WaPo | “The key takeaway message really is most people are in good health;
they don’t spend a lot of money, and yet it’s important to have them be
part of our insurance system. If they’re left out of the system, we’re
not going to have the funds to take care of people who are very sick,”
said Marc Berk, a health policy researcher and contributing editor of
Health Affairs who led the analysis.
But Tom Miller, a resident
fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, disagreed. He said that the
study is based on quick and incomplete snapshots of health and argued
that it is yet another way to divert from the health-care discussion we
should be having: about how to rein in spending. Using this data to
argue about where to get premium dollars from — from the pockets of the
well or the sick — simply allows the system to grow ever bigger and prop
up an even-more-expensive medical system.
“We
all get diverted by hoping we can hide the bill under someone else’s
pillow,” Miller said. “I think that’s the political argument you hear —
these low spenders, we’re scared to death they might catch on to the
fact they’re getting taken to the cleaners” by being forced to buy
expensive health insurance they don’t need.
According to House Speaker Paul Ryan earlier this month, the inequality in spending and sickness is the “fatal conceit of Obamacare.” Ryan used a graph that showed that chronically ill people are a narrow slice of the population, but a big driver of spending.
“The whole idea of Obamacare is the people … who are healthy pay for
the people who are sick; it’s not working and that’s why it’s in a death
spiral,” Ryan said.
As critics have
pointed out, this was part of how the Affordable Care Act was designed,
and it is how insurance traditionally works. The auto insurance of
people who don’t get into car crashes helps foot the bill for those who
do. The premiums from homeowners who never file a claim help underwrite
the insurance payouts for those whose houses burn down. It’s the same
for health, and a major challenge in the exchanges, where people buy
individual plans with government subsidies, has been getting enough
healthy people to sign up to keep the premiums reasonable for everyone. Fist tap Dale.
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