Zeke Emanuel, Obama's Health Care Alchemist

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04/19/09 05:12 AM

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Ezekiel Emanuel has a fear of failure. Months into the administration, the prominent bioethicist and brother of chief of staff, Rahm, has emerged as an important player in President Barack Obama's efforts at overhauling health care. But with the elevated role has come an elevated responsibility. And as the White House pushes for the largest expansion of coverage in well over two decades, the eldest of the Emanuel brothers refuses to get ahead of reality.

"My biggest fear is that we fail," said Emanuel in an interview with the Huffington Post. "You said, 'failure, obviously, is not an option.' But it is not clear that it is obvious. Stuart Altman, who many people consider the dean of health policy up at Brandeis University, he has this rule -- the rule of second best. You poll people and everyone is for health care reform, whether it is mandate or single payer. But everyone has a second best, and that is to do nothing. Well, I think this time it is different. Doing nothing, keeping the status quo, is not the second best. It is the biggest disaster that we can do."

This is not, necessarily, a form of expectations-setting superstition. Emanuel, who came to the administration with the title Special Advisor for Health Policy, knows that overhauling America's health care system has been an elusive goal of administrations dating back to Franklin Roosevelt. His task, while not his solely, is to find success where others have failed.

"Is reform going to be difficult? Is it going to be painful? Look, any change inherently is painful," he said. "Is keeping the current system painful? It is even more painful."

While not a student of politics like his brother, "Zeke" is acutely aware of the lessons from past health care reform efforts. Too much secrecy, a la Hillary Clinton's attempt in the early 90s, creates skepticism; too much orthodoxy, like the efforts in the 50s and 70s, gins up infighting and opposition. As such, he refuses to delve into the details of the administration's preferred policy, emphasizing instead how organic the process truly is.

Asked, for instance, whether the president is contemplating a public insurance plan -- which would provide a cheaper option for coverage, but could, as critics say, significantly hamper private insurers -- he replies: "I'm not talking about it." Pointing at the tape recorder on the desk, he adds, "You get paid for screwing me and I don't get paid for screwing myself."

In a similar vein, he only touches from afar issues like mandates requiring people to buy coverage, or removing tax exemptions for employer-based health insurance. "Look, that is a very complicated policy issue," he says of the latter. "I think the budget was very clear about not taking anything off the table."

But he is not just playing coy. In many ways, Emanuel is trying to perform "health care alchemy." He views reform and the system itself as a web of interconnected parts: make one policy move and it effects countless others.

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"There are just a huge number of choices," he said. "And as you go down, further and further, there are multiple choices that you have to make. And so the permutations of that become enormous. To pull out one thing and say 'tell me about that' is very artificial."

And yet, for as open a process as Obama has pursued, there are veterans of the health care reform movements who worry the president is already pointed in the wrong direction. Professor Altman, who Emanuel cited as the "dean of health policy," said he is concerned that the White House is focused on the wrong challenge, giving preference to cost containment over expanding coverage.

"I have known Zeke for a long time and I have tremendous respect for him," said Altman. "He is a thoughtful and decent guy... And his boss, [OMB director] Peter Orszag is a very smart guy. And I'm very supportive of what they are trying to do with this collaborative process. I'm just giving you the benefit of 40 years... Their emphasis to make health care cost reform the number one issue is going to doom health care reform. Because that is what all the forces will line up against."

On this front, however, the White House position seems bolstered by public opinion. A CNN poll released on Thursday found 82 percent of Americans satisfied with the quality of their health care, but 77 percent dissatisfied with the cost of health care in the country.

Moreover the administration has, as Emanuel notes, "already done a lot of things" to facilitate long-term savings. The stimulus bill passed this February included unprecedented investments in health IT, comparative effectiveness research, prevention and community health centers. The next fight will be over the administration's budget proposal, which contains $633.8 billion over the next ten years for health care.

The key is to encourage or spur short-term sacrifice (Emanuel uses the term "contributions" -- "it sounds softer") in exchange for long-term benefits. Stepping into a new room in his no-frills office in the Old Executive Office Building, he hand-draws what's known as a 'potential energy barrier graph.' Starting in the middle of the vertical axis, his pen climbs an upwards slope; it hits a peak, then falls back down, well below the height of where it started. His inner chemist is coming out. Short-term investments (climbing the hill) lead to lower costs (finding the lower plateau).

