Why – Because It Has To
No economic news is totally bad or totally good. The decades long news that health care costs
are rising astronomically is terrible news, but the good news is that the cost
increases are forcing the industry to evolve into a better system. Yes the evolution is taking too long and
costing too much, because public policy is not leading, but it is happening.
In the Washington
area this
is the look of the future.
In 2012, MedStar Health, like many large employers,
struggled to keep up with rapidly rising health-care costs. For three years,
the company held down premiums for its 19,000 employees by absorbing the
increases itself.
Most employers would have had no choice but to raise
premiums — in this case, by about $550 for a family — and cope with frustrated
employees. MedStar, one of the Washington area’s largest health systems, saw
another option.
It would launch its own health insurance plan, offering
it first to its employees. Patients would be limited to MedStar-affiliated
providers, and as a result, pay lower premiums. In time, MedStar could compete
with the Aetnas and Blue Crosses of the world, offering insurance to the
public.
“By putting in the new health plan, we had the ability to
give them an option that actually allowed savings,” said Eric Wagner, a MedStar
vice president. “People who enrolled in MedStar Select got a lower premium than
they had the year before.”
Why didn’t the old system work? Basic economics.
“They make their money by not paying for health care to be
delivered,” Wagner said of health insurers. “We make our money by delivering
care. There’s always been a natural tension.”
Had the U. S.
moved to this type of system years ago, with competition among competing health
care system providing assurances of good, low cost care, much of the inflation
in U. S. medical costs could have been avoided.
But this would have taken people to recognize that the health insurance
model was broken. That was apparently
beyond the scope of people’s abilities.
In some cases it still is.
Republicans think that competition in health insurance will
solve the problem. They are not deliberately
trying to wreck the system, they are just ignorant.
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