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Are Insurance Companies Controlling the Obamacare Narrative?

<p>The Healthcare Debate is ramping up in Washington as the Republican Senate continue to negotiate among their numbers to undo the damage done by the Affordable Care Act&comma; known colloquially as Obamacare&comma; which has seen coverage prices skyrocket and participation in the system decline even though it is now a CRIME to not participate&excl; <&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Republicans have quite a mess on their hands and are attempting to correct the problems specifically but are running into snags&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>As with any other entitlement&comma; once someone has gotten something from the collective state&comma; anytime that person is expected to take care of themselves they are LOSING something&period; That&rsquo&semi;s the problem with any welfare program&period; It is like an addictive drug&period; Once one person is on the program&comma; taking them off the program causes some level of pain&period; Except&comma; unlike drugs which are blamed for that pain and suffering&comma; it is the person who is taking it away from you because &&num;8230&semi; they&rsquo&semi;re evil white men or something equally as hyperbolic and vitriolic&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Well&comma; I have some bad news for both the Republicans and the Democrats&comma; this jumbled mess of private insurers and public legislation is not going to be solved by more government intervention&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Despite the claims to the contrary&comma; the problem with our healthcare system has more to do with the fact that is not driven by the market but this terrible chimera of government and crony capitalism&period; Two solutions come out of all of this&colon; either we go to a single healthcare system &lpar;which I have already pointed out the massive drain on our economy not to mention the surrendering of our rights to the central government that it will cause&rpar; or an even more market friendly healthcare system&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Let&rsquo&semi;s first consider basic economics here&period; Anytime you include a middle man in the workings of a transaction&comma; that transaction will inevitably be more expensive&period; It makes sense as that middle man is not going to participate without some level of remuneration&period; The insurance companies are these middlemen and they are the problem&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Now before the Progressives start agreeing with me and start promoting Neo-Marxist Socialized Medicine&comma; replacing a private middleman that competes with other insurance companies with a singular central government is making the middle man LARGER and making it a MONOPOLY&period; Socialized Medicine is not the solution to this problem&period; Insurance companies function as a piggy bank of people&rsquo&semi;s money that they then dive into to pay for procedures or medications&period; We all pay premiums&period; Money is used to pay the doctors&period; However&comma; like any company they have employees to pay&comma; infrastructure to maintain&comma; and are driven by profit motive&period; That means that that money we have pooled from our premiums must also go to maintaining this company&period; To ensure the maximization of that profit&comma; insurance companies will try to give as little money as possible to the hospitals&&num;8211&semi; who in turn pass on the difference to us&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This has been made even worse as insurance companies are now obligated to take on high-risk patients that are more expensive to maintain&period; I do not believe cutting these people off from insurance is justifiable&period; However&comma; they should not be costed out of the insurance racket&period; But&comma; this has led to higher across the board premiums for the rest of us&comma; especially the young and healthy&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Also&comma; the provisions of Obamacare demand that each plan now cover basically everything&period; &nbsp&semi;Men&&num;8217&semi;s&nbsp&semi;plans even have maternity care&period; I am no expert on human anatomy&comma; but at what point will a man need coverage for giving birth&quest; I know it&rsquo&semi;s the 21st Century and being male is no longer a set standard&comma; but this nutty provision is just a visualization of redistribution of wealth&period; I do not need maternity care&comma; but a lot of women who are poorer than I do so I must throw my money towards them&period; The insurance companies&comma; in turn&comma; hike the premiums just a little bit further&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>These costs are supposed to be overset with government grants and tax breaks but the corruption alone of private enterprises&comma; many of whom contribute funds to candidates who in turn promote this money flow&comma; it&rsquo&semi;s hard to imagine that that is offsetting anything&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>No matter how you cut it&comma; having to pool resources into a middle man system is only leading to higher expenditures&period; Add to that the traditional laws of always providing health care needs regardless of the ability to pay&comma; and even having insurance doesn&rsquo&semi;t guarantee that your medical bills will be kept low&period; My deductible&comma; for example&comma; is &dollar;10&comma;000&period; In other words&comma; unless I am set on fire while being hit by a train&comma; I will be spending out of pocket on all of my medical needs even though I am ALSO providing premium payments to the insurance companies&period; These high deductibles are how they offset the cost of those high-risk patients and maintain a healthy profit&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;So&comma; what is to be done&quest; In short&comma; we need to cut out the middlemen&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>More on the conservative plan for healthcare to come in a follow-up&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;&lowbar;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&ldquo&semi;Don&rsquo&semi;t