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Uncritical
Condition
Network news
fails to examine
high cost and proven failures
of government-run health care
Executive Summary
A study from the Business & Media Institute
Full Report
PDF Version
President Barack
Obama wants a health care reform plan by August and the news media
are doing their part to make it happen. ABC, CBS and NBC have
boosted the administration’s case with sad stories about children
without medical care and cancer patients whose insurance was
cancelled. At the same time, those networks are nearly ignoring
trillion-dollar cost estimates for a universal health care package,
and have been virtually silent on the failures of Medicare the
government insurance program that “reform” would be modeled on.
Some network
journalists, like ABC medical editor Dr. Tim Johnson, are openly
embracing “ObamaCare.” A long-time supporter of government-run
health care, this “objective” journalist calls the lack of
“universal coverage” a “national shame.” ABC and the other networks
are promoting Obama’s “historic” and “ambitious” health care agenda.
Stories on ABC, CBS and NBC favored proponents to critics by a
margin of more than 2-to-1 (243 to 104).
The Media
Research Center’s Business & Media Institute examined 224 stories
about health care on the three broadcast networks’ morning and
evening shows that aired between Jan. 20, the date of Obama’s
inauguration, and June 24, the night of ABC’s prime time town hall
special on health care. Here are some additional findings:
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Networks
Barely Discuss Cost Complaint:
The No. 1
criticism of ObamaCare has been its price tag. The Congressional
Budget Office estimates one proposed health care bill would cost
$1.6 trillion (while still leaving roughly 36 million people
uninsured according to the Washington Times). Yet, only 20
network stories (9 percent) referenced estimates even close to
that number.
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Total Number
of Uninsured Exaggerated:
On April 29,
Robin Roberts told “Good Morning America” viewers that “50
million Americans” were uninsured. Her claim was wrong by nearly
14 million people. Network mentions of the total number of
uninsured were wrong by a margin of 4-to-1 (80 percent). Only
NBC “Nightly News” and ABC “World News” never got it wrong – by
not citing the number of uninsured at all.
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Networks
Don’t Compare ‘Medicare-like’ Public Option to Medicare’s Track
Record:
Reporters
admitted the public option insurance Obama wants would be
“similar to Medicare” in just 11 of the stories (5 percent). But
none of those stories pointed out that Medicare is heading
toward an “explosive fiscal situation,” according to the CBO, or
that the program is a big reason for rising health care costs.
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ABC the
Worst:
Universal-coverage proponent Dr. Tim Johnson and his blatant
support for Obama’s health care plans made ABC’s coverage easily
the worst of the three networks. Johnson, who had called the
Clintons “almost heroes in my mind” after attempting to reform
health care, is ABC’s “expert on health care reform” according
to Diane Sawyer. Johnson even praised Obama as “right on target”
for reaching out to doctors in Chicago June 15.
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NBC the
Best:
NBC did a
better job than the other networks on a challenging topic.
On June 24, Matt Lauer described health reform plans as
“exorbitantly expensive” and asked how the president would
handle the remaining “35 million” uninsured after promising
“universal” coverage. NBC also did a slightly better job of
including criticism of government health care than CBS did (25
percent for CBS to 29 percent for NBC) and made far fewer errors
about the number of uninsured than CBS (CBS was wrong 8 times,
NBC 2 times).
Network coverage
of the health care reform plans needs to improve to ensure a fair
debate. Here are some recommendations to accomplish that:
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Be Honest
about the Cost:
Any
government plan is going to come at a huge cost to taxpayers. It
is the responsibility of reporters to ask what those costs will
be and who will be forced to pay them. Journalists should also
be skeptical of cost estimates from the government since they
have been unreliable in the past.
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Talk to
Critics:
In the case
of health care, proponents of ObamaCare or other
government-health care plans were included nearly three times as
often as critics. In some cases, critics were given only a
few-second sound bite while three or four sound bites from the
president were used in the same story. The networks need to
include more people skeptical of such plans and treat them
equally.
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Expose the
Shortcomings of Government Programs:
Instead of
advocating a new government solution, reporters should be
examining problems with health care in Massachusetts and Hawaii,
existing federal programs like Medicare and other countries.
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Find
Alternatives:
Conservative health policy experts advocated less regulation,
tax code changes and more freedom of choice. Networks should
include such experts and their proposals, not just the
administration’s proposals.
Click Here to Read the Full Report
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