Beer Baron said:
gearheadmb said:
I think the problem with healthcare is the same problem with higher education, and that is mixing socialism with capitalism. When the Gov tells a business to send them the bill things go off the rails cost wise.
If that is true, then why do European nations with systems like you are describing have a lower per-capita cost for health care and education?
The best argument I have heard similar to what you appear to be making is that one of the U.S.'s big problems is that where other nations have this style system or that style system, the U.S. has a patchwork of at least three major systems for providing healthcare. It's not that we have a system that is a "blend of socialism and capitalism" but that we have one system that is far more capitalist than most other developed nations and another system that is far more socialist, both are broken on their own and the issues each has compound upon each other rather than fill in the gaps.
As someone who works in this- this is completely true. The simplest expression I can give of the USA's healthcare system, is that it's built and meant for the 70s running the worst of both capitalist and socialist ideologies.
I am not a fan of Medicare for All because it has serious faults... but I'm not a fan of people dying more, and a lot of americans die needlessly.
We can do the easy thing and just pick winners and losers by shifting the cost burden around or we can do the hard thing and build a comprehensive model of the process, identify the inefficiencies, and intelligently reduce / eliminate them.
This is also true. I hate the trend of band-aiding onto the current system, because there's no control over insurance systems when it comes to the level of work they demand for proper bureaucracy. That in fact, is how insurance agencies fight against us- after the ACA passed they increased the amount of paperwork so much that it took an average of 3 minutes to over 20 for one doctor's visit, which is part of why NPs and PA-Cs are seeing such an expansion.
Want to understand why costs for private insurance are so high? 35% of $100 aspirin is $35 but 35% of a $2 aspirin is 70 cents.
Ironically, Medicare/Medicaid can be one of the key reasons why prices on medications is so high in hospitals. The reason is because economically, since Medicare draws a line in the sand saying "We won't pay more than $X for a pill", in doing so these corporations are incentivized to only combat that number and not each other- and since it's daddy US government and the cash flow is guaranteed, why change? It's basically a check that hasn't been banked yet, and because of that there's also no impetuous to change.
From here corpos will eventually shove each other out, but that's more in a duopoly/tetarchy way, a partnership more than anything. They do this because it eventually makes more sense for one company to focus on X products and simply... agree to not step on each other's toes. They'll purchase and swap plants and lines and personnel until two or three companies make all of one product, and the price remains static. You see this in the modern telecom industry as well; here in the USA, we still only have Baxter producing all our saline for infusion out of Puerto Rico, and ... you get it.
It is not uncommon for people WITH INSURANCE in the U.S. in need of major surgeries to take a month off work, fly to Europe, pay out of pocket for an operation, and sit around recovering on vacation for a couple weeks before flying back to the U.S. sooner and for lower out-of-pocket cost than using their insurance to cover the same procedure in the U.S.
E36 M3 dude, our insurance is starting to sponsor it even. It's called "Healthcare Tourism" Spain is a major destination for hip and knee replacements now.