kenberg, on 2013-November-15, 07:33, said:
Free choice is an issue. In medical treatment it's a big issue ( most of us are non-naked patients) . This sometimes plays out in discussions as free market. I don't regard them as the same at all, but as government assumes a larger role in medical care, it is definitely an issue of concern. When I was young the Golden Rule was explained to me as "He who has the gold makes the rules".
[...]
Anyway, I think there is an opportunity here for someone to step forward and get this right.
Is it? Why is choice important? Surely what we're shooting for in a healthcare system is these three things
1) Health outcomes (the most important bit)
2) Patient satisfaction
3) Lowest cost (Cost can be considered in public/government and private/individual costs)
And when designing a system you want to have some sort of balance between the three. Now that we've all accepted that government intervention is required to correct a market failure, then the only question is what is the best model for that intervention. The question has been answered and someone has stepped up. Depending on how much you want to pay, and if you want to outsource operation of the actual delivery of healthcare, the four archtypical models are of:
A) France (Expensive/Best, though still 2/3rds the cost of the what the US pays). Government provides a (high) base level of service to everyone, you may purchase supplemental insurance via your employer.
B) Canada (Outsourced operation, somewhat expensive than the UK for the same quality of service). Government provides a base level of service, additional care may be purchased outside of the state system. System is operated by private providers.
C) The UK (Cheapest, same quality of care as the other options, lower patient satisfaction than France). Government provides a base level of service, additional care may be purchased outside of the state system. System is operated by public providers.
D) The US, with a free market purchasing model, outsourced provision and multiple payers. It's very expensive - over 3 times as expensive per capita than the UK system, delivers the lowest patient satisfaction and doesn't exceed the UK on healthcare outcomes.
Finland, best overall model, may not scale as the population is smaller, so I've gone with larger arch-typical examples.
Clearly, the US has the worst system currently. You're paying a huge amount more in private costs, and almost the same in public costs (OK a bit lower, but it's like $100 dollars per person per year, ask everyone in the US if they'd pay $100 dollar a year to go on medicare from birth!) and not getting scoring higher in any of our assessment categories (outcomes and satisfaction) over the UK, so we can safely discard the free market approach upfront - it just doesn't work. The UK literally delivers Medicare type coverage to it's entire population with pretty much what the US spends on over 65s and medicaid recipients due to the economies of scale and positive externalities of preventative and primary care that can be captured by the single provider. The US is paying all this extra cash to deliver the same outcomes and worst patient satisfaction. It truly is a joke - the direct cost savings from getting it to the NHS are something in excess of $650 billion that could be redirected to productive investments, thus spurring the US economy. Other 'free market' models like Australia have the same problems, but we have more of a single payer system so costs are controlled more - but we still pay more for no better patient satisfaction or healthcare outcomes, so it is a bum deal.
Once we've ditched the free market model as non functional, we can hone in on how exactly the government should control healthcare - should it run public institutions, or should it outsource it? Outsourced care is more expensive, because it appears their are minimal competitive advantages to be gained, the publicly owned/operated models (UK, Finnland, etc) are cheaper than the privately owned models (canada, Australia) on a per capita basis. It doesn't seem to drive increased patient satisfaction either, so we're spending more money but not scoring better on our outcomes.
OK so far we can see that we want a publically operated single pay model - this is the most efficent. The next question is, what's the tradeoff between patient satisfaction and price? Well, it appears from the French vs UK experience (and for example, the Estonians excellent but centralised system vs anyone else) that what drives patient satisfaction is decentralised service delivery and integrated ancillary services that don't have demonstrable clinical benefits, for example the french offer stuff like accupuncture and massage services. However, these things all cost dollars - the concentration of service delivery enables improved economies of scale, but there is a clear tradeoff - the more you provide localised services, the more $$$$ you are on the hook for.
So at the end of the day, you're going with a single payer, publically operated system, and you can then select where you sit on the 'cost' slider by adjusting the 'centralisation' slider. If you want the 'assurance' of the private sector running things, you can click that box and add 20% to the cost to manage their profit margins and the increased cost of capital for private institutions vs the government.
It's a solved problem really, the problem is you guys keep wanting to expand the free marketness, when that has been shown time and time again to increase healthcare costs for zero benefits. Single payer is what works, I honestly do not understand why it's even slightly controversial.