I really like this push towards transparency but hopefully people who use the data / develop will make sure to understand the system and the data they're dealing with. Like list prices are often incredibly far removed from the actual dollars paid, and the actual amount paid is all dependent on insurer contracts
I'd imagine hospitals hate this. Many of them are paranoid at what will happen if there is more transparency -- there's a union fighting Stanford hospital now and playing radio ads about high infection rates at Stanford. Other hospitals are worried about whether similar things could happen to them -- and hold their data tight to make sure no one has ammunition to do similar things. Hospitals in many cases market based on brand value rather than quality. In a closed world, hospitals can define quality any way they want. Everyone is #1 in something. If there's an objective standard for quality based on integrated data from hospitals nationwide, many brands will be tarnished. I'd be interested to see how hospitals respond to this push towards openness
How this isn't already mandated by law is baffling. We like to champion the "free market" but then completely fail to implement policies that make that even remotely possible.
When people talk about the free market and today's healthcare in the US I'm always like, "What are you even talking about?" You've got a situation where there is typically no competition and little or no information available to the consumer. Free market economics simply don't apply.
One of the reasons I like Kaiser is because the price for just about everything is posted. I know an CT scan of stomach area, with dye is $608. Every healthcare provider should be required by law to give you an estimate price on the spot. If it's too complicated because of multiple insurance providers and their contracts they should be forced to renegotiate in a way that make this possible. "It depends" or "we can't tell you until after we bill you" is not acceptable. Can you imagine any other market working that way? How much is this car? Can you imagine if the response was, "Well, it depends. We can't tell until after you agree to take possession. It's somewhere between $40 and $40,000. But it might actually be free if you submit form X, but you have to go back in time and submit it before you walked in the door and get it approved."
If the option was universal healthcare vs a free market system there would at least be a discussion. Instead it's universal healthcare vs the roll-of-the-dice healthcare system we have now.
I'm glad to see someone else shares this view. I've been saying for years that both a single payer health system and an actual free market system would be preferable to the heavily-yet-poorly-regulated mess of a "market" we have now.
If we don't go the single payer route, it seems one of the #1 things we could do is to help move "insurance" back to being actual insurance (i.e., we'll keep you from being bankrupted by your medical bills) rather than a system that highly subsidizes your regular medical care but then may not actually be there for you when the bills really pile up... If consumers had to actually shop for procedures (as opposed to knowing the out-of-pocket is $250 and who knows what happens beyond that), I think you'd start to see people screaming for transparency, and medical providers would have to get their acts together.
Resetting the expectation that insurance is for unusual procedures, not for yearly checkups and the common cold would be a great start. It's also necessary to focus on the supply side. Just two examples: the AMA limits the number of doctors and new hospitals can't be opened without the approval of the existing hospitals in the area. There is far from a free market in health care in the US.
I don't think that making sure that insurance doesn't cover checkups and preventative care would have a very desirable effect. Putting people (and their young children) on high deductible plans has the very predictable effect of discouraging treatment or even 'well baby' checks. That is part of what leads to such an abysmal (third world) infant mortality in the US.
You can argue that hospitals and ERs in particular are not a good place for checkups, but discouraging them is likely to be more costly (in $ and human lives) than not.
Come to Norway. Every visit to a doctor or hospital involving any of our children is completely without cost to us as parents - there is no deductible. We just walk right out the doors from the doctor's office or hospital, and there is no bill.
It makes so much sense: If your father had to decide between a beer and you getting that wound checked, kids would die.
Yea, I think that those things are highly desirable FOR the insurance company, because yearly checkups reduce the chance that the insurance company has to make a big payout. So you would either see insurance rate refunds/reductions for a yearly checkup or you would see them covered.
We tried that, for, well, the whole history of health insurance in the US prior to the ACA, and that's not what happened. Preventive care improves outcomes but doesn't reduce aggregate costs.
Not sure about data, but medical costs are for the most part inelastic, and concentrated on a small number of patients with expensive conditions.
What I DO know from working in insurance is that lifetime medical costs are concentrated in the last 2 years of life (I worked on credit card insurance and life insurance).
That's where you could make huge costs savings (but is an ethical landmine, not to mention economic interests)
I understand your sentiment, but it is absolutely incorrect that the AMA limits the number of doctors.
I presume you really mean 'residency slots' when you say doctors. In this case, the relevant administrative body is the ACGME... who sets the limits based on appropriations from Congress.
The trope of doctors restricting entry to enrich themselves does not explain reported physician shortages.
Practicing medicine without a license is illegal in all 50 states. The AMA is a major gatekeeper of this process. It's one thing to prosecute people for falsely passing themselves off as being licensed, quite another not letting them perform procedures on consenting patients.
That was tried before and resulted in horrible levels of death and suffering. Which is exactly why we now have the AMA and laws against the unlicensed practice of medicine. No one who understands the history of medicine wants to go back.
That's a false dichotomy, no one said anything about going back.
Never mind that Josef Mengele was a licensed physicians, or that the AMA was well established before the Tuskegee syphilis experiments occurred, also with work performed by licensed physicians.
Just that the bureaucracy has resulted in an industry that fails patients. Heart surgeons refuse difficult surgeries to juke the stats. Good for their mortality ratings (not that anybody could blame individuals doctors)[1], not so great for patients.
Even just the notion of specialties hurts the patient - it makes perfect sense that the deep knowledge involved means that an orthopedic doctor can't (and shouldn't!) treat issues that should be seen by a podiatrist. But at the end of the day, the patient is in chronic pain, and has such a low quality of life, that to them, the risks of street heroin are acceptable. This isn't a moral failing by the patient's, nor is it a lack of intelligence, this life being too much to bear otherwise, and if you've never considered suicide as an option, be grateful.
Dr. David Casarett's talk[2] takes a closer look at an alternate, but accepted medical practice, and gives some thoughts about how our medical bureaucrats have resulted in worse patient care.
I am not repeating this to be pedantic - this is simply a common misunderstanding in the public:
> Never mind that Josef Mengele was a licensed physicians, or that the AMA was well established before the Tuskegee syphilis experiments
The AMA has no role in licensing physicians, a task which is left to the states.
> Heart surgeons refuse difficult surgeries to juke[sic] the stats.
This is far more complicated than it seems. For example, consider that the sickest/most difficult patients are the most likely to die, irrespective of an intervention. At a certain point, the harm inherent to surgery outweighs any potential for benefit that the surgery might yield.
The Heart surgeon thing is likely referring specifically to a UK press article recently featured on HN that was about surgeons in the UK reacting to a policy change that means their stats are shown to the general public. A large minority of those surveyed said that as a result they now refuse to do surgeries they think will be very bad for their stats, even if clinically the surgery might be appropriate and within their competence. A majority said they knew a surgeon who had made such choices.
As a patient in that system (the NHS) I would prefer my surgeons not to make decisions based on trying to game the statistics. If I need heart surgery, I want whoever is competent and available. So if these stats block that, I'd rather we don't have the stats.
Frankly it's weird anyway because surgery is a team activity, not solo. Nothing serious is done by one bloke in a surgical gown, there's a team. I had a relatively minor operation and the named surgeon will have spent most of that operation _talking_ not operating. All the sewing and some of the cutting will be the nice younger doctors I met, a woman who'd been doing this a few years and was well on her way to being an actual surgeon, and a new bloke who seemed like he'd probably graduated just a couple of years ago. The old bloke with the paperwork saying he's allowed to cut people open is mostly there to watch over them both and step in if things go to shit. The woman is doing most of the work, showing the noob what she's doing and maybe overseeing while he stitches me back up at the end. There's some Eastern European doctor lady making sure I neither die nor wake up, and two or three nurses making sure everybody has what they need, and counting things to make sure nothing is left inside me that shouldn't be there. But if I'd died (very unlikely for minor surgery) it would count against my named surgeon and not the rest of the team.
Medical licensing is performed at the state level. The AMA, a non-governmental organization, does not perform the function of ensuring physicians' qualifications.
In the broad sense that they are an influential industry group that has taken a number of political positions that impact laws. Chiropractors and osteopaths have in particular felt discrediting hostility from them, as I read. Now to be clear, I for one do not personally hold either of those two fields in as much esteem as much of the American public might, so I don't meant to be partisan, but to simply say that the AMA has used it's influence to maintain the standards of what should or should not be licensed medical practice. They are free to maintain their own standards, which I do much respect.
I guess they aren't referring to DOs with that remark, there's a field quite like chiropractic that is called "Osteopathy", in the US such practitioners wouldn't be DOs.
While that's certainly true, people also suffer great harm at the hands of licensed doctors.
But more to the point, almost everyone suffers harm because of the way our medical system is set up.
Maybe some ailments don't need 8 year degrees to cure. Just throwing out ideas here.
But anyhow, more transparency is almost always good. Particularly in the morass that is the American medical system. I keep wondering how ever let something so important get like this.
Requiring doctors to get a 4-year-degree before medical school also adds to the cost. The degree can be in anything: film crit, classics, Japanese history. those are valuable things to know, but they clearly aren't necessary to medical school or else you'd disqualify the people who couldn't give a solid explaination of how Miazaki was influenced by Heian literature. The cost of a $200,000 degree plus interest on a loan that doesn't start getting paid back until after med school shouldn't be dumped on the medical system.
It would make more sense to add a year to medical education to cover the prerequisites rather than requiring a bachelors degree to apply to medical school.
That's also an absurdity I never understood in the US Medical school system.
Why not do like other countries, and allow 18 years old to directly chose Medical School after high school?
The Certificate of Need process also applies to anyone wanting to install a MRI machine. Rather than letting a doctor take the risk of buying an expensive machine for their business, the certificate process forces patients to travel to the nearest machine, possibly in the next town, instead of just walking down the hall to it.
The knock-on effect of there being fewer machines built keeps the price high. The first photocopier (the Xerox 914) cost the equivalent of $220,000 in 1965, yet there are very few businesses without a copier today because the price is so reasonable (5% of the 914's cost), and they do much much more.
In healthcare you'd not only like to even out expenses over time, you'd also like to spread expenses over a group, else people with chronic conditions are still screwed.
The Accountable Care Act (Obamacare) specifically mandated that routine preventative care be covered by private insurance plans at no cost to the patient. That way patients won't skip preventative care to "save" money and problems can be detected early before they become serious.
Except checkups and preventative care are usually far, far more effective than emergency care. So it would be to the benefit of all for insurance to cover it.
That is, for any one particular patient who's found to have a disease down the road - say, cancer - it would have been cheaper for him if that problem had been found very early, so for his individual case the checkups and tests would have been a big savings.
But when you account for all the people that do not turn out to have the problem at all, and the cost of checkups and tests, and then especially the costs of the followups due to false positives that are a risk in every test, the overall cost of test and prevention is actually worse.
Your statement is poorly thought out on several fronts.
Firstly putting a bullet in the head of anyone with non trivial cancer would probably be a financial savings for the insurer but the real equation is the human/societal benefit of treatment vs costs to best make use of a finite resource.
A simple cost of treatment analysis even misses out on the income that a person would have earned had they not died and the money that could have been paid in taxes and used to fund more treatment.
Drilling down into just the cost of treatment your statement isn't even wrong its a category error like saying that adding 2 integers always yields a number greater than 42.
For any given test and set of circumstances under which it is administered there can be a cost benefit analysis.
Example if you spend a thousand dollars on each false positive result and save 10k for each and have a 1% false positive rate and test a million people with a 1 in a million true positive rate. You will find one true positive saving 10k unfortunately you will also find 10k false positives and waste 10 million dollars.
In actuality you wouldn't do this you would test people whose symptoms or circumstances suggest they are likely to have it.
It seems fantastic to suggest that preventative medicine is always financially negative when people who actually study health care say otherwise.
Mr. Gruber [yes, it's THAT Jonathan Gruber] found that when retirees in California began visiting their doctor less often and filling fewer prescriptions, overall medical spending fell. People did get sick more often, but treating their illnesses was still less costly than widespread basic care — in the form of doctors visits and drugs. ... As Dr. Mark R. Chassin, a former New York state health commissioner, says, preventive care “reduces costs, yes, for the individual who didn’t get sick.” [1]
You go on to state that the additional productivity of the person we saved also nets us additional savings. But the same article contradicts this notion as well:
The actual savings are also not as large as might at first seem. Even if you don’t develop diabetes, your lifetime medical costs won’t drop to zero. You might live longer and better and yet still ultimately run up almost as big a lifetime medical bill, because you’ll eventually have other problems. That would be an undeniably better outcome, but it wouldn’t produce a financial windfall for society.
You go on to suggest that medical professionals would not be wasting money on doing too many tests: "For any given test and set of circumstances under which it is administered there can be a cost benefit analysis."
That seems logical, but it's not how the real world works. People get emotional about the potential risks, and demand the tests even when there's not a clear indication. You might remember the hubbub a couple of years ago when it was suggested, based on historical evidence, that regular mammograms should be delayed a few years later than was currently the practice. But women's health advocacy groups raised such a hue and cry that the actual medical guidelines were not changed to follow the evidence.
I think that it is very hard to do a proper accounting. It is difficult to forsee all the consequences of an intervention; if a parent is sick, they do not work. The other parent may need to stay home too to help out. A double whammy on productivity. The firm employing them takes a hit too, as well as the municipalities and other levels of government depending on tax revenue. Such hits can lead to declines in necessary investment. And this doesn't even account for possible epidemiological effects, which can be highly nonlinear, as infection Cascades can be frequency dependant.
It seems like a mistake to extend preventative health care inferences for senior citizens to the general public. They are the largest cohort receiving medical testing and treatment. Also, fee for service encourages over-testing and treatment.
> Except checkups and preventative care are usually far, far more effective than emergency care.
This may be true in terms of outcomes, but it turns out not to be true in terms of aggregate costs.
(If you encourage smoking and discourage screenings and preventive care, you'll probably do a lot to reduce aggregate health costs, but at the expense of outcomes; the efficiencies you really want are ones that reduce cost while preserving outocomes, or improve outcomes without increasing costs. When outcomes and costs are in tension, though, desirability can be more ambiguous.)
It gets people to get more oil changes and thus avoids the insurer having to pay for more expensive matters.
More importantly it leads to less people dying of preventable matters. What you seem to be implying is that its a net negative to which I say citation needed.
> It gets people to get more oil changes and thus avoids the insurer having to pay for more expensive matters.
Doing that could also drive up the price of oil changes such that they're no longer affordable without the use of insurance. If you could get an oil change for $50, then most people could afford it by paying for it outright. If that oil change now costs $500, then most people would have to go through insurance, and get the "discounted" price of $100 (which either has to be paid if the deductible has not been met, or you end up paying 10 to 30% of it).
> It gets people to get more oil changes and thus avoids the insurer having to pay for more expensive matters
It also catches things that require long expensive treatment early enough for them to be treated, rather than treatment be pointless, and, even if attempted, of shorter duration (on average) than if the conditions were found earlier, which is why preventive care doesn't seem to reduce aggregate costs.
The best way to reduce aggregate healthcare costs, if you have no other priorities, is to just make people less likely to seek care. No care = no costs.
Your reasoning holds water. How does it play out in the real world? Do “free” checkups result in more frequent well visits?
Goods and services are allocated by price or by time. Take out the price component and assume that people will go to doctor more often, obtaining an appointment will take longer. How do time and hassle required to see a doctor disincentivize well visits?
Frankly, no one wants to talk about chronic ailments. ADHD (the so-called fake disease) for example.
Nevermind that they are a real part of why premiums are likely as high as they are.
Nevermind that it is essentially a life-long tax for the patient.
Nevermind that the law deprives those who suffer from a case for which narcotic therapies work and CBT doesn't into profit slaves to drug manufacturer's and their 'attending' prescription writer.
They have a solution to the problem (that generally works out better for the supply chain than the patient)! How dare you suggest it isn't the best approach! What are you, some communist? /s
But alas, if we don't say it no one will listen.
So...
As the parent said...
"If it worked like normal insurance, people with chronic illnesses would still go bankrupt."
I agree with this, and I would also like to see more welfare programs separate from the insurance role. Insurance companies like to trick you into thinking you're getting a better deal because of them. That's not what insurance means. Keep those roles separate and straightforward.
Yes! Political chicanery and tribalism is exploited to make sure that the leeches stay in place, with neither side realizing that what we have now is just the worst of all worlds for everyone else.
I'm pretty conservative and I'd love to see a solution to the healthcare marketplace that doesn't amount to nationalization, but at this point, the market is so distorted and fundamentally unworkable that even a nationalized healthcare industry would be preferable.
There is no definition that fits better than "FUBAR" [0]. The only solution is going to be tear down the industry that we have and build something more sustainable in its place, whether that new thing is a nationalized health system or just very serious regulations to ensure healthy and functioning competition and free-market ideals (Obamacare does the opposite of this, literally making it illegal to not pay a health insurer; good policy would make non-catastrophic medical coverage illegal). Whatever the answer is, there's going to be a lot of people who are unhappy about it, but we have to fix this.
That other conservatives are just slamming their heads into the sand and saying "free market" when it's impossible to know how much a given medical procedure will actually cost until 3-6 months after the fact is just utterly and fundamentally embarrassing for everyone. Pricing is the most fundamental element in a functioning market. You can't pretend to be making rational choices if you can't even find out the cost. The whole thing shows how very little anyone is paying attention to anything other than virtue signaling.
The government is a big bad powerful thing, but it exists for a reason, and reducing every argument down to "just let those nice men in the Hamptons handle it, they wouldn't be rich if they weren't real smart" gets really tiresome.
Bronze ACA plans are pretty much catastrophic coverage. $7300 individual, $14,500 family deductibles.
There's plenty of people that could afford higher deductibles than that (and would prefer the accompanying lower premiums), but not really the majority of people.
Cutting the basic benefits out of them wouldn't even really save that much money (because insurance negotiates reasonable prices for basic office visits...).
Insurance certainly costs far too much money, but that's missing the forest for the trees. Insurance is the reason that the market is non-functional and broken. The misdirection inherent in an insurance-centric pricing regime is what's made it impossible for anyone to ever know the actual out-of-pocket cost of anything, and getting that is the first part of getting a functioning market established.
We need to stop looking at the individual level and "What can we eek out of people who don't qualify for Medicaid?", and look to the macro-scale effects. Insurance is the wrong model for routine services (indeed, insurance usually functions as a discount program rather than true insurance) and people shouldn't be able to sell it for that purpose due to the debilitating effects it has on the marketplace.
Docs and pharamacies should be up front about their real prices. Today, even people who are "posting prices" can't be up front about it because posted prices function as high anchors for insurance negotiations. This is why you can often get a massive "cash discount" if you call about a bill that you're going to self-pay. That's what they'd really like to charge you, but if they don't start out charging the sticker price they quoted the insurer, they're in big trouble.
For a market to work, there must be a real pricing dynamic where the consumer can be reasonably well informed about the actual total cost and vote with their feet. Hyperinflated 300% prices, necessitated by insurer demands for large discounts, don't count, they're still not real numbers. Markets simply cannot work without meaningful and accessible pricing information.
