Originally posted by Andara Bledin
View Post
Doctors can charge more because insurance carriers will pay it. It hurts the poor or those without insurance much more because they would then have to pay the cost that the insured do not see. Without this in effect, doctors would be forced to charge less in order to see more people. It's a delicate juggling act. My concern is that an overreaching of medical coverage for things like this exponentially impact the people who would need the most assistance.
At any rate, it's probably way too late to go back.
Originally posted by Andara Bledin
View Post
But it also creates the incentive to try to take control of what people do, eat, and participate in. You can already find plenty of examples of this, from regulation attempting to reduce salt in commercial foods (not realizing how cheap and effective it is as a preservative, and how it would only be replaced with chemicals you cannot even pronounce), to penalizing the consumption of sodas (subsidized via corn and high fructose corn syrup, only to turn around and be taxed so heavily in some areas that beer is cheaper than cola), to even forcing small businesses into bankruptcy via overreaching regulations conveniently worded to exclude big businesses (straight up corruption).
It becomes a question of purpose then: is it better to enforce more feel-good regulation, increase black marketing, and reduce personal freedoms in order to attempt to have a slightly healthier populace, or is it better to let people make their choices and live with their consequences, safety nets aside?
I agree about the craziness about ER's. I wouldn't even begin to know how to tackle that. Even with a truly effective overhaul, people are going to attempt to abuse the system, and how can you truly differentiate between people who genuinely need a safety net from the guy hogging up all the hospital's resources?
Comment