I appreciate the ideas for bipartisan reform. These kinds of discussions are constructive.
My take on covering sick people is that I prefer the idea of barring insurance companies from denying them coverage, and letting them charge something like 50% more for the premiums. If you subsidize coverage for sick people, you are sending the wrong message about health - get sick and you will get free coverage, stay healthy and you have to pay for it.
- wolf
I have not read most of this, but I will take a brief shot.
-Tort reform
-Allow insurance to be sold across state lines
-Allow states to regulate the benefits of insurance sold in their state, require that they allow for "lower benefit" plans, while creating a structure to allow them to "penalize" these "low benefit plans" preferably through taxes.
-Eliminate any tax benefits of employer provided insurance,
-provide tax subsidies for personal insurance purchases - with a schedule to end the subsidies slowly over time.
-Either
-- mandate insurance coverage and eliminate "pre-existing conditions"
or
-- require all insurance providers to accept all buyers, but allow insurance providers to penalize buyers who have had lapsed coverage and pay the penalty over time through higher fees (will require regulation obviously)
-standardize whatever the VA uses for health care codes
I would prefer to do this one step at a time, but if we had to throw it all in at a time, this is what I think should be there, most of it comes from my right leaning bias. The biggest and most necessary step is to stop having employers provide health insurance. This is a huge agent issue. The company who buys the health insurance is not receiving the care from that insurance. The insurance company is providing care for the patient, but the patient does not have a realistic ability to switch insurers if the insurance company fails to come through for him. The customer the insurer is serving is not who is paying the bills, so the insurance company has very low incentives to provide good service.
I think that if we get to the point where health insurance is advertised like state farm, and all state it will make a huge difference. Right now, people don't shop for health insurance, they are given it. IF they shopped for it, insurance companies would be bending over backwords to prove to their potential customers that when things go bad they will be "in good hands." When the reputation of the insurance company directly affects who will buy insurance from them, insurance companies will dread a news story about how they refused to pay for "little susie's" cancer treatment. Right now, none of that happens, because large companies that buy insurance plans for their employees are not moved by "little susie" stories.