The medical system will remain a disaster until we can break this dynamic around pricing, and the only way to do that is to fundamentally change the way that medical insurance works, either by nationalizing insurance and/or medicine so that the government writes all the checks and price becomes only indirectly relevant to the public anyway, or by imposing law that mandates price transparency and seriously limits what "medical insurance" and "discount programs" can do, so that we don't immediately descend back into this.
IMO this is a textbook case of a market screaming for good regulation. Ideally we would identify the malicious actors (primarily insurers), develop rules and systems that minimize their ability to operate, and allow the free flow of commerce to handle everything else. "Nationalize it" is a clear power grab, but lacking any willingness to do anything else about such a breathtakingly large economic and humanitarian issue, even that would be better than "let's just keep crossing our fingers".
It's so sad that the level of conservative dialogue is not "let's find a good minimalist intervention that will get this market working again" but rather "Did someone say 'MURICA wasn't the best at something?!"
The big issue, as you mention, is health insurance companies themselves. They aren't actual insurance companies—they are payers, like others in this thread have called out. Real insurance exists when unlikely but disastrous events occur, like a house fire or a car accident.
Payers act more like surrogates—they bargain and make purchasing decisions on behalf of users like us. This is the fundamental problem in healthcare because surrogates cannot make financial decisions as well as a free market can.
Goldhill’s proposal for changing the industry is to eliminate the role of surrogates and replace it with a version of a health savings account that everybody would be required to contribute into and carry indefinitely, and require everybody to have a very high deductible catastrophic insurance plan. For example, all healthcare payments under $30k would be paid for directly by the patient and come out of the savings account. When something truly big and expensive occurs in a patient’s health (e.g., a cancer diagnosis) is when catastrophic health insurance would kick in and cover it.
This would allow for patients to make active decisions about which type of care to choose, and would force providers to become more competitive to earn the business of actual customers.
Why doesn't Germany have this problem? Their system is insurance-based. Why can't Blue Cross Blue Shield (a nonprofit) avoid this cost problem but a Krankenkassen can?
Because a tiny minority of the overall population profits from current inefficiency and if we revamped the whole thing even to massive public benefit some currently wealthy people would inevitably lose out.
In America we are happy to burn a dollar as long as a rich person somewhere can make an extra penny.
As a nation we have no notion of public ethics and haven't for decades. We believe in every man for himself and rather than resignation we feel pride. Venerating not caring about our fellow man as if it was self reliance.
We believe in the dysfunction of the public sphere as an article of faith, implacable as gravity, instead of it being the result of our collective failure to build a system that works.
We feel pride in ourselves when we ought to feel shame for all of us.
> if we revamped the whole thing even to massive public benefit
But this doesn't answer the question: what is the revamping that would be done to solve the problem? I get that "We believe in the dysfunction of the public sphere as an article of faith" is true and the answer to my next question "okay cool, so why haven't we implemented that", but I'd first like to know what "that" is.
(not that you're on the hook for the time to educate me on a complex public policy issue)
Do I need coverage from my food insurance every time I take a trip to Trader Joe's, Chipotle, or even Walmart? There is every reason for flu shots to be cheap enough that they don't require a special mechanism of payment. Yes, vaccine is delicate and it must be handled with care ... but the same is true for most foods and many other necessities that we somehow manage to buy and sell without an insurer butting in.
The goal has to be making medicine work like everything else we buy, including the daily non-negotiables like food, water, clothing, and energy resources. There's no reason medicine shouldn't or can't work that way in the general case.
But as long as we make it about moving numbers around so that Group X is slightly less inconvenienced by this farce, we're playing their game. We need to be talking about how to break their stranglehold, and I don't think just "move it into the government so we can get installed as bureaucrats, who are even harder to get rid than executives!" is necessarily a great macro-scale response (though I continue to believe it's better than doing nothing).
I don't suggest taking anything from anyone who is actually involved in the thing here. The only people I want to take out of the equation are the pencil-pushers leeching gargantuan quantities of otherwise-useful time and money away from the public.
That so many people find it so difficult to conceive of routine medical care without an insurance carrier of some type is a testament to the work we have ahead of us.
Isn’t choice also a fundamental part of a free market? I can choose to buy a certain product and decide not to buy if the market prices are above what I’m willing to spend. How does that apply to medical procedures?
Most medical issues are not emergencies. For most problems, there is plenty of time to comparison shop, consider the urgency and/or optionality of specific care, and so forth.
We do this just fine with other usually-non-emergent necessities of life like food, clothing, and housing. We didn't need to nationalize land ownership or food distribution to create vibrant economies for these, despite the fact that people can't really just "choose not to buy them".
Things are that way in part because there is a controlled regulatory regime in there, not trying to nationalize everything but also acknowledging the duty to protect the market from bad actors. Food, clothing, and housing aren't perfect analogs because medicine is a professional service, but this suffices to show that necessities aren't necessarily exempt from market forces just by virtue of their non-optionality.
Medicine needs a middle ground between "nationalize it" and "ignore it", but in this case, if those are the only two options, "ignore it" is clearly the worse one.
My wife and kids had 0 medical emergencies last year and we still paid over $10k in doctor and dentist bills just from deductibles, copays, and coinsurance. That's after having nearly $1k per month deducted from my paychecks for insurance premiums, not to mention the part that my employer contributed on top of that. It makes me sick to add those figures up, so I'll just leave that as an exercise. You can bet that if there were any actual optionality here, we'd spend a few days trying to sort out the most efficient way to handle this stuff.
Let's also not forget that insurance imposes a significant amount of rationing too. Our policy only covered up to 40 "habilitative care" visits per year, despite the fact that every therapist and doctor we saw recommended about 3x that. These are relatively mild speech and occupational therapy visits -- 40 visits is combined, every speech and pt/ot visit counts against it. "You need insurance because you'll have to buy medical care or you'll die" doesn't always play out that way.
Every medical procedure I've ever seen anyone forgo has been to their gross detriment. People really don't choose not to by like its a new car or chinese food. They suffer or die because they can't afford to do otherwise.
> Can you imagine any other market working that way? How much is this car? Can you imagine if the response was, "Well, it depends. We can't tell until after you agree to take possession.
I was livid when I couldn't find out how much it would cost for a medical procedure for my wife. All I got were excuses about how they couldn't do it. So many of us have high deductible insurance now. How can they not be setup to do this yet? How is it that we're not all demanding it?
Let's be clear: there's no real problem that couldn't possibly be solved here. All the other industries do it, medicine is no different. If unpredictable problems cause new expenses, then you can either disclaim those from upfront quotes and/or try to predict likely events that would cause additional charges.
There's a business called ZoomCare where I live that posts their prices for uninsured patients. I am quite annoyed that I, someone who has private insurance with ZoomCare as an in-network provider, was charged almost twice as much as the posted price. That money comes out of my pocket because I have one of these high deductible plans. So even places that are decent enough to post prices pull some b.s. when insurance is involved.
It's a bit of a gray area, but theoretically the provider has a contractual obligation to your insurer, to charge what your insurer requires. Also, they have to do more work for you than for an uninsured patient. By bringing your insurer into this, you've also made more work for them. You could have made it easier for everyone by simply telling the provider that you are uninsured.
I got some fancy new experimental equipment when I was recovering from a broken arm. I had to sign a paper that if I lost it I could be responsible so I asked how much it was and no one could answer and I was the first to ask.
In the end I signed and was never asked to return the item.
Two things complicate the realization of a free market in this sector:
1) It's standard practice to proclaim one's love for free markets when one is trying to enter a market. "Competition is good!" (for me) But then as soon as one's company is entrenched in said market, one mysteriously starts doing everything possible to make it less free. "Competition is bad!" (for me) The one consistent part here is, of course, the "for me" part.
2) In most of the healthcare industry you are not the customer; your insurance company is. So the incentives are perverted accordingly. Higher prices for providers means more revenue for them, obviously; that part is straightforward. Higher prices paid by insurers, you would think, means it's harder for them, but just like any business, they adjust their prices (premiums, rates) accordingly, so they can pass costs on to the consumer and still make a profit. So higher prices from providers just means the insurer is essentially insuring a higher "volume" of claim dollars and collecting a higher volume of premiums; in other words they're doing more business and making proportionately more profit.
In practice that's not really how it works any more. Most "insurance" companies don't provide much actual insurance. Instead they act as third-party administrators for self-insured employers and other group buyers. Those customers are very price sensitive, so insurers have a lot of incentive to drive down provider prices in order to maintain market share.
What's increasingly breaking the free market is provider consolidation. In many areas most of the small medical practices have been bought up by larger organizations. So those large providers control so much of the market that insurers have to pay whatever they charge. For example, in Northern California if an insurer (other than Kaiser Permanente) doesn't have Sutter Health in their network then their plans aren't viable.
> We like to champion the "free market" but then completely fail to implement policies that make that even remotely possible
We like to talk about free markets, but we don't really want them, at least our elected representatives don't. This is the reason why Medicare is _legally prohibited_ from negotiating drug prices (something that blows the mind of pretty much everyone the first time they hear it).
Saying Medicare can't negotiate drug prices is an over simplification.
For physician administered drugs, the gov't has said "we will pay an average of what everyone else pays". No negotiation, just defacto proclamation of what Medicare will pay.
For prescription drugs, Medicare pushes negotiation to private insurers who actually provide the coverage. They do negotiate with drug companies, often getting very steep discounts. Also, Medicare has said to drug companies "once a patient hit the donut hole, you need to give a 50% discount". Again, no negotiation, just a "if you want to do business with Medicare, deal with it".
So yes, they don't negotiate drug prices, they just tell the drug companies what they are willing to pay.
The word 'free' ... like the words 'nature','organic','improved','good', and 'god' ... means what you want it to. You may, of course, try to convince people that you mean something else entirely.
Of all such words, the word 'democracy' is possibly the most-abused.
> "It depends" or "we can't tell you until after we bill you" is not acceptable. Can you imagine any other market working that way?
Auto repair. Computer repair. Probably most kinds of repair. Even when prices are posted, there's always a ton of wiggle room, and by the time you find out the work is already done.
I walk in and sign a form that states I agree to pay diagnosis fee not to exceed ~$120. Diagnosis happens, I get an estimate of the work required to execute the repair. I can't recall a time when I paid anything other than precisely the amount of the quote offered ahead of time. Maybe it happens but it's vanishingly rare.
Best part is that the repair center will triage and rank the problems and often offer more than one treatment which will vary on endurance/cost/etc. Would that medicine could offer the same!
But can you then pick up your phone and do a quick price comparison with nearby shops without taking your car to each one and potentially paying a diagnosis fee at each one?
At least in auto repair you have a pretty good idea how much repair is going to cost you, and when you've been in a major wreck you get one bill that you can turn in to your insurance, not ten from the tow truck, the body shop, the paint shop, the several master mechanics &c, and none of them is out of network for insurance purposes.
And the bill is usually honest. The pregnancy test for males isn't a joke, it really happened to a physician colleague of mine.
Terrible examples. Any kind of repair gives you a quote before work starts. If you don't like it you can take it someplace else. Does the quote always match reality? No, but it give you an idea.
In most healthcare scenarios of consequence you have no such choice.
I like to think about it less as free market vs universal healthcare, and more in terms of incentives of incumbents and political power of incumbents to protect those incentives through regulation. If your regulatory regime doesn't adequately deal with incentives, then the companies you regulate will just find a new way to abuse the system to suit their needs
Right now, lack of public understanding of healthcare quality and lack of transparency is a big weapon for providers. Providers have a lot of political clout, as hospitals are huge employers at local levels and thus have lots of local political influence, plus they are powerful on a national scale bc its a huge industry.
There could theoretically be a large scale political movement against hospitals, though it would probably have to be grassroots, as again, hospitals have lots of control over the political incumbency because hospitals employ so many people and are important to communities.
However, it is hard for grassroots movements to propose effective policy recommendations. Healthcare is complicated, and presenting simplistic solutions that sound good but probably won't work gets more grassroots support than complex solutions that may be more effective (i personally think that single payer is one of those solutions that sounds good but prob wont work, but i know thats controversial). In many cases, its probably possible for hospitals to push legislation that sounds like it is decreasing costs, but actually helps powerful hospitals make more money (one could argue that ACOs and ACA in general are an example of this). Making the issue worse is that hospitals control data, so they are able to cherry pick data that makes them look good and get public support based on these factors, but grassroots organizations cant access data to counter those claims
So hospitals have tons of political cover to protect their interests through 1) control of information and 2) influence on politicians through their roles as large employers
> You've got a situation where there is typically no competition and little or no information available to the consumer. Free market economics simply don't apply.
I think a bigger issue is that during an emergency, even in the case where you are conscious and cogent, you will often have no ability to determine if you should get treatment at that hospital, or another.
I think it's utterly insane that life-critical procedures could result in someone being in massive debt (or bankrupted) through no fault of their own.
This insanity is one reason why when people ask "Would you be interested in working in the US?" my immediate answer is "hell no".
Even if employers were offering gold-plated top of the line insurance (doubtful), the insurers have so much wiggle room with bullshit about lifetime limits and whether they will cover X treatments, and whether specific hospitals are covered.
lol, the free market doesn't mean free as in money. Not that I agree with this, but in a free market, information is a good to be purchased just like everything else. In other words, no matter how nervous hospitals are about transparency, there is some dollar amount that would make them willingly provide all of their pricing data. A company could buy all the data, analyze it and create a paid service that ranked hospitals by affordability, quality, etc. They could then sell access to governments, universities, and insurance companies who would then be able to make informed decisions about society, career-planning, and coverage networks.
free market health care is innately impossible (simple example: you can't pick your hospital if you are knocked unconscious in an accident) , all the first world countries save one have figured that out, and get better health for less money because of it.
I've been saying this for years. Try asking your dentist or doctor how much something will cost. Most of the time they just tell you well we bill your insurance and then your insurance figures out your cost. Once in a while I can get a cost within 10 minutes, but that makes it impossible to shop around. It should take them a few moments 90% of the time to give me a quote with only exotic procedures being the exception.
Is it so hard to provide a real-time cost? It might not be easy now, but we have the damn technology. System is broken. Mandate this, give them a deadline to implement. They have deep pockets, the engineers and tech exists, delivering it within 3 years should be mandated. Let me shop around cuz capitalism...
You want to cut healthcare costs? This is something 100% of congress can back, even with a hefty lobby against it. Cruz and Sanders could co-sponsor this for Christ-sake, thats how non-partisan this is.
> System is broken. Mandate this, give them a deadline to implement. They have deep pockets, the engineers and tech exists, delivering it within 3 years should be mandated.
Have you ever looked at the language specs for MUMPS? That's what a lot of medical software started out in, or is still written in. Compared to anything but Intercal, it's amazing that it works at all...
There is something quite interesting in this - you claim that “free markets” are inhibited by a lack of information.
I’m not sure information is requisite in “free markets”; is it? I like the idea that a free market requires some information liquidity but I’m unfamiliar with any economic theories / philosophy on the subject.
Anyone here have some information that can be explored alongside that idea?
Yes, it is. This is literally an economics 101 thing. Pick up any text book and before you even get to supply and demand you will go through the "assumptions" that must be true in order for a free market to function.
They are usually listed as:
Perfect information
Perfect competition
Mobility of capital and labor
Firms maximize profits
Consumers maximize utility
A lot of people (most?) who champion free market economics have no idea what they are talking about. They could not pass the first quiz in an Econ 101 class.
In healthcare, at least in the decisions of consequence, you typically have no information and no choice.
Well, you're right that it's an econ 101 thing - because it's not a grad-level econ thing. Real economists understand that the real world differs from those simplistic models, and have (or are working on) other approaches that better model the real world.
It's just like in Physics 101 you're dealing with point masses on a frictionless surface. Later on you learn abut friction and inertia, and still later you get into relativity.
We frequently start with that simplified view of the world, but there aren't any real professionals who believe that's the end of the story. Markets do exist, despite the fact that your assumptions don't hold true to varying degrees.
You got me. I haven’t formally studied Econ, and maybe I would be one of those chumps you would mock for failing the first Econ 101 test.
Anyway, that’s all somewhat irrelevant. I asked a question wanting to know more about “free markets” as is commonly used in discussion, and not the theoretical concept which apparently does require complete information and is incompatible with the common / non-theoretical construct.
My curiosity remains, so I’ll ask if you know of any approachable resource that discusses the taxonomy of market models and their levers?
(In the past I have’nt found Amazon’s ranking of books to be useful as they’re written for entertainment, not exploration).
> I’m not sure information is requisite in “free markets”; is it?
No, but information (specifically perfect information about cost and all benefits, to an infinite time horizon, of economic decisions among all market participants) is a (but not the only important) central assumption in the theory underpinning the conclusion that free markets are optimal in terms of economic efficiency.
You can have a free market where this isn't even approximately true, of course, but the farther it is from true—ceteris paribus—the weaker the argument for the desirability of free markets is.
> You can have a free market where this isn't even approximately true, of course, but the farther it is from true, the weaker the argument for the desirability of free markets is.
That's debatable. In some markets (Veblen/Giffen goods, goods with a price elasticity that approaches zero, etc.) you could say that information doesn't matter because price is irrelevant, but I personally would say that you don't have a free market or any approximation of such without at least reasonable information. Which, you know, is up for interpretation.
I think there is a semantic issue where some people use free markets to mean markets run by mutual exchange by agreement between participants, and see the conditions that make such markets efficient as separate factors which may or may not be present, and other who use “free market” to include the combination of voluntary exchange with some or all of the conditions that make such exchange efficient.
>Pick up any text book and before you even get to supply and demand you will go through the "assumptions" that must be true in order for a free market to function.
You will go through the assumptions that must be true in order for a market to be in a state of perfect competition. Most econ books should be pretty good about this lanugage. 'Free market' is actually more about political philosophy than economics although it's usually cloaked in the language of normative economics.
I can’t find anything on there that supports the idea that free markets are modeled on “perfect information”.
I wouldn’t think that’s the case, anyway. Because marketing/advertising/awareness is a cost with diminishing returns, meaning it’s be prohibitively expensive to inform everyone of your product in the market, much less make accessible ALL products in a category for comparison shopping for any customer at any given time (aside from a singularity event).
I do think markets require some information liquidity to be maintainable, and I generally understand free markets to be free of coercion.
This sounds more like an “transparent market” though I’m not sure that’s a defined concept.
So after some light reading, theoretical free markets are predicated on complete information, and known to be impossible to achieve for the reason I mentioned. Interesting.
We assume "perfect information" because that's what lets us create simply supply and demand functions. Obviously in the real world you rarely (if ever) have perfect information—and we have models to deal with that—but healthcare has almost zero information. You either can't make a choice because you literally can't (only one provider in your area) or you can't make a choice because you don't have pricing information. So you can't maximize your own utility, because you don't know what options lead to that outcome.
