| > One solution could be to get rid of insurance scam (yes I call it a scam) and then lets hospitals/doctors compete with transparent pricing in a free market. I don't understand the American (and it is American) obsession with having a free market in healthcare. Why do Americans not look at public provision, paid for via your tax system? Canada does it, so it demonstrably does work in North America, Europe does it, with varying degrees of efficiency, but it basically works. No-one in Europe or Canada lives "in fear having an accident or getting sick" because they know healthcare is provided by the state in the same way as education, fire services and police service are all provided as a public service, for the general good of society, via taxation. Americans are happy to send their children to school, to be able to call the fire department or the police (we'll set aside the clear problems of US policing - you generally still call the police when you see a bank robbery, so there is a degree of confidence in them still). So why is healthcare the exception? What sort of mentality says I am to blame for getting sick and told if I cannot afford medical treatment, I should not have become ill? |
The question here is not what system to create in a vacuum, but the road in the middle. I live surrounded by a whole lot of ultra-expensive, luxurious hospitals, staffed by extremely well paid professionals (and not so well paid residents), which, in many cases, have six figures worth of debt for the privilege. To move to a public system, all of those things would have to change: Those luxurious, privately owned hospitals are never going to give great prices to a single payer system. The doctors are not going to be happy with lower wages. Medical schools would have to change drastically, so they can actually provide a number of doctors that resembles the rest of the western world. This level of disruption is what makes major changes like that in a system that employs so many people unpopular: It's a bit like how the US military can't take big cuts, as they are political suicide.
So overall, the change would be huge, and would be hard to make slowly. Therefore, I'd much rather solve it in the US through markets. Once the system has a whole lot less rent seeking behaviors, and the incentives are better aligned, a public option would actually be easier than from the catastrophe we live on now, where prices are secret, and yet, a hospitalization will often involve 10 to 20% coinsurance.