Single-Payer Myths; Single-Payer Facts
Facts about National Health Insurance (NHI) You Might Not Know
The health care delivery system remains private. As
opposed to a national health service, where the government
employs doctors, in a national health insurance system, the
government is billed, but doctors remain in private
practice.
A national health insurance program could save
approximately $150 billion on paperwork alone. Because of
the administrative complexities in our current system, over
25% of every health care dollar goes to marketing, billing,
utilization review, and other forms of waste. A single-payer
system could
reduce administrative costs greatly.
Most businesses would save money. Because a
single-payer system is more efficient than our current system,
health care costs are less, and therefore, businesses save
money. In Canada, the three major auto manufacturers (Ford, GM,
and Daimler-Chrysler) have all publicly endorsed Canada’s
single-payer health system from a business and financial
standpoint. In the United States, Ford pays more for its
workers health insurance than it does for the steel to make
its cars.
Under NHI, your insurance
doesn’t depend on your job. Whether you’re a student,
professor, or working part-time raising children, you’re
provided with care. Not only does this lead to a healthier
population, but it’s also beneficial from an economic
standpoint: workers are less-tied to their
employers, and those that dislike their current positions can
find new work
(where they would be happier and most likely more productive
and efficient).
Myths about National Health Insurance (NHI)
The government would dictate how physicians practice
medicine.
In countries with a national health insurance system,
physicians are rarely questioned about their medical practices
(and usually only in cases of expected fraud). Compare it to
today’s system, where doctors routinely have to ask an
insurance company permission to perform procedures, prescribe
certain medications, or run certain tests to help their
patients.
Waits for services would be extremely long.
Again, in countries with NHI, urgent
care is always provided immediately. Other countries do
experience some waits for elective procedures (like cataract
removal), but maintaining the US’s
same level of health expenditures (twice as much as the
next-highest country), waits would be much shorter or even
non-existent.
People will overutilize the system.
Most estimates do indicate that there would be some increased
utilization of the system (mostly from the 42 million people
that are currently uninsured and therefore not receiving
adequate health care), however the staggering savings from a
single-payer system would easily compensate for this. (And
remember, doctors still control most health care utilization.
Patients don’t receive prescriptions or tests because they
want them; they receive them because their doctors have deemed
them appropriate.)
Government programs are wasteful and inefficient.
Some are better than others, just as some businesses are
better than others. Just to name a few of the most successful
and helpful: the National Institutes of Health, the Centers
for Disease Control, and Social Security. Even consider
Medicare, the government program for the elderly; its overhead
is approximately 3%, while in private insurance companies,
overhead and profits add up to 15-25%.
"Our
current national health care system is simple: don't get
sick." - Anonymous
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