Message 41 of 5553

FIVE STEPS TO A BETTER HEALTH CARE SYSTEM

FROM:
NATIONAL CENTER FOR POLICY ANALYSIS

Five Steps to a Better Health Care System
Dallas Headquarters: 12770 Coit Road, Suite 800, Dallas, TX 75251
Washington Office: 601 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Suite 900, South Building, Washington, D.C. 20004
www.ncpa.org
From John C. Goodman’s testimony to Congress on April 2, 2009

1. Making health insurance portable:
If you have insurance that meets your needs, you should be able to keep it and take it with you as you move from
job to job and in and out of the labor market.
Getting there: (1) Employers should be able to help their employees obtain individually owned, portable insurance
at group rates; (2) employers should be able to help their early retirees get portable insurance at group rates,
(3) everyone should have access to a nationwide market for insurance.
Advantages: Once enrolled, people would never lose coverage because of a job change or be charged a higher
premium because of a health problem.

2. Making health insurance affordable:
Everyone should be treated alike under the federal tax system; and we should help everyone get the core insurance
that everyone should have, leaving people free to purchase additional insurance with their own money.
Getting there: The Coburn/Burr/Ryan/Nunes bill would replace the existing system of health insurance tax
subsidies with a refundable tax credit — covering the first $2,300 (individual) or $5,700 (family) of insurance costs
for all Americans.

3. Meeting the needs of the chronically ill:
Instead of trying to force providers to care for hard-to-treat patients at below market rates, we should encourage
a vigorous market for chronic care in which providers compete to meet patient needs and are rewarded for their
success.
Model for reform: In the Cash and Counseling pilot programs under way in more than half the states, homebound
disabled Medicaid patients manage their own budgets and hire and fire the people who provide them with services.
Satisfaction rates approach 100%.

4. Letting doctors and patients control costs:
300 million patients and 900,000 doctors can do a better job of cost control than bureaucrats far away in
Washington, D.C.
Getting there: (1) Let patients manage more of their own care and let them have direct control over the dollars that
pay for that care; (2) encourage providers to compete for patients based on price and quality and (3) let doctors have
the freedom to provide different services (e.g., telephone and email consultation) and be paid in a different way so
long as (a) total costs are reduced and (b) quality of care increases.

5. Protecting seniors:
Seniors should be able to keep the insurance they have and they should not be exposed to arbitrary cuts in Medicare
payments to fund health insurance for nonseniors.
Getting there: One in five seniors is in a Medicare Advantage Program — getting drug coverage and other benefits
that would otherwise be unaffordable. Bills before Congress would eliminate this option for many seniors and use
the money to pay for health insurance for nonseniors. These bills would also reduce Medicare payments, making
Medicare patients less desirable to all providers. These are bad policy changes.
ams454's profile
We have not yet realized where the bucks go!

The above post is good only in the sense of what is questionable regarding any type of health care plan. Difficult is only a word but nearly impossible in reality because we continue to refuse to recognize the true nature of health care delivery.

For the most part, we have decimated all vendors in the health care system.
We have negotiated to death the cost of materials that hospitals need to operate daily and still not enough system savings to float the program.
The reality is too many poeple within the hospital employment are making way too much money.
When will we realize that the administrators and the professional staff are well ahead of the national average of employment remuneration, and admit it, then we will make some progress in controlling health care costs.

The next time you walk around a hospital, just count the BMW's in the employees parking area.
How exactly did it get that way and who will point a finger at those who are living far beyond the means for a hospita; employer to sustain such wages?

Best
Ricky
Rickaz28's profile

about 1 month ago
The only way to cut medical costs is to protect doctors from frivalous malpractice suits. Maybe making arbitration mandatory would be a good idea. But of course, the attorney's lobbyists would fight that tooth and nail.
chatcat's profile

about 1 month ago
We have three non profit hospitals in our town. Each one has remodeled in the last few years adding huge fountains, grand pianos and fancy fireplaces. I would prefer cheaper fees to all the fancy stuff.
There are many ways to cut health care costs, including going after the doctors who swindle medicare.
kamsgram's profile

about 1 month ago