The Stunning Truth About Health Care Pricing.
By Deep Harm | Sourced from DailyKos
A story in today's
LA Times describes in rare detail why US healthcare is insanely
expensive. It's not due to patients who expect too much, high-tech
medicine or burdensome
regulations. No, it's the result of insurance industry bureaucracy and
greed. While many consumers have long suspected that, hard evidence has been
elusive. Now, an investigation by the Los Angeles Times has turned up that hard
evidence.
Evidence
shows that healthcare costs are arbitrary and capricious.
The
LA Times article, "Healthcare's
High Cost: Many hospitals, doctors offer cash discount for medical bills,"
provides data showing that healthcare costs are neither realistic nor
consistent. Americans purchase insurance with the expectation of getting reduced
out-of-pocket healthcare costs, but instead pay more than they would if they
just paid cash--sometimes, much, much more. Example:
Los Alamitos Medical Center, for instance, lists a CT scan of the abdomen on a state website for $4,423. Blue Shield says its negotiated rate at the hospital is about $2,400.When The Times called for a cash price, the hospital said it was $250. [LATimes]
Similar cost disparities exist at other
hospitals, according to the Los Angeles Times and Dr. David Belk, MD, and insurance
companies pocket the difference.
Healthcare
reforms passed in the Obama administration require hospitals to disclose
their standard charges, i.e., list prices. But, only a sucker pays the list
price. The real cost of medical procedures remains hidden to most consumers.
The
insurance industry can make exorbitant demands because it has full control of
healthcare
Dr.
Belk gives free talks around the country about the true costs of healthcare. The
following video of one such talk is available on his website, along with a treasure
trove of related information.
In
his video, Dr. Belk counters insurance industry propaganda with facts and
figures, concluding, "Every price is jacked up...we're looking at 10 times on
average." There is no reason, he says, why a CT scan should cost more than a
plane ticket or a transmission overhaul.
"How many of you use your car insurance to pay to fill your gas tank or change your oil? How many of you use your homeowner's insurance to pay your electric bill? Why is it that healthcare is the only industry in which we use our insurance for absolutely every expense, no matter how mundane? And, in a sense, we're forced to because if we say, "I'd rather pay for it myself," you're fined...you're fined ten times the actual value of the service you're getting." Moreover, the system limits what the physician can do even when a patient offers to pay cash.
"We're both stuck in this system where the insurance companies dictate everything we do. They control every dollar that goes into medicine--and not only do they control every dollar that goes into medicine, they can have complete control of the message. They can tell us whatever they want, and who are we to argue with them, because we have no understanding of what these costs are."
Thus, "They have us all looking in the
wrong direction, and all talking about the wrong thing."
Overpriced
healthcare undermines health and the economy
One
of the implications of exorbitantly priced healthcare is that many people do not
receive needed care, and some die as a result. Another implication is that huge
expenditures on healthcare reduce our ability to pay for other things.
The
average healthcare cost for a family of four is $20,728
a year. The same amount of money would buy a new, mid-priced car, the LA
Times points out--or a year's college tuition. No wonder many college students
rack up massive student loan debt.
Were
it not for the high cost of healthcare, the average American could purchase
vastly more non-healthcare goods and services. By co-opting consumer dollars,
over-priced healthcaredestroys
jobs in other parts of the economy.
Conclusion
With
new evidence in hand, consumers are empowered to demand a better healthcare
system. That might be a private system combining high-deductible major medical
insurance with patient direct pay for routine expenses, or a "single payer"
government program, or something else entirely. In any case, the healthcare
casino must be shut down. But, that will not happen until Americans demand it,
insisting that politicians address it in their campaigns and pass reforms in
their terms of office.
The
time for change is now.
No comments:
Post a Comment