by smallpoxgirl » Sat 26 Dec 2009, 21:33:13
Healthcare in the US is just too expensive. Somebody has to control the costs. We just can't spend 100% of our GNP on healthcare. Unless we accept that reality, the rest of this is just spit in the wind, because we're not going to be able to afford it.
In most countries that somebody is the government. If your doctor proposes some stupid overpriced course of treatment, it's the government that comes down with the hammer and says no. People in the US, for good reason IMHO, do not trust the government to make those decisions. Nor do they trust insurance companies. To wit the horrible hue and cry a few years ago when the Oregon Health Plan decided it wasn't going to cover kidney transplants. I firmly believe that the social contract is far too battered, and the track record for effective reasoned governance far too sparse to ever trust basic decisions about such life and death topics to the US government. Stupak is the exact sort of thing that can be expected to occur over and over if healthcare funding is entrusted more completely to the US government. Rather that decisions based on efficacy, affordability, and human decency, such decisions will be made based on superstition and political pandering. If you don't want the government or your insurance company making those decisions about what is and what isn't reasonable cost wise, then the only other option is to put those costs, unobscured back on the consumer, and let them decide for themselves what is and isn't a reasonable expense. Handing carte blanche to your doctor makes about as much sense as handing it to your auto mechanic. If I wreck my car, I'm probably not going to drag it all over town looking to competing estimates. OTOH, if I take it in for a tune up and he decides it needs major repairs, we're going to have a long talk about how much this is going to cost, how sure he is that the work is needed, what other repair options are available, etc. The only people that have those discussions with their doctor these days are the uninsured, and you can bet that they spend a pittance of the average on healthcare costs. Most times if I try to discuss the cost of various treatments with patients, they give me a scowl and say "It doesn't matter, I have insurance."
"We were standing on the edges
Of a thousand burning bridges
Sifting through the ashes every day
What we thought would never end
Now is nothing more than a memory
The way things were before
I lost my way" - OCMS