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Diagnosing Our Health Care Woes
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
No one disputes
the diagnosis: American health care is in lousy shape. As a practicing
physician for more than 30 years, I find the pervasiveness of managed
care very troubling.
The problems
with our health care system are not the result of too little government
intervention, but rather too much. Contrary to the claims of many
advocates of increased government regulation of health care, rising
costs and red tape do not represent market failure. Rather, they
represent the failure of government policies that have destroyed
the health care market.
Its time
to rethink the whole system of HMOs and managed care. This entire
unnecessary level of corporatism rakes off profits and worsens the
quality of care. But HMOs did not arise in the free market; they
are creatures of government interference in health care dating to
the 1970s. These non-market institutions have gained control over
medical care through collusion between organized medicine, politicians,
and drug companies, in an effort to move America toward free
universal health care.
One big problem
arises from the 1974 ERISA law, which grants tax benefits to employers
for providing health care, while not allowing similar incentives
for individuals. This results in the illogical coupling between
employment and health insurance. As such, government removed the
market incentive for health insurance companies to cater to the
actual health-care consumer. As a greater amount of government and
corporate money has been used to pay medical bills, costs have risen
artificially out of the range of most individuals.
Only true competition
assures that the consumer gets the best deal at the best price possible
by putting pressure on the providers. Patients are better served
by having options and choices, not new federal bureaucracies and
limitations on legal remedies. Such choices and options will arrive
only when we unravel the HMO web rooted in old laws, and change
the tax code to allow individual Americans to fully deduct all healthcare
costs from their taxes, as employers can.
As
government bureaucracy continues to give preferences and protections
to HMOs and trial lawyers, it will be the patients who lose, despite
the glowing rhetoric from the special interests in Washington. Patients
will pay ever rising prices and receive declining care while doctors
continue to leave the profession in droves.
September
26, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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