Part of the reason US medical costs are so high is that the uninsured go to county hospital emergency rooms that are required to treat them regardless of insurance, thereby jacking up the cost of what might be a routine visit to a family doctor into a emergency room visit that's about 5x higher in cost. There are additional side effects of this system:
> Because of the lack of insurance, these people wait until their illness get so bad that that they have to go to the ER
> Which further jacks up the cost of what might have been a trivial thing to treat at an earlier time
> This delay in treatment has the potential of getting other people sick, who may, or may not, have insurance. In either case, more people get sick than is necessary
> The additional demand on ER resources means that critically ill patients wind up competing with those that shouldn't have had to go to the ER for those resources
> This further means that county ERs have to have additional staffing to treat all the extra patients
And, we pay for all of that through property or other taxes. In effect, we are creating a single payer system with a guaranteed poor outcome, because we pay for those services at ER rates, and have to spend even more because the patients are sicker than they could have been had they had insurance.
The bottom line is that those that have insurance are still paying for the uninsured, and the rates that we pay are higher because non-county hospitals are likewise building in operating margin to cover the non-paying patients. My son stayed in the hospital for 2 days for pneumonia and the "bill" as $10k, which is an insane amount of money.
TTFN
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