Flem72, on 2017-July-01, 10:08, said:
No way I'm reading everything upthread, but wondering: Does it escape notice that this debate isn't about pricing health care, it is about pricing insurance? What if actual health care costs -- visits, procedures, tests, drugs -- were controlled, either by market forces, competition through advertising/cost comparison, or by some level of fiat (gulp -- not my cup of tea, really)? And if meaningful tort reform is part of the package, docs can use their common sense and medial experience in treatment and not have to fall back on the safest, by-the-numbers protocols -- OK, another MRI !! because if I don't do it, and the case falls into the small percentage where that could be made to look like it matters to a jury , I lose my shorts.
A friend who used to run hospitals tells me that in the 50s, 60s there was a book that priced procedures according to a regionally-based multiplier similar to a cost of living criterion. Base cost of an appendectomy = $X. In NYC, it's 1.9X, in Topeka, .7X. When was the last time any medical professional told you what something cost? when was the last time you asked?
The problem with market=based approach is that when you are vomiting and doubled over in pain from appendicitis, asking how much it will cost to make the pain stop is not going to be a consideration - considering your options prior to occurrence of a problem is iffy, too, as you don't know where you will be when a health emergency occurs or if you will be able to answer questions at that time.
The basic question is actually simple: should some minimum standard of healthcare be provided for everyone or should healthcare be treated like a commodity, bought and sold to the highest bidders through a market-based approach.
An argument I have read for market-based is that a single payer system will devastate innovation and research, that the rest of the world is saved that cost by U.S. capitalism spending on development - the rest of the world gets to benefit from that research and thus can afford universal healthcare.
That, to me, seems a hollow argument as I lived during the time of "Ma Bell" and Bell Labs. The U.S. government made a deal with AT&T for them to monopolize telephone service but they had to forego all other business. This did not prevent them from spending millions on Bell Labs, although they could not benefit directly from the discoveries.
Even today, research and development is in a quest to find new drugs from chronic diseases - the most profitable drugs - and the development of new antibiotics is virtually non-existent. The market looks for profits - it is not equipped to care if most of the entire planet's inhabitants die off from a bacteria that is resistant to all treatment options.
Perhaps the best idea is a single payer system run by each state.