The Soapbox

Hoodafan

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By Editorial Board June 18
OBAMACARE LOOKS shaky, mostly because Republicans are sabotaging it. This, in turn, has rekindled calls on the left to create a European-style “single-payer” system, in which the government directly pays for every American’s health care. California lawmakers, for example, are considering such a plan for their state.

The single-payer model has some strong advantages. It is much simpler for most people — no more insurance forms or related hassles. Employers would no longer be mixed up in providing health-care benefits, and taxpayers would no longer subsidize that form of private compensation. Government experts could conduct research on treatments and use that information to directly cut costs across the system.

But the government’s price tag would be astonishing. When Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) proposed a “Medicare for all” health plan in his presidential campaign, the nonpartisan Urban Institute figured that it would raise government spending by $32 trillion over 10 years, requiring a tax increase so huge that even the democratic socialist Mr. Sanders did not propose anything close to it.

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Single-payer advocates counter that government-run health systems in other developed countries spend much less than the United States does on its complex public-private arrangement. They say that if the United States adopted a European model, it could expand coverage to everyone by realizing a mountain of savings with no measureable decline in health outcomes, in part because excessive administrative costs and profit would be wrung from the system.

In fact, the savings would be less dramatic; the Urban Institute’s projections are closer to reality. The public piece of the American health-care system has not proven itself to be particularly cost-efficient. On a per capita basis, U.S. government health programs alone spend more than Canada, Australia, France and Britain each do on their entire health systems. That means the U.S. government spends more per American to cover a slice of the population than other governments spend per citizen to cover all of theirs. Simply expanding Medicare to all would not automatically result in a radically more efficient health-care system. Something else would have to change.

Play Video 1:10
Here's what's in the new CBO report on the Republican health-care bill
The Congressional Budget Office has released its score on the revised American Health Care Act. Here's what's in the report. (Daron Taylor/The Washington Post)
With monopoly buying power, the government could tighten up on health-care spending by dictating prices for services and drugs. But the government already has a lot of leverage. A big reason it does not clamp down now on health-care spending is that it is hard to do so politically.

Republicans have tarred the Affordable Care Act’s Medicare cuts as attacks on the cherished entitlement program. Doctors and hospitals have effectively resisted efforts to scale back the reimbursements they get from federal health programs. Small-town America does not want to give up expensive medical facilities that serve relatively few people in rural areas. A tax on medical device makers has been under bipartisan attack ever since it passed, as has the “Cadillac tax” on expensive health-insurance plans. When experts find that a treatment is too costly relative to the health benefits it provides, patients accustomed to receiving that treatment and medical organizations with a stake in the status quo rise up to demand it continue to be paid for.


A single-payer health-care system would face all of these political barriers to cost-saving reform and more. To realize the single-payer dream of coverage for all and big savings, medical industry players, including doctors, would likely have to get paid less and patients would have to accept different standards of access and comfort. There is little evidence most Americans are willing to accept such tradeoffs.

The goal still must be universal coverage and cost restraint. But no matter whether the government or some combination of parties is paying, that restraint will come slowly, with cuts to the rate of increase in medical costs that make the system more affordable over time. There are many options short of a disruptive takeover: the government can change how care is delivered, determine which treatments should be covered, control quality at hospitals, drive down drug costs and discourage high-cost health-care plans even while making the Obamacare system better at filling coverage gaps.

Read more here:

Eugene Robinson: Republicans are accidentally paving the way for single-payer health care

Charles Krauthammer: The road to single-payer health care

Catherine Rampell: Sorry, Republicans, but most people support single-payer health care

Letters to the Editor: Single-payer would make America No. 1 for health care

(In response to this post by JMHoo)

Posted: 06/21/2017 at 11:27AM



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Current Thread:
 
  
Wapo:cost of single payer would be ridiculous -- HokieDan95 06/21/2017 08:54AM
  The existing cost model is broken. -- GoochlandHoo 06/21/2017 3:51PM
  You can blink now! ** -- SPYCAV 06/21/2017 1:40PM
  That's pretty much the central Trumpleton paradox -- Beerman 06/21/2017 11:11AM
  What is the Republicans goal with health care? -- WahooMatt05 06/21/2017 09:54AM
  To help insurance companies be profitable ** -- hokeyhokie 06/21/2017 11:10AM
  Of course...as it should be ** -- 111Balz 06/21/2017 1:21PM
  "We didn't have coverage, we had robitussin!" ;) ** -- Seattle .Hoo 06/21/2017 12:35PM
  "Let that Tussin get on down to the bone!" -- hoodeyo 06/21/2017 2:47PM
  Ding! A screwed up goal if there ever was one. ** -- Seattle .Hoo 06/21/2017 11:20AM
  To kill as many democrat voters as possible... ** -- Hokie5150 06/21/2017 10:30AM
  Well, Rs control all Death Panel appointments now ** -- WahooMatt05 06/21/2017 10:48AM
  And how does the government "get" people -- WahooRQ 06/21/2017 10:17AM
  Gets out of the way ** -- TomKazanski 06/21/2017 11:30AM
  Anarchy: the key to universal heatlhcare. -- WahooRQ 06/21/2017 12:41PM
  We shouldn't have a federalized one. ** -- Hokie5150 06/21/2017 2:30PM
  It's also a strawman -- Beerman 06/21/2017 2:18PM
  Did you forget something Tom? -- VaTechie 06/21/2017 11:38AM
  He won't even understand your question ** -- 111Balz 06/21/2017 10:49AM
  To put as much cost on the consumer as possible -- Beerman 06/21/2017 09:57AM
  Addressing health care costs is valid -- WahooMatt05 06/21/2017 10:18AM
  Yes. That's what it takes. ** -- 111Balz 06/21/2017 09:40AM
  The USA can't do what every other modern nation does ** -- hokeyhokie 06/21/2017 08:58AM
  Sweden debt/gdp is about 42%. Us debt/gdp is about 106%. -- HoosWillWin 06/21/2017 09:12AM
  Norway also has a ~$1t oil fund -- Capital City Hoo 06/21/2017 11:01AM
  Canada: 21% immigrant. US: 13% immigrant ** -- Beerman 06/21/2017 1:30PM
  That's my point. We have multiple drivers of poverty -- Faz d. Hoo 06/21/2017 1:37PM
  So your solution then? -- Beerman 06/21/2017 1:54PM
  That much is absolutely true -- Beerman 06/21/2017 2:04PM
  If you are suggesting we abandon single payer, since it -- HoosWillWin 06/21/2017 1:10PM
  Link -- Faz d. Hoo 06/21/2017 1:52PM
  They are doing it** -- hokeyhokie 06/21/2017 09:03AM

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