Just about the ONLY assumption that holds true in healthcare is that firms maximize profits. And, in a twist of irony, the only healthcare provider to provide information on pricing is Kaiser Permanente—which is a non-profit. Yeah, they still do maximize profits, but not for shareholders. So you could make the argument that healthcare as a whole meets exactly zero of the assumptions necessary for any kind of free market model to apply.
The benefit of a free market is that businesses must compete by providing better service or better prices to consumers. That is entirely pointless unless consumers can actually choose the better service or price.
> How this isn't already mandated by law is baffling.
It's not baffling if you look at the way the medical billing system actually works. In short, Medicare is able to use existing laws (the requirement that Medicare receive the lowest price, along with the lack of mandate to reimburse COGS) to force providers to use funds from privately-insured patients to cover the costs of treating Medicare patients. From a financial point of view, the biggest adversary of price transparency (for privately-insured patients) is Medicare itself.
In that light, it's not surprising that an administration which has been very clear it wants to defund Medicare (without actually admitting as much in those words) is establishing rules that will essentially restrict the effective operating budget that Medicare will work with, long-term.
> Like list prices are often incredibly far removed from the actual dollars paid, and the actual amount paid is all dependent on insurer contracts.
Exactly this. The numbers that hospitals bill are largely fictitious compared to cost of care. What a lot of people don't realize is that hospitals use inflated billing from paying patients to cover the costs of uninsured patients that the hospital is required by law to treat in the ER.
A lot of people against socialized healthcare don't realize that the system still takes extra money from those that pay and gives it to those that can't--just through hospital billing.
>> A lot of people against socialized healthcare don't realize that the system still takes extra money from those that pay and gives it to those that can't
A lot of people against socialized healthcare are perfectly aware of this cost shifting.
What most other countries are doing: Fund healthcare from tax money.
The middle class will anyway pay for the healthcare of those who can't pay for themselves. In other countries they pay in taxes, in the US they pay for it in their own higher medical bills.
This is a matter of an opinion of course. But most Europeans would opine that the American model is the unreasonable alternative.
The American health care system also costs double as a percent of GDP vs every other modern country's health care system so spending more money on it is not going to fix things. Arguing about who pays is easy.
"People who self selected to apply for free medical care used it", study finds. More at 11.
People who self selected for free medical care didn't have much better health outcome than others who were not selected, except that they didn't go bankrupt.
So, the group that didn't get paid for didn't go to the ER, while the group that did get paid for went to the ER but didn't have better health outcomes than those that didn't. Surely that says something about the private, for profit institutions that run the ER business.
I don't understand why you're getting downvoted. The way the system works right now, I don't think the hospitals really have a choice. I'm hoping this new cost-transparency will raise more awareness at the patient-level which will in turn push for more discussion.
There ARE a lot of alternatives to the current system. Canada, France, the Netherlands, and Singapore are good examples to look at--very different systems, all far more cost-effective than ours.
If we're looking for good examples, let's keep France and toss Canada. I maintain that Canada's system is one of the main reasons the US doesn't go single-payer. We're close enough to see how bad it is, and people assume all single-payer systems are like that. I'd rather have single-payer than the mess we have now, but not if we end up like Canada. Three months wait for an MRI? No prescription coverage? No mental health coverage? No thank you.
And the US system is one of the main reasons there's resistance to loosening single-payer in Canada. Wait times for MRIs (and other procedures) depends on need -- low priority cases will get bumped for more immediate issues. Psychiatrists _are_ covered under MSP (with a referral), although psychologists & counselors are (generally) not. But non-government insurance plans will often cover them as well as prescriptions and other non covered services. Such extended medical plans are often a work benefit (like in the US).
If there's some social good the government is pursuing it should, as much as possible, be done through taxation and spending rather than rules that the government hopes will accomplish the same thing in a way where they hope voters don't notice the indirect costs.
Make every hospital into two separate corporations, one a for-profit and the other a not-for-profit. Budget their revenue and expenses entirely separately. Intake government-enforced "charity cases" only to the not-for-profit.
And then, don't allow the for-profit to loan or grant or shift any resources over to the not-for-profit. In fact, ensure they're not owned by the same parent corporation or even the same shareholders.
Keep the logistics consolidated—everything flows through the for-profit's buyer—but then, have the for-profit rent its facilities and machinery, and provide its pre-acquired drugs and materials, to the not-for-profit at market price.
And have the for-profit and not-for-profit hire the same employees and split their shifts; or perhaps, have the for-profit hire them, with the option to volunteer as many hours as they wish to the not-for-profit. (This would lower the expenses of the not-for-profit considerably.)
In other words, leave the not-for-profit "twisting in the wind", where it's still running but nobody's paying for it, so it's just running at more and more of a loss each year. Try to minimize its costs—in fact, have people working for the not-for-profit entirely dedicated to trying to minimize its costs (successful strategies for which can be rolled back into the for-profit.)
But also, treat the not-for-profit as a thing which needs to raise money, rather than just making revenue. A thing like a University, which has entire departments dedicated to getting funding from its alumni. Maybe even work with other not-for-profit hospitals in a Public Advocacy Coalition to build a social norm that if one of these not-for-profit hospitals saved your life, and you went on to great [monetary] success, you should donate to that hospital (and it will, in turn, privilege your family while pretending not to, just like Universities do.)
A fun effect of this is that the not-for-profit will now be a large, visible advocate for cost-minimization in the for-profit's purchasing—since those costs will be passed on to them (so they'll be incentivized to lower them), but they can't just lower them by buying cheaper themselves (because they don't have their own purchasing/facilities management/IT/etc. departments), they'll instead have to figure out how the hospital as a whole can lower costs, in order for them to save any money.
Essentially, this is doing the same thing that creating municipal vote districts along income lines does: the rich voters and the poor voters each get their own voices in how the city should be run, and so the poor voters (through their representative) get the chance to argue against proposals that would benefit the rich voters but hurt them. Right now, hospitals don't have any such representative for their "poor voters."
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(Yes, I know that a lot of hospitals are already not-for-profits. They're still run on a model that tries to maximize revenue, though, because they need that money. If you split the unprofitable patients out, suddenly the for-profit hospital can lower its prices, while the not-for-profit is forced to lower its costs.)
Finding a way to just give needy people money, and then have them participate in the same system as everyone else, seems much simpler than trying to build 2 systems in 1. Granted there are plenty of problems in getting for-profit medicine to work for people with average income, but assuming you could wave a magic wand and solve those problems...
The problem as it stands is that no agent in the system sees an incentive to do so, because the people having problems are invisible to their preference functions.
Consider the aphorism "the squeaky wheel gets the grease." Why is this an aphorism? Because squeaky wheels are annoying. If the people who use the wheels have to hear them squeak, they'll soon oil them. So if you hear a squeaky wheel (for example, on a shopping cart), that's usually because the people with the oil don't ever have to get close enough to hear that squeak.
Proposals like Basic Income, or even welfare, basically translate to "greasing all the wheels on a regular schedule, whether you've heard them squeak or not"—i.e., fixing problems that aren't actually bothering you personally. It's nearly impossible to incentivize anyone to do that.
My proposal here is more in terms of "ensuring when manufacturing wheels that they will squeak as loudly as possible when they've begun failing." You want to solve the shopping-cart case, where the person with the oil isn't the person who has to use the cart. And the best way to do that is to ensure that the customers will be too irritated by the squeaking to actually use the carts; and therefore the carts will go disused; and therefore the customers will complain to the cashiers that there are no carts, and people will buy less than they would with a cart, and revenue will go down, and some stakeholder will notice, and gather information, and figure out that it's that all the carts are squeaking horribly, and so oil them.
Or, in other words, you want the squeak of "people not getting treated because they don't have the money" to be loud enough to actually make it all the way up to the hospital's CFO, where the squeaking will cause cost-cutting; and even further, to the city surrounding the hospital, where the squeaking will cause donating.
In fact, if you oil the carts regularly, you might not realize that your wheels are badly-made and are rusting prematurely; or that your parking lot needs a regular dust-blower-ing; or whatever else. Sensitive components—canaries in coal mines, or people with no money in poor health—show you where your system is weakest. If you eliminate them (by just providing UBI, or even just public healthcare), you eliminate the chance to observe where your system fails. In a country with more money than it knows what to do with, this is probably a sensible approach—it has fewer people suffer over the short term, after all, at the expense of a bloated, bureaucratic medical system. But if you're trying to figure out how to cut those costs, you need the squeaking.
> (Yes, I know that a lot of hospitals are already not-for-profits. They're still run on a model that tries to maximize revenue, though, because they need that money. If you split the unprofitable patients out, suddenly the for-profit hospital can lower its prices, while the not-for-profit is forced to lower its costs.)
Bawawahahaha. No. Non-profit is just a tax status that allows them not to pay income taxes or property taxes on enormous assets and enormous income.
How do you think this would play out? My intuition is that the not-for-profits wouldn't even be close to sustainable (even with cost cutting). Are you anticipating a huge influx of funding for them or do you think they could cut costs that drastically?
Most American grocery stores (at least in California, which is what I know of) run by anyone give their food away for free, as it approaches expiry. Choosing to do so is a lot different than being mandated to.
We have lots of examples of governments doing this with ranges from poor to fair to good results. To my knowledge, the US is the only widescale attempt at market-based health care, with results of 2x the OECD average of health care cost per capita [1].
But it’s hardly a market-based system with the third party payers. Consumers aren’t making informed decisions about what they buy, have little ability to comparison shop, and state-level regulations intentionally limit the number of providers in a market. With those attributes, the poor outcome of the “market” system is entirely predictable. We need to go in one direction or the other, but having the worst elements of centrally managed care and the worst elements of a market solution makes for rotten outcomes.
Lots of ER visits aren't that dire. There are three hospitals within range if I broke my arm. I'd totally comparison shop if it were even remotely possible to call each up and ask how much. But getting even an estimated price for x-ray and bone set over the phone? Hahahahaha.
A lot of the regulations are there to protect existing players in the market as well. It seems that the market-based approach degrades when it comes into contact with democracy, probably because the equilibrium the market is trying to achieve is incompatible with our values.
19th century healthcare was relatively affordable, or at least the costs were streamlined and transparent.
Perhaps keep 3rd party insurance but ban it as an employment perk, that would incentivize the market to play to the greater public instead of just white collar salaried employees.
It it’s erroneous to call the American system a market-based system. It commonly is referred to as that - I know - but it doesn’t operate as such. Gov. regulation artificially and intentionally limits supply, supply shortage limits competition, limited competition inflates cost. Third party payer systems abstract the consumer from the supplier. Their buying decision is based on proximity of service center, not cost, because they often just see a $10 co-pay. So they aren’t making informed comparisons. If there’s a market there, it’s certainly not a free market, or anything close.
To hell with profitability. I'm infinitely glad my son's right to live wasn't an option or a choice. Today he's an healthy 7 normal years old Canadian who had the top infant cardiac surgeons in the world for multiple surgeries.
So, yes, the government. It may not be monetarily profitable but money shouldn't matter to build a humane society.
> Helen Anderson, provincial lead for systemic therapy for the BC Cancer Agency, said that Ibrance is currently under active review for coverage in B.C.
There are several expensive medications that the Canadian health system has elected not to cover.
Here is another example where if the husband didn't have drug coverage through his employer, he would have been on the hook for the entire cost. Eventually he had to shell out $3,000 per month.[1]
At first, he says, his company insurance covered the price of the drug. But years later – Gary’s employer changed insurers and he was now on the hook to pay more than $3,000 a month.
No, but if that's the standard, I'm fairly certain we can find a lot more "no insurance, couldn't get treatment at all" stories in the US than we can "Canadian needs unusual, not-yet-approved medication" ones.
> There are several expensive medications that the Canadian health system has elected not to cover.
You'll find the American medical system does the same.
All medical systems will have rules and timelines for approval of drugs and procedures. Sometimes they'll lead to unfortunate situations.
In the US, though, approval's just the first step. You might then have to scrape together the $6k deductible for your family's bronze plan. You might have to wait until next year to switch insurers to one who covers that particular med.
Commercial insurers in the US cover far more new and experimental treatments than the Canadian system does. The drug mentioned in the CBC article? Full coverage in the US, from the day of approval.
Covered in Canada? Maybe never. And that's one of the best drugs out there to treat that type of cancer.
I'm not arguing the US system is better than Canada's. Just calling out there are trade offs with single payer systems. If American's think they can move to a single payer system and keep all the bells and whistles they have now, they will be deeply disappointed.
And your 2nd link actually proves my point. The drug in the article is not covered in many Canadian provinces at all. The guy in the article is being denied the drug because it's not approved for his mutation. Most people with the correct mutation do get coverage for that drug (again, a new, state of the art drug).
No insurance? No med. ERs aren't gonna give you it.
Can't make your $6k bronze plan deductible? No med. Maybe you'll qualify for a patient assistance program from the drug company, maybe not.
> If American's think they can move to a single payer system and keep all the bells and whistles they have now, they will be deeply disappointed.
It's entirely possible to have a supplemental private health insurance system for the experimental or unapproved stuff. You can get private coverage for stuff like IVF in Australia, for example.
A lot of America's bells and whistles are already inaccessible to a large portion of the population.
> And your 2nd link actually proves my point. The drug in the article is not covered in many Canadian provinces at all. The guy in the article is being denied the drug because it's not approved for his mutation. Most people with the correct mutation do get coverage for that drug (again, a new, state of the art drug).
As the article mentions, the insurer approved their sibling with the same mutation for the same medication. Private insurance can be just as capricious as a single-payer's approval system.
When cost-cutting needs to happen... and it's inevitable, the people with severe disabilities will be the first ones to get cut.
Government-funded health care suffers from all the same economic problems that privately financed health care suffers from, and the government is just as corrupt as any private organization, plus there tends to be little incentive for efficiency, so government programs tend to be extremely inefficient and wasteful.
I appreciate (and agree with) your concern for the disabled, but letting the government be in charge is a recipe for making everything worse.
Government-funded health care suffers from all the same economic problems that privately financed health care suffers from
Except the biggest one: the need to maximize the extraction and distribution of profit to shareholders, while funding the cheapest and least amount of care possible without jeopardizing that imperative.
> I appreciate (and agree with) your concern for the disabled, but letting the government be in charge is a recipe for making everything worse.
Except we have pretty much the entire developed world's healthcare systems to debunk that claim. They have similar life expectancies, medical outcomes, infant mortality, access to care, wait times, etc. for half the cost.
Yes, I remember some right wing US rag saying the following in 2009:
People such as scientist Stephen Hawking wouldn't have a chance in the U.K., where the National Health Service would say the life of this brilliant man, because of his physical handicaps, is essentially worthless.
> In July 2009, an editorial in Investor's Business Daily claimed that physicist Stephen Hawking "wouldn't have a chance in the U.K., where the [British] National Health Service (NHS) would say the life of this brilliant man, because of his physical handicaps, is essentially worthless." Hawking has always lived in the United Kingdom and receives his medical care from the NHS.
People seem awfully confused about who pays for healthcare in the US so let's be clear: either the government or the market (consumers) pays for healthcare, or they do it in tandem.
I don't have a view on who should pay for it, but there are only 3 categories of payers in healthcare: 1 government and 2 private (insurance and self-pay). The compensation is funded by one of those sources.
People also seem awfully confused about how much the government currently spends on healthcare: the US government currently spends roughly as much per-capita on healthcare as socialized systems that cover the entire cost of healthcare for their citizens, and have better measured outcomes.
The crippling healthcare costs borne by individuals entirely consist of rent-seeking. It's also important to say that a lot of that money comes back out in salaries for the massive workforce required for the unnecessary administrative overhead, adding to the economy, and of course in non-imported luxury goods purchased by the rent-seekers themselves.
So, to summarize, the person you replied to above asked what is the reasonable alternative to socialized healthcare that does not include people dying in the streets of treatable maladies. And through your explanation it appears as though you replied with a tautological statement that had no bearing on the question being asked.
So, what is it that you are actually trying to say?
They did not ask 'what', they asked 'if' an alternative exists, invoking the classic 'dying in the streets' motif.
>Is there a reasonable alternative? I'm not trolling, but letting people die of treatable maladies doesn't seem like the right move.
I answered a tautological statement with a tautological question based on the logic the poster omitted.
Can you tell me who besides the government or the market (ie consumers) will prevent people from 'dying in the streets'? Perhaps by kidnapping another country's doctors and compelling them to provide care...
I'm a little offended that you'd assume my question to be tautological, by which I in turn assume you mean rhetorical. Seems to have generated some good discussion.
That's inappropriately anthropomorphizing the market. The market doesn't choose anything. I choose, and the market determines my constraints in choice. Since I'm well employed and not poor, my constraints are to my liking. My question regarding those who don't share that set of constraints. For some people, they go to the emergency room in cardiac arrest, having no insurance or ability to pay for critical treatment. Currently, they are treated, and costs are passed on to other consumers. Under single payer, those cost distributions would be made explicit. So besides doubling down on socialism, it accepting the status quo, are there reasonable alternative?
My half-baked opinion is that there should be a two tier system like US education.
Free primary and preventative care along with dental and vision, and have a government subsidized insurance program for hospital/long term illness coverage akin to the public university system (along with the in-state discounts).
And allow for a parallel private system to exist for those who want to pay more and get allegedly better treatment.
No. If you have a private system, the public system gets abandoned; it's the first thing to be cut when budgets are constrained because no one making the decisions knows anyone who uses it. See US public schools.
Public school funding per child increased 33% from 1995-2015.
EDIT: This does appear to be inflation adjusted. Here’s a federal source which is definitely inflation adjusted showing funding increasing in real terms by 27% from 1995-2013. [2]
For all the justified complaints about the US education system, it does a fairly impressive job moving the bulk of the country's children through a complex system to navigate.
Many of the country's best schools are public, especially at the college-level.
> If the government will not allow treatment and there’s no way to pay and you can’t leave the country, you’re finished.
If insurance will not allow treatment and there’s no way to pay and you can’t leave the country, you’re finished.
Side note: private health insurance, private healthcare facilities, and paying out of your own pocket are all possible in countries with socialized healthcare.
Parent poster is talking about the Alfie Evans case.
Alfie is going to die. He has no brain. He was being kept "alive" on life support. The hospital want to end this life support because it's in his best intersts to do so - there's no hope of treatment, and keeping him alive is likely to be keeping him in pain. The parents disagreed with this, and so it had to go to court.
This means there is legal representation for the hospital; for the parents; and independent representation for the child. This is because the child is a human and has rights and his best interests need to be kept in mind.
The parents have rejected the findings of the court, and have made many appeals. They've gone to appeal court several times, the supreme court several times, and ECHR[1] a couple of times.
All the courts agree: it's in Alfie's best interests to let him die, rather than rpolong his suffering when there's no hope of treatment.
Also, all the courts agree that Alfie's parents (and latterly his father) have been given terrible legal advice.
This is causing some consternation in US right-wing nutjobs.
