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  National
Bayer Renews Bid for US Supreme Court to Curb Roundup Cases
Hedge Funds Hunt Deals in Risk Scenarios Too Costly for Insurers
World Insurance Associates Acquires Royalty Insurance Services in California
Oracle Tells Clients of Second Recent Hack, Log-In Data Stolen
  East
People Moves: Plymouth Rock Home Names Zygmunt Chief Operating 0fficer
Maryland Lawmakers Send Bill Limiting Sexual Abuse Liabilities to Governor
Maine Approves 9.6% Decrease in Workers' Compensation Costs
Staffers Face Allegations Related to Abuse of Pennsylvania Charter School Students
  Midwest
Meta Plans Nearly $1 Billion Data Center Project in Wisconsin
$2M Settlement Reached in Death of Young Woman at North Dakota Jail
Microsoft Pulls Back on Data Centers From Chicago to Jakarta
Kansas' Key Insurance Placed Into Liquidation
  Southeast
Consultant Sheds Some Light on MGA Fee Report at Florida Legislative Hearing
South Carolina DOI Names Noga, Formerly With GuideOne, as Captives Director
Deadly Storms Bring Flooding and Destruction to Southeast, Midwest
North Carolina Appeals Court Won't Budge on Intrepid Insurance Name Mix-up
  Southcentral
Chevron Ordered to Pay $744M for Damaging Louisiana Wetlands
Texas Judge Awards $6.6M to Former Aides Fired by AG Paxton
People Moves: Conyers Joins Brown & Riding's Environmental Practice Leadership
Dallas Fed Warns of Slowing Growth in Trade-Reliant Texas
  West
Death Toll From Los Angeles Wildfires Reaches 30
People Moves: BTIS Promotes Keefe to SVP, Head of Operations
Newsom Says California to Seek Tariff Exemptions From Allies
People Moves: Bayern Joins Alliant Insurance Services as SVP in Denver
  International
Women in UK Financial Services Still Earn a Fifth Less Than Men
Buyer-Friendly April Reinsurance Renewal Bodes Well for Mid-Year Renewals: Brokers
Peak Re Granted License to Open Reinsurance Branch in India
Leaked Files Raise Fears About Shell Oil Production Fleet, Years After Devastating Spill
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Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Pay more, get less! What’s going on?

Just when it looks as though you can make ends meet, health insurance costs go up again. A growing percentage of every paycheck is going on health and, for the most part, you’re getting less for your dollars. The result? Every month, more people give up on rising premiums and drop into the ranks of the uninsured. Worse, if big bills hit, people face personal bankruptcy. This was mostly affecting low-income working families and those with chronic conditions requiring more continuous treatment like diabetes or depression. Now, it’s starting to bite the middle class. Employers are also feeling the pinch and more companies are dropping medical cover or reducing the benefits packages, and introducing wellness programs with teeth. This combination is placing a growing burden on taxpayers who fund Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program.

Why is this happening? Well, let’s come down to a short list. The economy is not in great shape. The population is ageing and, as people get older, more goes wrong with their bodies. New technology is producing new treatments but that is often more expensive. The pharmaceutical industry keeps raising prices to maintain its profitability. Put all the causes together and you have a broken system. The real problems start with the “entitlement” trap. Because people pay their health insurance premiums out of their own pockets, they feel they’re entitled to get all the medical care they like. This leads to a significant amount of waste as health providers supply expensive services on demand regardless whether those services are needed. Mostly, the providers are driven by the need to make profits to keep their investors happy, and not by the patients’ needs. This makes general medical care unaffordable and shifts ever more of the costs on to the insurance companies and the tax payers. Health insurance premiums therefore go up. The Republican approach is to reduce taxes which makes funding public health provision more difficult.

If people are uninsured, they wait longer to see a physician or go to an emergency room when their conditions have worsened. What could have been treated early on for less money suddenly becomes a bigger bill as costs are higher in emergency rooms. Why are costs higher? Because a significant proportion of patients cannot pay. The hospitals costs therefore have to be recovered from those who have the money or still carry health insurance. The moral of this story is for political parties to have the will to fix the problems.

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