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Kaiser Permanente and WWII 

California & the American West — Industrial Medicine Becomes a Health‑Insurance Model Category: Health Insurance / Integrated Care / Industrial Innovation

During World War II, the United States faced a massive industrial challenge: building ships, planes, and military infrastructure at a pace the world had never seen. In the American West, one of the largest wartime employers was Henry J. Kaiser, whose shipyards in Richmond, California, employed tens of thousands of workers. These workers labored under dangerous conditions — welding, riveting, lifting steel plates — and they needed reliable medical care.

Kaiser’s solution, created in partnership with physician Dr. Sidney Garfield, would become one of the most influential innovations in American healthcare: a prepaid, integrated, group‑practice medical system that would later be known as Kaiser Permanente.

It began as industrial medicine. It became a national health‑insurance model.

The Origins: Dr. Garfield and the Desert Hospital (1930s)

Before the war, Dr. Sidney Garfield had experimented with prepaid medical care while treating workers on the Los Angeles Aqueduct and later at a desert hospital near the Colorado River. His model was simple:

Garfield’s early experiments were financially shaky, but conceptually revolutionary.

When Henry Kaiser discovered Garfield’s model, he saw its potential.

Wartime Expansion: The Kaiser Shipyards (1942–1945)

During WWII, Kaiser needed a way to keep his workforce healthy, productive, and on the job. Injuries were common. Turnover was high. Traditional fee‑for‑service medicine was too slow and too expensive.

Kaiser invited Garfield to build a medical system for the shipyards.

What emerged was unprecedented:

By 1945, the Kaiser system was treating more than 200,000 workers — one of the largest prepaid health plans in the world.

This was the birth of the HMO model, decades before the term existed.

Postwar Transformation: From Industrial Plan to Public Health System

When the war ended, the shipyards closed. Most wartime medical programs shut down with them.

But Kaiser and Garfield made a bold decision: They opened the plan to the general public.

In 1945, the system was reorganized as:

Together, these formed Kaiser Permanente, a nonprofit, integrated health‑care system unlike anything else in the United States.

Insurance Impact

Kaiser Permanente introduced several innovations that would reshape American health insurance:

Kaiser was the first large‑scale alternative to fee‑for‑service medicine.

It was also the first major competitor to Blue Cross and Blue Shield.

Why Kaiser Was Controversial

Traditional medical societies opposed the model fiercely:

The American Medical Association fought Kaiser for decades.

But the public embraced it.

Why It Mattered

Kaiser Permanente is one of the most important institutional innovations in American health insurance. It marks:

Kaiser showed that health insurance could be more than a financing mechanism — it could be a delivery system.

It remains one of the largest nonprofit health systems in the United States.

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