Here are some, but not all, of the court hearings. I might have got the ordering wrong.
An example of the terrible legal advice (from a non-lawyer too!)
---begin
On 12th April 2018 the father went to the hospital with some other people who included a foreign doctor and air ambulance staff. The father had a letter written to him by Mr Pavel Stroilov of the Christian Legal Centre which, we were told, is a campaigning organisation. In the letter Mr Stroilov, who we have been told is not a lawyer, purported to give the father legal advice. He said that it would be lawful for the father to remove Alfie from the hospital and take him to any other place he chose. The previous order made by Hayden J was said not to have circumvented "your parental rights".
The letter, which was disseminated on social media (presumably with the knowledge and consent of Mr Stroilov), stated that:
"as a matter of law it is your right to come to (the) hospital with a team of medical professionals with their own life-support equipment and move Alfie to such other place as you consider is best for him. You do not need any permission from (the) Hospital or the court to do so".
This letter was misleading to the extent of giving the father false advice. We have been told that it had the most regrettable consequences in that it led to a confrontation in which Alfie was involved. The Police had to be called. An application had to be made as a matter of urgency to Hayden J.
The letter gave false advice because the previous decisions made by the courts in this case have directly addressed whether the parents have the right to decide what should happen to Alfie. The clear answer which has been given is that the parents' wishes are not determinative. The court has also expressly decided that removing Alfie from the hospital as the parents wanted was "irreconcilable with (his) best interests" and that his treatment and care "shall" be given by this hospital. To act inconsistently with or contrary to the court's determination and order would be to act without lawful authority. This includes the hospital which would have been acting in breach of the court's order if they had permitted Alfie to be removed from the hospital.
All the doctors (even the Italian doctors) agree: Alfie Evans is going to die, and soon. What they're offering in Italy is exactly the same palliative end-of-life care that he'd get in the UK, but with the addition of a long painful trip.
Alfie Evans has had the benefit of world class medical treatment - in the US he'd have been killed by the insurance company a long time ago. He's also had the benefit of free legal representation to make sure his best interests (because in the UK and Europe the best interests of the child are what's important) are looked after.
In American English, "government" includes almost any public body. The hospital, the court, and the organization acting as the child's guardian all qualify.
Isn't this a great argument for socialized (single-payer) systems? There is no price shifting in such a system, we all just pay in according to our ability as defined by the tax code.
It's a voice backed with $3.7 trillion in total economic value per year (18.x% of the $20 trillion US economy). In terms of size, it would just about be the fourth largest economy on earth, comparable to Germany.
There are millions of very well paid hands in that pot of gold, from doctors & nurses to scientists and pharma sales reps, hospital admin and insurance industry employees. Consider for a moment that US drug costs - the most notorious example of abuse in US healthcare costs - are about 10-11% of the total US healthcare expenditure, and our per capita spending is about 2x what it should be: ie nearly everyone in healthcare is partaking in the plunder. That makes for a very loud voice.
I'll speak for myself. I meant what I wrote; putative opponents of 'socialized' healthcare are not, in fact, ignorant of the endemic cost shifting that occurs in medicine. My intent was to satisfy my probably foolish urge to disabuse people on the Internet of their cherished strawmen. Unfortunately I haven't the time today to indulge that compulsion further, so I'll bid you all adieu.
It isn't actually about costs. The thing about Americans, culturally, is that we hate other Americans. As a society, we would gladly pay $5 more to ensure our neighbor doesn't get $1 we don't think they deserve. See: drug testing of welfare recipients.
Right, when you have a system working as more of a cohesive hole incentives are realigned such that preventative care, reasonable drug prices, and less middlemen, lobbying $$, etc, are part of the process.
It's not even that. "Sticker price" is simply the opening of negotations, sam as with any big-ticket purchase like real estate and vehicles and school tuition, and to a lesser extent airfare and hotel rates.
As with any high-overhead business with room for high-marginal-profit on units, they simply seek to maximize total revenue or at least cover costs. They don't care which customers pay how much.
I think this captures the mismatch better than you intended.
My routine healthcare is not a big-ticket purchase and should not be the kind of thing I need to negotiate over. The total package between hospitals and insurers is, but my transaction is not.
The key point of prices being published in a machine accessible and machine readable format isn't the numbers.
What numbers are published can be haggled over in future laws.
But the requirement for some numbers to be published is a big win.
FWIW, the move to digital health records was basically realized through Medicare demanding it. Providers can't afford to go without Medicare payments; like Texas and California, so goes Medicare, so goes the market.
> A lot of people against socialized healthcare don't realize that the system still takes extra money from those that pay and gives it to those that can't--just through hospital billing.
It would be refreshing to have a conversation with someone who holds such a position that was willing to say that hospitals should turn uninsured and poor people away at ERs and let them die in the streets. Its at least more honest.
I have had this debate. The right has learned to be very slippery.
You won't ever hear them suggest people should die in the streets - why that'd be just unhospitable!
They'll instead say - "why don't they have insurance? Why don't they get a job so they have health insurance? Why should I have to pay for people that don't feel like working when I go to work every day without complaint?"
If you suggest all the myriad of reasons the trapped impoverished don't have a job, they'll counter with "those are obstacles to getting a job, sure, but it's not impossible."
If you point out that many people have jobs that don't offer health insurance, you'll either get a sarcastic reply about Obamacare, or the question "why don't they just get a better job? Why don't they go to night school and get a degree?"
Empathy has been replaced by the desire to be infallible in debate.
Take a non-strawman like Paul Ryan, who is in every way a typical Republican, and his proposal is not to abandon Medicaid, but to make it into an Obamacare-like system whereby people are provided subsidized insurance.
If by "strawman" you mean my Trump-supporting friends back in Texas, sure. They are real, and I am paraphrasing from actual conversations I've had. I think it's insincere to claim "well actual republicans aren't like that" when republican propaganda seems aimed at creating a population exactly like that.
Ah, Paul Ryan.
>There’s nothing inherently wrong with high-risk pools, but they have to be adequately funded in order to work properly because the people in them are so expensive to care for. Many states had high-risk pools before Obamacare was enacted, but they charged much higher premiums than normal and excluded coverage for certain services. The federal government also had a high-risk pool temporarily, but it grew too expensive and had to cap enrollment. According to some estimates, the $10 billion a year allocated in the AHCA would still not be enough.
> Unless the amount of the credit is linked to the cost of coverage comparable with what people received under the Affordable Care Act (and subject to indexing), it will represent a reduction in coverage (or higher costs if people want to "buy up"). If people will be reduced to buying catastrophic coverage, their deductibles may be larger, not smaller than they were under Obamacare policies. That's a step backward for many Americans, who complain that the deductibles are too high already. Moreover, depending on the differential between the credit for older and younger Americans, older people (who use more health care) may wind up paying more.
>Equally problematic is the use of health-care saving accounts in lieu of the subsidies available on the Obamacare exchanges. If working-class people do not have the extra income to contribute (albeit on a pre-tax basis), once again they will be worse off than they were previously.
> Without massive new taxes to pay for it, it's hard to deliver more coverage for less. In other words, Republicans promised more and are delivering arguably less than Obamacare does.
I blame identity politics. If you want to identify with your right wing group you must stick to those believes. Compliance with the group norms you identify with is more important than health care for abstract "poor people".
I'd argue that the desire to appear infallible in debate is a facade to shroud the overriding desire to pay less in taxes no matter the human cost, coupled with a lack of empathy.
I’ve been saying for a while that until and unless people start advocating for the repeal of EMTALA (the law which requires ERs to treat everyone), there isn’t any debate over whether we should have socialized medicine, merely over how.
My point isn’t about whether or not it’s necessary. It’s that we have it already, just in a weird and inefficient form. Our politicians pretend to debate over whether we should have it, when in fact we’ve had it for three decades and nobody serious is proposing to change that.
If it can be simply made up for by the Swiss equivalent of SS I guess that'd be nice, seems like private health insurance wouldn't care either way.
Then again this goes against my theory that socialized aid should come directly in the form of the thing needed - voucher for healthcare, food (or very specific food vouchers), rent free housing or vouchers for housing, rather than cash which is a bit silly to give to someone the government failed to give good financial education to (speaking from experience here...)
There's a reason theres a huge market for under the table financial management among the trapped impoverished.
You're presuming that our only two options are requiring hospitals to admit everyone or let people die in the streets (and then calling people dishonest).
It's a bit like assuming grocery stores must give away food to anyone or people will starve in the streets. In fact, there's other ways to get food to those in need.
at least in the 80's a private hospital only had to bring a person to a certain degree of health. I had a gash and was taken to a private hospital where they cleaned and bandaged the wound but then told me to go to Bellevue for more work as I was not insured. Just came back from Thailand where I had a mountain bike accident where I spent 2 hours getting stitches in emergency room with next day followup and bunch of meds and total cost was US$400.00. That would have been more like US$4,000.00 in the U.S.
Or people who can't afford food get assistance from the government.
The difference is that healthcare costs are so outrageous, that the "people who can't afford healthcare" bucket includes families solidly in the middle and even upper-middle classes. Which includes most of the nation.
I don't think this happens often, at least not due to the patient not getting attention in a reasonable amount of time. ERs triage patients based on severity of condition and if you are in more critical condition you get bumped up the line.
But there is an issue in certain areas of people using ERs like a GP because the ER can't legally turn people away due to EMTALA
The ER is only required to assess patients and if you come in uninsured, unable to pay and with a GP-level complaint (flu, whatever) you'll receive no further treatment other than the assessment.
A lot of people seem to think ERs are simply required to treat everyone, which is not even close to true.
Medicaid (free healthcare for the poor) and Obamacare (require insurance with subsidized rates for the poor) are examples of how to address this issue.
Maybe. But couldn't we at least ask the question and have the same studies done on eliminating health insurance that we did for the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Implementing the ACA did not exactly go as planned either.
1. Deregulation - reduce compliance and legal burdens. That would bring cash prices down, so instead of 1% perhaps 50% can afford them. That's a start.
2. Charities. You can start your own: give 5% of your income to underinsured. For example:
At the urging of Frederick T. Gates, perhaps his most trusted philanthropic adviser, Rockefeller became increasingly devoted to medical research. In 1901, he funded the Rockefeller Medical Research Institute in New York City. Modeled on the Institut Pasteur in France and the Robert Koch Institute in Germany, it was the country’s first biomedical institute, soon on a par with its European models. The results were dramatic. Within a decade, it created a vaccine for cerebrospinal meningitis and had supported the work of America’s first winner of a Nobel Prize in medicine. Today, known as the Rockefeller University, it is one of the leading biomedical research centers in the world. Twenty-four Nobel Prize winners have served on its faculty.
But don't force charity on others who may be struggling.
Rockefeller University is an impressive research outfit, but not a) a pharmaceutical company or b) a treatment center. It deals more with moonshot basic research that most people won't benefit from for a few decades (e.g., Oswald Avery's early work on genetics) and doesn't directly affect the plight of the poor and underinsured.
Having worked in non-profits extensively, it's also disingenuous to claim that non-profits answer to anyone other than their primary donors, whose priorities are frequently not aligned with regular people.
> 2. Charities. You can start your own: give 5% of your income to underinsured. For example:
That's a shockingly high amount, especially if you don't get healthcare out of that.
16% of my taxes go to pay for my health care system, which covers the whole country. For someone on a median income that's 3% of their income. For someone on a top 10% income that's 4.15% of their income.
To spend 5% of your Gross Income on the NHS in the UK, you have to pay 31% in total taxes, that's an income of £75k, that's circa top 5% income.
The continued health and well-being of our fellow human beings take precedence over most other 'things'. If it's a choice between letting someone buy an extra boat and giving someone potentially life-saving preventative care, the choice is clear.
Deregulation might work if all market participants behaved like angels. But few people do, and so over time deregulation tends to result in cutthroat behavior, consolidation, and price increases.
Airline tickets are cheapest ever, and that's despite the fact that relative to biotech which is the fastest evolving field currently, airplane technology has been practically stagnant since the deregulation
It is much easier to compare airline tickets than hospitals/medical procedures. The worst case scenario for choosing wrong in the first case is a flight you're uncomfortable on and overpaid for.
1. Regulation is not the cause of high healthcare costs in America. One could argue that the lack of regulation in certain areas could be responsible for price hikes[1] in healthcare.
2. Charity has had thousands of years to solve societal problems, yet it didn't. What you're describing is a pipe dream.
Within the span of a less than a century, countries around the world have addressed healthcare effectively such that care is available to most, if not all.
I would argue that healthcare is not a right. But most of the comments here seems to leave only two choices: all or nothing. Just because someone is against socialized, universal, or free healthcare does not mean that they want people dying in the street. They just see the argument as a lot more complicated. As crazy as it sounds I think we should do away with health insurance in general. I think that would do more for cost control then any scheme the government could come up with.
I do believe that making hospitals publish their prices would be a good start. The first thing I think that would do is bring to light the difference in price between paying in cash versus using insurance. From there we could make arguments why the same service has a 10x to 100x difference in price depending on how or who pays for it.
How would you then hedge against unexpected high-cost procedures? Your assumption is that ridding the world of insurance would magically, dramatically lower the cost of every drug and procedure on the market.
Not everyone gets cancer, the medical insurance profit model is predicated on a bet that most people won't. The more people in the coverage pool, the less likely you will be paying out for every single person.
Socialized care is just the expansion of that model to encompass the entire country's citizen population. What would have been privately-captured profit from people that were healthy members of the pool can instead be used to reduce the premiums paid by all members of the pool.
I am arguing from the point of view that at current prices very few if anyone would be able to afford a high-cost procedure. When that happens prices would come down. This is partly why a bottle of snake venom antidote in Mexico can cost $100 but in the U.S. costs $10,000.
Another example is eye surgery. Originally the procedure was expensive but now it is more affordable because it is not covered by insurance. Comparatively, plastic surgery is relatively affordable because it is not normally covered by insurance.
Reducing or eliminating health insurance would also eliminate a lot of the medical administrators that provide zero care but due incur a cost due to their salaries.
As far as getting rid of the profit motivation but capturing the profits and giving it to those without health insurance I believe that you would also eliminate any reason to innovate and create new drugs.
I will admit that if you got rid of health insurance tomorrow that there would be a lot of short term pain. But I also believe that in the long run people would be better off because they would be able to afford there healthcare.
Using a different example look at the cost of college. I believe that we could fix that problem one of two ways. The first way would be to get rid of government loans and grants. The other way would be to allow people to file bankrupcy for student loans. The first way would attack the problem by getting rid of easy money. Because easy money makes things expensive. The second way could work by shifting the risks of the loans from the student to the banks. The problem with this solution would probably make it harder to pay for degrees that don't pay well.
To summarize my arguments, cheap money makes things expensive and is destroying almost everything is this country.
I don't think it would really work. Each of those countries developed their versions of healthcare based on the needs of the country at that time. It isn't like those countries were identical in size, population, gdp, etc. and then choose their healthcare scheme on a whime. The U.S. would have to design a plan that would work for the U.S. We are so polarized as a society right now we couldn't plan our way out of a paper bag if we needed to without getting into a fight.
I will admit that I have not read up on those countries healthcare plan but I think it is a lot more complicated than saying lets copy X countries plan. If you made a big change there would be a lot of second and third order effects that we would have to deal with and we may not like those out comes.
I think it would be better but it still doesn't address the problem of easy money making everything expensive. The other problem I think could come from making each state a "walled garden" so to speak that prevents non-residents from using those services. At least with the states deciding you can vote with your feet.
I could see California residents arguing why they should pay for the medical expenses of tourist.
Having some domain specific knowledge of the financial flow through the industry, I tend to favor a more federated administration model like you suggest. Skeptical of federal level ability and historical competency, I favor outsourcing the initial transition wrt implementation and administration to
Switzerland, Netherlands, Singapore, France, etc.
Now that I have thought about it for a little while longer I think I would be fine with each state deciding which model they wanted to follow. I falls in line with states rights and the 50 individual experiments concept. Which I also believe in. If one of the models work then great. If not they can look to see what is working.
The polarization is not as significant as imagined. On issues such as healthcare there is overwhelming support for universal coverage or a single payer type system, by around a 2:1 or higher margin. The problem is that our mainstream political parties are broken.
I am skeptical about that. I think that it is closer to 1:1. I could make the argument that everyone that I know is against single payer and universal healthcare. But I know that I would be biased. I think that that is called Comfirmation Biased but don't quote me on that.
We could point finger all day long about who is responsible but at the end of the day nothing changes. I think politics at this point is more about entertainment then anything.
Perhaps, but then there is no reason to bring up what other countries are doing except to say that they are doing something. But again we are back to trying to figure out how to make healthcare more affordable.
I think that both we and everyone in this discussion can agree that what we are doing now is not working and is unsustainable. We are just arguing over the best way to fix it. I personally believe that easy (cheap) money makes things unaffordable where is seems everyone else wants to spend or devote more tax dollars to an already broken system. I would just like to fix the root problem and not the symptoms.
> there is no reason to bring up what other countries are doing except to say that they are doing something
Are you suggesting that healthcare legislation should be drawn up in a vacuum? It's important to compare and contrast the benefits and pitfalls of other countries' systems. It's really all we have to go off of evidence-wise. It's also good to look at them for inspiration. There are a lot of different ways the public and private sector are being combined to make far more cost-effective healthcare systems than in the US. You are correct that some might not work in the US; that sort of reasoning needs to be weighed into whatever overhaul happens.
> I would just like to fix the root problem and not the symptoms
I have no problem with looking for good ideas from other countries. I just want to use realistic figures and study what the second and third order effects would be.
The main point to my arguments is that cheap money makes things expensive. Meaning is the government or somebody else subsides healthcare it will get more expensive. Because why not. Hospitals are trying to compete with other hospitals so they want the biggest budgets for paying the best doctors and newest equipment and technology. So why not charge just a little more then you need to get that. Then the next year comes around and the hospitals need more money so they charge just a little be more this year and it goes on and on.
You could probably start to fix things by making everyone publish their prices and charging the same price for cash as they would to insurance. From there things would start to unwind.
I would argue that rights are things that we declare by agreement as a group, not physical objects or measurable qualities. Of course healthcare is not currently a right; we haven't made it one. The question is: "Should healthcare be a right?"
Now here would be good forum post. But is pretty philosophical. What is the source of rights. If we agree that rights come from the state then we can't really complain when other countries do horrific things to their citizens. We also can't complain if our elected leaders decide that free speech, privacy, or any other pet social issue is removed. I think that we had it mostly right at the founding of this country.
Too much could be written about this argument but to me a right can't be provided by someone else's labor.
Now that I think about it, a right is also something that can't be taken away. No one should be able to prevent your free speech (1st Amendment), defend yourself (2nd Amendment), or violate your privacy (4th Amendment) without due process.
In this case no one is preventing someone from being able to care for themselves. We are just arguing over who pays for it. It is probably a bad example but everyone has the right to use the roads for transportation. We just don't have the right to the car, insurance, and gas.