"We ask businesses to invest now in their research and product development for better and higher profits in years from now," he says. "We need to do the same thing in the health care system. We need to invest today, whether it is health IT, comparative effectiveness, changing the incentive structure. The return is going to come in a few years. That is really at the heart of the notion of health care reform."

And so it is that Emanuel and the White House are attempting to reorganize the delivery and reimbursement systems of health care, changing what the types of procedures doctors rely on, making people more aware of disease prevention, encouraging insurance companies to expand coverage, and so on. It is a process rife with sensitivities, trickeries and, of course, the potential for failure. It is not, he insists, impossible.

"It is a complicated process and we have to try and make the choices clear and give people good reasons for making them," Emanuel explains. "I don't think that's an impossible task and thankfully we have one of the great communicators, Barack Obama, at the helm of this ship of state."

Ezekiel Emanuel has a fear of failure. Months into the administration, the prominent bioethicist and brother of chief of staff, Rahm, has emerged as an important player in President Barack Obama's eff...
Ezekiel Emanuel has a fear of failure. Months into the administration, the prominent bioethicist and brother of chief of staff, Rahm, has emerged as an important player in President Barack Obama's eff...
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Corporations waged a fierce battle against Clinton healthcare. Reading European MSM it looked vicious and very unscrupulous.
Ironically, this time around the very same companies are now being bankrupted because of their myopia.
It may be different this time... all depends which lobbyists pay Congress the most.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 03/19/2009
- lj9283 I'm a Fan of lj9283 67 fans permalink
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It won't be different, just a different set of ads. The Medical Health Insurance practice of the Insurance is the cash cow of the industry.

They will be as mean and as nasty as they can get.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:34 PM on 03/19/2009

Yes, it will be. As it was in Canada.
Yet, many big companies are staggering under high med costs for their retirees and are desperate to lighten the load.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:44 PM on 03/19/2009

nepotism

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:40 PM on 03/19/2009
- Tulka2 I'm a Fan of Tulka2 297 fans permalink
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....but of the best sort. Blame the Hospital Industry for keeping doctors away from Obama.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:19 PM on 03/19/2009
- truthglow I'm a Fan of truthglow 17 fans permalink

NO. Obama kept doctors and nurses out of his big meeting. It is he (and the Emanuels who don't want the Medicare for all plan, because they are cozying up to the Health Plans and RX Plans!!!!!!)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:28 PM on 03/19/2009

Any "health care reform" that leaves in place the employer-provided model for insurance isn't really reform, it's just trying to fix an irretrievably broken system. Employers should not be responsible for providing health insurance. It dampens their ability to compete with businesses in other countries with nationalized health care, and it hampers workers' ability to leave crummy jobs because they can't afford to go without insurance.

I am no fan of the health insurance industry - I think it's much too powerful and too fixated on profits. But I'd be a lot more willing to consider supporting a health care reform plan with private insurance as the underpinning, as long as said insurance is not to be provided through employers.

But when it's all said and done, I think I'd still really prefer universal coverage by making Medicare the national health care system for everyone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:33 PM on 03/19/2009
- Tulka2 I'm a Fan of Tulka2 297 fans permalink
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I beg you to call D.C. and say so: White House comments line, your states two Senators and/or your districts congressman.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:18 PM on 03/19/2009

Ironically, . . in this alchemy . . success is Failure! . . wait and see. now serving # 9,345,987,073

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:02 PM on 03/19/2009
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Amen. Finally someone appears to see the light. A price can not be put on Self respect and dignity, being treated as real people, not case numbers

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:08 PM on 03/19/2009
- DocTwain I'm a Fan of DocTwain 114 fans permalink
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The reality is that we can BOTH cut costs and provide universal, comprehensive coverage.
The answer is a single-payer national health insurance program, in which the government becomes the only insurer and the private health insurance cartel is eliminated.

That would save $350 billion a year in administrative costs, enough to insure the uninsured. http://www.pnhp.org. That's because private insurers consume on average 20% of each dollar they get in premiums on overhead, marketing, excess executive remuneration, and PROFIT. Only 80 cents goes to buy actual health care. In contrast, Medicare's adminsitrative costs are only 3%, and Canadian single-payer has administrative costs of 1%: 99 cents go to buy actual care people need.

59% of physicians support single payer: http://www.prospect.or/cs/articles?article=the_doctors_revolt
That is a big change--they used to oppose it, and with the AMA fought against it for decades, since the time of Roosevelt. But seeing how well single payer works for other countries, and the bueraucratic nightmares, uninsurance, underinsurance, and interference with care caused by the private insurers in this country, doctors have changed their minds.

