chicago51
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Medicaid is supposed to help the poor pay for medical treatment, but in reality it artificially drives demand for healthcare. People are going to the emergency room for the sniffles because Uncle Sam is footing the bill. Again, people don't "shop" with price in mind so insurance companies, doctors, and hospitals can charge whatever they want. (Just imagine what's going to happen now that you're MANDATED to buy insurance.)
You seem things like food, healthcare, and housing etc have an elastic demand that changes based on price. If people can't find to work to buy food they often will sort to criminal activity to get it but people got to eat regardless of the price.
Okay you may be an expert on taxes. If there is one thing I know it is healthcare considering I worked in a billing and collecting office for managed care insurance for 7 years prior to June 2013 and right now am in my last (class room I have a summer internship left) semester of physical therapy school. I'm actually supposed to me trying to finish this assignment instead I am BSing on IE. I admit I lack knowledge on the many complications of drug patent laws but for the most part I know healthcare pretty good.
First off the demand for healthcare doesn't follow perfect textbook suppy and demand laws. It does with some procedures but when you are sick you are sick. When the it comes life and depth procedures and even non life and death procedures that have major impacts on quality of life people are going to get those procedures done regardless of price unless the price unless it is literally impossibe to pay for it. Healthcare is an inelastic demand in alot of instances.
I can tell you government has raised healthcare cost but it is because of things like extensively long drug patent laws creating monopoly marketplaces. Not allowing Medicare to use it purchasing power to negoiate drug prices.
The Medicaid ER issue could easily be resolved by charging a small miniscule co-pay for ER visits. Even a small co-pay would deteriorate the really poor on Medicaid from going to the ER for unnecessary stuff. The real problem is most doctors won't take Medicaid patients.
If you eliminate Medicaid though you would still have people end up in the ER for more serious reason with no way to pay. Rules say you can't let people die and you have to stabalize them so with the uninsured hospitals right it off as a loss and have to jack up other people's prices.
Medicare reduces the cost for private insurance. When Medicare was being proposed most insurance companies at least intially where for it. A lot of them change their minds when they realized Medicare can easily be a single payer if the eligibility age is simply changed to 0. The reason though they where in favor of it is because it took the sickest individuals off their insurance rolles making the cost of private insurance cheeper. Premiums would go up the insurance companies had to ensure the oldest and sickest portion of our population.
Demand for healthcare is not higher in the US than it is in other coutries if anything thanks to large numbers of uninusred it is less. In basica supply and demand theory held true single payer countries or countries with mixed public and private plans should cost more because there is universal demand for healthcare. Yet healthcare cost have gone up and are higher in the United States because 30 cents of every dollar is not spent on health care but on administration cost, extra paper work, and bureaucracy . My job I referenced was for a whole department created to fight with insurance companies so the hospital can get their money. Nobody in our department (and it was a big department) administered any care yet our salaries came out of people's pocket's.
The other issue is that healthcare is not a competitive marketplace because doctors are the gait keepers to everything with HMOs and to a lesser extent with PPOs so the patients really can't control what services they want.
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