So, I hate complaining or complimenting without giving advice. What are the possible solutions to healthcare reform?
Objective:
Get as many people in America covered on healthcare as possible and get the costs as low as possible.
Bottom line. If you have $10 dollars to pay for a $12 item. You can't afford it. So, you have to either buy a $10 or less item or you have to get more money. I have some suggestions on how to do both.
Solutions:
1. TORT REFORM. Reduce the law suits to numbers that give compensation to people to make them whole or as close as possible. People make mistakes. If we continue to pay $10 million dollar law suites because a doctor makes a mistake, we will never solve this problem. The reality is that the patient gets about $4 million and the attorney gets $6 million of that $10 million, and WE pay for it all... not the doctor. Canada has passed laws in this area and it has made a huge impact on the costs of goods and on insurance costs. This is the biggest area of impact that we could make on the healthcare industry. BUT, the attorneys run our government. Good luck ever seeing tort reform at the level necessary. This would equal billions of dollars annually.
2. PPO Plans with deductibles at $2,000. Government subsidies for low income families paid in the form of medical stamps. Incentives for not using them. (there is more that ties this together - see #4). Insurance rates lower if they are not responsible for the first $2,000. Also, you could include a HSA Account to make it possible for people to put money in these accounts and invest it (helps economy as well) and build medical dollars for the future.
3. Government catastrophic insurance coverage to protect from medical bankruptcy.
4. Doctor and hospital rate posting in the facility and online. When was the last time you checked around with a few doctors for the cost of a procedure? When was the last time you checked to see if you could get lower medical tests (MRI's)? If all doctors rates and fees were posted and we had options to attend the different doctors, we could let supply and demand drive the prices down.
5. Shorten the food and drug standards on the length of time it takes to approve medicine. We have the highest price of drugs in the world and it is directly related to law suits and the food and drug administrations regulations.
6. The new bill penalizes doctors who's patients return for the same issues. I would require insurance companies to give incentives to doctors who don't have patients return for the same issues. One concern would be that doctors could become jerks so people wouldn't return with issues. Keep in mind item number 4 above.
7. Allow medical co-0ps. These would be risk pools that would reduce health care costs because of proactive health coordination.
8. Require healthcare penalties and rate increases for life style choices. Non medical related obesity (medical related would be due to thyroid or other issues), smoking, drinking, drug use, high cholesterol. You have to give incentives for the right behaviors. This would be fazed in to allow people to adjust lifestyle choices over time. If you are going to raise the cost of healthcare pools because of lifestyle choices, you should be required to pay more for coverage.
9. Eliminate HMOs. HMO's create an entitlement healthcare mentality that makes people believe they should go to the doctor for a sniffle. This drives costs up and insurance companies have to raise rates to pay for it.
10. Eliminate the government Cadillac plans. Government workers have the best insurance program in the country. It is not right that American people work, pay taxes, and the people in the government have better insurance than the people who are funding it. They need to have good healthcare plans but those plans need to be more in line with the average American. Most people in the U.S. have had their insurance plans reduced over the last 15 years. Government workers plans have improved over that same period. This is costing all of us more money.
Oh well, seems like these items would certainly lower our healthcare costs and would IMMEDIATELY lower insurance premiums and make healthcare more affordable. It wouldn't cost a fraction of the cost of the legislation that just passed.
You know, I wouldn't even mind paying a little higher taxes to help support subsidizing people who truly couldn't afford healthcare. I would have to think about how to structure it where they would have to be able to prove the hardship, but I think it could be done and I would be happy to help pay for it. It is the right thing to do.
There you go. Some ideas from an old jock country boy. Love to see your ideas. Post comments if you agree, disagree, or have better ideas.