65% of ordinary Americans support single payer as well: http://www.singlepayernewyork.org/NewsTicker-detail.php?ID=9

Support HR 676 http://www.pnhp.org/publications/united_states_national_health_care_act_hr_676.php

http://www.whithouse.gov
http://senate.gov
http://house.gov

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 PM on 03/19/2009
- Tulka2 I'm a Fan of Tulka2 297 fans permalink
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Mrs. Emamual raised some good boys, didn't she?

Look, if we could look at the psychic forces surrounding the White House, we would see orcs and minions of the Insurance Industry, Big Pharma's trolls, and the Hospital Industry is facing outwards to fend off the possibility of American doctors having a voice.

If you have not already done so, please call your Senators, congressman and the White House comments line. Leave a message begging for "single-payer" health care. I sadly know we will end of giving the players above a piece of American flesh, but give Obama the POLITICAL COVER to stand up for ordinary people. The only way to do that is to contact D.C.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:42 PM on 03/19/2009
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We've provided President Obama with an incredible mandate and talisman of power with which to battle the Orcs and minions of evil obstructing Health Care reform.

He must not shirk now, but enable his forces to be all powerful at the decisive battle, and Mrs. Emmanuels boys are the shiznit I agree.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 PM on 03/19/2009

shiznit?
never heard this word.
I Googled it.. Cool.
Which part of U.S. uses this word?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:01 PM on 03/19/2009
- Tulka2 I'm a Fan of Tulka2 297 fans permalink
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heehee

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:15 PM on 03/19/2009
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Money is not the problem. It's the politics of Racist discrimination that obstacles reform.

We will print the money if we really want too, isn't that clear now to all of us?

We can find 750 Billion dollars in a weekend, when it will bail out the White establishment, but Universal Health Care that will enable and empower every American is too expensive?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:33 PM on 03/19/2009
- DocTwain I'm a Fan of DocTwain 114 fans permalink
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Derelict, your perspective sounds a bit parochial. This isn't about race, it's about money. Class. Plutocracy. Government by the rich for the rich. The rich don't give a damn what color workers are--they want to exploit all of them. You think they don't bust unions in all-white areas? You think payroll taxes have been increased only on minorities? Wake up. The incomes of 80% of Americans stagnated or declined in the 2000s.

The war, banking, fossil fuel, private health insurance, pharma, and agro cartels have gamed the political markets to game their product markets in order to completely control their policy areas, writing the laws, refusing regulation, demanding subsidies and overpayment, and even running their own "bailouts." The private health insurance cartel is working hard to corrupt Emmanuel and Obama so that any "reform" simply pours more taxpayer and consumer dollars into its pockets.

Private insurers are just zero-value-added middlemen who charge hundreds of billions of dollars to write checks that a government insurer could do at a tiny fraction of the cost. Wiping out the private health insurance cartel would save $350 billion a year.

We need single-payer health care:

http://www.pnhp.org

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:12 PM on 03/19/2009
- AKJM I'm a Fan of AKJM 20 fans permalink
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Single-payer, please.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:55 PM on 03/19/2009
- schatsie I'm a Fan of schatsie 90 fans permalink

and then we would still be paying more per capita than any other country...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:53 PM on 03/19/2009
- BARRY08 I'm a Fan of BARRY08 3 fans permalink

Is not that they like it....
they are afraid... because there is so much fear mongouring out there
about everything to do with the new administration

we want change but one that does not change our comfort zone
human nature at its best

let's just trust our President
and keep alert ... we too need to get involve and alert him to what we see or hear

he will listen, he is the type !
he is the only capable of taking the responsibility of what will be going on
he is brave

let's be brave with him -

Obama cannot do it alone - he needs us
because the politicians - specially GOP and the new 13 Democrats - are not going to
help us or him

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:29 PM on 03/19/2009
- truthglow I'm a Fan of truthglow 17 fans permalink

The Emanuels will be his downfall. They are giving him very bad advice. If he had a backbone, he would know that single payer is the best. I have original Medicare, and it is fantastic! He never even invited any doctors or nurses into his original healthcare meeting. He had to scurry and invite them at the last minute, when he was confronted. It's all about the Insurance companies and the Rx companies. That's B.S.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:33 PM on 03/19/2009

