Tag: healthcare reform

Contributor Post Created with Sketch. Recommended by Ricochet Members Created with Sketch. Health Care Lights and Sirens

 

Trump thumbs up“If we want to make America great again, we’re gonna have to make healthcare well again.” — Katy Talento

Or, we can call it too hard to do, take two aspirin, and call Doctor Ocasio-Cortez in a year.

Katy Talento has talent. However busy you are, do listen to at least the last two minutes and thirty seconds of the Candice Owens Show November 24, 2019 episode, in which Katy Talento gives the Trump Administration’s two-minute pitch on real health care reform. Then go to PatientRightsAdvocate.org to submit a comment into the official federal regulatory comment process—because the Medical Industrial Swamp is loading up the system, once again seeking to stack the deck in their pecuniary and power interests. Would you prefer to read the proposed rule and comment directly in the Federal Register? There is a button to submit formal comments and guidance on that and other forms of commenting, along with the summary and details about the “Transparency in Coverage” proposed rule.

Contributor Post Created with Sketch. Recommended by Ricochet Members Created with Sketch. Another Promise Kept: POTUS Signs VA Mission Act

 

President Trump accomplished several things with this ceremony: promise keeping, serving veterans, and reforming healthcare. The first two were obvious and significant, the third was indirect and rhetorical.

From C-SPAN:

Recommended by Ricochet Members Created with Sketch. The Medicalist (or, Looking for the Pony) No. 4

 

ON THE DIMINISHED STATE OF THE MEDICAL PROFESSION

Note to fellow Ricochet members: I have had to take my Ricochet account back from Dr. Publius at this time. As it happens this post (Number 4 of Dr. P’s Medicalist papers), was inadvertently leaked, prior to publication, to a physician colleague, who took umbrage. Regrettable words were subsequently exchanged between Dr. P and this unnamed colleague (obviously, on a site with a less restrictive CoC than one finds here), and as a result the two have agreed to settle the matter in the way of gentlemen, on the Field of Honor. 

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Note to fellow Ricochet members: I have completed the posting of Dr Publius’ Medicalist papers, as he instructed me to do before he was obligated to addend to some unavoidable business. (As is happens, his “discussion” with his former colleague, mentioned in the prolog to Number 4, did not go well for him.) This post […]

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ON WHY CONSERVATIVES SHOULD, AFTER ALL, SUPPORT THIS PLAN To the People of Ricochet: Preview Open

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ON THE REQUISITE FEATURES OF AN ACCEPTABLE PLAN, PART 2 To the People of Ricochet: Preview Open

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ON THE REQUISITE FEATURES OF AN ACCEPTABLE PLAN, PART 1 To the People of Ricochet: Preview Open

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ON THE RELUCTANCE OF THE HEALTH INSURANCE INDUSTRY To the People of Ricochet: Preview Open

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ON THE THREAT POSED BY THE COST OF HEALTHCARE To the People of Ricochet: Preview Open

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Recommended by Ricochet Members Created with Sketch. Member Post

 

ON WHY WE SHOULD CONSIDER A DISAPPOINTING PLAN To the People of Ricochet: Preview Open

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Last night’s debate on health care had Senator Sanders repeatedly asking Senator Cruz about health care as a fundamental “right”. Cruz didn’t seem to have a good answer for this, and Sanders kept jabbing at him with it. Cruz went into automatic Constitution Mode, but never seemed to actually answer the question. It seems to […]

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I am proposing for discussion an outline for an equitable, fiscally responsible program for reforming our healthcare system. I submit that this would be a uniquely American plan that is compatible with our founding principles, but that at the same time recognizes the realities of the healthcare system we have today, and the obligations we […]

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Recommended by Ricochet Members Created with Sketch. On Collectivized Medical Progress

 

When it comes to fixing our healthcare system, there are several fundamental disconnects between progressivism and conservatism. One of these, perhaps the main one, relates to the advisability of collectivizing healthcare expenditures via taxpayer subsidization and debt accumulation. Conservatives tend to view the collectivization of healthcare financing as the root of the problem; whereas progressives tend to view it as the answer to the problem. (Obviously, for this to be true, among other things conservatives and progressives must be defining “the problem” differently.)

