[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Sign-in] [Mail] [Setup] [Help]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
Health See other Health Articles Title: Why are medical costs so high? Youre a doctor. You need to bring in $3,000 apiece for your most common procedure. But Medicare and Medicaid which pay for about half your patients have just told you theyre only going to pay you one-third of what theyre billed. What do you do? You dont need to be a CPA to know the answer is to start billing everyone $4,500 for your procedure. The half of your patients who pay full price thus pay $1,500 extra, covering the $1,500 shortfall for each Medicare/Medicaid-covered procedure. Now the tricky question: If someone whos NOT on Medicaid or Medicare visits your medical office to have this procedure done, and promptly pays his or her $4,500 in full, how much has he or she paid you, this year? And the answer is: $6,000. Those who are not on Medicare or Medicaid are known as taxpayers. Where do you think Medicare/Medicaid got the $1,500 to pay for the welfare patient? The taxpayer pays $4,500 for his or her own procedure, and then an extra $1,500 in taxes to fund someone elses. For all those who have written in insisting that we need government to pay our medical bills because theyre so high, lets keep this simple: Medical bills are really high because the government promises to pay most of them, the same way government-backed college loans have driven up the cost of college, by allowing colleges to charge you whatever you can afford plus whatever the government will loan. Perhaps its still technically a minority of Americans who are currently covered by Medicare and Medicaid. But since the old and the poor (the latter often skimping on health maintenance and prevention) use the most medicine and medical care, the majority of medical COSTS are covered and paid for by these two socialist programs. Some say as much as two thirds. If we switched over to cash only medicine tomorrow no government or even private insurance payments allowed what do you suppose would happen to medical costs? Remember, the doctor whos been accustomed to billing $4,500 for a procedure really only gets $1,500 from Medicare/Medicaid, a scheme thats already jacked up YOUR cost by 50 percent. Of that $1,500, another $500 (and that may be understated) goes to pay doctors non-medical office staff who negotiate bills and payments with the private and government insurance firms. So the doc who billed $4,500 expected to get about half that. The rest is only in there to buy off this unholy private-public insurance bureaucracy. If he could fire all those non-medical billing people in his office, and if the doctor could again assume that most patients might pay the full amount billed on a timely basis, in cash, he or she could drop many posted charges from $4,500 to $2,000 overnight. And what if that still didnt produce enough business? Could our M.D. somehow manage to drop that price again, to $1,500, advertising Lowest rates in town? In a true free market, hed have to. Streamline his costs of regulatory compliance, and he could probably do even better. Not only that, in a cash environment, conversations might be heard in the examining room which are virtually unknown today. Conversations starting with: There are three ways we can handle this problem. The middle course will cost $500 and probably not do much good, which means youll just have to come back for the $5,000 third-choice procedure, anyway. But first we may want to try something real simple thatll take a few weeks but will only cost you fifty bucks
Or: There are three medicines I can give you for this. The first two were recently patented and would cost you $500 a month and the salesgal who comes by to promote them has great knockers and wears short skirts and gives me all kinds of free notepads and ballpoint pens. On the other hand, theres an old generic drug thatll probably do just as well or better for five bucks a month. Want to try that first? Doctors long ago fell out of the habit of discussing things this way. It sounds unprofessional. But its no more unprofessional than a roofer telling you about something he can try to repair your chimney flashing before you go to the expense of replacing your entire roof. The difference is that roofers know youre likely to contact someone else someone who wont make them wait a month for an appointment because the number of practitioners in that profession arent as artificially limited by the state licensing agencies if they get too arrogant and dont tell you all your options. As medicine has gotten better, some treatments have been introduced which are just plain more expensive. But a true free market always works to reduce such costs. Compare the inflation-adjusted price of a color TV today to one in 1963. Government, on the other hand, pays on a cost-plus basis. Far from creating pressure to make things cheaper, this creates an incentive to jack prices up, which is why taxpayers pay 20 bucks when a candy-striper brings a Medicare patient two aspirin in the hospital. If government had undertaken to start buying us free color TVs in 1963, from only licensed suppliers, theyd still be clunky 300-pound console models and theyd now cost $12,000 apiece. No, from regulation designed to limit entry into the field (reducing price competition), to licensing, to socialist government insurance schemes, its primarily government meddling that has made a nightmare of our medical costs. So now were prepared to believe the politicians when they tell us the solution is not a return to the free, unregulated, pre-1916 market in medicine, but rather
more government meddling, by the same people who have been busy fixing the banking industry since 1913? And to those who say, Thats unthinkable! Snake oil and charlatans! We want regulation! It makes us feel safe! First, licensing and regulation are protection rackets. They keep supply down and prices up. If regulation guarantees our safety, why cant we sue the regulators when the doctors they regulate screw up? But second, answer me this, just once: America was supposed to be made up of 13 now 50 sovereign states, little greenhouses free to try all different ways of doing things. Id gladly move to the one state one out of 50 where medical liberty is restored, providing it also imposed no state income tax, no helmet or seatbelt or anti-smoking or endangered species or global warming or rural speed limit laws, that it allowed incandescent lightbulbs and full-sized rifle magazines and full-sized toilet tanks and encouraged the private ownership of machine guns. (I just described all of America in 1912, a place where our grandparents seemed pretty happy, only without the racism that CREATED the Wars on Guns and Drugs.) Which state is that? If there are a couple million of us who want to try it another way, why cant we have just one state to call our own? Were even willing to settle in the most inhospitable, God-forsaken desert youve got. If you liked all the taxes and regulations back in California or Illinois or New York or wherever you came from, why did you come here, determined to try and make this state just like the one you fled? Do you know the meaning of the word hubris? Has it never occurred to you the miners and ranchers who were already living in Nevada might have set things up just right for conditions here, and that you might want to check with them before you blithely insist on changing things in Americas last endangered refuge of freedom to be just like that decaying, jobless hellhole you ran away from?
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: Ada (#0)
"COULD" but would not happen. The author never mentions greed. Health "care" is no longer an art and science, it has become a very profitable business. Try buying gasoline in your own area, notice the same price everywhere? Is'nt that odd? Medicine is no different. NO insurance involved, cash from my own pocket, paid $580 to a dentist for a one tooth xray and extraction, thirty one minutes in the chair. Government in health care is bad but the greed factor brings it on.
#2. To: Cynicom (#1)
(Edited)
Medical consumers in non-emergency situations would also do well to be more skeptical of the claims of pharmaceutical manufacturers. Cholesterol levels now said to be "high" and in need of highly profitable "statin" drugs to "control" didn't used to be considered abnormal until the doctors and drug companies figured out this was a "profit center." It is not even known for sure whether high cholesterol even kills you or not. A substance called homocysteine may be more critical.
You need to shop around, that's not a heck of a lot less than what the wife paid for 2 visits and a crown and I just had a co-worker who had one done in one visit for less than $300 because the dentist he went to has some new CAD/CAM machine that sculpts the new crown out of ceramic while you sit in the chair...
Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
||
[Home]
[Headlines]
[Latest Articles]
[Latest Comments]
[Post]
[Sign-in]
[Mail]
[Setup]
[Help]
|