The New York Times
Op-Ed Contributor
Big Food vs. Big Insurance
By MICHAEL POLLAN

Berkeley, Calif.

TO listen to President Obama’s speech on Wednesday night, or to
just about anyone else in the health care debate, you would think
that the biggest problem with health care in America is the system
itself -- perverse incentives, inefficiencies, unnecessary tests
and procedures, lack of competition, and greed.

No one disputes that the $2.3 trillion we devote to the health
care industry is often spent unwisely, but the fact that the
United States spends twice as much per person as most European
countries on health care can be substantially explained, as a
study released last month says, by our being fatter. Even the most
efficient health care system that the administration could hope to
devise would still confront a rising tide of chronic disease
linked to diet.

That’s why our success in bringing health care costs under control
ultimately depends on whether Washington can summon the political
will to take on and reform a second, even more powerful industry:
the food industry.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
three-quarters of health care spending now goes to treat
"preventable chronic diseases." Not all of these diseases are
linked to diet -- there’s smoking, for instance -- but many, if
not most, of them are.

We’re spending $147 billion to treat obesity, $116 billion to
treat diabetes, and hundreds of billions more to treat
cardiovascular disease and the many types of cancer that have been
linked to the so-called Western diet. One recent study estimated
that 30 percent of the increase in health care spending over the
past 20 years could be attributed to the soaring rate of obesity,
a condition that now accounts for nearly a tenth of all spending
on health care.

The American way of eating has become the elephant in the room in
the debate over health care. The president has made a few notable
allusions to it, and, by planting her vegetable garden on the
South Lawn, Michelle Obama has tried to focus our attention on
it. Just last month, Mr. Obama talked about putting a farmers’
market in front of the White House, and building new distribution
networks to connect local farmers to public schools so that
student lunches might offer more fresh produce and fewer Tater
Tots. He’s even floated the idea of taxing soda.

But so far, food system reform has not figured in the national
conversation about health care reform. And so the government is
poised to go on encouraging America’s fast-food diet with its farm
policies even as it takes on added responsibilities for covering
the medical costs of that diet. To put it more bluntly, the
government is putting itself in the uncomfortable position of
subsidizing both the costs of treating Type 2 diabetes and the
consumption of high-fructose corn syrup.

Why the disconnect? Probably because reforming the food system is
politically even more difficult than reforming the health care
system. At least in the health care battle, the administration can
count some powerful corporate interests on its side -- like the
large segment of the Fortune 500 that has concluded the current
system is unsustainable.

That is hardly the case when it comes to challenging
agribusiness. Cheap food is going to be popular as long as the
social and environmental costs of that food are charged to the
future. There’s lots of money to be made selling fast food and
then treating the diseases that fast food causes. One of the
leading products of the American food industry has become patients
for the American health care industry.

The market for prescription drugs and medical devices to manage
Type 2 diabetes, which the Centers for Disease Control estimates
will afflict one in three Americans born after 2000, is one of the
brighter spots in the American economy. As things stand, the
health care industry finds it more profitable to treat chronic
diseases than to prevent them. There’s more money in amputating
the limbs of diabetics than in counseling them on diet and
exercise.

As for the insurers, you would think preventing chronic diseases
would be good business, but, at least under the current rules,
it’s much better business simply to keep patients at risk for
chronic disease out of your pool of customers, whether through
lifetime caps on coverage or rules against pre-existing conditions
or by figuring out ways to toss patients overboard when they
become ill.

But these rules may well be about to change -- and, when it comes
to reforming the American diet and food system, that step alone
could be a game changer. Even under the weaker versions of health
care reform now on offer, health insurers would be required to
take everyone at the same rates, provide a standard level of
coverage and keep people on their rolls regardless of their
health. Terms like "pre-existing conditions" and "underwriting"
would vanish from the health insurance rulebook -- and, when they
do, the relationship between the health insurance industry and the
food industry will undergo a sea change.

The moment these new rules take effect, health insurance companies
will promptly discover they have a powerful interest in reducing
rates of obesity and chronic diseases linked to diet. A patient
with Type 2 diabetes incurs additional health care costs of more
than $6,600 a year; over a lifetime, that can come to more than
$400,000. Insurers will quickly figure out that every case of Type
2 diabetes they can prevent adds $400,000 to their bottom
line. Suddenly, every can of soda or Happy Meal or chicken nugget
on a school lunch menu will look like a threat to future profits.

When health insurers can no longer evade much of the cost of
treating the collateral damage of the American diet, the movement
to reform the food system -- everything from farm policy to food
marketing and school lunches -- will acquire a powerful and
wealthy ally, something it hasn’t really ever had before.

AGRIBUSINESS dominates the agriculture committees of Congress, and
has swatted away most efforts at reform. But what happens when the
health insurance industry realizes that our system of farm
subsidies makes junk food cheap, and fresh produce dear, and thus
contributes to obesity and Type 2 diabetes? It will promptly get
involved in the fight over the farm bill -- which is to say, the
industry will begin buying seats on those agriculture committees
and demanding that the next bill be written with the interests of
the public health more firmly in mind.

In the same way much of the health insurance industry threw its
weight behind the campaign against smoking, we can expect it to
support, and perhaps even help pay for, public education efforts
like New York City’s bold new ad campaign against drinking
soda. At the moment, a federal campaign to discourage the
consumption of sweetened soft drinks is a political nonstarter,
but few things could do more to slow the rise of Type 2 diabetes
among adolescents than to reduce their soda consumption, which
represents 15 percent of their caloric intake.

That’s why it’s easy to imagine the industry throwing its weight
behind a soda tax. School lunch reform would become its cause,
too, and in time the industry would come to see that the
development of regional food systems, which make fresh produce
more available and reduce dependence on heavily processed food
from far away, could help prevent chronic disease and reduce their
costs.

Recently a team of designers from M.I.T. and Columbia was asked by
the foundation of the insurer UnitedHealthcare to develop an
innovative systems approach to tackling childhood obesity in
America. Their conclusion surprised the designers as much as their
sponsor: they determined that promoting the concept of a
"foodshed" -- a diversified, regional food economy -- could be the
key to improving the American diet.

All of which suggests that passing a health care reform bill, no
matter how ambitious, is only the first step in solving our health
care crisis. To keep from bankrupting ourselves, we will then have
to get to work on improving our health -- which means going to
work on the American way of eating.

But even if we get a health care bill that does little more than
require insurers to cover everyone on the same basis, it could put
us on that course.

For it will force the industry, and the government, to take a good
hard look at the elephant in the room and galvanize a movement to
slim it down.

==

Michael Pollan, a contributing writer for The Times Magazine and a
professor of journalism at the University of California, Berkeley,
is the author of "In Defense of Food: An Eater’s Manifesto."


_______________________________________________
For more information about sustainability in the Tompkins County area, please 
visit:  http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/

RSS, archives, subscription & listserv information for:
[email protected]
http://lists.mutualaid.org/mailman/listinfo/sustainabletompkins
Questions about the list? ask [email protected]
free hosting by http://www.mutualaid.org

Reply via email to