Capitalizing on Illness: The Health Insurance Industry
- 1 October 1974
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in International Journal of Health Services
- Vol. 4 (4) , 583-598
- https://doi.org/10.2190/hflg-14n9-kf8l-4fmd
Abstract
The private health insurance industry in the United States began as a money-collection mechanism for hospitals and doctors, and has evolved into an important profit-making sector of the economy. Blue Cross is dominated by hospital representatives and serves to channel money into the nation's hospitals. Physicians control Blue Shield and are its principal beneficiaries. And commercial insurance companies are closely linked to banks and industrial corporations through the country's large financial empires. Some effects of this elite control over the health insurance industry have been inadequate and distorted insurance coverage, discrimination against the elderly, the sick, and the poor, and rapidly rising medical costs. In addition, the control of Medicare and Medicaid by private insurance institutions has contributed to the enormous inflation produced by these programs. Though governments, consumers, and even the insurance industry itself are beginning to apply controls to the unprecedented medical inflation of the late 1960s, these controls tend to limit access to health care, especially for low-income people. Unless insurance companies are barred from the health care field and a public financing mechanism based on progressive taxation is introduced, health care will never be an equal right for everyone in the United States.Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Trends in Health-Insurance Operating ExpensesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1972