Friday, March 29, 2013
Healthcare
Reform Endgame
Only
a consumer-driven healthcare system with bullet-proof ideal medical savings
accounts will align all the stakeholders’ incentives.
Stanley
Feld, MD, FACP, “Obamacare’s Deception,” Repairing the Health System,
crrp://stan.feld.com
The
obvious, which is not so obvious, and the simple, which is not so simple.
The
Practical Cogitator, 1959
The health reform endgame is obvious.
The endgame will be consumers and voters agreeing
to spend enough of their own money to
shop for and choose what they want using
health savings accounts with high
deductibles for routine care but catastrophic
ceilings to protect against economic losses and with subsidies to protect the
poor.
While this may be obvious, it is not simple.
Progressives would oppose it.
For them, the endgame is a government-run system that is “free” but with
regulations and an accompanying bureaucracy directed by them to control that expense and to perpetuate their political power.
Health-savings accounts would take health-care decision-making
out of the hands of government and place
it in the hands of consumers. HSAs would
disempower government. These accounts
would puncture the illusion that health
care is, or ought to be, “free’, and
that anything short of that noble goal is a moral failure.
HSAs would put the onus of choosing what is
the right care in the consumers’, employers’, physicians’, hospitals’, and
health plans’, and health suppliers’ camps, for they would have to cater to
consumers and to prove to them what they is provided at the right place, at the
right time, for the right price.
Consumers, not government, would know what is “best.”
Universal HSAs would not happen overnight – or even
in a decade, or perhaps ever.
Government dependency is a powerful and appealing sedative, as all utopias are. Universal HSAs would require a number of painful
steps.
·
The government and voters coming to the
conclusion that the present health law is dysfunctional, does not protect consumers, and is unaffordable.
·
Acknowledging that informed consumers
are in the best position to shop for what is best and affordable for their own
personal care.
·
Creating an analytical system, with stakeholders participating at all levels, capable of delivering objective information on transparency and quality, but letting the
consumers make subjective choices of what fits their personal health and
economic interests best, given the resources at hand.
Tweet: The
ideal ultimate endgame in health reform would be for consumers to own health
savings accounts allowing them to choose their own care.
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