A Doctorfs Push
for Single-Payer Health Care for All Finds Traction in
Vermont
Published: May 21, 2011 - New York Times
MONTPELIER, Vt. — Many people move to Vermont in search of a slower pace; Dr.
Deb Richter came in 1999 to work obsessively toward a far-fetched goal.
She wanted Vermont to become the first state to adopt a single-payer health
care system, run and paid for by the government, with every resident eligible
for a uniform benefit package. So Dr. Richter, a buoyant primary care doctor
from Buffalo who had given up on New Yorkfs embracing such a system, started
lining up speaking engagements and meeting with lawmakers, whom she found more
accessible than their New York counterparts.
gI wrote a letter to the editor, and the speaker of the House called me up to
talk about it,h Dr. Richter, 56, recalled recently. gIt was astounding. In New
York, I couldnft even get an appointment with my legislator.h
Twelve years later, Dr. Richter will watch Gov. Peter Shumlin, a Democrat,
sign a bill on Thursday that sets Vermont on a path toward a single-payer system
— the nationfs first such experiment — thanks in no small part to her
persistence. Though scores of people pushed for the bill, she was the most
actively involved doctor — gthe backbone,h Mr. Shumlin has said, of a
grass-roots effort that helped sway the Democratic Legislature to pass it this
spring even as other states were suing to block the less ambitious federal
health care law.
gWe wouldnft be where we are without Deb,h Mr. Shumlin said in an interview.
gShefs made this her passion. And like anyone thatfs making significant social
change, she has qualities of persuasiveness and leadership and good judgment
that are hard to find.h
As in all states, the cost of health care has increased sharply in Vermont in
recent years. It has doubled here over the last decade to roughly $5 billion a
year, taking a particular toll on small businesses and the middle class. All
620,000 of the statefs residents would be eligible for coverage under the new
system, which proponents say would be cheaper over all than the current
patchwork of insurers. A five-member board appointed by the governor is to
determine payment rates for doctors, what benefits to cover and other details.
But much remains to be worked out — so much that even under the most
optimistic projections the plan might not take effect until 2017. Most
significantly, Mr. Shumlin still has to figure out how much it will cost and how
to pay for it, possibly through a new payroll tax. Whether he will still be in
charge by 2017 is among the complicating factors.
gIf we had the exact same Legislature and the same governor we could get it
done,h Dr. Richter said. gItfs a big if, because the opposition has a ton more
money to convince people that the governor is evil and this is socialized
medicine and all kinds of other scary stuff.h
The opposition will probably include insurance companies, drug makers and
some employers who say there are too many unknowns. Many doctors, too, are wary
of the change and what it might mean for their income. Dr. Richter said she
believed a gslim majorityh of the statefs 1,700 licensed physicians were
supportive.
gOne of the bigger worries I have is wefve had all this hoopla and nothingfs
going to happen,h she said at a coffee shop here recently on a rare quiet
afternoon. gBut it might also be helpful to us, because itfs going to be hard
for any opposition to be steadily pushing for seven years.h
The federal health care law has complicated Vermontfs plans, requiring the
state to first create a health
insurance exchange to help residents shop for coverage by 2014. The state
would then need a federal waiver to trade its exchange for a government-run
system.
Dr. Richter said she embraced the idea of a single-payer system as a young
doctor in Buffalo, where many of her patients put off crucial treatments because
they were uninsured. As a medical student, she saw a patient with a
life-threatening heart infection caused by an infected tooth that had gone
untreated because he lacked dental insurance.
gHe was in the hospital for six weeks, and I was like, eThis makes no
sense,f h she said.
She went to a meeting of Physicians for a National Health Program, a group
that advocates for a national single-payer system, and started researching the
concept. Before long she became a vocal advocate, even becoming president of the
physiciansf group, and moved to Vermont.
John McClaughry, a former Republican state senator who is against the new
law, said Dr. Richter meant well but did not understand the glong-term damageh
it would wreak. In particular, he said the law would drive away businesses that
did not want to help pay for it.
gShefll tell you that putting in single-payer will attract businesses from
all over the place,h said Mr. McClaughry, vice president of the Ethan Allen
Institute, a conservative research group. gI donft think she has any
appreciation of business decisions at all.h
Since moving with her husband and two sons to a rambling old house within
view of the State House, Dr. Richter has given about 400 talks on the
single-payer concept, tutored lawmakers in the State House cafeteria and
testified before the Legislature more times than she can remember. Once, she
presented a printout of all the insurance companies her small practice in
Cambridge had billed over five years.
gIt was like 190 pages long,h she said. gHere we were, this tiny rural clinic
having to bill all these different addresses. And all of them have different
rules and reimbursements; I mean, itfs ridiculous.h
Some supporters of single-payer health care say Vermontfs law does not go far
enough, mostly because it would allow at least a handful of private insurers to
stay in the market indefinitely. Self-insured businesses like IBM, the statefs
largest employer, could continue providing health coverage to workers under the
law, though they would have to help finance the new system, possibly through a
payroll tax.
Physicians for a National Health Program is among the critics, saying the law
gfalls well short of the single-payer reform needed.h Allowing private insurers
to remain in the state will prevent meaningful savings, the group says.
Dr. Richter acknowledges that the law will not allow for gstrict
single-payer,h but said it still promised ghealth care for everybody, for less
cost.h
gThis is not the top of the mountain, but itfs the first time anyone has
headed up the mountain,h she said. gNo other place in the country has gotten
this far.h