Wednesday, August 12, 2009 9:08 PM CDT
LETTER: Less 'coverage,' more real insurance needed
ROBERT COYNE, Mattoon
Healthcare is a mess. Congress’s plans will worsen it. We need reform the opposite way.
With costs high, if insurance is voluntary, healthy people go bare, leaving the insurance pool to sickies, raising premiums further. If it’s compulsory, when people collectively (indirectly, as employees or voters) decide how much healthcare to pay for, they count the cost, but when those same people individually use the services, to be paid for by the Plan, not themselves, they don’t, so demand exceeds supply, and healthcare must be rationed somehow.
It happens; this is why doctor visits last ten minutes. Government systems are notoriously worse. There is no solution from the financing end; any fix must start by bringing down costs, till healthy people insure just in case. This is easy, because high costs come from bad laws.
Get FDA out of decreeing what’s safe or effective. They are a rogue agency, pretending to “protect” us but actually protecting Pharma’s profits. Any statement they haven’t preapproved is “misbranding;” this is a “prior restraint” and in any other context would be unconstitutional, but they do it. Their approval takes a quarter billion, so only an artificial, patentable drug can afford it.
Anything cheap is illegal, or advertising would be. With freedom, competition would lower prices. (Example: Niacin is available as dietary supplement and as drug. There’s little difference, and the latter costs ten times as much, but doctors prescribe it, from brainwashing and because it’s what insurance will pay for.)
Eliminate the need for a prescription. If I know what I want, let me buy it without an expensive office visit to convince a gatekeeper.
Repeal the mandates about what insurance must include. There are common, expensive treatments I would never want and don’t want to pay for, but nobody is allowed to sell me cheap insurance that won’t cover them.
Health “insurance” isn’t. Real insurance pools risk, unlikely catastrophes. You can’t lower average costs by pooling them. Expectable expenses, like routine medical care and end-of-life care, are best financed by savings; insurance just inserts a middleman and extra costs.
People overinsure because there’s a tax break for employer-provided health insurance. Level the playing field: Tax insurance like other compensation or make medical expenditures deductible generally.
We need less “coverage,” more real insurance, less of it on the job, more tailored to individuals.— and lots more plastic on the barrel.
ROBERT COYNE
Mattoon
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father bob wrote on Aug 13, 2009 10:55 AM:
Healthcare is a mess. Congresss plans will worsen it. We need reform the opposite way."""""
WOW!!! Robert!....glad you've seen the final proposal, can you share all the details with us? Thanks!! "