| > I dream of a day when I can walk into an area which offers 'services' and be offered a pricing chart. I don't want to be offered a pricing chart when I have a kidney stone or get violently mugged. When that happens I don't want to have to deal with that sort of thing. The free market in medicine is plain weird. Everyone needs the doctor on occasion, and everyone needs tyres on their car. Both things are pretty standardized, medicine is an established science, and tyres just need to have the correct dimensions and speed rating. You show up at the doctor's, and they will treat you according to established procedure, most patients do not have complex illnesses, and you show up at your mechanic, and they will put new tyres on. It's very simple. Yet on TV you see many many more ads for the local hospital or medication for condition X that you see for tyres. How come? |
Says you. Time and again, Lasik surgery and cosmetic surgeries not covered by insurance or hindered by over-regulation have shown us that transparent pricing and competition work to make those procedures more affordable -- just like these forces work in other markets.
The State has perverted the medical market for more than half a century and you're just used to seeing it in its current screwed up state.