I propose to ignore ServiceSoon. Anyone who jumps into a long thread with a post that basically says "I have the answer", when in fact he is merely ignorantly repeating points that have been shot down in flames several times already, isn't interested in a debate. And besides, several posters have already dealt with him.
I'd like, at this stage, to look more closely at the role of the insurance industry in universal healthcare. What's it for?
While we acknowledge that there are many different ways of delivering univeral healthcare, we all tend to argue from the position of the system we know best - our own. (Posters like ServiceSoon, on the other hand, tend to argue on the basis of a preposterous straw-man construct of universal coverage dreamed up entirely by their own paranoid fantasies, which bears no resemblance to anything that actually happens or is likely to happen in the real world.) I have been arguing on the assumption that universal healthcare is simply paid for out of taxes - and I see that Volatile is taking the same position.
In this system, insurance companies have no role in universal healthcare provision. (They still exist, to provide extra cover to those who want more than what is provided by the universal system, but if that system provides good, comprehensive coverage as the NHS does, then in practice only a small proportion of the population take out extra insurance. They mostly get a nicer room, better food, prettier nurses and non-urgent needs dealt with at a time that suits them better.)
The patient's experience of healthcare is, as a result, pretty much cash-free. You're sick? See your doctor, get treated. Apart from a small prescription tax paid to the pharmacist (and not even that if you're over 65 or live in Wales), that's it. Nobody needs to figure out how much you personally just cost the system, and nobody is interested in tagging your usage.
You need more? Your doctor arranges for you to see a consultant. You see him. You get treated. Rinse and repeat. Or you need an MRI scan, or lab tests? You get them. You need surgery? You get it. Nobody even mentions money. Nobody's interested. Nobody cares.
Of course hospitals do their own internal accounting, for good housekeeping. They know how much a hip replacement costs to do, and they know how many they do in a year. But nobody cares how much
your hip replacement cost. You showed up needing the operation, and entitled to get it, you get it. End of story.
Now this seems to me to represent a
massive cost saving in terms of pricing, billing, chasing the money and so on. It also means that the experience of being ill, for the patient, at least lacks any need even to think about money, where it's coming from, or who pays. Works for me.
But Blue Mountain has brought up a different proposal.
We are proposing the government take steps to ensure everyone has access to affordable health insurance and has a basic policy. I suspect the US would adopt a model similar to Germany's, where health insurance is private but there are regulations in place that make sure everyone can get (and has) insurance.
Is this a good system? In my view, the involvement of private insurance companies in universal healthcare provision is a colossal waste of resources. Tack on the collection of the "premiums" to tax collection as it is already administered, and give the money directly to the healthcare providers to meet the healthcare needs of the citizens. Cut out the insurance parasites, with their overheads and their profits. And cut out the extra hassle for both the patients and the healthcare providers in dealing with the insurance companies - premium collection, and the pricing and itemised billing of every individual's treatment.
I can see how it might be politically expedient to continue to involve insurance companies in healthcare provision when moving to a universal system. Not least when the insurance industry gets lobbying, and people start screaming about job losses.
But leaving that aside, is there any benefit? Why does Germany run things that way? What am I missing here?
Rolfe.