Merkinball,
Healthcare. As cutlass already pointed out on this thread, Medicare is more efficiently run than private insurers.
Cleo
Yeah, if you use his/hers utterly simplistic and elementary analysis.
First - Medicare and Medicaid ration care to a ridiculous level. So much so, that patients on Medicare and Medicaid have significantly worse health than people who are covered by private insurance.
Second - Not all people on Medicare or Medicaid use the program to its fullest extent. Some people only need partial coverage. In fact, the majority of the people on these programs only have partial coverage. So of course this is going to drop per patient cost.
Third - Medicare and Medicaid ration care to a ridiculous level. On almost everything. They ration drugs, the tell you what drugs to take, they have limits on treatments available, they have limits on preventive care and procedures. It's not a blank check. The regulate every single little aspect of a persons care in an effort to reduce costs. Private insurance covers new treatment covers expensive treatments and state of the art procedures that medicare and medicaid either haven't approved yet, and don't approve period.
Fourth - Medicair and Medicaid are running in the red big time. These programs are accumulating billions in debt, and the costs of medicaid and medicare are currently rising much more dramatically than in the private sector.
The idea that this organization is run better than private insurance is absurd, and ridiculously short sighted. It's about as trite as pretending that if government got out of it, that private insurance firms would just habitually jack up prices.
Here is some more information on the wonderful quality of care that you guys want us all to fall under...which sucks compared to health insurance. I bet it just needs some more funding....which...all of a sudden...doesn't make it so financially feasible...
Out of 48 HEDIS
measures for effectiveness of care, Medicaid
lags behind private insurance in all but seven
measures. Only 50 percent of doctors will
accept a new Medicaid patient – compared to
more than 70 percent for Medicare and privately
insured patients. Compliance with evidencebased
treatment for a typical Medicaid patient
is estimated at 54.9 percent, slightly below
the already-poor average of 55.2 percent for
private managed care patients and 57 percent
for Medicare patients. Estimates of improper
claims and fraud are hard to verify, but suggest
that between 3 percent and 10 percent of all
Medicaid claims filed are irregular in some way.
Tip of the iceberg.
Check this out. It pretty much blows every fanciful notion that you guys have about universal healthcare in this country out of the water. Universal healthcare will be this:
http://www.shps.com/medicaid/book/SHPS_Making_Medicaid_Work.pdf except it will be for everybody. And you won't have a choice. And doctors won't have a choice. And we'll all be collectively f--ked.
Who's signing up now?