Murder Most Foul
The CEO of UnitedHealthcare, Brian Thompson, was shot in the back and killed while walking to a shareholder meeting on December 4. The alleged assassin was apparently enraged by the private health insurance industry—in a note, he called the executives “parasites” who “had it coming.” Insurers too often deny coverage for medical procedures (United denies 17%, the industry’s highest), policy provisions are complicated to navigate, and coverage is both expensive and remarkably profitable.
The murder was shocking and so has been the widespread sympathy for the alleged killer expressed on social media and in opinion surveys. Clearly, many people are so deeply unhappy with American healthcare, especially with private health insurance, that a cold-blooded killer seems to have become something of a folk hero.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development ranking of 2022 per capita healthcare costs (in U.S. dollars) has the U.S. first at $12,555 followed by Switzerland at $8,049, Germany $8,011, Norway $7,771, Austria $7,275, Netherlands $6,729, France $6,630, Belgium $6,600, Sweden $6,436, our neighbor Canada $6,319, and so on in descending order. The most popular healthcare among its citizens is Finland’s at $5,599. “We’re number 1” in spending is nothing to cheer about, certainly not when that spending buys something widely unpopular.
Health insurance is a profitable business. United, the nation’s largest insurer, made $16 billion in profits in 2023, a 33% increase from 2021, and CEO Thompson was paid $10.2 million in 2023. United’s parent company, UnitedHealth Group, earned 25.9% per shareholder-dollar from 2019-2023, much more than the average 17.9% for all companies in the S&P 500. As one doctor put it, “Today, medicine is awash in the language of economics. Patients are consumers; doctors are providers; health care is a commodity.”
For seniors, United and others offer Medicare Advantage, which often include dental and vision coverages that regular Medicare lacks. Private insurers have learned to game Medicare, which pays a fixed amount according to how many caregiver visits a patient makes. United now encourages doctors to compete: those who diagnose the most conditions in Medicare Advantage patients are eligible for $10,000 bonuses. A nonpartisan Congressional advisory commission estimates private Medicare Advantage plans cost taxpayers $80 billion a year more than regular Medicare.
Even so, insurance profits are only part of the reason U.S. healthcare is more costly than elsewhere. High prices charged by healthcare providers and high administrative costs are just as important, according to Peterson-KFF (formerly the Kaiser Family Foundation). Private equity firms have bought hundreds of hospitals nationwide and profited from skimping on patient care, staffing, and facility upgrades.
And increasingly, insurers don’t just insure. UnitedHealth’s Optum is the nation’s biggest employer of physicians, and its OptumRx pharmacy negotiates prices with drug makers (and is being sued by the Federal Trade Commission for anticompetitive practices that artificially raised insulin prices).
How can we fix our healthcare? Shooting executives is never the answer. The answer is to copy the best of what other countries do. There’s a job for Elon Musk’s proposed Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). The Constitution says the “general Welfare” is one of government’s fundamental jobs, and what is more important to the general welfare than healthy citizens? For all his oddities, Musk has led the global shift to electric vehicles and to commercial reusable rockets. Perhaps he could envision a more efficient and less costly health system serving every American with no loss in quality of care.