Okay, the health care bill has passed. Nobody really knows how all the lawsuits will pan out or whether it will really cover the uninsured. Previous threads discussing the merits of the legislation, or lack thereof, have degenerated into shouting matches. So I'd like to take a step back and try to look at what ails the current system from a more general standpoint.
The population can be divided into several groups:
1) Those with serious but treatable chronic diseases (coronary artery disease, diabetes, some forms of cancer, lupus, etc.). These people need coverage that allows them to get the treatment they need without bankrupting their families.
2) Those who are basically healthy, don't use much in the way of health care resources, but are of an age where shit starts to happen with increasing frequency (i.e. over 40. I wouldn't object to saying over 50). These people need to be covered because sooner or later something will happen. Everyone who has ever lived (including Jesus Christ his ownself) has died of something.
3) Those who are young and healthy. An argument can be made that these people don't need coverage. The problem is that there are a slew of nasty diseases that tend to manifest in this age group (lupus, Crohn's disease, a variety of neurologic problems, leukemias, etc.). And any adult can get appendicitis, gallstones, kidney stones, or other acute problems that can kill you if they're not treated.
4) Children. They should be covered. Any questions?
5) Those with end stage, terminal illnesses. This group uses the largest proportion of health care resources by far. People with heart failure, cirrhosis, and kidney failure who have to be hospitalized for a week if they eat a piece of salami (too much sodium, you know). People with severe Alzheimer's who have forgotten how to eat. People with widespread cancer who have failed three different chemotherapy regimens. Care for this group is extremely expensive for the life expectancy gained, especially when quality of life is considered. These people need coverage, but how many heart transplants is one person entitled to?
6) The Worried Well. These are people who don't really have anything serious wrong with them, but they use lots of health care resources because they're afraid they do. Every symptom has to be evaluated by a specialist, because everyone knows someone who had exactly the same symptoms and turned out to have cancer. They might fall into either Group 2 or 3 above except for their disproportionate use of resources. These folks are usually already covered.
In case you can't tell from the above, yes, I'm a health care provider. The problem with the U.S. health care system is that most of the money comes from Group 2, while most of the money is spent on Group 5. There is some waste in the system for all the groups, but it is greatest for Group 6. To get more money to spend on the other groups, you can get more people paying into the system (those in Groups 2 & 3 who aren't already paying premiums), eliminate some of the waste, or spend less on Group 5.
To increase the risk pool, you can establish a universal health care system where everyone is covered and everyone is taxed out the wazoo, or you can try to force people to buy private insurance.
To eliminate waste, you must have meaningful tort reform. Here's a dirty little secret about the health care industry: most of the waste in the system is from defensive medicine. It doesn't get measured as such in studies because it's so widespread that it has become the standard of care. If, for a given symptom, one person in 10,000 will truly have a serious problem that could be found by a moderately expensive test (say, a CT scan), a doctor will order the scan every single time. This is because while 9,999 times it's a wasted test, the 10,000th person can and will sue for missing the diagnosis. Even if the suit is thrown out, it's a huge hassle and may take years of dealing with lawyers to resolve. Until it is permissible to miss a long-shot problem, there will be a lot of waste in the system. See Group 6 above.
To reduce spending on aggressive treatment of terminal conditions you may think I'm going to say someone has to have the authority to stop treatments regardless of patients' wishes. Not so. This area is actually the greatest failure of the medical community. All that really needs to happen is that doctors tell their patients the truth about what is going on. There comes a point where the burden of treatment is greater than its benefit. It's amazing how often people choose to be kept comfortable rather than take that fourth type of chemotherapy if they are given a realistic assessment of its likely benefit. It's also amazing how many people don't realize that they have the right to refuse care that is offered (no, just because you've been on dialysis for five years doesn't mean you can't stop it when you find out you also have a brain tumor). The problem here is that it takes a lot of time, is emotionally draining to do, and it goes against everything modern medical education preaches. "Heal the sick, comfort the dying" has evolved into "Heal the sick, never admit anyone is dying."
So IMHO, the root of our health care crisis isn't something that politicians, insurance reform, or mandating coverage can fix. Republicans and Democrats can tear each other to shreds over this issue, but none of them can fix the underlying problem.
This is a long post on a controversial subject, so I expect some heat. But I'm hoping people can state their views in reasonable fashion. Now let the flames begin.