Tuesday, May 6, 2014

healthcare spending up...great news folks!

http://archive.delawareonline.com/usatoday/article/8570053

My first thoughts when I see this- demand is up. In economics, when demand increases, price increases. We have more people trying to access the same amount of medical services and providers as there were when demand was lower. In order to compensate for larger traffic, doctors and facilities need to increase what they charge to coordinate their wait times and get people to think twice about using that care. Also when we have insurance taking care of the bill, that means more claims are being processed and the premium dollars are going to be going sooner.
The big problem with healthcare, is people don't know what it actually costs. Insurance companies keep that a bit of a secret until after the services are complete. What's worse, is the costs vary across providers, and since you have no clue what each provider charges until after the fact, there is no real market power happening. In short, can costs really go up when there is no market movements? All we have is more people using a system . Maybe that system was under utilized before. There could actually be an economy of scale happening. Now a doctor who saw only 10 patients in a day and twiddling his thumbs and making people wait while he talks to a pharma rep, now has 12 patients and that pharma rep can't schmooze as long. Now that doctor gets to make more due to higher patient loads and gets to work for just as many hours. What a win. There are so many ways to look at this, but boy is it interesting. Little do most Americans know that with the new healthcare law, people who get subsidized costs due to their income, will not see any cost increases or decreases like those who actually pay full price for their insurance. Higher income earners and tax dollars take the brunt of all increases in premiums and will be the ones highly affected.
I think the lesson to be learned is that if we want to be insured, expect to pay more when you earn more and live your live the best you can financially so you don't go bankrupt paying for healthcare.

2 comments:

  1. I am already noticing an increase in patients in the waiting rooms.

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  2. very good article and very beneficial, continue to work for the common good, thank you
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