Despite the claims of socialists, Democrats and many others, there is
no "right" to adequate health care. Rights are endowed by the Creator
and are limited to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. All
other so-called rights are manufactured by governments. Governments are
not empowered to grant rights; governments can only limit or extinguish
rights. Governments can, however, bestow gifts upon its citizens. But
to do so, governments must first take resources from those who have
earned them and redistribute those resources to others.
HillaryCare, ObamaCare, EdwardsCare and every other form of socialized
medicine is inherently fraught with fraud, abuse and corruption. What's
more, these systems are necessarily designed to reduce the level of
service while driving up the costs.
Medicare should be a sufficient example to send all voters running away
from any suggestion of getting the federal government any deeper into
the health care business. Economists and politicians alike predict the
collapse of the current government-run health care program. It makes no
sense at all even to think about expanding government's roll in the
medical business. There is simply no way government can run a health
care program that will not end in disaster.
Why? Consider a small, simple real-life example. Patient A has a
breathing problem. To qualify for oxygen, his blood-oxygen saturation
had to register below a certain level. An oxygen service provider chose
a third-party contractor to perform the saturation test. The test
consisted of placing a clothespin-type device on the end of the index
finger and recording the number that registered on a small hand-held
machine. This was called the pre-stress test. Then the contractor asked
the patient to walk back and forth across the room twice, and
re-attached the clothespin to the index finger and recorded a
post-stress number. This test was repeated the next day, a Medicare
requirement, according to the contractor.
When the bill for this service arrived, the amount was $245 for each
reading. It may have taken five minutes. Medicare paid $110 of the
amount, a secondary insurance company was billed for the balance. The
insurance company paid $88, and the patient was billed for the
remaining $47.
The $47 amount should have been more than sufficient to cover the
actual cost of the test, including the time of the tester and the cost
of the equipment, and still provide profit for the contractor. Since
Medicare has stated in advance that it will pay $110 for this service,
the provider is naturally going to get the maximum it can get for the
service. Since there is a secondary insurance company involved, the
pricing is driven upward to get however much the insurance company is
willing to pay.
Whether the patient pays the remaining $47 is of little concern to the
contractor; he has already made far more money than the service was
worth. Magnify this process up through the range of medical services
that are provided, and then multiply it by the millions of people who
need medical services each day, and it is easy to see why the Medicare
system is destined for collapse and why no further expansion of
government's involvement should be tolerated.
But everyone is happy. The patient got the service for a cost of $47.
The third-party contractor made a day's pay. The oxygen service
provider got a new customer, and dozens of people employed to push
paper from one end of the country to the other all kept their jobs.
The system is designed to encourage people to take advantage of the
government, the insurance companies and the patient. This problem is
inherent in all socialized medical programs. Presidential candidates
and Congress hopefuls should be thinking in a completely different
direction. The goal should be to strengthen free-market principles
throughout the health care system, rather than to ignore them.
Competition among the various medical service providers should be the
first goal toward strengthening free-market principles. When government
guarantees a minimum price, it will be the starting point for pricing.
In a free market, the starting point would be whatever the patient can
afford. It will outrage the socialists to think that providers might
gravitate toward the rich while the poor might be left to fend for
themselves and, therefore, get left without service. This is what led
to government's involvement in the first place.
When the nation set out to help those without adequate health care, it
took the wrong road; it took the socialist road rather than the
free-market road. Now the nation is in a mess, but it's not too late to
back up and do it right.
In an ideal world, neighbors would help less fortunate citizens meet
their health needs, but why should they if government insists on doing
it. There are a few good examples of good neighbor health care. St.
Jude's Childrens' Hospital in Memphis is supported by private donations
and serves many patients who cannot afford the care they receive. This
example is replicated, in various scales, in communities throughout the
country.
If the federal government is to be involved in health care, it should
be looking toward encouraging and providing incentives for private
medical care that is determined between the patient and provider. The
problem is complex and cannot be solved by any government program.
Health care is certainly one of the primary areas where the principles
of freedom should be observed and advanced. Any candidate or politician
who thinks government can solve the problem better than a free market
should be rejected.
Original
Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Socialized medicine is not the solution
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||

![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)