What you're getting at is the difference between Negative Rights and Positive Rights. Negative Rights guarantee inaction, e.g. the government can't suppress your speech or take away your ability to defend yourself. Positive Rights guarantee action, e.g. the government will force someone to provide you healthcare.
Rights are expectations that you have from a just society. There's no real division into positive and negative rights. Due process, for instance, could be phrased either way but it is the same right nonetheless. One phrasing would emphasize freedom from extralegal persecution, the other would emphasize that all sorts of people (e.g. lawyers, juries, judges) are compelled to provide you certain services.
You can't have rights without guaranteeing action. My right not to be tortured requires all sorts of individual and societal interventions in order to fulfill. There's no classification of rights into positive/negative and certainly no difference in validity between the two.
Now I am not wealthy by any stretch of the imagination but I do not have a moral obligation to force anyone rich or poor to provide essential healthcare. I could morally encourage people to donate time and money to hospitals as a charity but to force them as part of a government mandate to me is morally wrong.
If you think that taxing the wealthy to provide essential services to the poor is immoral then you've totally lost me. That's not the type of society I want to live in. Relying on voluntary donations leaves too many people to fall through the cracks.
The problem with using words like wealthy are that it is a moving target. Generally when someone says wealthy they mean anyone making more money than them. In a small town in south east U.S. 150k would make someone very well off. One might even say wealthy. In San Francisco someone making that amount of money might be homeless. So should the person living in California pay more?
Furthermore, even the capitalistic idealism of "multiple private insurance companies competing with each other will drive prices down" doesn't work. At the end of the day, Medicare decides what it's going to pay for a procedure, and the rest of the insurance companies base their compensation off that. The government is still in control of pricing, by and large.
Even the Singapore model (which looks capitalistic on the consumer end) relies on huge amounts of government price-fixing on the hospital side of things.
> A lot of people against socialized healthcare don't realize that the system still takes extra money from those that pay and gives it to those that can't--just through hospital billing.
In fact it's really the opposite; it takes extra money from those who can't pay (the uninsured) and gives it to those who can (the insured), because it's the insurance companies that negotiate the lower rates.
It's more complicated than that. If you're uninsured, you can apply for aid. If your financial need is considered great enough, they might write off part or all of your bill. Hospitals set aside a certain amount of "charity" money to cover these cases (from the extra they get from other sources). In this case, the uninsured person is having their bill paid by others.
If you're uninsured and rich, well, you're paying sticker price and making the hospital very happy.
If you're uninsured and somewhere in the middle, you could be helped by the hospital, you could be screwed, really depends on the hospital.
Private insurance companies pay more than Medicare/Medicaid on basically all procedures. The price they negotiate is lower than the list price of a procedure, but remember, these sticker prices are hugely inflated. Hospitals will often raise the list price to renegotiate higher prices with insurers. In the end, I would suspect it is largely private insurance providing extra income for the hospitals (more common than cash patients, and they pay a greater % of the list price than Medicare).
Both happen. I think the point OP was making is that the cost for anyone who pays (insured or not) is higher in order to compensate for the required care to people who never pay.
This could still lead to lower prices by giving consumers better information. I have always wanted to set up a site to allow people to compare prices for healthcare in different hospitals/areas in the USA but this information is not publically available on the scale that would make it feasible.
Here is a good example of a hospital that is doing it right. Granted I have not been there but I would really consider it if I needed surgery and I was in the area. Maybe domestic medical tourism.
The inflated costs have very little to do with ER and uninsured patients. It is mostly about getting more money from insurance reimbursements. ER operations are subsidized by taxpayers in most of the US, and the ER is only a small part of the overall system. The reimbursement rates are loosely based on the inflated billing costs, with many insurance companies demanding a minimum discount of 50% being common.
-- Which amplifies the cost incredibly, through reactionary rather than preventative care. Sadly, it seems like most people I've had to inform of this perceive more than one bogeyman in more socialist systems.
> A lot of people against socialized healthcare don't realize that the system still takes extra money from those that pay and gives it to those that can't--just through hospital billing.
I don't know where you get this. In my experience nobody who advocates for socialized healthcare is under this impression. They know how the system works, just don't think it's an efficient way to run it (it isn't).
The way the incentives are structured on the American healthcare system now are beyond ridiculous and having public published prices is a way to start a much needed debate about the underlying issues, with data and facts instead of political viewpoints.
It's absurd that having a baby in an average facility in the US "costs" five times more than a private hospital in Switzerland. I put quote marks on cost because that's usually billed price and insurance tend to negotiate down, so in reality is more like twice the cost, but still absurd at any level.
> In my experience nobody who advocates for socialized healthcare is under this impression.
Did you misread? I said that many that are against socialized healthcare don't realize that wealth redistribution is already happening in the American system.
> Like list prices are often incredibly far removed from the actual dollars paid, and the actual amount paid is all dependent on insurer contracts.
I just had $5k worth of bills from the birth of my last child (the amount wasn't surprising, pretty much exactly what the insurance estimated for standard pregnancy).
I called, credit card in hand, and asked if they have any discounts for paying on time. They gave me a 35% discount on the spot!
It still feels vaguely like insurance fraud because the $5k amount is what is going towards the deductibles...
Be careful. I did this exact thing with my first child, but they billed my insurance company for the 35% they discounted, anyway. After something like 50 phone calls and hours and hours on the phone with people who said they would "take care of it", I finally got taken to collections and ended up paying it to avoid damaging my credit.
I haven't looked at it in a couple of years, but medicare used to publish what they pay, and the random adjustments based on location and other factors i don't recall.
medicare doesn't negotiate. they just pay a fixed cost up front.
Yes I think that's what I mean. We have a $5k individual deductible. After a deductible is met, we pay 20% coinsurance. Before the deductible we pay 100%.
Making up some numbers, my wife had already spent $3k on the OB-GYN which counts toward the deductible. The hospital billed us $7500. So $2k we pay to finish meeting the deductible and then 20% of the remaining $5500 is $1500, so our portion of the hospital bill is $3500.
If the insurance company knew we'd get a discount on our portion of the final bill, that calculation for how much of the bill we'd only have to pay 20% of would be different.
> Like list prices are often incredibly far removed from the actual dollars paid, and the actual amount paid is all dependent on insurer contracts
Which means that anyone those insurer contracts don't cover, is getting royally screwed. Thus, healthcare is simply unaffordable to someone who doesn't have those insurers acting as a payment intermediary.
This one of the dirty secrets of the whole US healthcare coverage problem that I never see politicians (or talking heads) on either side actually acknowledging.
It is extreme, but banning all insurance discounts would be a good first step.
This might concern people initially (because the discounts are currently so high) but for practical reasons after the ban is in effect the costs will go back to more or less pre-ban levels, but now simplify billing (reducing costs) and benefit people without insurance (no more absurd inflated bills).
Insurance discounts themselves are problematic, and also result in this silly "in-network" "out-of-network" system we have. In particular where you could go to an "in-network" hospital but get an "out-of-network" anesthesiologist or lab giving you care without warning.
Pulling people into the insurance system was the whole point of the ACA subsidies and Medicaid expansion. It's a pretty clear acknowledgement of the problem.
Whether full coverage should be something the government works on as policy and whether subsidized private insurance is the best way to get to full coverage are different questions, but the most talked about parts of the ACA directly address people in that insurance gap.
Right. Hospitals have to deal with a mess of insurance plans. If they Underbill they only get what they bill. If they overbill there is no penalty they just get paid the allowed amount. So they jack up the prices to ensure they are always over billing. This works for insurance patients but then people without insurance or high deductibles get screwed.
Hospital should not even deal with the mess of insurance plan by adjusting the price. They should not care what kind of insurance the patient has or whether the patient even has insurance. They should just set a price to what they deem reasonable and if somehow patient insurance provider doesn't pay enough, it still the patient responsibility to pay for it.
Insurance contracts with providers prohibit balance billing to patients. The provider can only bill a contractual maximum amount for each procedure. This helps to control costs and prevents patients from getting hit by unexpected charges.
> people without insurance or high deductibles get screwed.
I've used the high deductible plus HSA approach since it was an option. I don't know if this varies by state or plan, but all I ever pay is what the insurance company considers allowable.
Why is this concept ever even deemed acceptable? Why do you get the privilege of "only paying what the insurance company deems allowable, minus what they cover", but someone else has to pay in full?
This puts you in a state where you basically require insurance to get care at a reasonable price. Where its cheaper to have coverage and pay out of pocket, than to pay out of pocket without coverage.
I dont walk into a Walmart or Target, load my cart up with stuff, have it scanned, walk out the door, and receive a bill 1-12 months later demanding all money paid in full in 30 days.
This "negotiation" you mention works 1. If you know the price up front 2. have the leverage to negotiate.
And guess what, you have neither of them. This law changes one of those, so that shopping around is at least possible.
Aside: I'm surprised a lawyer didn't sue a hospital over Informed Consent via no billing knowledge.
> This "negotiation" you mention works 1. If you know the price up front 2. have the leverage to negotiate.
In emergency situations this is hard to do, but I've done it numerous times when needing non-emergency health care. I even call around asking about prices and the cash discount. Oddly enough, a co-worker and I both had the same procedure (back issues ugh) last year at the same doctor. He used his insurance, and I asked about and went the cash route. I ended up paying less for the exact same thing because of how his deductibles worked.
It was the end of the year and I guessed I would not hit my yearly deductible so paying cash was the right move.
How complicated/extensive was this procedure? I have requested prices for many procedures and only once have I received that information (and like I said in another comment, I received a discount for paying it in full at the time of service). Every other time, every single person I talked to said "I can't give you that information" or "I honestly don't know".
Not too complicated I would imagine, but it was an MRI, doctor visits, and back injections. One place in town laughed when I called and ask for pricing, and when I said I wanted to pay cash they hung up. So it definitely takes some asking around.
When I had knee surgery years ago, and had good insurance at the time, I asked the doctor about the price just to see. He was quick to say if I wanted/needed to pay cash he could work something out.
So they are out there, but you might have to do some digging.
And again, emergency situations are a completely different beast.
Not really, there's another comment thread in this post alone which talks about getting a 35% discount just for paying on the spot. It's ridiculously easy to negotiate because the prices are already so inflated that the hospital isn't losing money by offering "discounts" like that.
If you don't know the bill, they can't tell you the bill, and they have no way to get the bill until weeks later, how can they "negotiate" when nobody knows?
Frankly, that claim sounds like a pile of you-know-what. My bet is they take your money, and then bill you for the rest.
If you're serious about learning, stop listening to these people (seriously, it's a waste of your one precious life) and try taking a healthcare economics class or reading Paul Starr's Social Transformation of American Medicine.
The problem is that these people dominate the public conversation. We can't solve a problem if you have to read some special book or take some special class to even be able to correctly acknowledge it.
The biggest beneficiary of price opacity is, actually Medicare itself. Because prices are opaque, and because it's illegal to charge private insurers less than what you charge Medicare, and because Medicare has no legal mandate to reimburse COGS, Medicare is able to use the lack of price transparency to force providers to pass Medicare costs on to private insurers (which then gets passed on to privately-insured patients in the form of premiums).
A rather cynical - but wholly plausible - view of this news is that it's an attempt to undermine the long-term financial solvency of Medicare, by making it harder for them (in the long run) to pad their operating budget this way. Given that the press release heavily emphasizes the role of the current administration in making this change[0], and that the entire party has pretty consistently supported cutting funding for Medicare[2], it's a rather easy conclusion to come to.
[0] It's not exactly unusual to mention the President by name in a press release of this nature, but it's not exactly typical or standard practice either. Oftentimes, agencies will refer to themselves as if they were politically neutral and functioning somewhat independently of the executive branch[1], even though the leadership is obviously appointed by the executive.
[1] Because, to a large degree, they are - the people employed by these agencies have relatively low turnover, unlike the directors who are appointed fresh by each new administration.
[2] Not in their rhetoric, of course, but with their actions
> Like list prices are often incredibly far removed from the actual dollars paid, and the actual amount paid is all dependent on insurer contracts
I had a "pleasure" to actually dig for some service (online) and after a while I got frustrated by this exact thing - all prices are always hidden, you HAVE TO contact 'sales' department and even if they show some prices upfront there are sooo many hidden costs and obligatory services and taxes that it's virtually impossible to quickly compare services.
In contrast - in majority of the European countries (I think it's an EU thing) all companies are obliged to display complete, total price for customer with all taxes included - this makes life so much easier…
I would argue that there will be no push toward accurate cost of care unless some messy steps towards transparency are taken first. Union pushes infection rate data? Counter with your own data. Someone saying you’re too expensive? Counter with real dollar figures. More data!
Right now we kinda just have to take people’s word for it.
This transparency is the first step needed to move us toward smarter consumption of care. I don’t see any worthwhile brands getting tarnished by pricing data.
If consumers see a hospital as expensive, they might choose a cheaper hospital that provides the same standard of care without the frills. This is the kind of decision making that will bring down care costs over time and I’m stoked to see this move.
I totally agree, transparency has the power to really move the needle.
The issue I see though is that all parties that have data are incentivized to keep it to themselves. Many "leading" hospitals actually don't have super great quality compared to other, less well known hospitals. So powerful, well known but low quality hospitals will lose if there's more transparency. They know this, and they're fighting it
Large EMRs will also lose if there is more interoperability. Right now the fact that Epic and Cerner "own" a hospitals data gives them a lot of power. If anyone wants data, they have to go not just through the hospital, but through the EMR duopoly.
Insurers don't want to publish their rates, because they'd face backlash from all around when people realize how much variability there is in how much they pay for the same procedure at different hospitals
Under the 21st Century Cures act, the federal government has now started prohibiting information blocking by EMRs. There are still some obstacles and friction but generally Epic, Cerner, and their competitors are opening up and offering published APIs using standard protocols.
Basically, Medicare and Medicaid are tired of getting screwed. When those programs were established, they were intentionally hobbled in negotiating prices with drug companies, hospitals, physicians, etc. Because, you know, it wouldn't be fair to providers.
As a result, Medicare and Medicaid often pay more than private insurance. In part, that's because their ranges for negotiation are pegged to list prices. And so providers inflate those list prices. And nobody, except for a few clueless patients, actually pays list price.
If you take Medicare, it is illegal to charge anyone else a lower price than what you charge Medicare. Therefore these prices will be the floor and nothing else.
> I really like this push towards transparency but hopefully people who use the data / develop will make sure to understand the system and the data they're dealing with.
They won't. Having clear, sinple, unambiguous per-procedure price information widely available while quality information (including on induced downstream needs and costs) is less clear will produce strong downward pressure on quality, while also not controlling aggregate cost. That's a pretty clear pattern in human behavior that is often leveraged both as a competitive tactic and to increase total revenue.
Right, the real solution would be to have a listing of usual and customary costs per region.
This is what people who offer advocacy services to the uninsured do. It's similar to getting comps on real estate, those people have access to billing systems to find out what insurers actually pay and negotiate based on that pricing.
It's unfortunate that union actions against hospitals often try to scare the public -- the patient base -- into staying away. Such actions have been known to backfire. Where I live an electricians' union tried this, and it generated ill will towards the union and good will towards the hospital.
One of the biggest problems with US health care is that it's usually impossible to find out what treatments will cost before having them.
This makes "shopping around" and being an informed consumer near impossible.
If this actually happens in a meaningful way, hospitals will have to be competitive on price, and I can easily see a 30% cost reduction across the industry just from that.
...which is why I'd be surprised if that actually happened. Such a big restructuring of such a politically powerful industry doesn't just happen in our system.
Where as other high income/developed countries, citizens don't have to shop around because everyone is insured by the State and pays the same prices.
The biggest problem with the US health care system is that it's decades behind every one of our counterparts in Europe, Australia/NZ, Japan, Canada, et. al.
People in other developed nation don't have to worry when they're sick. They know they can see a doctor and it either won't cost them anything, or it will always cost the same amount. If they lose their jobs, they don't have to worry about their health as well. People can chose to quit their jobs, or take long unpaid periods to work on their own projects, without having to worry about how they're going to pay for health care. In America, we're required to pay for private insurance, even if you leave the workforce.
There is a huge cognitive load when health is in the background of your mind. In America, we have to work. If you don't work, you don't get services; not until you're old enough to get Medicare. In other words, you don't get medical services until you're too old to be a working member of society; until the country bleeds you dry as a resource.
> Where as other high income/developed countries, citizens don't have to shop around because everyone is insured by the State and pays the same prices.
Exactly. Everyone praising this is doing so because they think it's great that this will allow Americans to "shop around" when it comes to healthcare, but they seem to be missing the fact that even the very concept of "shopping around" for healthcare is absurd.
If you're having a heart attack, or just have a broken bone, or even if you just have a stomach ache, the last thing that you are going to want to have to spend time doing is "shopping around" before getting your problems fixed. Being able to shop around isn't something that should be praised, it's something that should be relentlessly mocked and is evidence of a failing healthcare system.
very concept of "shopping around" for healthcare is absurd
No it's not. A very large percentage of medical care is planned, not urgent. There is no reason why price comparison can't happen for those.
A great example of a highly functional healthcare market is vision correction laser surgery. Every time I look around some deal is being offered. Competition is what drove those prices down.
Can you do that with everything? Of course not. But you can do it with a lot of planned medical care.
>No it's not. A very large percentage of medical care is planned, not urgent.
And for those procedures, a hybrid system should suffice. All Americans, should, at minimum, be able to get urgent, surprise medical issues addressed in a way that doesn't completely destroy them financially.
Of course, nothing is black and white. Issues that could have been treated in a planned way become urgent if they're left to fester. Obamacare started shifting the incentives to make preventative measures more palatable, and healthcare cost growth has come down as a result. ACA is a /conservative/ set of policies. Even still, it elicits extreme reactions from loud people on the fringes.
> All Americans should, at minimum, be able to get routine and urgent, surprise medical issues addressed in a way that doesn't completely destroy them financially.
Elective procedures are obviously a thorny issue people will debate over where to draw the lines. But standard checkups, routine wellness procedures, and covering the unexpected ought to be the bare minimum—the healthcare floor of social decency beneath which we do not allow any member of society to fall without recognizing we are failing as a society.
And it's not purely a race to the bottom; as expected price levels are achieved, it also becomes possible to read signals in the price, so that medical practitioners who are willing to do extra work (reduce wait times, better followup, home visits, etc.) can charge more to compensate for that, rather than just doing the minimum amount of work necessary in order to get the fixed payment.
Lasik eye surgery is a terrible example for you to pick for this. Lasik is notorious for being a market where laser clinics bought the machines when Lasik was a fad and were hoping demand would stay high, and are now having to resort to unscrupulous sales tactics to recoup their losses. Laser clinics give sales commission to their eye counselors as an incentive to get you to purchase Lasik even when you might not need it or it may not be best for you [1]. They have incentives to use deceptive marketing techniques to make you think that you need it and that it is affordable, even though the price you hear on the radio is almost never the actual price you will pay (they will tell you that the advertised price is only for some eyes, and that yours are more complicated and require more money). They will try to convince you that there are no side effects, despite an FDA study showing that 46% of people reported visual issues caused by Lasik, with 30% of all recipients stating that Lasik caused them to have chronic dry eye [2]. This is so commonplace that the FDA and FTC had to get involved to guide consumers about how to avoid these shady clinics and to tell these Lasik marketers to knock it off [3], [4].
