If the primary driver of insurance affordability is the rising costs of health care, how does insurance coverage for everyone address this issue?Would this not be analogous to trying to overcome the burden of rising energy costs by having the federal government foot everyone’s gas/heating bills? In the end, all you do is increase the demand vis-à-vis restricted supply, thus furthering the initial problem of rising costs. If the goal is to have coverage for all, why does it make sense to strip away each American’s freedom to choose their own health coverage just because a fraction of the US is not insured?
2/24/2008 2:13:37 PM
Health care for some, tiny American flags for others.
2/24/2008 2:58:43 PM
^winnar(don't blame me, I voted for kodos)but seriously
2/24/2008 3:20:29 PM
there is a difference between making it economically feasible to have health coverage for all and a socialized universal health care plan.Most likely my employer will provide 100% coverage and i will be pissed if i have to pay to subsidize the health insurance for those who'd rather use their marginal income to buy hennesy, a $500 car payment, or [insert other non-necessity commodity here] than to buy health insurance.
2/24/2008 3:50:11 PM
I don’t think straight up socialism is the answer, but I also don’t think that the health care system couldn’t use some improvements from where it’s at now.There are real improvements that can be made that aren’t just the government “footing the bill.” Spending money on a review and overhaul to improve efficiently, the infusion of more technology, a huge focus on preventive medicine, and yeah maybe a little footing of the bills in target areas. If we can get a shift towards having people in the doctors office before hand with the smaller bill that entails instead of at the ER later with a problem that’s become a lot worse and with a bill they can’t pay which just ends up being covered by others anyways, then maybe it would be worth while.Universal Health Care can mean a lot of things and can be acted on in a number of ways. I’m starting to like Obama’s plan, atleast more than Hillary’s because of its focus on affordable care for all, then people can chose whether or not they want it, instead of mandated care for all like Hillary has.I don't think any candidate's plan alone is perfect, but then again they won't be writing the legislation alone. Obama's closer to where I stand on this right now, and in politics its voting for the closest because you'll never find someone who matches you entirely.
2/24/2008 4:01:17 PM
Hunt, Well, neither Hillary's or Obama's plans "strip away your freedom" to choose your own health coverage. You can choose from any private or government insurance plan. But under Hillary's plan you will be forced to have some type of coverage and under Obama's plan you will be "punished" if you wait until you're sick to purchase coverage. I suggest you read up some more before you criticize. But, I do think you make a good point about increasing coverage means increasing demand for medical services. I've addressed this in a few other posts, but the idea is that getting insurance to people who do not currently have it will help them afford regular check-ups and preventive medical care, which will help keep folks from getting diseases that are expensive to treat. Hillary and Obama argue that this will actually lower total health care spending and therefore lower total health care costs. Of course, all the empirical evidence suggests this is not the case. This actually why I like McCain's plan better.
2/24/2008 5:52:37 PM
2/24/2008 7:11:30 PM
Socks - I did not mention either Hillary's or Obama's plan, so I am a little confused why you assert I haven't read up on their plans.One of the fundamental problems with our current system is the lack of price transparency. With a third-party paying most of the costs, there are no incentives in place for either consumers or suppliers of health care to be conscience of costs. Handing out insurance to all Americans does nothing to address the fundamental issue that led premiums to be unaffordable for many in the first place.
2/24/2008 8:27:06 PM
Hunt, So the last paragraph of your post is in reference to? Nothing, I guess. I guess I'll just ignore it then and dive straight to your purely academic concern. The problem is not the third-party (insurance) per se. After all, we don't see premiums spiraling out of reach in the market for car insurance. Consumers of health care services may have a "softer" incentive, but the insurance companies don't. They are VERY concerned with their bottom lines. So if health consumers are wanting "too much" medical services, why aren't the insurance companies saying no???That's the question you should be asking. Because that's going to tell us where some of the reforms need to be made. I recomend checking out "The Age of Diminished Expectations" by Paul Krugman (my favorite popular economist). It has a nice, quick discussion of this problem and some potential solutions.
