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by bhupy
1840 days ago
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> Either the goal is fixing sick people, delivering care, or it is not. That's an odd dichotomy. You could apply this to literally any good or service. With food, either your goal is nourishing hungry people, or it is not; and yet the private sector provides food just fine. At the end of the day, price signals and market forces ensure that producers meet the needs of consumers. There are certainly instances of market failures, especially in the case of externalities. But with healthcare, there's really no evidence that markets and the private sector cannot deliver world class healthcare, and in fact we see evidence to the contrary, both domestically (in Medicare Advantage) as well as globally (in Switzerland and the Netherlands). |
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Not only is it interesting, it's reality.
You are making a market argument fundamentally.
With food, for example, people have lots of options, and while the need for food is absolute, wants for food can be ignored and or vary widely. Food wants is a great market. People can participate or not. They can prepare their own food or not.
Food needs are not as good of a market, though again, people have options, and are rarely in a must buy scenario.
That difference matters.
Notably, there is a cap on how big of a risk there is in the whole thing, and it's not all that big of a risk.
With food, one can end up in a weak scenario where one gets the least value for the most dollars. But, it's not typically life changing, and there are a lot of options for most people in most cases.
Contrast that with health care.
Let's talk about wants first, just like food. Cosmetics are a great example. People can choose not to do it. They may have options, depending on what the scenario is. This makes for a reasonable market. And, depending, people can make their own. I did that for a prosthetic a while back. Saved thousands of dollars. But, that is rare more than not. Still, we could empower people to some degree like we do with food.
Someone having a heart attack will need treatment, or let's say they are out of the market. It's not like they can shop around either. I could go through and compare / contrast with food, but here's the main point:
Unlike food, that doctor visit doesn't really have a cap on risk. 5 figure? 6 figure? 7 figure? All can and does happen.
And things people require? When people have to participate in the market, they pay the most and get the least value for the dollar. See insulin prices in the US?
Now, for a nation that has it's priorities in order and those priorities are not making money first and foremost, that price is a small fraction of what gets charged here in the US.
This is a shitty market. People are forced to buy, their choice is often limited, risks are crazy variant, costs not transparent, and on and on it goes.
At a minimum, most nations break these out making sure people who find themselves sick or hurt have baseline options that are not life changing, and market type options for those health care related things that make better sense.
Boil all that down, and what do we get?
Making money IS NOT THE TOP PRIORITY. Fixing sick people is.
When we examine all this in detail, we will find those shining examples of for profit health care actually working out are very well regulated, and that means they are forced to fix sick people first and foremost.
If they were not, then people would be tipping over for lack of ability to participate in the market, which isn't really even a market in a need scenario. It can be a market in the want scenario.
All of which is precisely why I frame it in those terms.
Which is it then?
Currently the US has chosen to make money first and foremost and look at the carnage!