms about paying for
abortion, and plenty of American doctors have moral qualms about
providing them (and therefore decline to do so). But the current
system doesn't allow providers and patients to get together and
organize health insurance plans around shared values.
In an alternative model, membership associations such as
professional and faith-based organizations could sponsor or endorse
a health-insurance plan in which participating doctors and patients
agree on clearly established ethical parameters for care. Trusted
intermediaries like the Knights of Columbus, Southern Baptists, or
the Salvation Army, for example, could help individuals and
families navigate the moral and fiscal complexities of health care
coverage by negotiating with an insurance company to offer a group
plan that meets their standards.
Such a faith-based health plan is available to one of the few
groups in America with a wide choice of plans: federal employees.
The Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP), the largest
group insurance system in America, is a national consumer-driven
market for federal employees, retirees, and their families. They
can choose a plan from a large pool of health care options (278
plans participated in FEHBP in 2006). One of these federal employee
plans is the Order of Saint Francis Healthcare System, run by an
order of Catholic nuns in Illinois, who are very clear about their
governing values for the care of human life, from conception to
natural death. Regrettably, only federal employees in the region
can select this option, but this is precisely the kind of plan that
could proliferate if there were true choice in health-insurance
design.
Unlike these federal employees, most Americans don't have access
to health-insurance plans that are governed by religious values.
This lack is emblematic of a general limitation on personal
freedom, a central defect of the American health-care system.
To expand families' freedom to choose cost-effective
health-insurance plans consistent with their ethical and religious
convictions, policymakers should change tax and insurance rules in
these ways:
- Allow Americans to choose their own health
plans. In addition to conventional employer-sponsored
health plans, Americans should be allowed to choose plans sponsored
or endorsed by professional associations or faith-based and
religious groups.
- Eliminate discrimination in the tax
code. To make this choice a reality, federal and state
tax codes should treat all types of plans equally and stop giving
preference to employer-based health plans.
- Reduce mandates. State mandates drive
up costs and raise conscience concerns. Thirteen states, for
example, require health plans to cover in vitro fertilization
(IVF). Thirty states mandate coverage of contraception. State-level
reform offers the occasion to expose mandates to popular
debate.
- Open up health-insurance markets. State mandates define and limit the kind of health insurance available to individuals and families -- and often prevent them from getting the specific kind of coverage they want at an affordable price. To address this, some states are considering reforms that would create a statewide health insurance "exchange," or marketplace for health-care plans. Consumers would have multiple choices in such a marketplace, and employers could contribute a specified amount (a "defined contribution") to the health plans designated by their employees. Plans -- including those organized around shared moral values -- would compete with each other directly for consumers' dollars.
Individuals and families can no longer afford -- financially or
ethically -- to be passive recipients of third-party decisions.
They should be free to control their health-care dollars. Americans
need the freedom to choose health care they can trust.
Jennifer A.
Marshall is director of domestic-policy studies at the Heritage
Foundation and author of Now and Not Yet: Making Sense of Single
Life in the Twenty-First Century(Multnomah, June
2007).
First Appeared in NRO