Healthcare reform is not a simple as it looks, as one will find the same issues in healthcare as recently noted with AIG. One will find just as much dirt on the hands of insurance, pharmaceutical companies and the AMA. It is sad to see one of the wealthiest countries (US) with the poorest healthcare system, where the misdiagnosis rate in hospitals is 86% and the leading cause of death is physician errors.
People do not want to change the healthcare system because they have been fed a line of b.s. such as "it would either cost the individual more out of pocket expense or that the quality of service and innovation would diminish". Hmm....86% misdiagnosis, leading cause of death - doctor/ healthcare error.
This is in addition to the fact that the golden standard of care for cancer treatment is cut and chemo- radiation, while other countries are using more innovative treatment options. And if a physician refuses to follow the "golden standard of care" for said treatment, he/she may find themselves without a license to practice medicine. The infamous hippocratic oath (just like the constitution) has been devalued. People need to stop being afraid of change and step out of their comfort zones. Change is part of growth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:18 PM on 03/19/2009
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Ultimately, the public must make the leap to understanding ... the coffee must be smelled ... the lights must go on.

Just as we are at the tip of the financial services industry iceberg of egregious business practices, the public must come to understand the depth, scope and diversity of bad actors in the healthcare industry. If they ever do, their anger and disgust about AIG's 'retention' bonuses will be a microscopic sense of betrayal in contrast.

There is something about fashioning a healthcare system from the landfill of tainted characters and institutions within the healthcare industry, which is unacceptable. Policy wonks use words designed to dance on the head of a pin and soften what fools Americans suffer.

The heart of health care reform is enabling universal access. The kidneys of healthcare reform are the reallocation of hundreds fo billions in financial resources from the beneficiaries of enrichment to patient care. The liver of healthcare reform is the requisite of accountability and elimination of massive fraud-waste-abuse. The stomach of health care reform is the ability to centralize all current resources of healthcare purchasing and funding and establish fair and equitable payment policiies. And the pancreas of health care reform is the eradication of political corruption, which sustains government protection of special healthcare industry interests.

Two scholars are cited above disagreeing about which is #1 --- universal coverage or cost containment.

Bulletin: Universal coverage cannot be attained without cost containment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:09 PM on 03/19/2009
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Millions of Americans without Health Care Insurance have deductions for MediCare taken from their paychecks today.

Today, millions of poor Americans that cannot afford it, will pay for Health Care for children and the amorphous "elderly" with payroll deductions but will go bankrupt and perhaps die for lack of care for themselves and their partners flipping burgers.

How can we Americans continue to conscience and allow such discrimination?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:07 PM on 03/19/2009
- truthglow I'm a Fan of truthglow 17 fans permalink

What are you talking about? You only pay for Medicare, if you get Medicare benefits, yourself. You must have been listening to Fox propaganda!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:35 PM on 03/19/2009

The very idea that we are continuing on with the illegal immoral Bush wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, while we continue to rationalize denying ourselves health care is absurd.

Bad enough that we would just stay in Iraq, we have to have 20,000 more soldiers in Afghanistan, and we are quietly going to war with Pakistan too.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/mar/19/pakistan-us-national-security

Any discussion about health care that ignores the trillion dollar war effort is incomplete. We have all the money we need to have health care comparable to any other civilized nation. If we stop feeding our war machine. So far, the people are getting screwed every time while both parties expand wars and our military budgets....every time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:02 PM on 03/19/2009
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Money is not the problem. It's the politics of Racist discrimination.

We will print the money if we really want too, isn't that clear now to all of us?

We can find 750 Billion dollars in a weekend, when it will bail out the White establishment, but Universal Health Care that will enable and empower every American is too expensive?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:14 PM on 03/19/2009
- schatsie I'm a Fan of schatsie 90 fans permalink

It iswar on the WORKING CLASS... And there are a lot of us...AND it is war on the MILITARY....How in the sam hill could our great and courageous leader come out with saying that the VA should not be responsible for SERVICE INJURIES... The soldiers will have to buy their own health insurance..

Tell me, did Bush Bribe Frist with the Walter Reed Hospital.. It is going to close and that means it will be sold off.... and was the 100 million before Katrina part of the contract....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:59 PM on 03/19/2009
- LucieLee I'm a Fan of LucieLee 37 fans permalink
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Single-payer is the only way to go!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:01 PM on 03/19/2009

Long Term Thinking vs short term thinking- that is the battle the President is fighting-I think a lot of us are with him but it's tough because like that old Pogo cartoon, " we have met the enemy and it's us"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:01 PM on 03/19/2009
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Lets finally end the discrimination in Health Care in America.

Universal Health Care enables and empowers FREEDOM, nothing less.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:57 PM on 03/19/2009
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