Health Care Tough Love
Ron Getty
Chair-Initiatives Committee
In 1941, a woman was
given a one-page, hand-written hospital bill for $73.75 after an
11-day stay following the caesarian birth of her son. Based on the
increase in the Consumer Price Index, the same hospital bill today
should be $1,023. However, the actual hospital bill would be closer
to $13,300. This means that since 1941 medical costs have risen at
twice the rate of the CPI.
Is it possible to make health care
as affordable as it was back in 1941?
First, two truths need
to be understood about basic economics. Prices rise when demand
exceeds supply. Prices fall when supply exceeds demand.
Achieving
the increased supply of health care needed with a concurrent
reduction in the bureaucracy in claims processing can reduce the cost
of health care. However, let's acknowledge some relevant factors
affecting health care costs and provide some health care tough
love.
With aging Baby Boomers hitting retirement, demands on
the health care system will increase and health care prices will
rise. The uninsured create another dynamic that affects health care
prices.
The witches' brew of HMOs, Medicare, Medicaid, and
private and group medical insurance induces increases on the costs
and supply of health care through the reimbursement process of what
is and isn't covered. The massive paperwork and administration needed
to process claims and payments by government agencies, insurers, and
health care providers causes further ripples in the cost of medical
care. Legislation dictating to medical insurers and providers what is
to be covered also adds to health care costs.
The Food and
Drug Administration creates additional disruption. The FDA's red-tape
ridden bureaucratic process for approving new medications and medical
equipment dramatically increases health care costs for medicine and
medical equipment.
Overall, the biggest and gravest major
factor that must be addressed is in the health care personnel needed
to provide medical services.
Thousands of retiring Baby Boomer
personnel will reduce accessibility to trained and experienced
medical staff, and cause long lines and lessened competition. To
offset the loss of retirees, more people must enroll in training
programs for doctors, nurses, pharmacists, medical technicians, and
medical lab personnel. This means more training facilities for
medical personnel and qualified medical teachers.
Public
schools will have to stop graduating functional illiterates who need
remedial math and English at the college level if we hope to have the
number of necessary people capable of entering those medical training
programs.
The American Medical Association and state licensing
requirements further exacerbates the cost of medical care. The
extensive mandatory training standards place barriers – some
medically necessitated – in the way of additional health care
personnel entering the field and competing for patients.
We
need a physician-light program without the 12-year doctoral training
program. A physician could specialize in specific types of medicine,
like podiatrists are doing, with reduced training required. We also
need an accelerated licensing program for qualified foreign-trained
health care professionals, and we need to allow RNs to run bumps,
bruises, scrapes, and basic shots medical clinics where MDs aren't
needed.
More community hospitals, medical clinics, and medical
training facilities must be opened to increase consumer options for
health care, which will reduce costs through competition. As a
result, we will need to rethink zoning and building permit processes
to allow more such facilities.
Yes, these things can happen.
However, to make an omelet, eggs are going to get broken. The biggest
eggs to break will be politicians and their misguided efforts to
omnisciently determine how health care must be provided for everyone
at taxpayers' expense.
Radical measures are called for to
increase the supply of health care and reduce prices through
competition. This means doing the following:
Eliminate licensing standards for hospitals, pharmacies, doctors, nurses, medical personnel, medical colleges and medical clinics;
Eliminate the FDA;
Deregulate the medical insurance industry;
Repeal the HMO Act of 1970;
Eliminate Medicare and Medicaid and all other involuntarily, taxpayer-funded, government programs providing medical benefits at the federal or the state level; and
Eliminate legislatively mandated employer health insurance.
The tough love solution to the health care crisis is getting politicians and the government out of the health care business. Let free enterprise medical providers address the market demands for health care at a price anyone can afford. Affordable health care can happen when there are no politicians or government agencies infecting the medical marketplace.