Government Can’t Fix Health Care Because They Created The Problem


medicare-medicaidI am going to share what this one woman’s (my) life experience is to help support my argument with regards to government involvement in health care. I’m doing this because I want the government to get out of my healthcare and stay out forever, amen.

Backing up a long way to when I was raised in a thriving middle class family in a small town, I will just say this: medical care was accessible and affordable, insurance was mostly for catastrophic circumstances, nursing care was wonderful, medical care was personal, and we knew who our medical professionals were. People did not go to the Dr. or the hospital unless there was a real need. By real, I mean something that could not be fixed with homeopathic remedies. The only checkups required had to do with schools for athletic participation. Vaccinations were required to participate in schools for the sake of eradicating infectious diseases. I knew of no one who could not afford or access healthcare if they needed it.

Flash forward to the 1970′s. After Johnson in the ’60′s enacted Medicare and Medicaid, insurance rates rose and government regulations began to intervene in the medical profession. Granting that medical technology advancements would cause prices to rise somewhat, and inflation would effect the prices as well, the costs to families was still mostly within reach. The birth of my first child cost $185.00 for three days in the hospital in 1973. The entire price of bringing him into the world, including the preliminary pregnancy checkups was under $500.00.

Flash forward to 1986 when I had two young children and went through a divorce. From that point on, for 13 years, I lived without health insurance. By 1991 I owned a small business with 3 part-time employees, 2 full-time employees, and 50 independent sales reps who were commission only reps. There was no way at that time my business could afford a health coverage policy for such a small pool of employees. Insurance rates were escalating yearly. Even then, one could still afford, out of pocket, regular checkups. As I recall, during those 13 years. it was $18.00 to $24.00 to see the Dr. for a virus or a cold with a nasal infection. During those years I had a broken leg (can’t remember the cost of that with emergency room and follow up care) and a minor surgery that cost around $2000.00. The most difficult of costs for me at the time were dental crowns that cost $300.00 per. I needed 3 of them during those years. I would have loved to have a “catastrophic” insurance policy with a high deductible of $5,000.00, or something like that, but could not find one that either existed or that I could afford. ( Being a person of faith, I’m sure the Good Lord protected me from that “catastrophe,” so I could continue to raise my children and take care of my family.) Other than that concern of an unaffordable catastrophe, I was perfectly willing and happy to pay for all of my medical care out of pocket. I would still be happy to do that if the costs were still as affordable as they used to be.

Flash forward again to the early 2000′s. The cost of going to the Dr. for a cold, infection, virus treatment, or non-life threatening events had gone up to over $60.00. (Now I think it might be $80.00 or more.) I married in 1999 and due to my husband’s employer policy, I once again had insurance coverage. Dental crowns today are $800.00. (From $300.00 to $800.00 in less than 20 years’ time. Whew!) Insurance rates are high and higher. What I could not pay for insurance earlier in my life is now only affordable because of employer co-pays in a larger insurance pool.

So what has caused the cost of medical care to go out of reach for most people? Someone please tell me? I’ll give you my opinion.

One would expect some inflationary rises in medical care just because that exists in all of our monetary policies. You could look at supply and demand, with more people and fewer medical professionals. Those two aspects would increase prices to some degree, no doubt. Nothing costs the same as it did even a few years ago. But what would make healthcare unaffordable for most people. As you can tell from my story above, insurance was already out of reach for a relatively young small business owner by the 1990′s. But in the 1950′s, 1960′s, and 1970′s my Dad was a small business owner with under 4 employees and he could easily afford health insurance for his family.

Throw in all of the advances in medical technologies, the increasing population (demand), but then, throw in Medicare and Medicaid. Every medical bill you and I pay has built in it an increase to cover the costs of patients who are under those two programs. Every use of equipment has that built in cost as well. Yes, you might say, wait a minute, “Aren’t people paying into those programs through taxes and withholding?” Obviously government programs have skewed the patient cost ratio because the answer to that is, “Yes, paying, but not covering enough.” Why? We were in much better shape on medical expenses before Medicare and Medicaid. The government (Lyndon Johnson and Co.) wrecked the system. Medicare is a disaster in much the same way Social Security is a disaster due to demographics. The government socialist program of Medicare has done what all socialist programs do, i.e. intervene in the market in such a way as to make everyone miserably poorer.

Liberty Issues recalls the Clinton era debate on government run healthcare:

“Let’s go back to 1965, when Congress passed Medicare and Medicaid.

Most of the elderly already had health insurance. The poor were treated at city, county and charity hospitals. The right to emergency treatment, regardless of insurance, had been enacted under Eisenhower. Medical care was available to only slightly fewer people than now. But medical costs were less than half today’s level – 5.9% of the economy.(1)

Since 1965, health costs have more than doubled, to 14% of GDP, and are projected to triple by the year 2000 (2). Government now pays over 43% of all medical costs (3) – and shifts billions more to private insurers. From a 1991 CBO report: Medicare was underpaying hospital average costs by 12%. Medicaid was underpaying hospitals by 12%., and paying doctors 31% less than Medicare rates. (4)

When government underpays, providers shift their costs to private insurers and cash customers.”

Reason TV, in an article on Medicare and Medicaid causing the rise in health care costs, said:

“The rapid rise in health care costs is primarily the consequence of government policies.”

