The reason I can blame both parties is because neither has been instrumental in changing anything for the better. You blame aca and while it hasn’t helped anything, it’s not a main cost driver for why things are the way they are.
You should care about pbms and why they are allowed to do the things that they do, unchecked. They do things that in any other industry is completely illegal. They make a ton of money at every step of the pharmaceutical process from manufacturing, to transportation to dispensing medication. Spread pricing, formulary manipulation, “rebates” from manufacturing etc etc. and why are they allowed to do all this? Because they have powerful lobbyists in Washington that line congress’ pockets. In a lot of cases, pharma is outpacing costs and claims vs medical. It’s one of the biggest drivers in costs in healthcare today.
Lack of price transparency has little to do with Insurance companies. It has mostly to do with hospitals, and clinics. They are the ones that are able to charge whatever they want without any oversight. Ins companies just negotiate those prices or cover a portion of whatever that price is. Not saying ins companies don’t have a hand in rising costs but price transparency isn’t one of them.
Results 24,981 to 24,990 of 26805
Thread: Politics Thread
-
01-11-2025, 08:53 AM #24981
- Join Date
- Jan 2012
- Posts
- 18,689
-
01-11-2025, 09:04 AM #24982
So, the ACA made things worse?
The Ds have owned the issue and have created the “cookie jar”.
The examples I gave previously are why the health insurance industry is what is is today.
If you want to blame the Rs for a mess, we could talk about military spending. However, it seems the new generation of Rs are sick of funding and fighting endless wars.Last edited by Strange Brew; 01-11-2025 at 09:11 AM.
Official XUHoops Resident Legal Scholar.
(Do not take this seriously)
-
01-11-2025, 09:13 AM #24983
- Join Date
- Mar 2008
- Posts
- 2,619
This is such a typical post from you!!
You can't explain the situation, so your response is to ask more questions to obfuscate your lack of knowledge on the topic.
You're not fooling anyone!!
You're trying to pass yourself off as some high level executive - by claiming to be an "expert", when it's clearly obvious you're not. Moreover, you're on this damn website throughout the day - everyday. What kind of an employee claiming to be an expert has the time to blow on a website every single day??
I'm calling bullshit!When they say, “We must protect our democracy,” switch the word “democracy” to “bureaucracy”, and it will all make sense.
-
01-11-2025, 09:35 AM #24984
- Join Date
- Jan 2012
- Posts
- 18,689
-
01-11-2025, 10:04 AM #24985
-
01-11-2025, 10:09 AM #24986
Hmmm. That would be a heck no from me on total government controlled healthcare.
1) just imagine how much more control, power, and financial responsibility we will be giving the federal government.
2) why reward the entity that is partially responsible for the mess we are in.
I obviously don’t have the answers but government control is not. Not to saying you’re advocating, but government is not the answer. And you are correct, they would totally screw it up.
-
01-11-2025, 10:26 AM #24987
- Join Date
- Jan 2012
- Posts
- 18,689
I think there are good elements and bad elements. I don’t think it should be repealed but there are certainly elements of it I would personally change.
The good parts of getting rid of preexisting conditions even as something as silly as pregnancy was sorely needed, and I’m for more people having the ability to be covered.
With that said, I’d enhance it by offering things like catastrophic plans which went away when it was enacted. People should be free to choose their own plan design if it’s something like that, especially for younger, healthier single folk. There are other things I’d change to, but I don’t want to write a thesis.
I don’t think it’s all good or all bad, I don’t think overall it did much positively or negatively in terms of cost driving. Other elements of our healthcare system are way more to blame.
-
01-11-2025, 10:29 AM #24988
- Join Date
- Jan 2012
- Posts
- 18,689
Agree with these points. Regulation is badly needed, but like with all things government touches, I worry it would just be made worse. Something needs to be done, and it starts with getting pharma way under control. I just don’t think the government gives a crap to fix it properly. Everyone is just making too much money.
-
01-11-2025, 10:36 AM #24989
Single payer does NOT equal government run health plan (only in Great Britain)
The European and other models that perform so much better than ours at less cost, are non-profits for the most part.
They just remove the overhead of insurance companies, standardize administration, don't need PBM's and cover everybody.
You may not like the ACA, but there are millions of Americans who now have some form of insurance that didn't have it before....he went up late, and I was already up there.
-
01-11-2025, 11:16 AM #24990
Anyone who thought the ACA was going to reduce premiums doesn’t have a clue how insurance works. In theory, it could have if EVERYONE who didn’t have insurance signed up for it, but that didn’t happen. The penalty for not signing up was small enough, that all the young, healthy, people that the ACA was counting on signing up, paying premiums, and having little to no claims, didn’t. It was cheaper for them to pay the “tax”, which is the only reason it wasn’t overturned by the SCOTUS. Instead, we ended up with a lot of adverse selection, meaning most of the people who signed up were older, needed coverage, and many times had expensive preexisting conditions. The result? Claims a hell of a lot more than expected resulting in skyrocketing premiums for everyone.
As someone else said, the business model of PBMs would be illegal in most industries with the collusion and kickbacks involved. In many cases, prescriptions are cheaper when you pay the cash price without using insurance, or using a service like GoodRX. If PBMs were truly saving all the money they claim, the cash price shouldn’t be less.
Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkGolf is a relatively simple game, played by reasonably intelligent people, stupidly.
Bookmarks