Brian Doherty | January 27, 2005
The Jan./Feb. issue of the Utne Reader has an interesting article (not available online yet, near as I can tell) about the Ithaca Health Alliance, a health co-op that helps you pay for certain medical expenses (broken bones up to $2,500, burns up to $3,000, no coverage for drugs or preventative care) for a mere $100 a year expenditure on your part. But don't call it an insurance company. Utne buries in graf nine one of the more interesting details about why this sort of approach--which works great as the article tells it--isn't more widespread:
The Ithaca Health Alliance takes pains to call itself a "health assurance" project. The distinction is more than semantic. In 2004, the New York State Health Insurance Board sent a letter inquiring about its activities. The board's regulations, which would require [the Alliance] to maintain a $25 million general fund and to offer specific categories of coverage, would effectively spell the end of the project. With nudging from [the Alliance's founder and board], state senator Jim Seward asked the board to leave the Ithaca Health Alliance alone.
I hope they continue to do so. But government's role in the impossible difficulties and expense of health care and health insurance in today's world should get bigger play in stories like this.
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
Man, I wish I lived in Ithica.
/college student
//can't even afford the crappy univ. health plan
What a great program. I would think the government a low-cost
medical plan to reduce the number of people without access to
healthcare.
It also helps relieve the burden on hospitals - millions are spent
every year on providing emergency medical care to people without
insurance.
This was about a year or three in place when I moved on out of
Ithaca. At that point, it covered ambulance rides and setting
broken bones and got member discounts. Point of interest - the
founder of the alternative currency Ithaca Hours
(http://www.ithacahours.org/), Paul Glover, is also one of the
founders of the health organization.
I thought there was an H&R item maybe a year ago that discussed
alternative currency or the Hours, but my search didn't turn up
anything.
I've tried to persuade my mother (a nurse) that blanket
insurance coverage isn't always the most sensible arrangement. I've
tried to point out that mandating coverage of certain items means
that more people will go without any insurance protection
altogether. And I've tried to point out that getting routine care
handled via insurance only makes routine care more expensive by
adding a middle man, without bringing any significant risk
reduction.
To her, being a nurse, these notions are inhumane.
I am not optimistic about health care policy in this country
becoming more rational.
This doesn't seem to do a whole lot other than insure against
some very specific, very narrowly defined health problems - broken
bones, burns, stitches, appendectomy. You only get a 10% off
discount with your doctor - I used to get better than that when I
had no insurance (hint: cash is king, even with doctors. I
negotiated down to about what half of what I would have paid with
insurance for a regular office visit, i.e $50 cash vs. the $85
billed to the insurance company.)
Certainly, these kind of things could help, but I like the idea of
a catastrophic/high deductable policy a lot better than this. Also,
I don't like their push for universal health care in the "comic".
But, hell, it's only $100/year.
Also, I like the specific line item for rabies treatment - $600. Is
that a big problem in Ithica?
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245