There's too much being invested in other things, like Silicon Valley. Time to cut your wages.
There needs to be a whole lot of things done just in prep work to figure out what's going on, then more "what if" modelling without some politician getting his fingers in the pie. That's the most difficult thing because too many are stuck in a mentality where the way things were are how they should be now and for all time. I expect that any good plan will initially cost a lot of money up front because there's going to be a need of transitioning and investment. You can't expect things to not collapse if proper management isn't done. Eventually things could be better, but considering who some want to be the masters I don't see anything being much different than now. Too much ignorance and lust for control over things not even understood at a most basic level. Like I said the change of hydrocodone just sucked up a whole bunch of money simply because of the regulatory requirements of C-IIs. This was a political solution of this medication being abused by some, but it isn't a medical one. Physicians can still prescribe it but the storage and paperwork don't affect them at all and so there's no disincentive to prescribe, no politician will look deep enough to get some ideas of what might be more reasonably done. As federal law exists hydrocodone could be refilled. By moving it to a C-II what will ultimately cost millions upon millions (and already has just to comply with those regs) they cannot except in special circumstances which are rare exceptions in specific settings. What could (and should) have happened was this
A Law
"No hydrocodone containing medication may be refilled. Further the supply of medication authorized may be for more than a 30 day supply per order issued."
No onerous and irrelevant burden but it would eliminate refills for the 6 months that was previously allowed. No one in DC was bright enough to even think about what might work and what it would cost. Money removed from the system for care for foolishness, and yes that's your problem if you expect things to get better.