@phazzedout
A sentiment that many share... is it really that difficult to demand a basic amount of healthcare, for all?
@ kinley3 and joejv4
From what I can tell, ObamaCare seems to be attempting to model itself after the Dutch system.
http://www.minvws.nl/en/themes/health-insurance-system/
The Dutch System works kinda like this (from what I can gather):
- Mandatory insurance via private insurance companies
- The lowest income groups and children are given government money to buy insurance
- All insurance companies are not allowed to deny coverage to customers, nor cherry-pick who they will insure. If the customer asks for a policy, they must cover the customer.
- All insurance companies offer the same basic plan. Some insurance companies offer supplemental insurance to cover "luxuries" such as private hospital rooms at extra cost.
- If a customer does not use his/her insurance this year, s/he gets what amounts to a rebate.
- All doctors have access to a highly secure database of records, which allow sharing of information between doctors, to facilitate history-taking and treatment.
- Free competition between insurance companies keeps costs low, since all companies offer the same basic plan. Some competition exists for optional supplemental insurance plans.
- Insurance companies are obligated to offer the same price to their customers, regardless of the customer, regardless of their condition. ie a single company cannot offer cheap insurance to "healthy" customers and expensive insurance to "high-risk" customers
- Insurance companies receive a government allowance to take on "high risk" customers.
Unfortunately, ObamaCare doesn't sufficiently answer some questions I have about differences between this system (which works in the Netherlands) and the proposed system.
- The Netherlands is pretty small, but the US is huge... do we expect it to work on a larger scale?
- Is there a basic plan that all insurance companies offer? Or does the healthcare biz still have to hassle with the details of hundreds of different plans? (Drives up costs!)
- Will there continue to be "deductibles"??
- Is there price-control within each insurance company, or do "healthy" customers get cheaper prices?
- Will there still be insurance physicals to assess the healthiness of a customer before they offer a plan?
- Is there any incentive to the customers to "keep in shape?"
- Is there any incentive to the insurance companies to take on "high risk" individuals?
- Is there any attempt AT ALL to lower healthcare prices? Or do we assume beating insurance companies on the head will drive down the astronomical costs that healthcare providers charge?
For me, ObamaCare seems more penalty-based than incentive-based. I suppose given the circumstances, fines and penalties are more feasible, considering the debt, than tons of handouts. Still, vinegar catches less flies than honey.