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Paying for health care is not rocket science! By Jack Lohman [View All]

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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Oct-15-07 07:39 PM
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Paying for health care is not rocket science! By Jack Lohman
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Original Content at http://www.opednews.com/articles/genera_jack_loh_071014_paying_for_health_ca.htm


Where are our heads?

It never ceases to amaze me, the amount of energy that can go into a project just to avoid doing the right thing, and reforming health care is at the top of that list.

The best, simplest, least costly, most effective thing we could do is expand what has been working so well for 50 years, Medicare. You get sick, you get care, and the caregiver gets paid. Guaranteed. Nothing could be simpler. Simple is inexpensive and simple doesn't break, while complexity is very costly to administer.

Churchill had it right when he said "Americans will always do the right thing, but only after everything else has failed."

Some things are best handled by the government, and establishing one nationwide pool of patients is in the best interest of the country. Medicare is not perfect, but it is far better than the 1500 insurance companies we have, and their 15,000 variations on insurance plans. Isn't one plan enough, where all people get all necessary care? Or are people expected to know ahead of time what type of care they should insure against?

Worse are all of the unnecessary expenses insurers add to both the hospital and clinic side -- like extra billing clerks -- and on the insurer's side, like their costs for marketing, sales commissions, actuarial and cherry-picking, gatekeeping, high executive and CEO salaries and bonuses, and ever-increasing shareholder profits. Even their lobbying and campaign contributions are paid for by the patient.

None of these costs are imposed on Medicare.

And, no, Medicare isn't socialized medicine. It uses the same private hospitals and doctors as everyone else, though it eliminates the above middleman insurance bureaucracy that unnecessarily consumes 31% of the costs. For the same amount of dollars we are spending to care for 85% of the public today, we could provide first-class care to 100% of the people. And we could do it without wait times, rationing, healthcare bankruptcies, or losses of homes or retirement savings because of catastrophic illnesses. Canada spends 10% of GDP compared to our 16% -- which is projected to rise to 20% by 2015 -- yet they cover 100% of patients compared to our 85%. Why can't we?...





Authors Website: www.MoneyedPoliticians.com

Authors Bio: Lohman is a retired business owner and is author of "Politicians - Owned and Operated by Corporate America" (www.MoneyedPoliticians.com) and author of http://MoneyedPoliticians.net
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