Jon Tevlin's May 7 column on my support for the American Health Care Act ("Spare us crowing over your 'health' bill") was both inaccurate and offensive. Put aside the numerous non sequiturs in the piece regarding what is or is not political courage, the deliberate distortion of actual fact cannot go unchallenged and is not fit for a newspaper with any interest in maintaining a modicum of credibility.
Now, I understand how quoting people who are genuinely scared and vulnerable might make good copy for a columnist with an agenda, but using those remarks to give a deliberately false impression is not good journalism, to say the least.
For example, stating the AHCA turns back the clock so "insurers could consider sexual assaults and even pregnancy pre-existing conditions" is an outrage and deserves a retraction. Gender discrimination is explicitly prohibited by the law and exploiting the tragedy of rape by falsely referring to it as a pre-existing condition is unconscionable. So much so that the Washington Post gave the scurrilous charge a well-deserved "4 Pinocchios" from the paper's fact-checkers. The Star Tribune should do the same.
Under the AHCA, no one can be charged more for any reason unless they stop paying their premiums. Tevlin's suggestion that this continuous coverage requirement is "robbing people of coverage" is especially partisan given that it's nearly identical to the provision in Sen. Ted Kennedy's 1996 HIPAA law for employer-sponsored plans — no doubt like the Star Tribune's.
Tell me, Jon, was the late liberal lion from Massachusetts "cynical" and "mean-spirited" as well?
U.S. Rep. Jason Lewis, R-Minn.
The writer represents Minnesota's Second Congressional District.
FOR-PROFIT HMOS
The motivating effect of money? Extrapolate from this example.
An example of why for-profit health insurance would not work ("Minnesota is poised to fall into a trap," May 10): I have lived with, and worked despite, a serious autoimmune disease for almost 20 years, which has been stubbornly hard to treat. I have tried many medications that either worked and then failed, or never worked at all. When the latest med stopped working, I went to Mayo, to see if my specialist there had another ace in her pocket. And she did; she recommended that I join her research trial this summer. Ahead of the trial, we need to treat a related condition, for which she recommended a safe, noninvasive procedure. It's somewhat experimental for this condition, but she thinks it will work. However, my insurance company flat-out refuses to pay for it, against the recommendations of my doctors, against specialists who have been treating me, and this disease for years. It's prohibitive to pay out-of-pocket.
Insurers, how much do you spend on executive salaries? How much on advertising? How much on lobbying? How many health care dollars are you diverting from actual health care? How are you adding value, coming between patients and their doctors? At best, you are an expensive bill-payer. At worst, you sentence people like me to a diminished life, marked by pain and fatigue. We need to get rid of these money-sucking middlemen called insurance companies. We need real nonprofit health care. We need Medicare for all.