J
JW10631
Guest
Drop the single-payer nonsense. Single-payer is a catch phrase for government controlled health care. government owned monopoly.it seems to me the first thing to do is eliminate the health insurance industry altogether – there’s nothing wrong with hospitals or drug companies making a (reasonable) profit on the work they do, but the idea of a middle man skimming off the top without contributing to anybody’s health or healing is pure insanity.
eliminating the health insurance industry means implementing one of two existing solutions: a government run system (a la britain), or a single-payer insurance system (where there are copays, premiums and whatnot, but it’s all funneled through one not-for-profit organization).
the outrageous cost of health care in the US can be mitigated by:
i’m stumped by what to do about the drug companies. i suspect that the scientists who are designing and researching the new drugs do it as much for love as for money; i’m not so sure about the execs or the share-holders. banning drug ads is a great idea, and we ought not to feel obligated to offer them tort “reform” in return. if they’re making a profit off us, they need to be held accountable for rushing drugs to the market or suppressing information about health risks. that’s what punitive damages are for.
- cutting out the middle man!
- digitizing medical records and making them available to providers anywhere in the country
- promoting a cultural shift within the health care community away from new/shiny and toward tried/true, AKA evidence-based practice
- providing the best preventive care possible (this has to go way beyond the yearly physical – smoking cessation, weight loss, vaccination, proper management of chronic conditions, early detection of acute conditions, etc.), which means, i’m sorry to say, providing it for free.
it’s not always the case that people don’t value things they get for free. i’m sure there are some who would go “yahoo!” and turn visiting the doctor into some form of entertainment. but not everyone. i’m on medicaid, which means all the health care i recieve is paid for by the state and federal government, and also by the doctors i see, who don’t get as big a reimbursement from medicaid as they do from for-profit insurance companies. i’m keenly aware of this, and i do what i can to keep my expenses low.
I have worked in health care - hospitals and health insurance - since 1979.
The growth in health care costs is due to utilization. 90% plus of a health insurer’s expenditure is to pay claims. All it takes to prove this is to read a financial statement. Insurance companies are swamped with Federal and state regulation. Don’t think so? Do my job, then tell me what it’s like.
The end user of health care services is the one who pays for this regulation as well as the rising cost of health care services. Insurance companies don’t set the cost of services. That comes from hospitals, pharmeceutical companies, physicians, medical equipment providers, other health care professionals.
What is typical is that many people take the bait from the media and blame the insurance company for all that is wrong. I’m not excusing them. I worked for an insurer that was investigated by the US Congress in 1993. Our CEO flew all over the world on the Concorde and a VP stocked his wine cellar with the company expense account.
We don’t have a single payer auto insurance system.
We don’t have a single payer home insurance system.
We don’t have a single payer life insurance system.
What is needed is the ability of groups and individuals to shop for the health insurance they want and for consumers of health care to take better care of themselves.
Do you want to pay higher auto insurance rates so a teenager can pay a cheaper rate? The same process applies.