Gilding the Lily
Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 30, 2006
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- 1,466
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Not necessarily. This country does not look long term. I'll have to see if I can find it again but I remember reading that the cost of taking care of uninsured medical problems (illegals not with standing) is huge. If the people who did not have insurance were able to get preventative care, the costs would be substantially less.
People do not like giving others a free ride and I understand (even agree to a point) but if the people are going to get care regardless ten I would rather do it the cheapest way possible. I do not think you expect people to e turned out on the street if they cannot afford care so if we have to care for them anyway, would it not behoove us to find a better way to do it?
Garfield...
Ask yourself this question: If people are already able to get easy gov't care through ER or whatever (whether reactive healthcare or not), then why are so many people complaining about the costs???
I definitely agree with the short-sighted comment. There is a better way... one way to do it is to get rid of judicial hell-holes such as St. Clair County.
You cannot reduce the costs of healthcare without reducing the public's overconsumption of such healthcare. There are many ways that healthcare consumers can have an incentive to not go to the doctor as much or not consume useless medical procedures or medicine... and it doesn't have much to do with the government.
I know I mentioned this once before on another thread, but it is worth mentioning again I think:
One way is to use a more in-depth system of medical savings accounts. Rather than employers (where appropriate) paying for a percentage of all your healh insurance, they should put some money into a medical savings account for each employee. Then, perhaps a much smaller amount for catastrophic health care insurance could be maintained by the employer. If the money from the medical account is not used by years end, it gets rolled over into a retirement account. This would give patients/medical consumers an incentive to only use the doctor or procedures when necessary or beneficial from a cost/benefit analysis. This would also help with the all-so-common billing errors. When it is the patient's money that could be used in retirement, they will care whether the doctor charged them twice for latex gloves. It also gives the public an opportunity to make their own priorities in their life, instead of forcing priorities on them, which a severely taxed social healthcare system would do.