No one has answered my question…who will be approving coverages? Who will be paying claims, and how will they be paid? Why do some of the posters here suppose that insurance carriers will be eliminated if we have UHC?
Most proposals are similar to medicare and medicaid at the level of benefits determination- check the right boxes, you get coverage for specific procedures that are not decided upon by you and your doctor, but by bureaucrats.
Contrary to popular belief, claims will be denied under UHC- there will be people with legitimate needs who cannot get treatment for many reasons:
some faceless bureaucrat didn’t get the right form with the right boxes checked,
because some politician 2000 miles away didn’t vote for the right bill because they made a deal with their buddy down the hall to get more bridges in their county,
or because some lobbyist convinced enough bureaucrats that the government shouldn’t fund their competitor’s new medicine or machine.
**To save everyone a lot of frenzied typing, I agree that these problems all exist in our current system- UHC and the current system are equally bad. **
The government does not have anywhere near the amount of money needed to fund insurance medical claims for an entire country.
One of the biggest proposals to fund UHC right now is to either impose a “windfall profits” tax on energy companies, or to develop a system of taxation based on carbon credit exchange which would generate revenue for the government.
Whatever you think of energy companies, the bottom line is that a tax on them is going to be felt first at the gas pumps-and then with everything else. Like all taxes on the rich, the people hurt most by it would be the poor.
I don’t have enough Tylenol on hand to start explaining the whole carbon credit tax scheme- but in the end, businesses would be punished for, uh, global warming, and the tax burden would trickle down to the rest of us through price increases, wage cuts, and job layoffs.
It is worth noting also that, like the current system, things will inevitably get more expensive- and we will all end up paying for it.
Those $700 toilet seats won’t be restricted to the military applications anymore-they will be available for everyone at hospitals nationwide.