2/24/2008 8:53:44 PM
You cannot equate car insurance, which has a low probability of payout, with health insurance, which has an almost-guaranteed probability of payout.You can, however, extrapolate some characteristics of the car insurance industry that point to possible improvements in the health insurance industry. For one, car insurance is not nearly as regulated as health insurance. There is a government-induced lack of competition in health insurance. Each state dictates a laundry list of events that must be covered by all plans, which increases premiums (coverage for in-vitro fertilization and chiropractics are common and costly requirements). Additionally, states will not allow citizens to purchase insurance plans originated in other states, which decreases competition among insurers. To answer your question…
2/24/2008 9:27:23 PM
The best thing the government can do for healthcare is to stop regulating it.
2/24/2008 9:54:31 PM
No, the best thing the gov't can do for healthcare is to take it back from the corporations. Hospitals and clinics used to be owned by the communities they serve. Now they are corporations. This new profit being tacked on is your rising health cost.
2/24/2008 9:57:40 PM
Wait. Let me see if I got this right. 1) Thanks to insurance, people don't bear the majority of the cost of the medical services they consume. 2) As a result, they consume more medical services and the cost of those services go up.3) Normally, an insurance company might respond to rising costs by switching to policies that paid less on these claims. However, medical insurance works differently. They are able to stay in business and pay for all these claims by...4) Passing on the majority of the cost of medical services to the people that consume them through higher premiums. And this isn't circular logic because?
2/24/2008 10:03:18 PM
Fine. If they city wants to build a hospital then go ahead. But for goodness sakes, drop the perverse regulations.
2/24/2008 10:04:30 PM
why dont we look at the root of the problem which is the price of health care vs. the price of insurance. we have a demand for health care and health care at a high price. now why is the price high? well that is because there isnt a large enough supply to bring the price down. it is simple economics that when supply is increased price falls. now why is the supply low? well think about how incredibly hard it is to get into med school these days. there are plenty of people out there who are smart enough and capable enough to be doctors but they cannot get into med school. if those people got in and became doctors there would be more of them and that would drop the price. also there would be more competition which would create better health care with more innovations all for the sake of profit.
2/24/2008 10:13:04 PM
2/24/2008 10:14:39 PM
yes, but when government regulation is actually the CAUSE of the high prices, then I'd say that some deregulation is called for.you know, like how it takes years for drugs to get approved and you have to be buddy-buddy with the FDA to have a chance anyway... Gee, what do monopolies do? Oh yeah, JACK UP PRICES. Or what about how the gov't pays pennies on the dollar for everything healthcare related when it comes to medicare and medicaid, thus driving up everyone else's prices?
2/24/2008 10:19:43 PM
It takes years to get approval because there are tons of drugs out there that have very serious side effects. But to say that research and development costs are the primary agent of high drug costs is ridiculous. Drug companies usually spend several times what they spend in R&D for advertising and lobbying activities, usually used to stymy meaningful health care reform, protect long overdue patent expirations or prevent the government to use its purchasing power to buy bulk quantities to reduce cost. Thats why a months worth of meds in Canada might cost $100 in Canada but $400 in the US, they don't allow health care lobbyists to undermine efforts to provide a functioning free market for prescription medicine.[Edited on February 24, 2008 at 10:34 PM. Reason : .]
2/24/2008 10:32:56 PM
and, don't you think that the health care lobby has a HUGE influence on the kinds of regulations being put on the industry already? As in, they make it impossible for anyone else to compete, thus creating an effective monopoly? durrr
2/24/2008 10:38:09 PM
2/24/2008 11:01:25 PM
2/24/2008 11:31:02 PM
2/25/2008 1:06:41 AM
Scuba Steve, regarding your earlier post on the deregulation of S&Ls, it was not outright deregulation that caused their insolvency. On the contrary, it was actually congress' regulations that kept many S&Ls in business. Airline deregulation is a good case study of the ills of regulation and subsquent benefits of deregulation. In most cases, its the consumer who loses the most under regulationhttp://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/AirlineDeregulation.html
2/25/2008 6:54:49 AM
socks - there is an obvious difference in consumer behavior between paying insurance premiums and paying for the underlying health care. When paying premiums, you are not paying for a particular service for which there is an incentive to cut back on in the face of rising costs. When premiums rise, there is little one can do to mitigate the costs due to the fact the prices of the insurance premiums are not purely a function of supply and demand for insurance. Consuming health care, however, does allow for cost containment. The only way we can effectively manage health care costs is to incentivise the consumer to be more conscience of costs. The only way this will happen is if the consumer bears more of the costs of the services they consumer. This would put the necessary incentives in place for the consumer to demand price transparency, which provides suppliers with the necessary incentives to assess costs and improve efficiency. As long as someone else pays the bills, neither will happen.
