aczlan
Good Morning
- Joined
- Mar 7, 2008
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Here is my $0.02 on the whole healthcare mess
To adapt the Project Triangle:
Without majorly changing the rules of healthcare (ie: make it possible for healthcare providers to do more for less money without sacrificing quality or the low wait times that we generally have) you CANNOT break free of that metaphor. Being as that does not appear to be happening any time soon, I do not forsee the rules changing. If the "Healthcare Entitlement (or is that Reform) Bill" passes, it will not change these rules, it will just change who is paying for healthcare.
You can cut overall costs by having lower volumes of people being accepted for treatment, you can cut costs by lowering quality levels down, or you can keep quality and speed but pay through the nose for it.
If more people go to a system that pays at medicare rates, you will see some doctors not accepting that system, you will see others lowering quality down so that they have less costs. If it costs them $500 to do a procedure (not I said COST, not what they bill it as) and they get paid $250 from the insurance company (be it a government ins co or a private one), the difference has to come from somewhere or they will have to shut down.
I would suspect that at this time, doctors who take medicare patients make up for the difference in their costs and what they get paid by charging others more. In effect, they are subsidizing medicare at the cost of everyone else.
Back to lurking...
Aaron Z
To adapt the Project Triangle:
- Fast Service
- High Quality Care
- Inexpensive Healthcare
Without majorly changing the rules of healthcare (ie: make it possible for healthcare providers to do more for less money without sacrificing quality or the low wait times that we generally have) you CANNOT break free of that metaphor. Being as that does not appear to be happening any time soon, I do not forsee the rules changing. If the "Healthcare Entitlement (or is that Reform) Bill" passes, it will not change these rules, it will just change who is paying for healthcare.
You can cut overall costs by having lower volumes of people being accepted for treatment, you can cut costs by lowering quality levels down, or you can keep quality and speed but pay through the nose for it.
If more people go to a system that pays at medicare rates, you will see some doctors not accepting that system, you will see others lowering quality down so that they have less costs. If it costs them $500 to do a procedure (not I said COST, not what they bill it as) and they get paid $250 from the insurance company (be it a government ins co or a private one), the difference has to come from somewhere or they will have to shut down.
I would suspect that at this time, doctors who take medicare patients make up for the difference in their costs and what they get paid by charging others more. In effect, they are subsidizing medicare at the cost of everyone else.
Back to lurking...
Aaron Z