San Francisco Bay Area Independent Media Center
Blue Shield Declared Crime Scene by Single Payer Activists - posted by Direct Action for Single Payer
San Francisco, October 28— More than two dozen protesters blocked the entrances to the San Francisco office of Blue Shield of California early this morning, marking the
building with crime tape and charging the health insurance industry with crimes including murder, breach of contract, and subversion of democracy.
About 200 advocates of a “single-payer” health care system, which would eliminate the private health insurance industry, chanted and sang in front of the Market Street offices of United
HealthCare starting at 7:30 am. Street theater featured a giant black octopus representing the health insurance industry, which prevented sick and injured patients from reaching the doctors who
wanted to care for them. At around 8 the group, led by the Brass Liberation Orchestra, began lively march chanting “Health care is a right” and “Patients not profits,” ending at the Blue Shield
office on Beale St.
At the Beale Street location, protesters were joined by a local contingent of “Billionaires for Wealthcare” in formal wear and accompanied by a maidservant. The Billionaires held signs supporting the status quo and sang several numbers including “We Shall Overcharge” to the traditional tune "We Shall Overcome". Other artistic action included music and chants led by Brass Liberation Orchestra and a giant "Octopus of Death" representing insurance industry profiteering. The octopus extended large tentacles choking protesters who portrayed needy patients denied care by Blue Shield.
Protesters charged the health insurance industry with crimes including:
Murder: A new Harvard study found that 45,000 Americans a year die because they don’t have health insurance. For the insured, denial of care and delays in approving care cause an uncounted number of deaths (see “Patient stories” sheet in this packet).
Causing sickness and suffering for millions of people with treatable health conditions who can’t get the care they need because claims are denied, policies canceled, or deductibles and co-payments set so high that patients can’t afford to seek treatment.
Breach of contract: Insurance companies routinely cancel the policies of many thousands of people after they became sick. A report released in June by House Committee on Energy and Commerce showed that Blue Cross ‘ evaluations included reports of how many policyholders they dropped and how many millions worth of medical care they saved the company. “The committee investigation uncovered several rescission practices that one lawmaker called egregious, including targeting every policyholder diagnosed with leukemia, breast cancer and 1,400 other serious illnesses,” wrote Lisa Girion in the June 17 edition of the L.A. Times.
Theft and waste of 31% of the U.S. health care dollar, according to Harvard researchers Stephanie Woolhandler and David Himmelstein. That’s enough money to extend comprehensive care to all. According to health industry research firm McKinsey & Co., almost two-thirds of insurance company overhead goes to underwriting, sales, and marketing – business costs that would not exist in a single-payer system. Some of the rest goes to profits: The profits of the top 10 health insurance companies went up 428% from 2000 to 2007. And to executive compensation: CEOs of large health insurance companies typically make $ 7 million to $12 million a year or more in salaries.
Subverting democracy by spending huge amounts of our premium money on lobbying, campaign contributions, and private meetings at the White House and Congress. Paul Krugman recently reported that the insurance industry is now spending $1.4 million a day lobbying Congress. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, Blue Dog Democrats in the House of Representatives—the ones who have been fighting so hard to make sure private insurers are the only ones included in the health care reform -- have received a total of $2,905,853 in campaign contributions from the insurance industry.
ActForSinglePayer.blogspot.com, www.mobilizeforhealthcare.org
