This week in Congress: Will RINOCare Pass?
The Senate came in today to vote on nominations to the United States Sentencing Commission.
The House came in yesterday. The big item of the week is the American Heath Care Act, better named the RepealInNameOnlyCare Act. The House is currently scheduled to vote on this bill on Thursday. As of this writing, the bill is undergoing rewrites and modifications to gain votes.
The House will also consider legislation (HR 372) repealing health insurance companies’ exemption from anti-trust laws. Supporters of the this bill say it is necessary to create a level playing field between the companies and health care providers.
They do have a point, but the solution is to repeal the anti-trust laws, not to expand their reach. While he was in office, Campaign for Liberty Chairman Ron Paul supported legislation exempting associations of health care providers formed to negotiate with health insurance companies from anti-trust laws. This legislation has been incorporated into Senator Rand Paul’s free-market health care bill.
In 2000, this legislation passed the House. Here is Dr.Paul’s official statement on the bill:
Mr. Paul: Mr. Chairman, I am pleased to take this opportunity to lend my support to H.R. 1304, the Quality Health Care Coalition Act, which takes a first step towards restoring a true free-market in health care by restoring the rights of freedom of contract and association to health care professionals. Over the past few years, we have had much debate in Congress about the difficulties medical professionals and patients are having with Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs).
HMOs are devices used by insurance industries to ration health care. While it is politically popular for members of Congress to bash the HMOs and the insurance industry, the growth of the HMOs are rooted in past government interventions in the health care market though the tax code, the Employment Retirement Security Act (ERSIA), and the federal anti- trust laws.
These interventions took control of the health care dollar away from individual patients and providers, thus making it inevitable that something like the HMOs would emerge as a means to control costs. Many of my well-meaning colleagues would deal with the problems created by the HMOs by expanding the federal government’s control over the health care market.
These interventions will inevitably drive up the cost of health care and further erode the ability of patents and providers to determine the best health treatments free of government and third-party interference. In contrast, the Quality Health Care Coalition Act addresses the problems associated with HMOs by restoring medical professionals’ freedom to form voluntary organizations for the purpose of negotiating contracts with an HMO or an insurance company.
As an OB-GYN with over 30 years in practice, I am well aware of how young physicians coming out of medical school feel compelled to sign contracts with HMOs that may contain clauses that compromise their professional integrity. For example, many physicians are contractually forbidden from discussing all available treatment options with their patients because the HMO gatekeeper has deemed certain treatment options too expensive.
In my own practice, I have tried hard not to sign contracts with any health insurance company that infringed on my ability to practice medicine in the best interests of my patients and I have always counseled my professional colleagues to do the same.
Unfortunately, because of the dominance of the HMO in today’s health care market, many health care professionals cannot sustain a medical practice unless they agree to conform their practice to the dictates of some HMO.
One way health care professionals could counter the power of the HMOs would be to form a voluntary association for the purpose of negotiating with an HMO or an insurance company. However, health care professionals who attempt to form such a group run the risk of persecution under federal anti-trust laws. This not only reduces the ability of health care professionals to negotiate with HMOs on a level playing field, it, like existing antitrust laws, are an unconstitutional violation of medical professionals’ freedom of contract and association.
Under the United States Constitution, the federal government has no authority to interfere with the private contracts of American citizens. Furthermore, the prohibitions on contracting contained in the Sherman antitrust laws are based on a flawed economic theory: that federal regulators can improve upon market outcomes by restricting the rights of certain market participants deemed too powerful by the government.
In fact, anti-trust laws harm consumers by preventing the operation of the free-market, causing prices to rise, quality to suffer, and, as is certainly the case with the relationship between the HMOs and medical professionals, favoring certain industries over others.
In fact, Mr. Speaker, I would hope that my colleagues would see the folly of antitrust laws and support my Market Process Restoration Act (H.R. 1789), which repeals all federal antitrust laws. By restoring the freedom of medical professionals to voluntarily come together to negotiate as a group with HMOs and insurance companies, this bill removes a government-imposed barrier to a true free market in health care.
I am quite pleased that this bill does not infringe on the rights of health care professionals by forcing them to join a bargaining organization against their will. Contrary to the claims of some of its opponents, H.R. 1304 in no way extends the scourge of federally-mandated compulsory unionism to the health care professions. While Congress should protect the right of all Americans to join organizations for the purpose of bargaining collectively, Congress also has a moral responsibility to ensure that no worker is forced by law to join or financially support such an organization.
Mr. Chairman, it is my hope that Congress will follow up on its action today by empowering patients to control their health care by providing all Americans with access to Medical Saving Accounts (MSAs) and large tax credits for their health care expenses. Putting individuals back in charge of their own health care decisions will enable patients to work with providers to ensure they receive the best possible health care at the lowest possible price.
If providers and patients have the ability to form the contractual arrangements that they found most beneficial to them, the HMO monster would wither on the vine without the imposition of new federal regulations on the insurance industry.
In conclusion, Mr. Chairman, I urge my colleagues to support the Quality Health Care Coalition Act and restore the freedom of contract and association to American’s health care professionals. Antitrust laws are no more legitimate or constitutional in the health care market than they are on the software market.
Therefore, I hope my colleagues will not just pass this bill but will also support my Market Process Restoration Act and exempt all Americans from antitrust laws. I also urge my colleagues to join me in working to promote a true free-market in health care by putting patients back in charge of the health care dollar through means such as Medical Savings Accounts (MSAs) and individual health care tax credits.
The House will also consider HR 1101, legislation allowing small businesses to join together in Association Health Plans. This gives them increased negotiating power with insurance companies as well as some relief from state regulations.
Finally, the House will consider HR 1367, which changes how the VA hires physicians, including creating a new fellowship program. The House was scheduled to consider this bill last week, but it had to be delayed because of the storm.
The House has also considered the following bills on suspension:
1. HR 1029– “Improves” federal system of pesticide registration…because without government, nothing would protect us from pesticides and there are no market incentives for producers to keep their products safe.
2. HR 382– creates a new grant program in the Department of Agriculture to encourage women and minorities to pursue careers in science and technology. The program is named after Jeannette Rankin, the first woman to serve in Congress and the only member of the House to vote against both World Wars.
The following bills were on last week’s suspension calendar but were postponed because of the storm:
3. HR 1302– Requires the Department of Homeland Security to conduct an exercise to test the government’s effectiveness in stopping terrorists and “foreign fighters” from traveling to the US.
4. HR 1238– Americans can breathe easier if this bill passes as it makes the Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security for Health Affairs responsible for coordinating “…the efforts of the Department of Homeland Security related to food, agriculture, and veterinary defense against terrorism, and for other purposes.”
5.HR 1294– Requires Homeland Security to notify Congress of “major acquisition breaches.”
6. HR 1365– Requires the Department of Homeland Security to use innovations in acquisitions. Yeah, it takes a law to make federal agencies use innovations.
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