I don't know about you, but I certainly don't think the 'marketplace' for procedures such as childbirths, biopsies, transplants, bone replacements, etc should look anything like the marketplace for Lasik does.
How does that differ under a single payer system where a doctor might do surgery that isn't needed. The problem of bad actors exists whether you have a market or not.
My comment wasn't meant to say anything about single payer systems. You used the Lasik surgery market as an example of a "highly functional medical market" and acted as if it is something to aspire to, when it clearly isn't. That's all I'm saying.
But if we want to go down that rabbit hole, a single payer system like the NHS isn't profit-driven like laser eye clinics are, so there's one way it differs. Doctors aren't incentivized to "sell" unnecessary surgeries.
>No it's not. A very large percentage of medical care is planned, not urgent. There is no reason why price comparison can't happen for those.
The idea is that money shouldn't enter into the decision to have planned care at all. Let's say the price for a regular checkup goes from $200 to $100 (just an example). Okay but there are still people who will put off the checkup because of the cost. That shouldn't happen, people should just go to the doctor when they feel they need to, planned or unplanned.
>A great example of a highly functional healthcare market is vision correction laser surgery. Every time I look around some deal is being offered. Competition is what drove those prices down.
You mean LASIK? I mean besides the fact that you're falling for a markup-then-sale strategy there is a lot of contention around lasik surgeries - that they're misleadingly advertised, not that effective, bad side effects, etc. Heap a bunch of advertising on top that makes it hard for consumers to know the quality of what they're purchasing and you have basically all the hallmarks of bad un(der)regulated markets.
The idea is that money shouldn't enter into the decision to have planned care at all.
Money always enters the decision, even in a single payer system. Someone decides what will and won't be paid for. Your example of preventative care isn't a good one, since every US insurer had to cover it at no copay.
You mean LASIK?
Yes I do. And I mean the fact that it went from several thousand dollars in cost to under $1000 in pretty short time due to competition.
And of course consumers know what quality they are purchasing, any smart person would make the decision on more than just price.
This analysis ignores the secondary effects of the mere ability to shop around.
Right now, for many insurance plans, consumers of care are 100% price insensitive. If even, say, 5% of a market starts to take their business elsewhere out of concern for price, it starts to put more cost discipline onto the system, which encourages competition.
You can't suggest a huge change and then assume the world will stay the same post-change. It won't. What the health system needs is some incentive to control cost; today, it has very few.
Completely disagree. Providers are not all the same. Some doctors are so incompetent they should not be allowed to practice, some are excellent. People should have full information on their providers, including costs, to be able to make informed choices.
This makes sense in theory, but the healthcare market isn't a great example of a free market. One example, especially for emergency care, you don't have many repeat customers (I realize there are exceptions). Word of mouth doesn't travel very far, even if people had time to examine reviews on Yelp. People aren't educated enough to understand if they received quality care or not anyway, beyond bike shedding (ie. bedside manner). If you receive poor care, you don't typically have options when it comes to getting a refund.
Not an argument against, just an observation that it's unlikely to be part of a realistic solution to the problems we face in healthcare. Interesting point about emergency care costs. Do you have a source you could share?
I figure "it can't hurt, there is a significant market failure, and price transparency can only help."
I'd like to hear someone knowledgeable provide a counterargument, though. Maybe it would be expensive or impossible to enumerate those costs. Maybe preferential ("discriminatory") pricing is really important to the smooth functioning of the system.
Thanks for sharing. Looks like anywhere from 2-10% could be reasonable. Even if it's 2%, that's almost $50B a year. There isn't just one problem in healthcare; we'll need to solve multiple problems.
FTR, I think my original post did have several points that pertained to nonemergency care as well.
>Some doctors are so incompetent they should not be allowed to practice
Which is yet more evidence of a failing healthcare system, and
is certainly not reason to praise the concept of having to "shop around" just to get adequate and reasonably priced care.
You seem to be using the wrong (though obvious) definition of what it means to be incompetent. A doctor who is incompetent because of poor treatment is handled by the system.
However there are other incompetents that someone who is medically competent can not the less fall into. The doctor with poor human interaction skills makes the patient feel horribly before, during and after treatment. The doctor who takes "bribes" to prescribe a more expensive treatment when a cheaper alternative would work as well. Those are just a couple examples of how someone can be incompetent yet still not raise to the level of not being allowed to practice.
I'm not using the wrong definition. A doctor who is considered "incompetent" because they take "bribes" should certainly be terminated by the system. If they aren't, it is a failing system.
I put bribes in quotes for a reason. Outright bribes are handled by the system. However I'm implying any way to get around the rules without getting caught. Some are legal loopholes, some are illegal. The only point is by some way you got around the rules without getting caught.
That doesn't change my answer. If you have a system in which doctors carry out shady tactics and are able to "get around the rules without getting caught", and that system is so rife with such issues that you have to actively "shop around" to avoid them, then the system is failing.
It's absurd, but as long as it's politically untenable to go all the way to something reasonable, things like this which will presumably be a lot easier to defend is still better than nothing - a huge proportion of medical needs are not emergency care, after all.
Emergency care for things like a heart attack or broken bone only account for 2% of healthcare spending. So your primary case for why "shopping around" is bad is mostly irrelevant. Nothing is stopping you from creating a not-for-profit healthcare co-op, getting participants to voluntarily turn over their healthcare decisions to you, and then demanding reduced prices from vendors. All I ask is that you don't force me to join it against my will.
I never said anything about emergency care being my "primary case". My comment even specifically lists 2 instances of non-emergency care. Needing to shop around is an absurd concept for any medical care.
Please don't force me against my will to live by the whims of what you personally consider absurd in your own life. You are free to abdicate responsibility and choice to a third party all you like.
Your choice to live by an absurdly low standard of care is what forces the rest of us to suffer from a low standard of care as well (against our will). Your request to "don't force me against my will" is hypocritical.
It becomes societies problem once you are about to die because you bet to not get an expensive disease and cant afford the care once it happens. You dont live in an isolated bubble.
This boils down to a simply question. Is society ok with letting people die in the gutter because they cant care for themself as a result of having bet on not needing insurance? If not the discussion is moot. Because then the freedom of not being insured simply means people leeching on society once it happens.
You are creating a false dichotomy where either sick people die in the gutter or you forcibly take everyone's resources to pay for it. Maybe society IS okay with letting people die in the gutter, but I suspect not. I am a member of society and I would not stand by while someone dies in the gutter. And you don't need to force me to subject myself to the kinds of healthcare options Donald Trump would pick for me in order to convince me to help someone dying in the gutter.
If you dont want the comparison between the current system and none you have to be able to present an alternative. In the system we live in if you arent insured, you are betting that you wont become a burden on the rest on society. You are betting on charity and thats a bet which society has to pay for if you loose. If you cant pay because of other circumstances thats fine, but if you dont share the burden out of principle and your own stubbornness, you are simply acting anti social and living off others.
I am not saying it is either or, but if you boycott the current system without offering a new one its simply dishonest. Your actions still have consequences whether you like it or not.
Fundamentalism is rarely a working model for society. Despite your motivations, your actions have effects in reality. They have effects on others. And no matter what you think might be possible, as long as its not, you are still betting on getting bailed out by the current system.
We are all stuck with each other whether we like it or not and we have to find a way to coexist without actively seeking to harm each other for your own benefit.
>If you dont want the comparison between the current system and none you have to be able to present an alternative.
The problem with this is that you want a top-down defined system with a master ruling over you. I want an emergent system where free people interact for mutual benefit. Surely there is some tiny fraction of the population that will be unable to take care of themselves. I'm happy to have a discussion with you about how we help that tiny percent of the population. Helping them doesn't require that you turn my healthcare decisions over to Donald Trump.
>but if you dont share the burden out of principle and your own stubbornness, you are simply acting anti social and living off others.
I suspect that if you had to rely entirely on the personal charity of others for your survival that you might be more inclined to behave in a pro-social manner.
>I am not saying it is either or, but if you boycott the current system without offering a new one its simply dishonest. Your actions still have consequences whether you like it or not.
You're being dishonest by painting a picture of a utopia where if I'll just turn over my healthcare decisions to Donald Trump then everyone will get the care they need when they need it. Can you even say out loud, "Donald Trump should decide what kind of medical care I deserve?"
>Fundamentalism is rarely a working model for society. Despite your motivations, your actions have effects in reality. They have effects on others. And no matter what you think might be possible, as long as its not, you are still betting on getting bailed out by the current system.
I'm not a fundamentalist. I'm not an anarcho-capitalist. I just believe that, in general, I am better able to make healthcare decisions for myself than Donald Trump. I also believe that emergent systems tend to be better than centrally planned ones.
>We are all stuck with each other whether we like it or not and we have to find a way to coexist without actively seeking to harm each other for your own benefit.
In the scenario I'm describing there is no active harm to anyone. The worst case scenario is passively not aiding someone. Your scenario actively harms many for the benefit of the few.
Are you trolling? Don't you understand that this goes both ways? By accepting this, you are forcing me against my will to be limited by what you personally consider to be an acceptable standard of care.
Again, your request is hypocritical and carries no merit.
As opposed to authoritarians who want to force me to ask the likes of Donald Trump for permission to get the kind of healthcare I want. I'll take the libertarian solution any day, thanks.
Do libertarians think it's wrong for the federal government to require hospitals provide emergency care regardless of the patient's ability to pay? Surgeons are forced to operate, which violates their personal freedom?
I think this sentence is the key to the lack of understanding.
>The problem is, it leads directly to the conclusion that "if you don't have any money, you shouldn't be entitled to any medicine."
You are not entitled to anything from anyone even if you do have money.
I'm curious if you've been following the popular show, The Handmaid's Tale. If you haven't, it's a show in which the human race is facing potential extinction because women are becoming infertile. To solve this problem they essentially enslave and repeatedly rape fertile women in the hopes of increasing the population. Now obviously this is an exaggerated scenario, but by what moral principal would you suggest that it's wrong to to enslave and rape women to save the human race? And why would you not apply that same moral principal to a surgeon and an individual patient? Does the moral principal no longer apply simply because the scale is different? What level of coercion are you willing to apply to the surgeon? If he won't help a bankrupt person will you remove his license and create an additional bankrupt person? That doesn't seem to be beneficial to society at all.
The moral thing, of course, is for the surgeon to spend some portion of his time aiding those who cannot help themselves. And the moral thing, of course, is for all of us to help those who cannot help themselves by either providing our own time/labor or perhaps funding the surgeon so he can perform more "free" surgeries. Some people will certainly choose not to aid others, but that doesn't justify forcing them against their will.
Are there places where enough people make the moral choice to support as high a standard of living as Norway?
Edit: I mean, it seems you're saying that there are enough good humans to support a nice enough society that we should all have that much free will. But is that what we find in real life?
I want to be free to choose what I personally define as a high standard of living for myself, as long as I don't harm anyone else. More importantly, I want to be free from being coerced into living what you personally consider a high standard of living.
>I mean, it seems you're saying that there are enough good humans to support a nice enough society that we should all have that much free will. But is that what we find in real life?
I would rather live in a world where I'm literally the only human on the planet willing to help his fellow man than one in which I'm subjected to someone else's personal ideal of how I should live my life. But I'm far more optimistic than that. It's entirely probable that some people will slip through the proverbial cracks, as they do in all systems, but I don't support attempting to right one moral wrong by committing another.
Do you resent being coerced into paying taxes to support the fire fighters and police and the infrastructure, etc that others believe should be in place?
Where do you draw the line between what we can all agree on and where you start to feel coerced into supporting what you call others' personal view of something?
How is that level of freedom different from anarchy?
Certain constraints on freedom can actually lead to greater freedoms. As someone mentioned above, there's greater freedom in taking a long break from work or in doing a career change in Norway than there is in the United States.
And when you're dying on the sidewalk in front of the hospital, do you expect them to just let you die there and leave it to the county to dispose of the body? Like it or not it's unreasonable and inhumane to let capitalism condemn someone to a preventable death. Someone has to foot the bill for this. The only question is who and how. The naive answer is to let the hospital eat the loss but ultimately that just means that the rest of the patients pay it in increased costs. You can't sell yourself into slavery, you can't sell your organs, and you can't sign a contract to let the hospital ignore you dying on the sidewalk in front of the ER.
The total sum of all emergency care is less than 2% of healthcare spending in the US. And obviously the majority of that is going to be paid for by the patients, either directly or via insurance. The scenario you're talking about is a rounding error in healthcare spending costs. It certainly doesn't justify forcing people to accept what the likes of Donald Trump considers to be sufficient healthcare.
Rising costs of healthcare are also a big issue in other top-wealth countries, and for better or worse, the US also does cutting edge health science that other countries dont get close to.
I find the comparison country vs country to be valuable, but somewhat limited. The U.S. is unique in a lot of aspects.
For example in argentina(i know, not rich country but hear me out), that has public healthcare, healthcare spending per gdp has been cut in half in the last couple of decades: mostly because private healthcare ate up the market. Hybrid markets are a reasonable compromise.
The US is also not a free market of healthcare, it has the worst of both worlds: highly regulated, intrusive and punishing state, with proteccionism and quotas.
To this day I still believe the #1 healthcare policy issue is with the state's intervention. It is the FDA that makes pharma expensive, it is H1B quotas and medical licensing requirements that prevent foreign doctors to come to the US, it is Medicare that puts fee-for-service, it is the state that makes malpractice costly, etc etc.
>for better or worse, the US also does cutting edge health science that other countries dont get close to.
You're conflating two things. A large portion of "cutting edge health science" research is funded publicly. The private funding tends to focus on reformulating existing drugs and other less-risky bets. The real game changers come out of moon-shots made possible by government funding.
I dont know enough to confirm or refute, but government science in general is pretty inefficient: yes it does things that the private sector wouldnt do that are valuable, but it does a lot of other things poorly and expensively.
Not to mention that the very state makes researching drugs onerously expensive. It can take a billion dollars to get FDA approval, how is that reasonable.
> It can take a billion dollars to get FDA approval, how is that reasonable.
It is unreasonable to have to prove drugs are safe before shipping them out to potentially millions of people? We must have very different definitions of reasonable.
Private insurance still exists in countries that have universal health care. In the UK, for example, a little over 10% of the population has private insurance.
In the US today, about 50% of the population has free or extremely low cost health care provided by the Government. The majority of poor people in the US now receive 100% free care via State-administered medicaid.
So what exactly does universal health care in the US look like? Medicaid/medicare for everyone? Based on the UK experience, we'd expect 20% of the US to still pay out of pocket for private insurance. Private insurance companies would also likely be free to discriminate on prior conditions because, after all, everyone has universal insurance as a backstop.
You risk creating a two-tier system of public-private insurance where healthy, wealthy people have access to concierge preventative care and very fast specialist referrals, while the chronically sick (uninsurable) and non-wealthy are stuck in a publicly run system with less preventative care and worse referral and wait times.
I'm not saying I have the answer - just raising some issues that are often lost in the debate over how to reform this market. Personally, since the medicaid expansion, I don't think insurance coverage is the problem any more. Now it's about quality and cost of care. And transparency and competition certainly seem like two reasonable ways to tackle cost.
Private health insurance for covered procedures is generally forbidden in Canada, to avoid creating exactly this sort of two-tiered system. Works great.
Beats what we have now, where there's a two-tier system, where healthy, wealthy people have concierge preventative care and very fast specialist referrals, and the non-wealthy are stuck in a privately run system with exorbiant fees and impossibly high medical bills.
You are just muddying up a debate that should not be this hard. There are 2 countries in the world that do not have public healthcare; The US and Liberia. Whatever counterpoints there are to the public option, 196+ countries have already had those conversations and already solved the problems.
>You risk creating a two-tier system of public-private insurance where healthy, wealthy people have access to concierge preventative care and very fast specialist referrals, while the chronically sick (uninsurable) and non-wealthy are stuck in a publicly run system with less preventative care and worse referral and wait times.
Sure, if that happens, fine let it happen. 0.1% of people might fall into the bracket of wealth that use private healthcare. Would you really hold up healthcare for 99.9% of people because of this?
You do not have the answer, but everyone else does. Go public. The benefits far outweigh any detraction.
I would like to thank America for being the world pharma profit center, as well. It is impossible to give away antibiotics for 30 pence a dosage if not for the American paying $50 per tablet.
Seems like the U.S. should adopt the Swiss system. It's much more effective than the current U.S. train wreck without quite so much political baggage as single-payer systems.
They tried taking a baby step in that direction with Obamacare. Government mandatory anything is a seriously hard sell in the US. I honestly think single payer is an easier sell at this point.
Obamacare was an attempt in that direction, but for a lot of healthy people it made more sense to pay the relatively low penalty than get insurance. This breaks everything about it.
I would be curious as to how well public opinion correlates with legislation in regards to healthcare. The 'selling' of healthcare seems to be mostly propaganda, not a comprehensive description of the structures, inputs, and outputs of the healthcare system.
I've always been of the opinion that kind of information should be available next to the ballot box. I just have no idea how it should be presented.
I've always been of the opinion that kind of information should be available next to the ballot box.
Even the quickest of comprehensive summaries about a the ins and outs of your average healthcare plan would probably run at least 30 pages (and the actual bills run 100s of pages). Do you really expect to people to read that just before they vote?
Honestly, unless you are a hardcore healthcare wonk, reading the 1 page 'propaganda' summary is realistically all you can expect from people.
I completely agree, and no, it shouldn't be a prerequisite for voting. Using a mountain of indigestible information to assuage potential ignorance doesn't make much since... Like I said, I don't know how it should be presented.
The single most important thing for the US to do right now, is to considerably bring down the per capita spending on healthcare, by reducing the cost of everything in the system. It must be hammered down, belligerently.
We have to slash at least $1 trillion in healthcare spending.
Everyone in the healthcare industry is going to be extremely upset about that. It will all come directly out of their pockets. That will include doctors and nurses, middle class people working in health insurance, biotech companies, medtech device makers, you name it.
As you bring the cost down, implementing broader socialized medicine than what the US already has (half of all Americans are getting some form of government healthcare coverage), becomes that much easier and cost effective. As costs stand today, there is no way the US can afford to implement the style of socialized medicine that Canada or Britain have - we're spending twice what they are per capita. The Democrats in California recently looked at implementing universal healthcare for the state, they immediately walked away from it because it's financially impossible at current costs.
The article already states that these online prices will be meaningless to most people, as they are the 'list prices' that no insurance company or individual would actually end up paying. So it will still be nearly impossible to find out what a treatment will cost before having it.
