- European, US markets wobble awaiting Santa rally
- Serie A basement club Monza fire coach Nesta
- Mozambique top court confirms ruling party disputed win
- Biden commutes almost all federal death sentences
- Syrian medics say were coerced into false chemical attack testimony
- NASA solar probe to make its closest ever pass of Sun
- France's new government to be announced Monday evening: Elysee
- London toy 'shop' window where nothing is for sale
- Volkswagen boss hails cost-cutting deal but shares fall
- Accused killer of US insurance CEO pleads not guilty to 'terrorist' murder
- Global stock markets mostly higher
- Not for sale. Greenland shrugs off Trump's new push
- Sweden says China blocked prosecutors' probe of ship linked to cut cables
- Acid complicates search after deadly Brazil bridge collapse
- Norwegian Haugan dazzles in men's World Cup slalom win
- Arsenal's Saka out for 'many weeks' with hamstring injury
- Mali singer Traore child custody case postponed
- France mourns Mayotte victims amid uncertainy over government
- UK economy stagnant in third quarter in fresh setback
- Sweden says China denied request for prosecutors to probe ship linked to cut undersea cables
- African players in Europe: Salah leads Golden Boot race after brace
- Global stock markets edge higher as US inflation eases rate fears
- German far-right AfD to march in city hit by Christmas market attack
- Ireland centre Henshaw signs IRFU contract extension
- Bangladesh launches $5bn graft probe into Hasina's family
- US probes China chip industry on 'anticompetitive' concerns
- Biden commutes sentences for 37 of 40 federal death row inmates
- Clock ticks down on France government nomination
- 'Devastated' Australian tennis star Purcell provisionally suspended for doping
- Mozambique on edge as judges rule on disputed election
- Mobile cinema brings Tunisians big screen experience
- Philippines says to acquire US Typhon missile system
- Honda and Nissan to launch merger talks
- Police arrest suspect who set woman on fire in New York subway
- China vows 'cooperation' over ship linked to severed Baltic Sea cables
- Australian tennis star Purcell provisionally suspended for doping
- Asian markets track Wall St rally as US inflation eases rate fears
- Luxury Western goods line Russian stores, three years into sanctions
- Wallace and Gromit return with comic warning about AI dystopia
- Philippine military says will acquire US Typhon missile system
- Afghan bread, the humble centrepiece of every meal
- Honda and Nissan expected to begin merger talks
- 'Draconian' Vietnam internet law heightens free speech fears
- Israeli women mobilise against ultra-Orthodox military exemptions
- Asian markets track Wall St rally as US inflation eases rate worries
- Tens of thousands protest in Serbian capital over fatal train station accident
- Trump vows to 'stop transgender lunacy' as a top priority
- Daniels throws five TDs as Commanders down Eagles, Lions and Vikings win
- 'Who's next?': Misinformation and online threats after US CEO slaying
- Only 12 trucks delivered food, water in North Gaza Governorate since October: Oxfam
Health insurers: the 800-pound gorilla in profit-driven US system
Last week's slaying of UnitedHealthcare executive Brian Thompson has brought renewed attention to the widespread dissatisfaction with the American health care system, even as prominent leaders have condemned the killing.
Reports that the casings of the bullets fired by suspected shooter Luigi Mangione had the words "depose, deny, delay" inscribed on them prompted horror stories on social media about health insurers who use those very tactics to get out of paying for medical tests or cancer treatment.
Such fights with sick and ailing consumers are only one of the gripes many have with a health system that has also been criticized for mystery billing practices, opaque middlemen, confusing jargon and overpriced drugs.
While surveys suggest pharmaceutical companies may be even more disliked than health insurers, the latter occupies a more foundational role in the profit-driven American system that has evolved over recent decades.
On the continuum between totally private and completely government-run, the US health care system is "more free-market than average," said Greg Shaw, a political science professor at Illinois Wesleyan University.
But the "hybrid" nature of a health system mixing private and public governance is not the US system's most unusual trait: the country is a true "outlier" as the only developed economy that doesn't guarantee health care as a right, Shaw said.
The free-market ethos has created an enormous berth for insurers such as UnitedHealth, which spent nearly $15 billion on dividends and share buybacks in 2023. The evening before Thompson was shot, UnitedHealth Group projected 2025 revenues of at least $450 billion, up nearly 40 percent from the level three years ago.
- Entrenched player -
Shaw described the position of private insurers in US health care as entrenched.
The industry dates to the 1920s in Texas, when health insurance was invented to help hospitals with unpaid invoices and help patients who wanted access to care.
Originally led by the non-profit Blue Cross plans, the system took off after World War II when companies facing labor shortages offered health insurance instead of higher pay. Private companies Aetna and Cigna emerged in the 1950s.
"The new demand for health insurance presented a business opportunity and spawned an emerging market with other motivations," journalist and physician Elisabeth Rosenthal writes in "An American Sickness," published in 2017.
"Once acceptance of health insurance was widespread, a domino effect ensued: hospitals adapted to its financial incentives, which changed how doctors practiced medicine, which revolutionized the types of drugs and devices that manufacturers made and marketed."
While progressives like Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders have backed government-run health care, there has been no serious move in recent decades to excise insurers from the American health care system.
After Bill Clinton won the White House in 1992, his ill-fated health care reform proposal preserved the private insurance system. The 2010 Affordable Care Act, signed into law by Barack Obama, included provisions meant to control costs and broaden coverage, but was again built around private insurance.
Outgoing President Joe Biden has taken aim at health care profiteering by drugmakers and other players but has not primarily focused on insurers.
Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan launched a "cross-government inquiry" with other agencies on the impact of "corporate greed in health care." But the effort primarily targeted private equity firms that might attempt to acquire health care assets.
A September 2024 survey by YouGov ranked health insurance fifth highest in terms of industries that people say should be regulated more heavily. That means the public views health insurers as less trustworthy than pornographers or bankers, which ranked lower, but more reliable than companies in artificial intelligence, pharmaceuticals, social media and firearms, which ranked first through fourth.
A December 5 YouGov poll after the shooting found 59 percent of Americans "very satisfied" or "somewhat satisfied" with their health insurance.
Shaw thinks the health insurance industry could face a significant confrontational push from Washington in the coming years due to the rising concerns about people carrying heavy medical debt.
But he does not see the current wave of attention as a meaningful challenge, in part because the sharpest criticism can be dismissed as coming from extremists who condone violence.
"I don't think this is in the industry's George Floyd moment," he said. "I don't think this is going to catalyze soul-searching on the part of the industry and regulators."
G.Stevens--AMWN