How would you handle the 47 million uninsured? How do we change the use of the Emergency Room as a place for everyday medical care? What about pre-existing conditions? What would the law say about drug companies selling for less elsewhere and prohibiting Americans from going elsewhere to buy them for less? What about bankruptcies due to medical costs? Wouldn't 50 different state laws make it difficult for companies to compete efficiently across so many state lines and, in fact, make insurance more costly if they chose to compete nationwide? Would rate increases beyond inflation be tolerated? How much profit is enough? Would jail terms become the n orm for price fixing and price gouging? Does realclear have the answers?
1) Those who choose to be uninsured would remain so, though I would encourage the promotion of HSA accounts as they work great for the young, single, healthy individuals. That is about a third of your 47 million.
2) The illegal immigrants would continue to be uninsured... though we would continue to provide them with emergency care as a humanitarian gesture. That is another third of your 47 million.
3) The remaining third... this is where we should focus our attention. First, we have to get costs under control. The current plans being proposed do not do that. Then we can subsidize their care. We do not need to nationalize health care to address this portion of the population.
4) Those that use the emergency care as you describe are the ones in numbers 2 & 3 above.
5) Coverage should be portable. That way if an individual changes jobs they do not lose coverage and do not have to re-qualify for insurance. That said, if you make insurance companies take everyone, then what is to stop people from only buying insurance when they get sick? What incentive would I have to be covered when I do not need it?
6) As for Bankruptcies... again, this is why we have to address the COSTS of health care and not just rushing a plan to make sure everyone is 'covered'.
7) Yes, 50 sets of regulations make it expensive and difficult for insurers to compete. That is why I stated we need a normalized set of regulations. It is the current status quo that has allowed the monopolies (or duopolies) to form.
8) As for the drug companies charging more here. The funny thing is... this is a DEMOCRAT concept. It is simply one that is taken across borders. Dems want the rich to subsidize the poor.... that is what we do. WE subsidize poorer countries. If a drug company isn't allowed to recoup costs, they have no incentive to create new drugs. Given that about 90% never even make it to the FDA, they have to recoup the costs of failures as well. People have to get over the mindset that we are 'entitled' to every new drug and treatment the second it is developed.