Nope. Subsidies do nothing but line the pockets of corporate farmers.
Mm. So, you're saying they should be scrapped?
In our current system. What about a system in which people are mostly responsible for their healthcare but must purchase a catastrophic insurance plan that kicks in once their expenses reach a certain level, which the person can choose.
I didn't understand that.
That's what the HMOs claim to be doing.
The "once their expenses reach a certain level" part is the copays and deductibles that many plans use. As pointed out: these seem to increase costs by distorting medical need vs immediate cashflow.
If your numbers are correct,
I stand corrected. 77.9% had insurance (2007 data), not the 95% I quoted.
then maybe people shouldn't rely totally on insurance.
They may not be able to: 3% of those bankrupted with medical expenses in 2007 were rejected by private insurers due to
being ill and also did not qualify for public programs (too high an income).
This is where a catastrophic plan makes sense.
What do you mean by 'catastrophic plan'?
I would normally assume you meant insurance policy, but you're saying above that HMOs and insurance are not the way to go.
So, I'm not sure what this 'catastrophic plan' would look like.
It's not a fantasy.
The average person spends about $2100 on entertainment, alcohol and tobacco and about $2010 on healthcare.
Yep. But your claim is that reallocating this money will prepare for a catastrophe. So, here's the math question: is $2100 annually redirected to, say, a savings account over a normal period of time, going to cover the typical US health-caused bankruptcy debt?
Be mindful that many of these bankruptcies are young parents (in their 20s) with sick children. So, they would have had maybe 5 years to save.
Does this work mathematically?
Yes. More personal responsibility = less utilization = lower costs for all.
That's a valid hypothesis. We can test that! We're skeptics, we love testing an hypotheses. Let's compare countries with public vs private models to see whether there's a difference in costs.
Oh, wait. We did that, and the model with no public option has higher costs.
Also be aware that the HMOs were filling a need - medicine in the US and Canada used to be paid for out of savings or debt. But it didn't work well, so people started getting insurance. The HMOs were an offshoot of insurance.