Dick
Morris video
Let the
States Opt Out. Nothing in the US Constitution allows the federal government to
run healthcare, but the 10th Amendment would send it to the States
to decide if they want to deal with it.
A clever solution.
A Way Out Of Health Care
Impasse: Leave It Up To States
Published on on
DickMorris.com on June 29, 2017
Senator Mitch
McConnell's inability to cobble together a bill that 50 Republicans can support
replacing ObamaCare reflects the diversity of health care needs, demographics,
economic levels, and opinions on government's role in the nation itself. One size does not fit all, particularly where
health care is concerned.
The key to making this
work is to let each state tailor the program to its own needs.
President Trump, Speaker
Ryan, and Senator McConnell should unite on a four-part solution to the current
imbroglio:
1. Leave it up to each state to decide its level
of participation in the new health care system.
Use the federal legislation to create a menu of options. Then pay the states the cash equivalent of
the services and subsidies it is opting not to take under the federal program.
The need for a
state-by-state approach is evidenced by how about half of the country opted to
participate in the Medicaid expansion while the other stayed out (even with no
federal payment of the cash equivalent).
2. Curb Medicaid Spending Through Co-Payments
The Medicaid program was
conceived for poor people and any question of co- payments or deductibles was
ruled out at the outset because of the poverty of the population being
served. But now as Obama has expanded it
into a lower- middle class entitlement (with people with incomes up to $85,000
eligible in some states), co-payments become feasible.
The use of emergency
rooms has swelled under the Medicaid expansion, often rising by 50 percent or
more. The ER has become the new
community center where people can congregate out of the rain. Charging a $10 copayment at the door should
reduce the utilization significantly, lowering the cost substantially with no
social injustice.
3. Delete the List of Required Services
The reason CBO thinks so
many people will be unable to afford insurance under the new bill is that it
keeps the list of required services that must be offered under insurance plans
to qualify for subsidy. 60-year-old men
will still have to have maternity benefits.
We will all have to have addiction treatment and mental health
coverage. Again, one size has to fit
all. Get rid of this requirement and let
the states design individual packages that they feel best suit the needs of
their citizens.
4. Expand the Number of Doctors
The fundamental problem
with health care is that we are seeking to expand the utilization of medical
and health services with no concomitant rise in the number of professionals who
must deliver them. In fact, legal limits
on the number of residencies nationally hold down the number of doctors at a
time when we face a looming shortage of primary care physicians that will only
get worse.
In short, use the Tenth
Amendment to deal with this problem, like the Founders intended.
Dick Morris, 6/29/17
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