2/25/2008 7:29:45 AM
Hunt,
2/25/2008 7:45:04 AM
the government forces me to buy car insurance.yet I dont have to buy health insurance.
2/25/2008 8:15:53 AM
Dent, ^ Well that's a different argument all together. It sounds like you're saying that people are not interested in buying cheaper policies with less coverage, that they are totally uninterested in buying health insurance all together. Is that correct?
2/25/2008 8:29:18 AM
im saying if the insurance companies could find a way to make it cost effective (huge profit) to have everyone on health insurance, like they have with car insurance, the government would force us to buy health insurance.it just so happens its not cost effective.
2/25/2008 8:34:07 AM
2/25/2008 8:52:23 AM
2/25/2008 9:51:30 AM
2/25/2008 10:08:48 AM
A libertarian? You don't say.
2/25/2008 10:36:33 AM
yupwhy not?wanting bad companies to be allowed to fail (as opposed to relying on tax-supported bailouts) is very libertarianwanting companies to remain small enough as to not be as powerful as entire nations?perhaps not a classic libertarian view, but I think it is, because it threatens individual libertywanting Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad to be overturned?I could care less what big L libertarians feel about this. corporations are not individuals. periodI read an article in reason magazine about charter revocation being some liberal tomfoolerybut again, until the rules are changed somehow to eliminate corporate oligarchy and fascismpeople NEED some way of ABSOLUTELY KILLING an ENTIRE corporation, (and then to piss on it's grave)this would hold corporations accountable to everyone they affect, not just their shareholdersif you think big L libertarians (read: love and defend huge corporations -- the bigger the better)have any fucking chance at taking on the socialist evolution currently attacking and destroying the america we lovethen you are off your fucking gourdI mean, why do you think so many small L libertarians like much of what nader or kucinich has to say?
2/25/2008 10:56:48 AM
2/25/2008 3:19:44 PM
2/25/2008 3:31:21 PM
Reading massive amounts of medical blogs makes me think doctors are not in favor of government regulation of insurance or medical care
2/25/2008 6:51:39 PM
when i had my car wreck about 25 days ago i asked 3 doctors about it and it was evenly split...one was all for it...one kinda liked what we have now, and the last thought even what we have now kinda sucks[Edited on February 25, 2008 at 7:43 PM. Reason : for the record, i'm for it when like 95 percent of the population is what i deem "healthy"]
2/25/2008 7:42:02 PM
2/25/2008 7:56:51 PM
http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/02/26/dems.debate/index.html
2/27/2008 6:40:56 AM
I agree with Hunt. The main problem is that the majority of people are ignorant to thier own plans and have no decisions about what they get.Health ins does have a comprehensive policy. Its usually a no deduct. copay plan and is expensive. Most people have moved to a deductible. What auto insurances dont have a is a comprehensive policy. They dont offer a plan that covers tune-ups, tires, gas, etc. Imagine how expensive that would be. Auto services also arent FORCED to fix your car for free. Thus reducing the need to have auto ins.Hillary is right, if you are going to have a national plan you have to collect the money from everyone. No opting out. If you do allow people to choose, alot simply wont buy it no matter how cheap it is bc they feel they wont need it. Then they will get in an accident and demand service whihc thye wont pay for...just like now. How do I know? Because we have some of the most irresponsible people in this country. We have people who are GIVEN free ins, who wont take thier kids to the doctor. You are telling me that they will now purchase ins? Its not going to happen.We should allow hospital ERs to triage patients and turn some away.[Edited on February 27, 2008 at 9:35 AM. Reason : .]
2/27/2008 9:34:37 AM
2/27/2008 10:09:34 AM