Awful,
I read your post and I find a whole raft of unsupported assertions right out of talk-radio talking points. I think you will find through investigation that, very few of the reasons you cite have any meaningful impact on health care costs.
Also I’m afraid you are quite mistaken about my assessment of the reasons for the extraordinarily high cost of health care. It isn’t greed on anyone’s part. It is primarily a result of two factors, cutting edge technology and the large number of uninsured people who receive their primary care through emergency rooms.
You are correct that businesses opted to offer health insurance to their employees because of a wage freeze by the government, what you fail to mention is that the wage freeze was a measure the government enacted to fight World War II. Even then the wage controls were removed shortly after WWII (60 years ago!!).
The “administration and paperwork” is a bit of a red herring as well. Both Medicaid and Medicare have much lower administrative costs. Only about 5% of Medicare spending is administrative compared to 9% for private insurers (17% if you count marketing and commision costs!!). So that dog won’t hunt.
cahi.org/cahi_contents/resources/pdf/CAHI_Medicare_Admin_Final_Publication.pdf
“Overuse of insurance”, I’ve never heard this one. I’ve heard that ER use is too high, generally because of the number of people who use the ER as their PCP and because insured folks often don’t find the hours of their PCP convenient to meet their “urgentish” needs. My understanding was that the rise of the “Doc-in-a-box” had largely addressed the second groups, but the first group was still a problem. Given the constant preaching about preventative care being cheaper than treatment, I’d be surprised if insurers actually wanted their insureds to visit the doctor’s less often. If you have any data on this I’d love to see it.
“Fear of malpractice suits” Oh! I remember this one! This was the one the Malpractice Insurers trotted out a few years ago when that wave of “tort reform” swept the US. Well, the cost of insurance certainly isn’t a issue accounting for less than 2% of health care costs in the US.
makethemaccountable.com/myth/RisingCostOfMedicalMalpracticeInsurance.htm
As far as defensive medicine, the absolute highest estimate I’ve ever seen is that $210B (out of total spend of $2.1T) is spent on defensive medicine, which would account for ~10% of spending, but doesn’t explain the year over year increases at all.
blogs.usatoday.com/oped/2008/04/wasted-medical.html
Now we’ve got state regulation. Here we may part company philosophically. But lets look at the best (worst?) case. Even the Heritage Foundation (a source I would imagine you’d approve of) estimates that the maximum cost of state regulation is about $2,000 per year. And of course that begs the question of who would be dong the regulating (I think even you would concede that
b some
regulation is necessary?). And what happened to this belief in “states rights” that all you conservatives were supposed to consider so sacrosanct?
So lets review the bidding. Discarding the wage control as true but irrelevant, discounting the mythical excessive administrative fees of Medicare and Medicaid, we’re left with defensive medicine
at most! 10% and “state regulation” at $2,000/year.
The original quote was $12,000 per year, discounting that to 90% to eliminate “defensive medicine” we get $10,800, knocking off another $2,000 for state regulation we’re still left with $8,800 per year. In a society where 40% of households earn less than $40,000, (and the median is $50K)
census.gov/prod/2008pubs/p60-235.pdf
that’s simply not affordable my anyone’s definition.
I suppose you could take the Social Darwinist position that people who can’t afford health insurance shouldn’t get health care, I suppose you could even believe that people shouldn’t have children if they can’t afford to provide them with health insurance, but I think both of these positions are inconsistent with Catholic philosophy and theology.
And none of this explains why the costs keep increasing so danged fast!
The best explanation I’ve heard cites the rise in technology (both equipment and drugs) as the single fastest driver of health care increases. Other important factors are the increase in uninsured are causing hospitals to amortize more unpaid bills (from the uninsured) to the rest of us and finally a rapidly aging population.