Insulating Delusion

marathonThis NY Times story on long-distance runners and medical insurers provides a case study on why productive reform of the U.S. health care finance sector so difficult.

As noted many times on this blog, long-distance running is not healthy. Thus, as the article notes, medical insurers are beginning to balk at insuring long-distance runners.

However, the myth that long-distance running is healthy remains firmly implanted in the American psyche. So, the medical insurers – not wanting to be perceived as refusing to cover injuries resulting from supposedly healthy activity – are trying to figure out ways to cover the runners.

And, of course, Obamacare is going to require that insurers cover consumers who engage in injury-causing activities.

Meanwhile, the runners delude themselves that they are engaging in a healthy activity while advocating that insurers essentially provide them insulation (rather than real insurance) from the cost of dealing with the unhealthy effects of their activity.

Don’t get me wrong. Folks should be able to enjoy long-distance running as either exercise or a recreational activity (those are two different things, but that’s for another post). My anecdotal observation is that most runners don’t actually appear to enjoy the activity — the delusion that the benefits of long-distance running outweigh the costs apparently pushes them through the displeasure.

But if folks elect to take the risk of injury from long-distance running, then they should have to bear the cost of at least the non-catastrophic damages resulting from that risk. And insurers should be free to elect not to cover consumers who engage in such risky behavior. Shifting the cost of that risk to insurers (who pass it along to the rest of us) simply encourages runners to avoid confronting the myth that they are engaging in healthy activity.

As the late Milton Friedman was fond of saying, consumers will consume as much health care as they can so long as someone else is paying for it.

One thought on “Insulating Delusion

  1. As a former (emphasis on “former”) distance runner, I agree with you completely. I do other forms of exercise now, as I blew out my ankles badly while running and don’t want to have back trouble the rest of my life.
    One of the unfortunate things in training was that 40+ years ago, Arthur Lydiard, who coached Peter Snell and other running greats in New Zealand, emphasized the 100-mile weeks. Most people simply cannot handle that kind of training, no matter how slowly they run, as the body is not meant to do that much running, especially on hard surfaces.
    Today, I find that I can keep good conditioning by biking (which has good, bloody crashes as a risk, and I have my share) or by the eliptical machine or doing weights. Furthermore, I don’t get the same kind of stress injuries I got from running.
    So, if you want to run, do it, but the body had limits and if you refuse to follow those limits, your body will make you pay and pay dearly.

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