The Real Reason Medical Costs Are High? Hint:It Is Not A Shortage of Insurance.
Posted by freedomforall 10 years, 1 month ago to Government
This article gives the history of government intervention in health care services (with an assist in wrecking the free market from the AMA.) If anyone wants to understand the source of the problem and the solution, this is the article to read.
Thanks to sjatkins, who posted this article in Sept. It is good enough to warrant a repeat viewing.
Thanks to sjatkins, who posted this article in Sept. It is good enough to warrant a repeat viewing.
We need to move away from the “doctor with a black bag” model of healthcare and use technology to provide care to people. This will increase the quality of care as well as lowering its costs. In the future, your primary care physician will be a computer, and possibly paid for by ads. It might even be built into your refrigerator (many health problems start there!)
Of course the lock the AMA has on the industry and all the laws about “practicing medicine without a license” keep software and hardware designers cowering in the corner rather than innovating.
I know dozens of alternative health providers who are constantly afraid of jack booted thugs raiding them for one misplaced word on a web page. Innovation is near impossible under these conditions, and that is the goal: elimination of any competition. Something as simple as recommending high doses of Vitamin C is all but prohibited.
I would like to see a watchdog outfit to publish objective research about which kinds of treatment actually help and which are hooey. It would have to be private, though; both the AMA and medical regulators have broken their promise to do that job.
While I am not a fan of the AMA remember that a century ago the level of medical care was about 1% of what it is today. They were all GP.s. Specialists did not exist. Now it is the opposite. It is TOO specialized.
Nor am I a fan of insurance companies but remember that they must now insure people they previously declined - and that costs us all money.
Yes, goverment inteverntion is the problem, not the solution. As soon as it was said healthcare is a right, it has been imploding ever since. It is insane the amount of money doctors must spend to remain compliant.
It truely is a disaster.
I just thought of another.
Who do you think makes big contributions to Democrats?
This government solution to healthcare seems very similar to the government intervention in education, and many other factors and businesses we deal with. We've got to make up minds soon which way we want this country to go or the government will just decide for us. It's that simple. I vote to start shutting down government departments that are not doing what they claim they were intended to do.
Thanks for posting again, I missed it the first time.
Thank's for re-posting. It is an excellent article.
Too bad our politicians are generally so ill informed on economics and history.
Regards,
O.A.
Here we are 23 years later and in the ever worsening mess that is the healthcare "system". And Harry finally announces he is retiring. Thanks Harry, ever so much for being a perpetual embarrassment to the State of Nevada.
Other than that, I agree with the article notably in reference to the artificial structure of the pyramid of power by which doctors act as gatekeepers to medical care that can effectively be implemented at a lower level of expertise.
And I am totally in synch with the need for 'free market' medical coverage. Let's just make my medical insurance belong to 'me'...the way my car insurance does.
Jan
Jan
(1) The introduction of the first anaesthetic, chloroform (about 1870), which made surgery (at first mostly amputations after injuries) much safer as well as more comfortable. Lots of other drugs followed, including many now considered harmful.
(2) The discovery of how to avoid infection by better sanitary practice (also late 19th century, mostly due to Semmelweis in Hungary). This was *not* the discovery of germs -- the ancient Greeks knew about them. (Related: The toilet added 30 years to man's lifespan. All of medicine combined hasn't achieved half that, yet.)
Antibiotics and X-rays did increase what the doctors could do -- but before about 1850 they couldn't do much of anything except make predictions.
Jan
India and China are chock-full of doctor-mill universities, churning them out in the tens of thousands. Their upper-band graduates actually have a great foundation to becoming really good practitioners. While the US is building more medical schools, there would be merit in opening the immigration floodgates to some of these fresh graduates and helping to rectify the artificially-depressed supply.