It makes me think of the shopping admonition: “You break it, You own it.” The progressive leftists live by that phrase. They break everything and then they own everything. But my healthcare is mine. I don’t want some progressive leftist government bureaucrat making those decisions for me, or even knowing anything about me. They broke it. They should never be trusted with your healthcare or mine. Ever. They break everything. And they will break you and me and our nation with government run healthcare. They already have. The answer is to get them out of it.

    (1)”The Government’s Role in the Health Care Industry: Past, Present and Future,” Economic Commentary published by the Cleveland Fed, 6/1/94, by Charles T. Carlstrom.
    (2)Cited in #1. ”Projections of National Health Expendirures,” CBO study, 10/92.
    (3)Cited in #1, ”Trends in Health Spending, and Update,” CBO study, 6/93.
    (4)Cited in #1, ”Rising Health Care Costs: Causes, Implications and Strategies,” CBO study, 4/91.

Editor’s Note: Chery presents what I’ve been saying all along. Whether it’s Obamacare or Romneycare, it will continue to cause costs to increase and not really allow a free market to work and a free market will bring down costs.





  • LeSellers

    Any government intrusion into the medical field is harmful.

    It’s harmful to doctors. Others have noted that MediDon’tCare doesn’t even reimburse enough to cover costs.

    It’s harmful to taxpayers. No brainer. Even Roberts agrees with this one.

    It’s harmful to patients, as we see here.

    The only ones it benefits are politicians, bureaucrats and “Big Pharma”. They all get money, power, and self-satisfaction.

    In the early 1960s, before MediDon’tCare, the average senior citizen paid ~20% of his income on medical care and treatment. Today, the average senior citizen pays ~20% of his income on medical care and treatments. The millions billions we have sent to Washington in MediDon’tCare taxes have all gone to bureaucracies and pharmaceutical companies. No senior citizens were helped by this assault on freedom and wallets.

    Mr. O’bama, where are the full-time Jobs? (And, while we’re at it, where are the war-zone absentee ballots, Mr. Commander-in-Chief?)

    • ERB

      And It’s going up the 1st of the year!!!
      The Medicare payroll tax is currently 2.9 percent on all wages and self-employment profits. Under this tax hike, wages and profits exceeding $200,000 ($250,000 in the case of married couples) will face a 3.8 percent rate instead. This is a direct marginal income tax hike on small business owners, who are liable for self-employment tax in most cases. The table below compares current law vs. the Obamacare Medicare Payroll Tax Hike:
      http://www.theblaze.com/stories/these-are-the-top-5-worst-taxes-obamacare-will-impose-in-2013/

  • TLady62

    I agree with this article 100%. Who better to understand the medical needs of an individual and his or her family than that individual? Since when did we deem the Government Bureaucrat more intelligent and in tune with what is best? This is absolute insanity. And it chafes my hide when I hear Republicans (and even some from the T.E.A. Party) suggesting we should “save” Medicare and Social Security. What should happen is to allow those Seniors 55+ to remain on the program until they pass on, those 54-35 receive tax credits, and the 34 and under not put into the system at all. This should also be duplicated with Social Security. I’m fed up with giving politicians slush funds to reward their buddies on K Street with.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Bob-Marshall/100001163952013 Bob Marshall

    The government can’t fix problems they create, they are the problem. the more things change in government the more they same the same. Only the names change from time to time. I am amazed how many people still believe we actually have a two party system. In name only.

    • LeSellers

      Government can’t solve problems they did not create, either.

      The only legitimate function of government is to protect individuals rights. Ours (and very few, if any, others) is failing miserably at this; quite the contrary: the government itself is the single biggest offender, trampling rights left and (pardon the expression) right.

      The first imperative of government is to grow. Bureaucrats and politicians gain more power and more money by having a larger role in people’s lives. To accomplish this, these “public ‘servants’” create problems (or proclaim non-issues to be le crise du jour), and then tell people that they, and only they, can solve it.

      This was the case in the early XIX when Horace Mann imported Prussian schools from the Kaiser. He said, with no evidence to back him up, that children were illiterate and that only by forcing parents to send the their children to his indoctrination centers, could this problem be solved. He went so far as to use the state militia to march children, at point of bayonet, past the private schools they had been attending to the unused government-run, tax-funded welfare school in Barnswell (or Barnstable — I keep forgetting which, no matter how often I look it up), Massachusetts, in the early 1880s. (For the details, see Sheldon Richman’s Separating School and State or visit http://www.sepschool.org.)

      It was the same with antiSocial inSecurity in the 30s: FDR didn’t have a single serious study that showed that old people were impoverished and needed a govenrment program to save them. (Had he, why wait years to start paying off?)

      The real goal for Mann was to get students to reject their parents’ religions, to, in his words, “divorce children from their parents”. For Roosevelt, the aim was a decades-long Democrat majority in Congress. Both men got their wishes. USmerica paid a heavy price in each case.

      Mr. O’bama, where are the full-time Jobs? (And, while we’re at it, where are the war-zone absentee ballots, Mr. Commander-in-Chief?)

  • R.Young

    The Government doesn’t need to fix health care all good citizens should remember the words they love to here “I’m from the government I’m here to help.”