complain about the problem if you haven&rsquo&semi;t got any ideas on the solution&comma;&rdquo&semi; is a good saying&period; Therefore&comma; I&rsquo&semi;d now like to talk about what will work&period; &lpar;Hint&colon; whatever Obama did&comma; do exactly the opposite&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I believe this country needs to completely restructure its entire medical system in three ways&colon; direct payments to hospital&sol;healthcare providers&comma; deregulation to allow for new companies into the medical field&comma; and legal reforms regarding lawsuits against medical practitioners&period; The first one is probably the hardest to accomplish especially with so much money and influence the health insurance companies have&comma; not to mention the reaction people working in the health insurance racket would have to the prospect of erasing an entire sector of the economy from existence&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I propose more direct payments of individuals to hospitals and healthcare providers&period; Imagine that you live in an area where a healthcare guild is created among the hospitals and doctors&period; You pay for membership for this guild&rsquo&semi;s services and pay them the premiums directly&comma; rather than to the middle man&period; It would almost be like a club membership which would then give you access to the hospital and doctors at free or reduced cost&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;This direct payment would cut out significant bleeding of funds away from doctors towards insurance companies and would help lessen the cost of providing these health care needs&period; This membership could become a national syndicate of hospitals and doctors who&comma; instead of being paid by a second-hand source who has already taken a sizable cut&comma; the funds would go to the maintenance of the healthcare provider itself&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The second need of this healthcare overall would be the deregulation of new medical centers and service providers to create a more competitive market&period; Innovators would be able to come along with better services at a better price&period; The driving force behind changes in price and quality come from new companies entering the market with a revolutionary idea&period; Look at what Uber and Lyft have done for the cab services&comma; for example&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>However&comma; we have passed thousands of laws&comma; regulations&comma; mandates&comma; restrictions&comma; and costs of compliance that make it nearly impossible to enter into the market&period; New medical practices&comma; for example&comma; must obtain a Certificate of Need from the government to open up these centers who often times deny these innovators access to protect existing&comma; and well-paying campaign contributing&comma; medical companies&period; If we could harness the power of the free market we would start to see clinics open up that may simply charge a la carte prices on basic services&period; In addition to this&comma; such services would now have to compete in a market with price visibility&period; It is not often that you go to the doctor and see the bill BEFORE they conduct the service&period; By having price visibility&comma; we could compare prices among competing centers which would force these institutions to keep prices low and their product high quality and accessible&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Lastly&comma; we need to reform how doctors become targets of law suits and litigations for performing&comma; or not performing&comma; certain things on a patient&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Doctors are continually targets of frivolous law suits that claim they didn&rsquo&semi;t do enough in regard to providing healthcare needs&period; This has led to doctors frequently having to cover all bases and perform tests and procedures that would be unnecessary but are performed to CMA themselves&period; If a patient comes in with a sore throat&comma; there is a 99&percnt; it is viral or bacterial but they will perform a cancer screening anyways because of that 1&percnt; what-if&period; That means another service you must pay for just so they can sleep at night knowing that they have solid defense in any potential law suit&period; I am not saying don&rsquo&semi;t hold them accountable for malpractice&comma; just that we reconsider what that word means&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Of course&comma; the question will still arise what will you do for people who are unemployed and or too poor to provide for themselves healthcare services&quest; I don&rsquo&semi;t want to seem uncaring and I would say that this need would be made up by the generous spirit of their fellow Americans in some way&period; However&comma; injecting any middleman like the government or a private enterprise will only lead to the same problems we have right now&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Already&comma; medical centers offer reduced cost medical needs and charity organizations offer assistance in a variety of medical needs&period; I would say those institutions should be granted tax breaks and incentives to continue to expand their aid to the less fortunate&period; Giving it to a private enterprise will result in profit-motive driving up the cost and giving it to the government is like injecting yourself with a virus&comma; excuse my pun&comma; it will only get more intrusive and spread to other aspects&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The problem with this country is not that there isn&rsquo&semi;t enough government in our health care system but rather there is too much&period; We not only have private enterprises partnering with the government to line their own pockets in exchange for votes on certain legislations&comma; we have government becoming more intrusive into our daily lives and driving up the cost of living it as a result&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I say&comma; in short&comma; get rid of both of these hindrances to affordable health care and give it back to the citizen and their doctors&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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