Going Dutch

Life after the public option.

"You can’t really have reform without a public option," former governor Howard Dean, a prominent public-option advocate, said recently. "If you really want to fix the health care system, you’ve got to give the public the choice of having such an option." Promising as this sounds, it seems increasingly likely that the public option will be a liberal dream deferred. Republicans and conservative Democrats, panicked that the government plan will squash competition and the medical industry as we know it, are slowly killing the idea. Even President Obama, who has endorsed the idea unambiguously, has indicated a willingness to compromise on the issue.

Liberals, understandably, are in agony. But they can take at least some comfort in looking overseas--where one tiny country has managed to build a popular and successful universal health care program based entirely on private insurance. That country is the Netherlands, which several years ago overhauled its health care system and achieved most of the goals the liberal reform movement holds dear: near-universal coverage, affordable insurance, and quality health care.

Under the new system, the Dutch government has required that everybody gets insurance; in return, it makes sure insurance is available to everybody, regardless of pre-existing medical conditions or income. Although the government finances long-term care through a public program, it has turned over the job of providing basic medical coverage exclusively to private insurers, including some for-profit companies. Surveys show that the Dutch are happier with their health care than are Americans--or the people of any other developed country, for that matter. There are even signs, albeit faint ones, that the insurers are achieving what’s become the Holy Grail of health reform: using their leverage to improve the quality of care that doctors and hospitals provide--by improving the coordination of treatments for the chronically ill or steering patients to providers that get the best outcomes.

Still, there’s a catch. A big catch. Private insurance in the Netherlands works because it operates more or less like a public utility. The Dutch government regulates industry practices tightly--more tightly than the reforms now moving through Congress propose to do in the United States. The public insurance option was supposed to make up for that deficiency, at least in part, by setting a standard for service and affordability that the private industry would have to meet--and by offering a fail-safe option in case the private plans simply couldn’t keep up. If Congress ends up gutting the public plan, in part or in whole, then it needs to work even harder on making private insurance work. And it’s an open question whether that will happen.

 

What makes private insurance work in the Netherlands? It starts with tradition. The Netherlands first extended insurance coverage to everybody during Germany’s occupation of World War II. (It is, the Dutch like to say, the one good thing to come of that experience.) But, by the end of the century, frustration had set in. At the time, government provided insurance directly to people with incomes below a certain threshold; everybody above bought coverage on their own. The left found the system inequitable, since people with private coverage sometimes had better access to care; the right found it inefficient, since they thought public insurance interfered with the natural forces of competition. Eventually, they brokered a deal: Create a seamless system to cover everybody, regardless of income or medical condition, but do it all through private carriers.

The new system came on line in 2006 and, so far, the results are encouraging. Everybody picks an insurance carrier once a year, more or less the same way employees of large companies routinely do here in the United States, during annual open enrollment periods. By law, the coverage is generous, no matter which carrier somebody chooses. Plans cover all medically necessary services--as defined by the government, in consultation with independent experts and medical societies--and they pay for all but a tiny fraction of the bills. The government provides income-based subsidies, and roughly two-thirds of the population gets some assistance. In surveys of major countries by the Commonwealth Fund (which financed my own travel to the Netherlands), the Dutch were least likely to report forgoing care because they couldn’t afford it.

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COMMENTS (7)

09/29/2009 - 1:07am EDT |

The rise and fall of the "public option" has been greeted by all too many mainstream media "liberals" by rationalizing the abandonment of something that, existenatially, will almost certainly have no impact on their own lives anyway. It then becomes a question of good or bad "policy"; a question, in other words, that can be debated as all such policy options are: over the heads of those who will be adversely effected by the Democrats abandoning them yet again to Wall Street.

And the relationship between Dutch citizens and their government....is it comparable to the relationship between U.S. citizens and the government here? Apples to apples? I, uh, suspect not.

As Cohn notes succinctly, "[p]ri ... view full comment

09/29/2009 - 6:39am EDT |

Up until this post by Mr. Cohn, I thought all the focus by the Democrats on the public option was intended to divert attention away from the crux of health care (i.e., health insurance) reform, namely the regulation of the health insurance industry by the Federal government to prevent insurers from, among other things, cherry picking, limiting benefits, and denying coverage for pre-existing and chronic conditions. I didn't agree with the strategy, but if it worked, I would be the first to acknowledge its brilliance. Now, with Mr. Cohn's post, it is painfully clear that it was the Republicans who employed the strategy of keeping all the focus on the public option in order to divert the Dem ... view full comment

09/29/2009 - 9:40am EDT |

Jonathan,

How much does the Dutch system cost per person? Is it as expensive as the system here in the US?

09/29/2009 - 11:08am EDT |

raylward,

I'm not sure I follow your argument. It seems to me that the left would be very interested in health care reform, whether it includes the public option or not and that the right would want to kill both, especially the public option. Now, if your point is that the left has seized upon the PO as the be-all-and-end-all solution to universal, affordable health coveraget to the degree that it ignores any other methods to reform, then I agree that may be true. Very naive, INMHO, but true nonetheless. I can't imagine why the progressives would NOT want to keep other ways of reforming on the agenda.

The right would definitely benefit from keeping the public's attention on the PO (and, ki ... view full comment

09/29/2009 - 12:01pm EDT |

desertdog, the Democrats are terrible at framing, the Republicans experts. Reagan was the master, always framing issues with a very sympathetic face. This is my point about the Democrats' lsoing strategy. Suppose that the Democrats had framed the isuue as health insurance (as oppose to health care) reform, with cherry picking, limited benefits, and pre-existing and chronic conditions (cancer is, in most cases today, a chronic condition) as the centerpiece, and framed the issue around someone who was denied coverage, or who lost coverage, due to a pre-existing or chronic condition. Take my brother, who suffers chronic leukemia. He uesed to work at a small, locally owned bank, but the hea ... view full comment

09/29/2009 - 1:30pm EDT |

Yes, I see your point better, now. Your argument is that the issue should have been INSURANCE reform at the beginning rather than the bigger and more complicated health care reform. So now, the debate has already spun out of control and gets hijacked by the Right and the corporatocracy who then turned it into a caricature of itself. I tried to warn some of my lefty friends to tone down the "Obama's gonna give us everything we've been waiting for since Reagan" talk.

Ah those soft-headed lefties, always trying to get the whole utopian universe instead of settling for the neighborhood. As my grandfather used to say at Thanksgiving dinner...."Your eyes are bigger than your stomach". Don't tr ... view full comment

09/29/2009 - 5:33pm EDT |

Since I'm throwing the Democrats under the bus I'll make one final point. At any time the Democrats could have offered health insurance reform (no cherry picking, denial of coverage for pre-existing conditions, etc.), and would more than a handfull of cranks in Congress actually voted against it? So why didn't they? Because it would be unfair to the insurers to require they accept every applicant but not require everyone (meaning the young and healthy) to have health insurance. That's right, the Democrats have been protecting the insurance companies. Sad, but true. Of course, the Democrats could have proposed health insurance reform without universal coverage so we could have watched t ... view full comment

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