windelina: (Firefly)
[personal profile] windelina
Paul Krugman's latest deals with healthcare:

Those of us who accuse the administration of inventing a Social Security crisis are often accused, in return, of do-nothingism, of refusing to face up to the nation's problems. I plead not guilty: America does face a real crisis -- but it's in health care, not Social Security.

Well-informed business executives agree. A recent survey of chief financial officers at major corporations found that 65 percent regard immediate action on health care costs as "very important." Only 31 percent said the same about Social Security reform.

But serious health care reform isn't on the table, and in the current political climate it probably can't be. You see, the health care crisis is ideologically inconvenient.

Let's start with some basic facts about health care.

Notice that I said "health care reform," not "Medicare reform." The rising cost of Medicare may loom large in political discussion, because it's a government program (and because it's often, wrongly, lumped together with Social Security by the crisis-mongers), but this isn't a story of runaway government spending. The costs of Medicare and of private health plans are both rising much faster than gross domestic product per capita, and at about the same rate per enrollee.

So what we're really facing is rapidly rising spending on health care generally, not just the part of health care currently paid for by taxpayers.

Rising health care spending isn't primarily the result of medical price inflation. It's primarily a response to innovation: The range of things that medicine can do keeps increasing. For example, Medicare recently started paying for implanted cardiac devices in many patients with heart trouble, now that research has shown them to be highly effective. This is good news, not bad.

So what's the problem? Why not welcome medical progress, and consider its costs money well spent? There are three answers.

First, America's traditional private health insurance system, in which workers get coverage through their employers, is unraveling. The Kaiser Family Foundation estimates that in 2004 there were at least 5 million fewer jobs with health insurance than in 2001. And health care costs have become a major burden on those businesses that continue to provide insurance coverage: General Motors now spends about $1,500 on health care for every car it produces.

Second, rising Medicare spending may be a sign of progress, but it still must be paid for -- and right now few politicians are willing to talk about the tax increases that will be needed if the program is to make medical advances available to all older Americans.

Finally, the U.S. health care system is wildly inefficient. Americans tend to believe that we have the best health care system in the world. (I've encountered members of the journalistic elite who flatly refuse to believe that France ranks much better on most measures of health care quality than the United States.) But it isn't true. We spend far more per person on health care than any other country -- 75 percent more than Canada or France -- yet rank near the bottom among industrial countries in indicators from life expectancy to infant mortality.

This last point is, in a way, good news. In the long run, medical progress may force us to make a harsh choice: If we don't want to become a society in which the rich get life-saving medical treatment and the rest of us don't, we'll have to pay much higher taxes. The vast waste in our current system means, however, that effective reform could both improve quality and cut costs, postponing the day of reckoning.

To get effective reform, however, we'll need to shed some preconceptions -- in particular, the ideologically driven belief that government is always the problem and market competition is always the solution.

The fact is that in health care, the private sector is often bloated and bureaucratic, while some government agencies -- notably the Veterans Administration system -- are lean and efficient. In health care, competition and personal choice can and do lead to higher costs and lower quality. The United States has the most privatized, competitive health system in the advanced world; it also has by far the highest costs, and close to the worst results.

Over the next few weeks I'll back up these assertions, and talk about what a workable health care reform might look like, if we can get ideology out of the way.

***************************

Hunh. Well, I've known that the US has terrible infant mortality rates for an industrialized country.
I guess we're discovering yet another area where we're not "#1".

Date: 2005-04-14 12:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wombat-socho.livejournal.com
i get confused about the price tag. most of my healthcare costs go to paying towards the chance i might have a serious accident that i most likely will never have. i would prefer it if that money could go towards more preventative general care but i can't get that preventative care because i can't risk going without the insurance against catastrophy. i'd be curious to know how much insurance payments go 'unused' to get an idea of costs. like how many people paying a couple hundred bucks a month insurance for years and years never use any benefits? where does that money go? how does the total amount of insurance paid by all people in this country line up with the total cost of healthcare?

That's a really good question. Most people have major medical insurance which pays 80% (or some large percentage) of the bill for doctor visits and such; some people have HMOs which do offer some preventative care and "lifecare" services intended to get you living a healthier lifestyle, but also act like major medical so long as you only see the HMO's doctor and pharmacy; some people have PPOs which are like major medical except you get a price break for using only doctors and pharmacies in their network. I don't know of too many places that offer only catastrophic insurance, which pays off if you have an extended hospital stay but doesn't cover anything else.

Date: 2005-04-14 03:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dangerdhotrod.livejournal.com
i'm self employed and pay my own insurance so all i can afford is the 80% thing but the deductible is so high it's basically like i'm paying out of pocket for any hospital visit. the only thing my insurance is covering is catastrophy. oh and prescription drugs too. but i'm quite healthy and never go to the doctor so my insurance is really only covering me against catastrophy. it seems so dumb. if there was socialized healthcare i would be paying for nothing but my general well being would be protected and i'd somehow feel like the money i was paying in was going towards _something_ besides insurance against an accident i'm never going to have.

Date: 2005-04-15 12:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wombat-socho.livejournal.com
ISTM you might be better off with an medical savings account, but I don't know how/if that would work since you're self-employed.

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