Government’s meddling in the
healthcare business has been disastrous from the get-go.
Since 1910, when Republican William Taft gave in to
the American Medical Association’s lobbying efforts, most administrations have passed new
healthcare regulations. With each new law or set of new regulations,
restrictions on the healthcare market went further, until, at some point in the
1980s, people began to notice the cost of healthcare had skyrocketed.
This is not an accident. It’s by design.
As regulators allowed special interests to help design policy,
everything from medical education to drugs became dominated by virtual
monopolies that wouldn’t have otherwise existed if not for government’s notion
that intervening in people’s lives is part of their job.
But how did costs go up, and why didn’t this happen overnight?
It wasn’t until 1972 that President Richard Nixon restricted the
supply of hospitals by requiring institutions to provide a certificate-of-need.
Just a couple years later, in 1974, the president also
strengthened unions for hospital workers by boosting pension
protections, which raise the cost for both those who run hospitals and
taxpayers in cases of institutions that rely on government subsidies. This move
also helped force doctors who once owned and ran their own hospitals to merge
into provider monopolies. These, in turn, are often only able to keep their
doors open with the help of government subsidies.
This artificial restriction on healthcare access had yet another
harsh consequence: overworked doctors.
But they weren’t the first to feel the consequences hit home. As
the number of hospitals and clinics became further restricted and the
healthcare industry became obsessed
with simple compliance, patients were the first to feel abandoned.
According to Business Insider, the average doctor has thousands
of patients, and each visit lasts less than 30 minutes.
Prior to the government’s slow but absolute control of health care,
the doctor listened to the patient — many old timers will confirm — even if they couldn’t afford it. Few
were turned down. Now, doctors can hardly recall the
conversations they have with the people they are supposed to be looking after.
As President Barack Obama pushed further restrictions on the
insurance industry by touting his Affordable Care Act as a piece of legislation
that would make insurance more affordable — ignoring that insurance
isn’t the same as care —
the overall cost of coverage also increased over the years. And as a result, a
new group of independent healthcare professionals went on to ignite one of the
most liberating revolutions in recent U.S. history.
Direct Primary Care: Removing Artificial Restrictions from the
Picture
Business Insider chronicles
the story behind Dr. Bryan Hill’s practice.
As a pediatrician, Hill spent most of his life dealing with
insurance companies. But one day after answering an impromptu house call, he
decided he had had enough.
That’s when he learned about primary care clinics. These offices
remain open by giving patients memberships in exchange for a monthly fee that
covers most of what the average patient requires. As a result, the patient pays
the doctor directly, and neither party is forced to navigate the complicated
rules imposed by insurance companies.
In September 2016, Hill opened his practice in South Carolina,
and he’s not planning on going back. But he’s just one of many. As ACA became
increasingly suffocating to patients and providers, many doctors ditched the
system altogether while others went into the primary care business.
On average, members of these direct primary care clinics pay as
little as $60 per month, with couples paying about $150. Without having to
handle heavily regulated middlemen, patients have a clearer picture of how much
they spend on their health by being members of such practices. They also enjoy
the peace of mind of knowing their doctor.
Studies have already demonstrated that when there is good
communication between doctors and patients, treatments are more efficient. This is not simply because
doctors are giving patients attention, but also because they are able to tailor
a certain treatment to that patient’s lifestyle, health, and activities.
By removing the government entirely from the picture and
allowing patients and doctors to once again deal directly with one another, the
practice of embracing primary care helps to illustrate the importance of an
individual and personalized approach to health care.
For governments and government bureaucrats, everything is dealt
with from a collective perspective — after all, if all you have is a hammer,
everything looks like a nail.
When government gets involved in healthcare, everything looks
like another number, another statistic. But what bureaucrats fail to understand
is that they do not possess all the answers. Only a doctor who is paying
attention will be better able to help the individual patient — not a few
thousand new regulations.
In essence, what this growing movement seems to suggest is that,
even if doctors and patients are unaware of the interventionist forces driving
the cost of doing business and receiving medical attention, they’re still
driven into the open arms of the free market at some point or another. In the
end, needs speak louder than ideology.