V
vern_humphrey
Guest
Amen!BTW, there is no free health care. Somebody, somewhere, pays for it.
Those who can pay, should pay. Those who can pay something, should pay their share, with some help from the rest of us. And we should provide for who cannot pay – which we can’t effectively do if everyone is feeding out of the same trough.
That is why I support true Medical Savings Accounts – the only system I know of with a chance of lowering medical costs.
The fundamental principle behind Medical Savings Accounts (MSA) is that you buy cheap, high-deductible catastrophic health insurance, and then save an amount each year with tax-free dollars to cover any medical expenses up to the deductable. You roll any unused dollars over at the end of each year into your IRA. The institution holding the MSA would issue a credit card, and this card would be used to pay for health care. This would have several important impacts:
- Paperwork makes up from one-third (in private health plans) to two-thirds (in government programs) of the total cost of health care. The use of this credit card approach would dramatically reduce the paperwork and result in lower costs.
- The current systems of paying for health care have long delays built in. The pay-on-the-spot approach would allow care providers to further lower costs.
- MSAs provide an incentive for people to bargain for health care – when people spend their own money (and know they can keep all they save), they have an incentive to bargain for better rates.
- MSAs provide an incentive to avoid over-consumption of medical care.
Young people would especially benefit from this – since they could build up substantial savings in their healthiest years.