In One
Era and Out the Other
Now
this is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is
perhaps, the end of the beginning.
Winston
Churchill (1874-1965)
I listened to Donald Trump and Hillary speak after their
sweeping victories in the East, and to Donald Trump’s foreign policy
speech.
From these listenings, I sense the end of the era of centralized government and the Nanny state, big political establishments left and right, traditional
elitist and intellectual dominance ,
a timid and hesitant foreign policy
, strict liberalism and stringent conservatism, top-down media messaging, health policies dictated by HHS and CMS
and ACOs, collectivism imposed from above as opposed
to individualism bubbling up from below.
I do not sense the end of dominant hospital systems. In Connecticut, where I live, two huge hospital systems, Yale New Haven and Hartford, each with revenues over $1 billion, have the lion's share of medical markets, both inpatient and outpatient through their central hospitals, acquired hospitals, and peripheral facilities, which feed the mother ships.
Elsewhere, however, I sense the beginning of an era of dispersed and customer-oriented markets, smaller and more flexible economic entities, a bolder and more decisive foreign policy, a mix of liberalism and conservative views, more migration of businesses across national borders, the economic rise of the IT-skilled and the a fall of those not skilled workers, and an increase in hacking and terrorist related crimes and a decrease in physical violence and large scale wars.
A Dual System
I do not sense the end of dominant hospital systems. In Connecticut, where I live, two huge hospital systems, Yale New Haven and Hartford, each with revenues over $1 billion, have the lion's share of medical markets, both inpatient and outpatient through their central hospitals, acquired hospitals, and peripheral facilities, which feed the mother ships.
Elsewhere, however, I sense the beginning of an era of dispersed and customer-oriented markets, smaller and more flexible economic entities, a bolder and more decisive foreign policy, a mix of liberalism and conservative views, more migration of businesses across national borders, the economic rise of the IT-skilled and the a fall of those not skilled workers, and an increase in hacking and terrorist related crimes and a decrease in physical violence and large scale wars.
A Dual System
In health care, I
sense the rapid emergence of a dual health system.
One will be dominated and controlled by government –Medicare, Medicaid, ObamaCare, and large integrated hospital organizations. These systems are generally reimbursed through 3rd parties, and for the general run of patients, have a significant flaw, high deductibles, which, for many patients, rules them out as a source of care.
The other part of the system will be characterized by cash-only and direct care delivered by individuals, small groups, and entrepreneurs offering convenient, personal, and direct care at multiple sites where efficiency is more important than power or size of the organization.
In many cases, these smaller outlets will be more economical for health care customers because of skyrocketing health premiums and deductibles, which render routine car unaffordable.
ObamaCare will survive in the dual system because it has taxpayer dollars to prop it up. But because of surging premiums and deductibles and UnitedHealth backing out of 34 markets, it is in trouble and financially unsustainable. Its fate depends on public approval which has dropped to 44% and to politics. Republicans have vowed to repeal either its mandates or the law as a whole.
Transitions to More Market-Based Entities
One will be dominated and controlled by government –Medicare, Medicaid, ObamaCare, and large integrated hospital organizations. These systems are generally reimbursed through 3rd parties, and for the general run of patients, have a significant flaw, high deductibles, which, for many patients, rules them out as a source of care.
The other part of the system will be characterized by cash-only and direct care delivered by individuals, small groups, and entrepreneurs offering convenient, personal, and direct care at multiple sites where efficiency is more important than power or size of the organization.
In many cases, these smaller outlets will be more economical for health care customers because of skyrocketing health premiums and deductibles, which render routine car unaffordable.
ObamaCare will survive in the dual system because it has taxpayer dollars to prop it up. But because of surging premiums and deductibles and UnitedHealth backing out of 34 markets, it is in trouble and financially unsustainable. Its fate depends on public approval which has dropped to 44% and to politics. Republicans have vowed to repeal either its mandates or the law as a whole.
Transitions to More Market-Based Entities
The transition to a
dual, information and data- geared health system, will not be easy, particularly among those who
lose status, income, and benefits.
There will be suspicious and hostile to the information elite, rich
people, the well-educated, the immigrants, and those with disappearing jobs, and loss of
income and status.
Among some, particularly
the millenials, I sense a revolutionary
attitude. The millenials are now the large demographic group in the
U.S. Many will throw up their hands and shout,
“Let the government do it. Let the government
equalize incomes. Let the government tax the rich and the prileged. Let the government provide Medicare-for-all
and free college tuitions.”
But the past era will not be resuscitated. It is breathing its last, for we are witnessing the end of big government as we know it, With the
downsizing of government and politics, will come the rise of efficient markets
outside of government power and control.
Lovelyy blog you have
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