Originally posted by: QuantumPion
Originally posted by: Modelworks
Insurance came into existence to pay for unexpected expenses that someone could not normally afford. If you look at the history of medicine, before insurance, people actually paid cash for services. It was no different than paying someone to paint your house.
Somewhere along the way someone realized they could make a bundle and prices increased to the point that insurance was no longer about unexpected expenses but everyday expenses. Imagine if car repair and maintenance increased to the point that an oil change was $500. That is what happened to health care.
They really should just change it from insurance companies to medical brokers, because that is all they are. They act as a go between from the patient to the doctor negotiating for the best price for what the patient can pay. It isn't insurance anymore. The old insurance model cannot work with pre-existing conditions, it just isn't possible. You can't insure a house that is sitting halfway over a river for flood insurance and expect to make a profit. The insurance model only works when you have less claims than you have money being paid in premiums and pre-existing conditions nullify that.
Exactly. The purpose of insurance is to cover your medical expenses if you are in an auto accident or get appendicitis. In an ideal system, if you have a heart condition or cancer or diabetes (e.g. something that is a known condition and requires long-term expenses), you should pay for it yourself using an HSA or loan.
The problem is that the government has interfered with the health care industry so destructively that the cost of treatments has increased to ridiculous levels that no one can afford, unless they have an insurance plan which pays for it. Thus everyone demands to be covered by insurance for everything. Which causes the prices to become even more astronomical.
There are other major problems with our health care, but these can be easily fixed if the Democrats were interested in actually fixing health care, rather then socialize it for their own power. These two are: health care for poor/old people. Replace medicare/medicaid with government-provided HSA's (or even better, contribution-matched). That way, people will be responsible for the price they pay for care. Second: tort reform. This is self-explanatory but will never happen as long as the lawyers dump billions in contributions to congress to keep themselves in business.