>It may still prove to be confusing to consumers, since standard rates are like list prices and don't reflect what insurers and government programs pay.
Does not mean "meaningless." And the purpose of shopping around is comparing between hospitals. List prices should be a good relative predictor for comparing cost.
> And the purpose of shopping around is comparing between hospitals. List prices should be a good relative predictor for comparing cost.
When is the last time you dealt with any healthcare bills? This is almost universally untrue. Hospital A's list price for an MRI might be $1000, but your insurance has a deal with them where you only pay $100 out of pocket. Meanwhile Hospital B's list price for the same MRI is $500, but your insurance doesn't have a deal with them, so your OOP cost is $500. This is very common, and in many cases is impossible to know if it will happen until after you have had the procedure and are billed.
I mean, yea, you check with your insurer first? How could the hospital possibly have information about how much each insurer would cover considering there are literally hundreds? This seems like a "perfect is the enemy of good" situation
If you're checking with your insurer to find the price, then that makes the hospital's listed prices meaningless, which is the entire point of this comment chain.
The insurer doesn't know what each hospital charges. Posting costs online is just to make it more convenient to find the information.
In the perfect world, everyone would sit down with the hospital, look at the likely range of costs of a procedure, call the HMO/PPO to check how each outcome would be covered, and then repeat that process at several locations. But that is arduous and people don't have the time or patience.
>The insurer doesn't know what each hospital charges.
Yes they do. Providers are already required to make their list prices publicly available, and insurance companies have it (they are already available to the general public as well, but they're probably going to be hard to find/understand for a layperson). Many insurance companies already have cost lookup tools specifically for this purpose. Posting the hospital's list price online like the article is talking about is purely for the consumption of the patient. It is not of use to the insurer.
>In the perfect world
In a perfect world, I'd contest that you wouldn't have to worry about healthcare costs at all, but I digress.
>everyone would sit down with the hospital, look at the likely range of costs of a procedure, call the HMO/PPO to check how each outcome would be covered
Except you already can do this even without looking at the list prices from a hospital. Your insurance can already tell you exactly how much you will be charged by any provider. They do not need these online 'list prices' to do so.
> The insurer doesn't know what each hospital charges. Posting costs online is just to make it more convenient to find the information.
Every hospital charges more than the maximum reimbursable amount for the insurer. If they don't, that's because they've made a mistake - their goal is literally to set a bill that's high enough that it will generate a reimbursement for the maximum amount each time.
List prices should be a good relative predictor for comparing cost.
The problem is it's not a good predictor. I'm sure you've seen articles that say the cost of an MRI can vary between $500 and $5000. Those are the list prices.
For a given insurer, the contracted rate is probably pretty similar with the $500 rate being only marginally discounted and the $5000 rate heavily discounted.
Sure, predictions aren't always right. People should still check with the health insurance of where they should seek treatment. None of that doesn't makes list prices "meaningless"
I think this is the issue that should push us all toward a single-payer, government-backed system. The fact that we all (or our employers) pay a ridiculous amount for health insurance each month, PLUS end up paying out of pocket a high amount anyway as our health insurance really only kicks in once there is an extreme situation (emergency, chronic illness). And as a consumer I am stuck in the middle of it, with there being no competition but no recourse either.
It's not meaningless. Because you know if the procedure costs X, and your insurance covers 80%, you know you will only pay 0.2X at most. There will be no random charge for thousands of dollars for something trivial.
>It's not meaningless. Because you know if the procedure costs X, and your insurance covers 80%, you know you will only pay 0.2X at most. There will be no random charge for thousands of dollars for something trivial.
That's not how insurance works, though. You would pay 20% of your insurance's negotiated cost, not the list price. So you could still end up paying more at a hospital that has "lower prices", based on how well your insurance negotiates with them.
In what ways would price competition be worse than no price competition, given that other relevant information like quality of care is available as well?
> given that other relevant information like quality of care is available as well?
Well first off, that's not a given. The article only mentions Medicare using price and electronic medical records as a way of 'rating' providers. I can't find anything similar about Medicare rating providers based on quality of care.
Second, look up the situation with Lasik eye clinics. Another user in this thread suggested it as a "great example of a highly functional healthcare market" driven by price competition. In reality, price competition in the Lasik market has caused eye clinics to operate more like car salesmen (complete with sales commissions, aggressive/pushy sales tactics, and deceptive marketing), and not like someone who actually has your best medical interests in mind.
I'm not saying that simply introducing price competition to hospitals will lead to something like that, but it's certainly an example of price competition not being a good thing.
> One of the biggest problems with US health care is that it's usually impossible to find out what treatments will cost before having them.
I've had places laugh and hang up when I asked about pricing and paying cash, while others give me exact figures and a discount for cash. Maybe this law will at least start us down the path of pricing transparency.
You're presuming that consumers have the ability of easily making a switch to other healthcare centers. This is divorced from the demographics of healthcare in the USA, because the problem is that the sickest and oldest patients incur by far the most costs. Many of these individuals are unable to get to even their own hospital effectively, never mind doing market research and trying out different centers many more miles away. Simply put, there is far less ability for consumers to choose in healthcare, even if this step by Medicare is one small step in the right direction.
By far, the most sensible system is to have a single-payer, universal healthcare system. Prices can be set nation-wide for drugs, our gov't can bargain and negotiate with providers, and most importantly: healthcare professionals will mostly not operate on a fee-for-service basis, which is a perverse incentive divorced from the Hippocratic oath.
Exactly. And it's pretty much standard practice for providers to expect you to just throw yourself at their (or your insurer's) mercy and only learn the price later. They don't even upper-bound the amount you might need to pay by default.
I don't know how a patient can be expected to make a decision in that situation -- either legally or economically.
> This makes "shopping around" and being an informed consumer near impossible.
Add to that the fact that you are likely ill. I think the biggest argument against healthcare-as-a-market is simply that patients can't be (expected to be) informed consumers.
I went to the emergency room with a horrid ear infection because no local urgent cares were open and after I called the phone # on my insurance card thats what they told me to do.
The receptionist literally, and I am using this word correctly, LITERALLY laughed in my face when I asked how much the visit that had just ended would cost.
For me it's not about "shopping around" before I go to a hospital. Its having a transparent and up front bill for what services were rendered before I leave. It's preventing that shock unbelievable bill that shows up in the mail three months later, and giving the patient a chance to dispute fraudulent or excessive costs while they are still in the building.
Hospital billing needs to be open and transparent. It's the most manipulative and predatory industry on the planet. If only the goal was to help people, it seems like the companies that own hospitals only care about shareholders.
I had a similar situation about 5 years ago. Even though the hospital had my insurance info, they sent a bill / demand letter for the full amount anyway. Of course insurance eventually paid for most of it, and I was finally reimbursed by the hospital about six months later. This was from an "award winning" hospital in Oregon. Scum suckers.
I’ve had similar experiences when I went for a checkup for the first time with my own insurance. I’ve been so used to knowing the prices beforehand through my young and feeble life, but everything about my initial visits felt abnormal. I’m here to pay for a service, but why aren’t they telling me anything about price? I’m aware of my copay but what about the original price? Okay, I should probably get an x-ray. Why the hell aren’t you mentioning the costs? I mean, I don’t have to get it either.
I always feel so helpless whenever I go as if my decisions are more or less made for me. Transparency will not only help me decide, but give me options that weren’t visible in the first place.
Hospitals and doctors must post their price list online.
Hospitals and doctors must disclose to each patient before any non-emergency service how much that service will cost. The disclosed cost must be consistent with the price list and must not depend on what insurance is involved.
Hospitals and doctors must not give any non-charitable discount to anyone that lowers the total amount that they charge below the listed price. (With the possible exception of Medicare.)
Hospitals and doctors must not attempt to collect more than the listed and disclosed price from any patient for any service.
In other words, if a doctor is willing to see a patient with some particular insurance plan for $100 (split between the insurer and patient however the insurer sees fit), then that doctor cannot bill a patient $300 for the same service becaues they have a different insurer.
Yes, a law like this would thoroughly invalidate the entire way that insurance contracts work right now in the US.
Interesting that many states have laws mandating this for auto care.
I'm hoping we reach consensus soon that healthcare isn't somehow "special". It's just an industry, with incumbent interests, fighting to earn as much profit as possible, just like any other industry.
How would doctors and hospitals account for complications or non-standard 'things' that come up during treatment? I don't think it's reasonable to try to document every outcome or potential action taken. It's easy for me to think "setting a cast on a broken arm should cost $X.", but having had it done before, there can be complications - existing fractures, location of fracture, skin conditions, etc.
I absolutely would love things to be transparent, but I think healthcare is more like fixing software bugs than delivering well-scoped features. It's very hard to estimate anything beyond the most basic, superficial issues.
Just to be totally clear, I want prices posted online. I'm just worried there would be asterisks next to everything and then they would be useless. Perhaps that's an opportunity for differentiation in hospitals: "broken bone - cast set: $X - all inclusive".
There are at least two ways to approach variable costs. One is to have a price to treat a condition, e.g. a hospital can charge $X for a pregnancy, regardless of whether it’s a C-section or a vaginal birth. The other is to allow the variable charge but to disclose it as it happens, just like auto shops do. If I see a doctor for $75, and the doctor determines that I need a $17 strep test, the doctor can tell me that the strep test is $17 before doing it.
This does impose an annoyance cost on every little charge, which I think is a good thing. If a medical practice really wants to charge for every piece of gauze they use, then this should annoy the patient up front so the practice has an incentive to stop doing it.
> One is to have a price to treat a condition, e.g. a hospital can charge $X for a pregnancy, regardless of whether it’s a C-section or a vaginal birth
The side effect of such a policy is that hospitals will then have huge incentives to perform the cheaper procedure. E.g. if the real price of C-section is higher than the real price of vaginal birth, but the effective price for both is mandated by the government, then hospitals will have too much pressure not to perform C-sections (even when they'd result in better outcomes for the patient).
People are mocking this policy here, but it’s obviously better than nothing.
A large number of hospital procedures are likely planned, and can therefore be subject to comparison shopping. Giving birth is an obvious one. But even for many fractures there is a day or two before the procedure, and you could transfer.
Maybe more importantly, public price information allows independent research into price disparities, and public shaming of the worst offenders. That’s data only insurance companies currently have access to.
I don't really think it is "better than nothing", though.
If we start 'publicly shaming' hospitals for high prices, then that will encourage hospitals to aim for low prices. That of course sounds great on its face, but my concern is that this is going to encourage hospitals to achieve lower prices through cost cutting, (aka cutting corners, in the industry where corners need to be cut the least: healthcare).
Trying to rein in healthcare costs is great, but I fear that trying to do it by encouraging focus on narrow metrics like these could do more harm than good.
Also, these publicly-available prices will be almost meaningless to the average person, as they are just 'list prices' and won't match what insurance or any individual actually pays.
> The report, which analyzed three years of BCBSA companies' claims data in 64 markets, found that the average price for a knee replacement surgery is $31,124. But that price, which doesn't reflect what the patient actually pays, can vary greatly within the same city. In Dallas, for example, a knee surgery will run anywhere between $16,772 and $61,585 depending on the hospital.
"cutting corners" is part of the overall profitability picture for a health organization (or any large corporation) so literally _anywhere_ that corners could be cut is already happening.
Not really. It is much more common and much easier from a business operations perspective to simply increase premiums or deny coverage, especially because a lack of competition means that consumers will have to pay the premiums no matter what. If a price hike causes the premiums to become unaffordable the insurance company actually benefits because they no longer have to endure the cost of providing benefits but they get to keep all the money that was paid before raising the rate to a level that the consumer could no longer afford. This is in contrast to healthcare providers which have a much better negotiating position because they're the ones actually providing the service that the consumer actually wants for the money that they're paying, so trying to get them to lower prices ends up being a much more difficult and risky negotiation.
Next step is to make them actually charge those prices to all patients/insurers. It's not appropriate for insurers to pay less because they made a deal with the hospital.
From TFA: It may still prove to be confusing to consumers, since standard rates are like list prices and don't reflect what insurers and government programs pay.
Just because your insurance doesn't cover something doesn't mean they should make more money. This is one of the root problems driving healthcare costs. No deals for government or insurance companies. Post prices. Standard procedures should end up with lower pricing due to competition.
I've worked in medical finance as a consultant, and a huge problem that I've seen is that although private insurance was originally intended to encourage competition, it has made prices much more complicated and opaque for the end consumer (patient).
Generally speaking, each hospital/practice/clinical lab has to negotiate with individual insurance companies to get reimbursed at a given rate minus "contractual adjustments" - this negotiation process is highly inefficient, given that each payer may do things differently (a contract with BCBS of NC may be different than one with Florida Blue), and smaller providers simply don't have the bandwidth or resources to have any leverage in this process.
The complexity of this ecosystem only hurts consumers and providers (and helps the payers, of course), and although many insurance entities call themselves "non-profit", I seriously question their motives.
It's almost reminiscent of the era leading up to the financial crisis of 2008, where complex derivatives, mortgage-backed securities, and other overly sophisticated financial instruments made those that worked in the industry fantastically wealthy, while the common people were left holding the bag when the stock market finally plummeted.
I hope we can find ways to simplify this system - the single payer system, for all of its flaws, seems like a step forward in the right direction.
Insurance companies are also incentivized to make every claim a battle of attrition with healthcare providers and patients through denying, delaying, and traps make of fine print.
Why hospital even need to negotiate with insurance company? Can't they just set the price they deem reasonable and then let the patient and insurance to work out the payment within themselves .
It works that way for 'out of network' facilities and doctors, and there are higher deductibles and lower limits on payouts for those as the insurance copany has no fiscal control.
The negotiations happen for 'in network' systems, and it's in the hospital's interests to be 'in network' for as many insurance companies as possible, as most people choose 'in network' care providers.
Firstly, why would a hospital relinquish control of payment to the patient? The hospital is the one getting paid, after all, and they want to maximize their profits (aka get paid as much as they can).
Secondly, if a provider doesn't negotiate with an insurance company, the insurance company would naturally reimburse a lot less. In the U.S., the lion's share of provider revenue comes from insurance companies instead of patient self-pay, so they have less leverage to negotiate here. Of course, a large hospital system could just say "screw you, we won't join your network" (in which case they have the upper hand, since people are more likely to pay insurance premiums for plans that include their current doctor/hospital).
> Hospitals are required to disclose prices publicly, but the latest change would put that information online in machine-readable format that can be easily processed by computers.
This is great news and step zero on the long road to transparency in the voodoo that is USA medical billing.
What would be really awesome is if someone can get non-Medicare versions of these prices and somehow marry that with the co-pay / co-insurance of common insurance plans to give people an idea of what they'd be on the hook for. At the moment nothing short of going through with the medical service and then taking a time machine will get you the true answer. And even then they can retroactively change it!
This is exactly what my company's solution does! We get prices from multiple sources, one of them being claims data (which is basically your time machine).
Anecdote: along with the public health care system in Italy, there's a parallel, private system if you want something a bit fancier, or a bit faster for non-urgent things. One of the things that made me laugh was when I went through that to see a local ear-nose-throat doctor. I was able to call and ask for prices on the phone.
In other words, along with covering everyone via the public system, Italy's private system is a better functioning market than the US system.
>Hospitals are required to disclose prices publicly, but the latest change would put that information online in machine-readable format that can be easily processed by computers.
Apparently the hospitals have already been required to do this but now it will be online. Also this number will only give the upper bound of the cost since it is considerably negotiated down. What good does it do if they say mending a broken bone costs up to $20k when in reality it is somewhere between 0-$20k depending on insurance and other factors.
Wow, that would cover 2 years worth membership at the clinic I run. We charge $49 / month for unlimited visits, freezing the mole would've been around 10 bucks. You likely could have gotten a plane ticket, flown to our clinic, gotten the procedure, and flown back for less money
Who wants to start the Uber for ambulances? It will have a list of prices for the nearest hospitals and drop you off where the costs are cheapest and the waiting times the shortest? (I'm a mobile/backend dev B) )
Ambulance services are generally extremely tightly regulated, and often exclusive area contracts. You probably couldn't operate an ambulance company with the policy you describe in most places, and you certainly couldn't legally do an Uber-style middleman service with independent ambulances that used that policy.
And, unlike taxi laws, the laws on operating thingd that pretend to be legally-mandated emergency vehicles are going to be vigorously enforced.
Useless. Consumers don't care about how much something costs when it's life or death and they may not even know enough to understand what price they should be looking for. Medicare must have the power to negotiate prices for the benefit of the population full stop. Also, medical service must be free at the point of service for all US residents to ensure everyone gets essential care and preventative care.
Yeah, but for some reason the cheap stuff suffers from the same price opaqueness, and for some reason, we still rely on a third party to pay for an expense that costs less than most premiums.
Insurance should be for the actual exceptional stuff. If we made prices transparent for basic care, then we may be able to have people pay for their own primary 'easy' care. This could lower the rate of more expensive illnesses as well as free money the insurance companies are using to pay for basic services to pay for the more life-saving, expensive stuff.
> Multiple the medicare spending for the amount of population it serves and rejoice in a 40% GDP spending on healthcare.
Don't forget to account for the fact that Medicare's reimbursement rates are not self-sufficient - they're implicitly subsidized by private insurers. So it's actually much higher than that.
That effect goes both ways: medicare gets patients that are old and have more expensive and chronic diseases, thus their spending per service might be very efficient. Which leans on which is hard to know without some rigorous analysis.
> That effect goes both ways: medicare gets patients that are old and have more expensive and chronic diseases, thus their spending per service might be very efficient.
It doesn't really matter, if they're reimbursing below COGS (which they are). If the expected value of a set of numbers is negative, you can't make it positive by adding a bunch of other numbers which are also negative (even if they might be closer to zero, which in this case they oftentimes are not).
I don't follow your reasoning. Private insurance pays physicians more than medicare, producing the implied subsidy you mention (as they pay less). But once patients get onto medicare, they dont go to private insurance anymore so there is no subsidy: almost all the money is spent by the state at that stage.
This has the incentive that private markets have incentives to do disease treatment and prevention before the patient goes to medicare, potentially offloading care onto the later stages.
I would surely like some formal study and analysis on this, i feel this is very theoretical.
> I don't follow your reasoning. Private insurance pays physicians more than medicare, producing the implied subsidy you mention (as they pay less). But once patients get onto medicare, they dont go to private insurance anymore so there is no subsidy: almost all the money is spent by the state at that stage.
As a provider, let's say 40% of your patients are on Medicare, and 60% are on private insurance. On average, you're losing money on a per-patient basis for 40% of your patient base, since Medicare's reimbursement rates are below COGS. You stay in the black by charging the remaining 60% enough to make up the difference.
Without the privately-insured patient base to subsidize the Medicare patients, the provider would go out of business immediately, because they wouldn't even have enough revenue to cover the direct, marginal costs of supplies for each treatment, let alone anything to pay for staff wages, office space, overhead, etc.
