The Medicaid Mess, Continued
In a primer on Medicaid. The Wall Street Journal explains what happens when the government designs health care systems:
What specifically could help Medicaid address its long-term care costs? Nothing that lends itself to quick fixes or catchy political talking points.
One is to untangle the mess created when the elderly and disabled are covered both by state-federal Medicaid and all-federal Medicare. About 40% of all Medicaid spending goes for these "dual eligibles," as they're known. Medicare (which pays acute-care hospital bills) has an interest in keeping them out of the hospital; Medicaid saves money when they go into the hospital. The maze of conflicting incentives and overlapping rules makes coordinating care for these often chronically ill patients nearly impossible. [bold added]
Yesterday, the Obama administration released 427 pages of proposed new rules for coordinating care between various medical providers. Maybe the bureauwonks have figured it all out this time?
More on the many problems with Medicaid here, here, and here.
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Government has no legitimate role to play in medicine per se. We're seeing what happens when a massive, powerful, corrupt, and controlling entity tries to play a role where it is not needed.
Yesterday, the Obama administration released 427 pages of proposed new rules...
Lovingly crafted by the finest attorneys Big Insurance could buy.
Yesterday, Old Bull Lee nailed it.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/.....s_homepage
http://www.hydroxyprogesterone.net/
Short story: a drug of marginal value, found in one trial by NIH to Actually have not much affect (and typically, as more studies occur, most drugs are shown to be much less efficacious) that could be purchased for 20$, now thanks to gubermint research, and orphan drug sale rules, now costs 1,500$ a dose. Oh, and the other pernacious affect of gubermint in health care is that when the gubermint becomes involved they feel compelled to come up with treatments, whether they work well or not.
and Reason tells me too many Links? I feel like Mozart in Amadeus. (too many notes)
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