Article

How to Get Timely, Affordable Health Care

Topic: Medical Advice and ResourcesPublished December 17, 2019

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 589 legacy views

To get what you want, you must first decide what that is. If you believe media reports on healthcare, the public wants to save money and to have health insurance. Money and insurance are not our primary healthcare desires. What we want is simple and universal: access to timely affordable health care. Federal politicians have been promising to deliver timely affordable care to Americans for more than half a century. Their repeated "fixes" have brought healthcare to its present sorry state-spending too much and not getting care. How NOT to get timely, affordable health care: In 1965, Washington passed Medicare promising it would provide all the care needed by retirees. After 50 years of federal (mis)management, a 2018 internal audit projected that the Medicare Hospital Trust Fund will be insolvent, "broke," by 2026. Within seven years, seniors won't be able to get in-patient care. Also in 1965, Congress created Medicaid, a no-charge-to-patient program supposedly administered by the states for the "disabled, aged, and blind." Today, Medicaid has enrolled 74 million Americans, 23 percent of the U.S. population, including millions of healthy, able-bodied adults and 30 million healthy children. Enrollees' access to care is limited because one third of U.S. physicians refuse to see new Medicaid patients due to bureaucratic hassle and low, fixed and highly delayed payments by the government. As for timeliness of care, 752 residents of Illinois died while waiting for Medicaid authorization for care. Such "death by queueing" is not limited to Medicaid. With government-supplied Tricare coverage for our armed forces, "47,000 veterans may have died" waiting in line for care. EMTALA (Emergency Medical Transport and Labor Act of 1986) was Washington's solution to patient dumping-transferring uninsured patients from one hospital to another. The law required essentially all hospitals to treat patients who presented to an emergency room regardless of whether the patient had a payment source. EMTALA's unintended adverse consequence was creation of the unfunded mandate, responsible for hundreds of closures of rural hospitals as well as cost-shifting by those still open. In 2010 came the Affordable Care Act, which achieved the precise opposite of its name. Insurance premiums-unaffordable before the ACA-doubled after it was implemented. As for access to care, Obamacare increased maximum average wait times from 99 days to 176 days to see a primary care physician. The latest proposed fix for healthcare, Medicare-for-All, continues Washington's tradition of one-size-fits-all, Father Knows Best mandates. It would prohibit private insurance, lower already low payments to doctors (further extends delays), and would spend $30-40 trillion we don't have. The combined GDP of all nations on earth is $87 trillion. The way NOT to get timely affordable health care is to expect Washington to deliver. How to GET timely, affordable health care: Having timely affordable care starts with StatesCare: take control away from Washington and return authority where it belongs, We the People in their states. Two benefits will quickly accrue. First, we can recoup more than one trillion "healthcare" dollars currently being wasted on federal bureaucracy and use it for patient care. Second, when Americans are no longer forced to obey federal healthcare mandates, they can choose the structure that best suits to their local needs and resources. The system most likely to provide timely affordable health care is market-based medicine. This approach reconnects patient with doctor without a third-party payer making decisions. Patients shop for and pay for care. Thus, they have a strong incentive to economize. Providers compete for patients' (buyers') dollars, driving prices down. Add a safety net for the medically fragile and truly impoverished, and that's it. Details and financial modeling are available in "Curing the Cancer in U.S. Healthcare: StatesCare and Market-Based Medicine." There is virtually no bureaucracy. It puts patients are back in control of their care and their money. Finally, Americans can get timely, affordable health care. To know more, Visit the Website at https://www.deanewaldman.com/

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

A Growing Challenge in Diabetes Care Across the country, millions of people living with diabetes rely on test strips and other supplies to monitor their health. These items are essential, but they often accumulate in households for various reasons. Sometimes prescriptions change, sometimes people switch to different brands, and sometimes supplies arrive in larger quantities than needed. What was once a lifeline can quickly become a drawer full of unused materials. The Problem

February 17, 2026

Article

Long clinic days often spill into late nights, leaving physicians buried under hours of unfinished documentation. Instead of focusing on patients, much of your time disappears into typing, charting, and catching up on notes. It’s no surprise that administrative overload has become one of the biggest drivers of physician burnout today. This is where AI medical scribes come in. By automating clinical documentation in real time, they give healthcare providers the freedom to fo

September 9, 2025

Article

If you’re scheduled for your first root canal treatment, you might be feeling a mix of anxiety and relief. Anxiety about what to expect during the procedure, and relief that you’re on your way to alleviating discomfort caused by a tooth infection or decay. Here’s a comprehensive guide to help you understand the root canal process, what you can expect, and how best to prepare for it. Understanding Root Canal TreatmentrnA root canal is a dental procedure designed to clear

February 21, 2025

Article

The role of an anesthesiologist is critical in modern medicine, serving as the guardian of patient safety during surgical procedures. With this immense responsibility comes the necessity of having robust malpractice insurance . For anesthesiologists, the implications of malpractice claims can be profound, making understanding the associated costs and benefits of malpractice insurance essential. Understanding Malpractice Insurance Malpractice insurance is a specific type of pr

February 7, 2025