> I would surely like some formal study and analysis on this, i feel this is very theoretical.
This isn't theoretical at all. It's no secret that Medicare's reimbursement rates are below sustainable levels. Medicare itself admits as much. For providers that see a high enough percentage of Medicare patients that they can't effectively distribute the costs among their privately-insured patients (because there aren't enough of them), Medicare actually runs special stipend programs, where they provide you with extra money to stay afloat (separately from the regular reimbursements).
I dont agree with this analysis, but Im more than willing to read up on it.
> Medicare does not reimburse below sustainable levels
> On average, you're losing money on a per-patient basis for 40% of your patient basis..
I disagree with this conception of sustainable: at any point if you have two suppliers with price differenciation yes, one of them 'subsidizes' the other, but that doesnt make it so the latter doesnt bring revenue. If by law airlines could not sell coach anymore, they would all drastically go out of business, even though they dont make money on coach. Medicare does lower reimbursement but it only matters in so far they take the spot of a private insurer.
Furthermore, sustainable implies that there would be no providers at medicares rates but that is not true: there would be less because they pay less, but you would still have providers.
Second, accepting medicare is a hassle for providers but I assure you they dont do it out of charity. They give you infinite demand which means you can fill your non-private insurers slots with medicare and provide lots of revenue.
> Furthermore, sustainable implies that there would be no providers at medicares rates but that is not true: there would be less because they pay less, but you would still have providers.
In most regions, Medicare reimburses rates that are less than COGS. If you have to pay $100 wholesale just for the supplies to perform a procedure, and you're only allowed to charge $93 for the procedure, you're going to go out of business very quickly.
Your assertion that "there would still be providers" is wrong, because unless Medicare dramatically raised its reimbursement rates[0], most providers would go out of business overnight. Even if it were true that there would still be providers, just fewer of them (which is not true), you're at best arguing for something which, in your own words, would exacerbate the current shortage of practicing clinicians, which would drive up prices for self-paying patients even further and dramatically lower the quality of care for the entire country.
> Second, accepting medicare is a hassle for providers but I assure you they dont do it out of charity. They give you infinite demand which means you can fill your non-private insurers slots with medicare and provide lots of revenue.
Medicare doesn't give you "infinite" demand. But furthermore, having more patients doesn't help you if you're literally losing money on a per-patient basis. You can't lose money on margin but "make it up in volume".
This is exactly why Medicare has to provide separate stipend programs to providers who aren't able to overcharge privately-insured patients and make up for their losses on Medicare patients that way.
[0] which is the entire point of the comment that began this whole thread - Medicare would have to dramatically raise its reimbursement rates if it covered all patients
I don't believe this is accurate. The causality runs the other way. Medicare takes the oldest sickest patients away from private enterprise. Private insurance gets to cherry pick healthy people and aggressively denies coverage whenever it can.
> I don't believe this is accurate. The causality runs the other way. Medicare takes the oldest sickest patients away from private enterprise. Private insurance gets to cherry pick healthy people and aggressively denies coverage whenever it can.
As I explain below, Medicare reimburses providers rates that are below COGS. That's not a secret, and Medicare itself admits as much. It's not hard to see that, if Medicare reimburses rates that are below COGS, the only way providers can stay in business is by making up those losses with non-Medicare patients.
The patient pool of Medicare is actually not relevant to this entire conversation, because we're talking about what Medicare themselves reimburse for individual services, so we're already comparing like quantities. But if you really want to explore that line of reasoning, note that privately-managed Medicare plans (who have the same general patient population as Original Medicare) systematically outperform Medicare on the three top metrics: medical outcomes, cost, and patient satisfaction.
That's not an accurate calculation. Medicare currently serves the oldest and sickest patients. Expanding coverage would cover young health and wealthy people. Additionally, giving Medicare monopsony pricing would drive down costs and prevent travesties like Martin Shkreli's price hikes.
My mother-in-law died of brain cancer over the course of about five days. We received a "Statement of Benefits". She received ~$130,000 of care. Medicare paid ~$30,000. That's bullshit. Per James Fallows' article, medical price transparency is CRITICAL. You can't improve something if you can't see it and can't measure it until after you experience it.
I'm an anti-Trump (and anti-Republican) Republican but I have to admit that, with this Medicare transparency action, sometimes this administration takes surprisingly sensible actions.
Great question. We were not responsible for the difference. The "Statement of Benefits" is a very confusing US healthcare tradition in which you're told how much you should have paid before being told what you owe. In our case, there was a corresponding "Medicare discount" (or something; it's been 8 years) and the final bill was $0.
The situation is terribly regressive: people with the least money and the least likely to be able to afford healthcare and are therefore most likely to suffer high hospital costs. People with the most money get healthcare "insurance" and so get the lowest prices.
Understanding the root cause of how our healthcare system developed is both crucial and completely lacking from most of these discussions.
It is a tale of federally mandated wage control and specialized tax breaks. A quick google will show many articles outlining how we got here.
Why is car insurance not tied to employers? In general how much better does car insurance work than health? Are the prices not much more straightforward and is it easy to shop around? If you are treated poorly by your car insurance company, can you easily tell all your friends and change companies?
This is the real problem here. Most folks have no choice and no skin in the game, which leads to all these crazy stories about zero pricing information and no ability to change companies.
If the tax breaks simply got removed, and people had to actually pay directly for their insurance and could switch companies, the vast majority of these problems would go away.
Car insurance is not comparable to health insurance. It's apples to oranges. Car insurance reduces risk, by exchanging the cost of an unpredictable potentially costly event (an accident) for a regular much reduced cost event (monthly payment). The benefit is predictable expenses and budget.
Health insurance only works this way for the healthy. For the chronically ill, it's flat out cost reduction to have it and a profit loss for the insurer.
My insurance pays out more than I pay into it every year. I had one year it paid out ~$250k.
Unless we stop mandating care for the sick unable to pay for it, healthcare is socialized; it's just a matter of how efficiently socialized it is.
Insurance companies overcharge the healthy to make up for their losses with the chronically ill, and hospitals overcharge those who can pay to make up for their losses with those who can't.
Medicare reimbursement is generally fixed price based on diagnosis (DRG == diagnostic related groups)
Table 5 here shows a "weight" . That's the number of units of reimbursement a hospital gets for each particular diagnosis / procedure / whatever. (LOS is length of stay) (CC is complications) (MCC is major complications)
Hospitals negotiate with CMS the number of dollars per unit of weight. Sometimes aggressively. It would be good to have that number of dollars posted publicly and explained. Does the hospital hate serving Medicare patients because they don't make enough?
1 - I'd imagine the price they will post is similar to an airline's full fare, refundable ticket price. The price actually paid is quite different and related to the negotiated rates with your insurer and your deductible.
2 - Hospital billing is often separated from physician billing. Does price transparency extend to all physician groups?
3 - Patients care about total out of pocket expense. How much is it going to cost me? Hospitals can't know this because they are not privy to your health plan structure/details - they only know their negotiated rates. Your health plan doesn't know it, because it hasn't received the full details of your treatment.
Still have to change consumers of health care to have a consumer mentality for health care. Whatever the age, you really should actually shop around for non-emergency medical procedures. This is one area you can really save money because a lot of places are severely overcharging for simple procedures.
Call the facility, get a quote (they will probably have to do a bunch of work on their end), document quoted price (if I were to do this I would probably have the hospital email me a document), and don't pay more than the agreed upon price.
Receiving non-emergency medical care should be like shopping for cars, pizza, iPads, houses, etc. So, yeah, start doing that. Be the change you want to see.
I’m in favor of this, and not just for Medicare. Medicare pricing is extremely low because doctors can’t turn down Medicare patients. Medicare pays like $8 for a physician visit, which is, quite obviously, not sustainable for the physician. I want to be able to comparison shop at the very least for routine stuff that’s not customized patient to patient: yearly physical, blood tests, chronic disease care, etc. Combined with ratings this should reduce the current extreme information imbalance and drive the prices down.
How much of my money are you willing to spend to save your own life?
Read an article that talked about insurance companies providing tools to consumers about pricing, turns out they don't use them because people are price conscience when it comes to their current healthcare needs. And my guess they're probably too price/time conscience when it comes to preventive care. Aka, they would need to be compensated to stop eating cheeseburgers.
Hotels are required in most jurisdictions to post their rack rate for hotel rooms. Look on the inside of your hotel room next time, you'll find the rack rate is usually 4X what you actually pay.
You'll find they comply with this, just like California Prop 65.
They'll continue to give discounts just like Rockefeller gave rebates and subsidies.
I never understood why doctors, hospitals, etc never do this. They know their prices but they never want to let you know until too late. Heck doctors have often told me they take my insurance then say "woops you gotta pay me cash!". Medical billing needs some serious fixing or consumer protections.
How about we take this a step further and require hospitals to have one price for each service to all comers.
Then we can trivially pick a plan independently of backroom deals that are impossible to evaluate ahead of time and easily pick the provider that provides the combination of service and price.
This is a step in the right direction. I hope they push all medical services and drugs to publilsh their prices. This way, customers can have the option to pay cash or go through insurance.
how about taking it one step further and aggregate the database of all hospital prices so we can filter and compare. better yet, single payer system overall
Feels like a step in the right direction. But we've already got geographic monopolies in many cases - you can't just decide to go ten more miles in an emergency because you know the prices are 15% lower.
However, if a new hospital opens close-ish to an existing one, offers a temporary discount, then the two just keep an eye on each other's websites to maintain the status quo in pricing will offering "competition," now we have a duopoly.
Capitalism will find a way to keep screwing consumers.
Removing any of the information asymmetry in health care is useful. Providers in clinics usually don't know what procedures costs, especially with various insurance negotiations. This empowers patients and additionally medical providers themselves. It is a real conversation (in non-emergent situations) that should be happening with patients and providers about what the patient can afford.
If you do not like that this exposes publicly the capitalist nature of US health care, then I encourage you to support a universal/government health care option, rather than trying to prove this information isn't helpful.
Honestly the biggest pain in the ass when it comes to trying to price healthcare comes outside office visits. Want to go in for a surgical procedure? You think it's going to cost $X but it ends up costing $X+Y because some complication caused the operation to run 10-15 minutes over the estimated time and now you have an extra unit of time for the anesthesiologist getting billed.
Price transparency is great, but office visits are basically the only thing you can estimate well upfront (there's five CPT codes for the visit, 99211-99215 and it's easy to estimate which one will apply based on whether it's a new/existing patient and the level of history/examination you anticipate requiring). I will stand by my belief that the only way to "fix" healthcare in our country is going full single-payer so citizens don't have to worry about whether they can afford to get treated or not.
A few years back my son got his tonsils taken out at a private hospital in the UK (my employer at the time provided it) - after the operation the anesthesiologist and apologized and said that due to a billing mistake I'd have to pay an additional amount directly and handed me a bill.
Having read horror stories about medical billing in the US I was prepared for a shock. However the bill was for something like £4.50... :-)
"Getting anything other than true emergency care in an emergency department tends to be an expensive, fragmented way to receive care and should be avoided if any other reasonable alternative is available," Wilensky said.
Most money is spent in non-emergency care. Just because something doesn't solve all problems doesn't mean it isn't an improvement. The next step is then to force the hospitals to charge all payers the same price.
A delusional wishful thinking that a patient, while in pain and in need to care, will be shopping and browsing around to see prices, and that would drive prices down. Even if that was true, it requires that you could predict how much your treatment or visit would cost, and anyone who have actually used and paid bills in the health system in US knows how it goes.
There are some facilities which already post basically accurate prices online: https://surgerycenterok.com/ is a great example.
If I needed some kind of elective or non-emergency procedure, they would be high on my list (along with medical tourism to foreign countries where procedures are also clearly priced, and even cheaper)
I've recently been having pretty good luck going to medical providers and offering cash (I have Kaiser insurance now, which I basically treat as emergency/catastrophic only, since they never cover any providers I'd want to see, so I basically end up paying cash.). I was able to get a dermatologist to go from $600+ to $95 because cash.
> (along with medical tourism to foreign countries where procedures are also clearly priced, and even cheaper)
The thing that is really bizarre to me is that I've more than once seen people quite prices for non-emergency procedures in the US that are more expensive than taking a business class flight to London, checking into a high end hotel and getting treated at a top private hospital targeting mostly rich people... Of course it's less convenient than being treated near your home, but the difference can be significant.
Do such hospitals actually accept non-resident patients from outside the EU for elective stuff? I'm not sure about the UK setup, but in Ireland, private hospitals are able to save costs on the basis that if something goes badly wrong, they can just shunt the patient over to the larger and generally better equipped public hospital, which is often literally next door, at which point the patient become's the state system's problem. For instance, many of them don't have an ICU.
This works okay if the patient is resident or is an EU citizen, and so is entitled to be treated by the public system (though it's arguably an effective subsidy of the private system by the public system), but I wouldn't have thought it'd be feasible for non-resident foreign citizens.
Yes, most would. The NHS also treats anyone who needs it if an emergency need arises with the caveat that they will bill you if you don't have proper coverage (be it by virtue of residency or private cover).
Many, like e.g. HCA International explicitly advertise to an international client base, and tout their large numbers of ICU beds as one of their features, so would rarely expect to need to transfer patients.
One thing that certainly does bring costs down in the UK is that the system is geared heavily towards maximizing utilization of resources by e.g. allowing the NHS trusts to take on private work, and allowing NHS doctors to take on work at private clinics, and allowing private clinics to rent NHS resources, so you may very well find that your treatment by a private healthcare company involves being operated in an NHS hospital by an NHS consultant on their spare time. But while they certainly then benefit from economies of scale, all of this happens on commercial terms - e.g. NHS trusts use profits from renting out capacity to offset parts of their running costs.
The biggest private providers do have their own operating theatres and ICU's, but they too tend to have NHS staff working part time or consulting and may still rent NHS resources where it makes sense.
England has a mix of private hospitals and NHS hospitals. Some private surgeons work from NHS hospitals - in that case you'd have a private surgeon, a private anaesthetist, and probably NHS nurses / OD techs, and then a private room.
The cost to visitors of NHS treatment is 1.5x the NHS rate. Some stuff is exempt.
Huh, interesting. I wonder if that's allowed here, too; the Irish system is a dual public-private system fairly similar to the UK one. I just assumed it wouldn't be allowed because it seems like it'd be an undue burden on the public system.
While you are right about in the moment decision making, this is a welcome change.
What will likely happen is that aggregators / bloggers / journalists will start comparing prices and write about the differences. People will see the articles. And in a moment of crisis, they'll potentially think about the ones they read about, remembering one hospital or another.
And even if they don't, the mere fact of comparison articles (and likely outrage from normal people in the comments sections, etc), will create competitive pressure driving prices closer together. At that point, people won't need to search for the specific price for a hospital because all will likely be similar.
It depends on the patient and the procedure. It will keep them honest tho, like if the hospital charges 10x what the next one does, you can ask some questions.
There are a whole lot of treatments different from emergency care. In many of these cases, the patient does not need to go to the hospital immediately and can take the time to go through various options and choose the one suitable for them. In India, almost all private hospitals will provide you with a reasonable estimate of the costs including surgery, medicine, etc. Patients can and do shop around for the hospitals that fit their budget and any other criteria they might have. Of course, they can not be 100% accurate as complications do arise. But they don't need to be, because small differences average out and a reasonably accurate estimate is a far better option compared to no estimate at all.
> A delusional wishful thinking that a patient, while in pain and in need to care, will be shopping and browsing around to see prices, and that would drive prices down.
Are you kidding me? If a patient is in so much pain that they can't make rational decisions about their care or feel that their care is urgent enough that they don't have time to look at prices, they should probably be in the ER anyway. For the 95% of patients not in this situation, having tangible pricing will be beneficial. Furthermore, for patients in seriously debilitating conditions, many have caregivers that can look into procedure finances.
I believe the theory is that by posting prices online hospitals will become generally regarded as being "expensive" or "inexpensive", which in turn could drive prices down.
It opens the door to third party organizations to do the comparison upfront, and assign different hospitals an overall grade. No one's expecting you to shop around while you're waiting for an ambulance, but a) there are a lot of procedures where you do indeed have some time to think about it upfront (childbirth, most surgeries), having a sense that a particular hospital is overcharging allows social and political pressure to be put on them to normalize.
the Surgery Center of Oklahoma already does this. I'd expect some of these prices are below the deductable of many plans or at least much less than you would get charged if you went to another hospital without insurance.
Which is better, a CT Scan for $1000 or one for $10,000?
You probably guessed the cheaper one, right? Thinking "all CT Scans are the same," right? I happen to know that's not remotely true, but it's easy to think that saving money on a test would make sense, right?
Okay, now which is better, open-heart surgery for $20,000 or $200,000?
That's a lot harder to answer, isn't it?
You need to know the outcomes of those procedures at that facility, compared to other facilities, to have any possible way to judge them.
This is free market working correctly. Transparency is important. You should have information about the price AND outcome. It is not mutually exclusive.
If you need a heart transplant, and I know you need a heart transplant, you're in kind of a lousy position to negotiate, aren't you?
I don't buy some Defense tokens or insurance on some market. I pay taxes for National Defense.
Don't get me wrong, capitalism is awesome. And I worked in healthcare software for about 13 years. But applying capitalism to basic, necessary healthcare is no good.
Imagine saying, do you want a $300 used iPhone or a $600 used iPhone? Pick one. You don't have enough information to make the decision but at least you know the price difference.
Forcing people to decide "For $5,000 more, I have a 2% greater 5-year survivability" is inhumane.
We can do better. Other countries have done better. Our healthcare is more expensive, and our outcomes are worse. Capitalism does not work in healthcare.
Healthcare is a market all over the world, including across all of the developed world.
What do you think Sanofi is exactly? That's the giant French pharma corporation that sells drugs in a global healthcare market.
How about all the excellent German medtech device makers? They sell their products in a global healthcare market.
How about Switzerland, Germany, Japan? They all have regulated healthcare markets, and they're three of the best healthcare systems on earth.
If you're a radiologist in the EU, you're selling your skill in a market. If one country won't pay you what you want, you can try to go to another market and earn more.
I don't know why I'm being downvoted. Hospitals are ranked and they do have outcomes of procedures available. For example, when my wife and I were looking into IVF, hospitals and medical centers were ranked based on their success rate for various procedures. And on the contrary, prices were not easily available without first going through a few interviews.
Now, outcome data is probably not available for every single procedure.
I'd imagine hospitals hate this. Many of them are paranoid at what will happen if there is more transparency -- there's a union fighting Stanford hospital now and playing radio ads about high infection rates at Stanford. Other hospitals are worried about whether similar things could happen to them -- and hold their data tight to make sure no one has ammunition to do similar things. Hospitals in many cases market based on brand value rather than quality. In a closed world, hospitals can define quality any way they want. Everyone is #1 in something. If there's an objective standard for quality based on integrated data from hospitals nationwide, many brands will be tarnished. I'd be interested to see how hospitals respond to this push towards openness