![]() |
Re: Aca
Quote:
It seems to me that no matter how complicated providing adequate healthcare coverage is, there are a few simple truths.
But I really want to understand what you think the right approach is. Because, unless you choose one (universal healthcare) or the other (government completely out of the healthcare "business"), everything in the middle will have problems. The question is, do you have any interest at all in figuring out how to solve those problems or do you just want to bitch about your taxes? TM |
Nunes
This shit is a joke. Nunes is a fucking stooge. Ryan is complicit in all of this shit for sticking with him. There is absolutely zero integrity in the Republican House. I truly hope the Senate acts with some.
http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politi...etapping-obama TM |
Re: Nunes
Quote:
The Daily Dose is a Mohawks tune from 1968, that has that nice raw early funk feel to it. "Pepsi": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hbwm8aNDgA0 |
Re: Nunes
Quote:
The frightening thing about today is that there is both Ryan and Trump at the same time. No Eisenhower balancing McCarthy, no Scott balancing Nixon or Clinton managing Gingrich. |
Re: Nothing to see here. No. Really. You can't see this.
Quote:
TM |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
Quote:
And now Haley is through the looking glass. |
Re: Aca
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
The reason we do not have universal healthcare, I believe, is political. It has "socialist" connotations. Quote:
A conversion to true insurance would lower unit prices across the board, as removal of third party payers forces preventative/elective care providers to lower unit prices to affordable rates. (If they don't, their cash flow will crater quite quickly. Additionally, the cot inflating mechanisms necessarily introduced by a TPA system will be removed.) The problem with this is it puts HC management at the preventative/elective level back in the hands of consumers. Most of the people we talk to about these sorts of issues contend, with good evidence, this is a recipe for disaster. They argue that people do better when insurers negotiate with providers, and they discount the argument that TPA structures inflate prices. But their real argument is a more depressing one... The average American cannot be trusted to handle his own health care. They may be right. And here I indulge my inner Libertarian. If you earn enough that you cannot qualify for Medicaid, and still can't manage your own healthcare, you can't be helped. (This subsection of the population I suspect contains a lot of ardent Trump supporters. Live by the sword...) Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
I understand that what I propose has little if any chance of political success. I doubt we can return to a true insurance system where people are responsible for their own preventative/elective costs, and providers are forced to charge a more honest market rate (rather than inflate the fuck out of unit prices to offset insurer aggregate discounts). But it's worth noting we've never tried such a thing. And it's worth noting such a solution trusts people to make decisions for themselves, while removing insurers entirely from the preventative/elective care market. |
Re: Aca
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: Aca
Quote:
Quote:
In fact, unless you're looking to increase market share by squeezing competitors out of the market (which ain't happening here) it makes no business sense whatsoever to provide services (or products) to one group below cost, at cost, or at a discount which is only supportable through price increases to others. I'm not sure why you think this is happening. What is actually happening is that insurers negotiate prices down to an amount at which both parties benefit. Individuals are in a different boat. And since they have absolutely no negotiating power whatsoever, they're basically subject to contracts of adhesion and gouged. These are not offsets. TM |
Re: Aca
Quote:
Implicitely, he thinks providers have market power vis-a-vis payers, but would not vis-a-vis individual consumers, which is kind of weird. |
Re: Aca
Quote:
Just because the invoice that you see shows a deep discount because it reflects the negotiated price doesn't mean the non-discounted price is the real price. That bullshit invoice actually helps both the insurer and the provider. That fiction helps show the insured what a great job(!) the insurer has done to lower the price and it gives the provider legitimacy to just make up random, inflated prices they use to fuck the uninsured. Also, this is a good article on how providers screw the uninsured and insured.: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/29/m...imes&smtyp=cur TM |
Re: Aca
Quote:
If he were just saying that the occassional sucker who pays list price out of pocket (i.e., the uninsured) won't get taken, there would be no disagreement. But that's a tiny fraction of purchasers (some of whom, of course, won't pay the whole thing anyway becaus they can't). But he's actually saying that individual buyers will be able to get prices that are lower than the negotiated prices insurers pay. |
Re: Aca
Quote:
Not saying you're wrong about what he's saying. But if that were the case, wouldn't insurers currently be paying more than individuals? That's like the opposite of any understanding of collective bargaining. Ever. TM |
Re: Aca
Quote:
This inflates prices generally across the board for preventative, catastrophic and chronic care. (Introduce cost inflation in one area and it will infect others.) Remove insurers from the preventative and elective care markets and the providers will have to charge less. Individuals cannot pay anything close to sticker price. Sure, preventative and elective care providers will try to keep prices high for a time, but they'll adjust quickly as their revenues sag because no one can afford them. This period of adjustment would be ugly for providers and consumers, but it would pass quickly and the market would set reasonable prices for individuals to purchase services directly. Insurers would then be able to offer plans which covered exclusively catastrophic and chronic care, at much lower prices. This scenario would also introduce price transparency, which is a huge benefit to consumers (in terms of educating them and creating more competition to deliver value among providers) and is sorely lacking in the current marketplace. I derived this view from concurrently managing portfolios of delinquent HC debt and credit card delinquencies. The impact of a TPA structure in both markets is much the same. When they aren't feeling the immediate impact of the purchase, the average American over-consumes and does not pay attention to price. The best way to create educated consumers of health care, who will pay more attention to theirs, and make better lifestyle choices, is to make them more directly involved in the transaction. A person paying for something out of pocket is a more prudent purchaser who will force providers to maximize value. GGG will reflexively argue, "but preventative care isn't the problem!" He's right. It's not. The bigger costs are catastrophic and chronic care. But taking it away from insurers will allow for cheaper plans to cover those big costs, which benefit consumers. This at a minimum washes, if not significantly eclipses, any increased burden on the consumer from having to purchase preventative and elective care out of pocket. Also, the drop in unit prices for preventative care will bleed into chronic and catastrophic care, creating downward pressure on pricing in those areas. The problem with all of this, however, is it requires the American to take control of his own health care. I think this is a very reasonable thing to ask. I frankly think a person who will not take the time to become an informed consumer deserves whatever bad turn he receives in the healthcare market, or any other market for that matter. That kind of laziness should not be coddled. But, as Adder demonstrated, I am in the minority. The pragmatists, whose point I see, will argue persuasively that the common American is incapable of managing his own affairs. The do-gooder will assert that "smart folks" like us should set up systems to make the best decisions for these common people. I understand and appreciate both arguments, and I think they will rule the day. That's why I believe we will see single payer at some point. The end of all this will be a two tiered system like those in Europe. |
Re: Aca
Quote:
You know what'd render a lot of those people unnecessary? A direct purchase system for preventative and elective care. Quote:
Quote:
|
| All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:18 PM. |
Powered by: vBulletin, Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.
Hosted By: URLJet.com