As a conservative I hold to the view that any real fix of our healthcare mess is going to require individuals to take on much more of the financial responsibility for their own health, and that doing so is both morally desirable and fiscally mandatory. I also believe it is going to be extraordinarily difficult to get a substantial proportion of the American public to accept personal responsibility for something that, they have been convinced, is and ought to be a right. I think most of us here understand how difficult that will be. But as we formulate our arguments in this regard, we are obligated to take a sober look at another major issue we face as we fight to individualize healthcare expenditures. It is an issue which, I fear, judging from the content of the debate, has not yet occurred to many of us.

Recommended by Ricochet Members Created with Sketch. The Importance of the Doctor-Patient Relationship (and why we can’t have it anymore)

 

Why It’s Important

The doctor-patient relationship, I am led to understand, is still being taught in medical schools. But what they’re teaching is not the real doctor-patient relationship. It’s more of a Dale Carnegie thing — how to win your patient’s trust so you can persuade them to become more compliant to whatever program you devise for them. The real doctor-patient relationship has become so foreign to healthcare bureaucrats, and (sadly) to many doctors, that its meaning is all but lost in many quarters. In fact, to really explain it we need to resort to parables:

One day, down on your luck and in need of some quick cash, you decide to rob a Seven-Eleven. You rush in brandishing a 9mm, and order the clerk to hand over all the cash. He appears to reach under the counter, so you panic and shoot him. You quickly clean out the cash register and head for the door — where you run smack into two burly police officers who happen to be entering right then for some of that good Seven-Eleven coffee. You are quickly and none-too-gently disarmed and arrested. So there you are — caught red-handed, money in one hand, gun in the other, the blood of the clerk on your shirt, and for good measure the whole unfortunate episode recorded by a security camera. Now, here’s the question: What rights do you have?

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By maintaining a volunteer military, we choose to provide those who fight for our country and our interests with a comfortable existence past their war-time duties. This is the ideal that is portrayed in all recruiting centers. A weekend of duty. A lifetime of benefits for you and for yours. If anything, we have failed […]

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I want to begin this post by assuring you that I consider Obamacare to be disastrous not only for American healthcare itself, but more importantly for America’s unique social compact. In fact, I think that the very reason our President was willing to expend his entire political capital pushing Obamacare through Congress is precisely because […]

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Promoted from the Ricochet Member Feed by Editors Created with Sketch. Some Form of Universal Healthcare is Justified

 

shutterstock_213429910Dan Hanson’s recent post proposed a healthcare solution that includes universal, single-payer, catastrophic health insurance. In his plan, non-catastrophic healthcare would be paid for by individuals, often utilizing various private insurance products and (I presume) HSAs. It generated a vigorous response, both for and against. The chief objection to his proposal is that any type of universal health plan smacks of socialism. His critics say that we need to find a solution that does not include such an odious thing. (Progressives strenuously object to plans like Dan’s for the opposite reason: because such plans allow individuals to make many of their own decisions regarding their own healthcare.)

I have proposed a plan similar to Dan’s elsewhere, which I’ll sketch here. My plan has three tiers. In Tier 1, people would be responsible for the first, say, $2,000 of their annual healthcare expenditures, supported by a tax-deductible HSA. Teir 2 would be universal, catastrophic, taxpayer-funded health insurance that kicks in after that first few thousand dollars are spent. To keep Tier 2 spending spending at some pre-determined level, it would operate under a strict, but transparent, system of healthcare rationing. That is, some things simply would not be covered for financial reasons. Teir 3 would be an optional, super-catastrophic, private insurance plan that people could choose to buy on the open market, that would cover some (or all) expenditures that the Teir 2 plan deems insufficiently cost effective.

I can — and have elsewhere — offer a detailed justification for why this is the best plan available. Here I will offer only a justification for its major sticking point: that it includes a universal insurance component.