Media recently reported that “two health provider groups brought alarming anecdotes and statistics to the House Committee on Health Care.” One legislator compared Vermont’s health care system to a village on fire.

The testimony came from:

  • Devon Green of the Vermont Association of Hospitals and Health Systems.
  • Jessa Barnard of the Vermont Medical Society, which represents 2,600 physicians and physician assistants.

Rest assured that the same privilege has been accorded to insurers like Blue Cross and MVP, as well as the University of Vermont Health Network.

What’s missing here? The voices of the villagers, those ordinary people caught in the fire. The many thousands in medical debt, the many more thousands unable to afford the deductibles and co-pays imposed by the insurance for which they have already paid. They don’t get invited to chat about the problem, don’t sponsor breakfasts for the legislators, and don’t have lobbyists at the ready to push policies that benefit them.

Which means the interests of the villagers are never taken into account the way that the interests of the Vermont Association of Hospitals and Health Systems and the Vermont Medical Society are taken into account. Without those voices, attempts to fight the fire may well end up drowning even more villagers.

I guess villagers need to organize their own nonprofit, something like the Vermont Medical Debtor Society, or the Vermont Association of Helpless Health Care Victims.

Lee Russ

Bennington

Pieces contributed by readers and newsmakers. VTDigger strives to publish a variety of views from a broad range of Vermonters.