The solution is simple. First, get government out of the healthcare business. Regulations increase the cost of healthcare dramatically and restrict competition. Second, have insurance companies provide catastrophic coverage only as well as full coverage. Those who want to pay full coverage would be free to do so (at an increased cost of course), but those who don't could carry a much less expensive catastrophic coverage policy. Third, get rid of punitive damages for pain and suffering. If a person is harmed by a medical practitioner, they are entitled to compensation for their loss. They are not entitled to get rich and make their lawyers rich by assessing triple damages.2firfun50 wrote:I've got a serious question for those opposed to paying for health insurance or being taxed for that decision.
I understand that Plan A is to never have a serious illness or injury, not pay any taxes, or health insurance, etc..
But if misfortune should strike, what is Plan B? Who pays the bill?
Look at auto insurance. Your auto insurance doesn't pay for tuneups, oil changes, brake jobs, engine jobs, transmission jobs or routine maintenance. It has a collision deductible that is an incentive to drive carefully and avoid collisions that are expensive and sometimes catastrophic, yet covers you in the event of a large expense. It even has a deductible for acts of God.
If consumers paid for their own health tuneups and "oil changes" and the government got out of the healthcare business, healthcare would probably cost one third (or less) of what it does today.
The reason people go to the emergency room every time they stub their toe is because it costs them nothing. But it costs us a lot, because we have to pay for highly paid professionals, expensive equipment and buildings and protective procedures that serve no purpose other than to comply with regulations and indemnify the practitioners.
Human beings are very predictable. They respond to incentives. If there is no incentive to be careful with money, they won't be. How many times have you heard someone say they went to the doctor or the hospital because "it costs me nothing - I have insurance"?
That is the reason healthcare is so expensive today.