Many are finding the new healthcare legislation more expensive and harder to implement then first thought. When it comes to healthcare people wonder what we are facing in both care and cost, what I see as the crux of the issue is who will be paying these bills. We must look at how we can cut healthcare cost
so we get more and better coverage for the money spent. Extending medicare to
give the most "basic coverage" to everyone would require some rationing
of service to contain cost, but this is already being done. It would
allow us to discontinue Medicaid while meeting our goal of basic
healthcare for all citizens. Other wise let us be honest and made it
lawful to turn the uninsured and poor away from the emergency rooms of
our nations hospitals untreated.
Healthcare
is ridiculously expensive because many people have convinced themselves
of three things: The answers for good health outcomes rest with pills
and procedures rather than good diet and exercise. Death at late stages
of life is some strange, recent development
in human history which justifies and necessitates extreme, exorbitant
payouts to delay it for every possible last second. And last but not least, thinking that mixing all the myriad of
"health care" transactions that result
from the just mentioned concepts with health insurance as originally
conceived to
protect a person from unforeseeable, catastrophic events like an
accident is
a good idea. Just because we can
does not mean we should, healthcare is like a tape worm ever ready and always wanting to grow larger.
Healthcare is the Achilles heel of American competitiveness, our healthcare problems are not for
lack of spending, Americans spend more on healthcare then people in
other developed countries, but with very poor results. Our system allows
insurance companies to stick
their nose into every interaction you have with a health care provider,
they get to take a large cut as well. It has become virtually impossible
to
find a modestly-priced traditional insurance plan that protects a
person from unforeseeable catastrophic accidents while letting them own
responsibility for the accumulation of their lifestyle choices over
time, thus differentiating the healthy 70-something marathon runners
from a
fat slob suffering from self induced diabetes.
After the Supreme Court decided that Obamacare is here to stay, I heard one supporter say "I think it rather tragic that a five/four
Supreme Court decision could have overturned the wishes of Congress." Another joked, "I guess we could just let people die in the streets but
then the
conservatives would probably complain about the cost of collecting the
corpses." This is the kind of noise that makes it difficult to stay focused on the important issues. Surely there is a legitimate and rational
place for government in ensuring access to basic levels of care, but
we've lost our bearings about what "basic levels of care" should
mean, and we know what happens to costs when free government money flows
into a system, hello college tuition! Indeed, healthcare and hospitals have become a quasi government entity.
Another
interesting objection to Obamacare is that it is a boondoggle to
increase the profits of
private companies and their owners and that it should not have been
adopted in
preference to a single-payer system covering "basic healthcare." A
single-payer system could achieve many of the goals of the healthcare
bill by cutting cost through eliminating wasteful duplication,
bureaucracies, and paperwork. The idea wouldn't eliminate insurance or
pharmaceutical companies, they would continue to sell extensive types of
"optional" coverage. A single payer program would appear
constitutional. Many argue
there are "better" solutions than Obamacare, but that is not the legal
standard for what is constitutional. Deciding the better, or the
workable, is the job of the legislature.
We all know
that there is no escaping the grim reaper, and little to no way to
collect against the dead if they have no assets to pay for burial,
cremation, etc. Therefore, mandating people buy burial insurance makes
sense. Consider the fabled broccoli, gym, and junk food examples, if you
are
out of shape you increase your chances of getting a major disease and
forcing costs on the system. Once Congress has the power to regulate in
an area it is more or less unfettered what is to prevent them from
mandating you eat broccoli, go to the gym and banning junk food? When all is said and done the crux
of the issue is how can America cut healthcare cost
and get more and better coverage for the money spent.
Footnote; Other related articles may be found in my blog archive, thanks for reading and comments are encouraged,
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