The Affordable Care Act is flawed, why not public pricing?
5 points| poorcedure | 9 years ago
"The Affordable Care Act creates no incentive for insurance companies to reduce prices, only their margins. Why not instead create a public service that forces health care providers to lock in a price?
If health care providers were not allowed to manufacture a starting price as part of negotiation, everyone could shop for the service that suits them. Insurance would still be helpful, just like it is for normally good drivers. The masses pay into a system in case they might need it, and those with the misfortune of needing help are funded.
Medical institutions and doctors can set realistic prices, the ones that insurance companies are already negotiating. The transparency would make billing simpler and more efficient. There could be some rating system, but I doubt that belongs in a government system. But any technology company will have access to prices and could amend with ratings.
Thoughts?"
romgrk|9 years ago
The reason is that healthcare is somewhere you don't want the profits to be the main goal. The goal is to make sure everyone is taken care of, at the best cost for the society. Did you know the US is the country that spends most on healthcare, and still doesn't have universal coverage? (http://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/020915/what-country-...)
Therefore, public pricing is not the optimal solution. Public heath system is.
maxerickson|9 years ago
There's quite a few countries that have universal coverage with private medical providers (and maybe mostly private insurance).
For example, click through Switzerland at your link:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Healthcare_in_Switzerland
Of course with the ACA, the US system looks a lot more like Switzerland than it did before (private providers and insurance, guaranteed access, individual mandate).
I wonder if this sort of comparison points to there being some less drastic regulatory changes that could be made in the US to help reduce prices.
I also wonder how much things like population density factor into US costs. We have a lot of small rural hospitals (with 24 hour emergency room coverage and CT scanners and so on). Medicare reimburses small rural hospitals at a higher rate than other hospitals (but Medicare is our most efficient spending, so probably this is not a problem).
poorcedure|9 years ago
But replacing all of the private entities involved with health care overnight is not a likely next step. It should be a goal, eventually.
codegeek|9 years ago
But the insurance companies, lobbyists and the big pharmas don't want this transparency. They make record profits only because of this non-transparency. Imagine the jobs of hundreds of medical billers, transcriptionists going away as well if this whole healthcare "thing" becomes simpler.
omonra|9 years ago
1. Public service 2. Lock in a price 3. What are the prices (vs margins) 4. What's a starting price
I understand your question because I get regular bills from my insurance company that say "Doctor usually charges $1,000 for the procedure you had but we have negotiated price $100, so that's what you owe, as you are still below your deductible."
poorcedure|9 years ago
It seems weird, because it is weird. I can not think of another industry that works like this, where prices can be unknown until it goes to billing. Forcing them to fix a price and publish it to a government registry could possibly allow market forces to drive lower prices than even the largest insurance companies can negotiate.
gpsx|9 years ago
commentzorro|9 years ago
Without the young paying in during the early years they're going to have annual premiums of $40-50,000 as they approach their 60s.
poorcedure|9 years ago
Lower prices should reduce premiums for everyone, since insurance companies have strict margins per the ACA. Lower premiums should increase those that are covered by insurance, hopefully.