>From Forbes, here's one huge reason why your healthcare costs need to
be financed with insurance:
---------------------------

In simplest terms, it works like this: Doctors and hospitals determine
"list" prices for procedures, but hardly anyone pays those fees
(unless they're uninsured).

Rather, they pay their portion of a rate negotiated by their provider
and insurer.  If the insurer is Medicare, Uncle Sam sets the rate.

Because of this system, patients typically have little idea how much
procedures actually cost and how much their insurance is willing to
pay until they receive the bill in the mail. Doctors don't have to
compete to provide good care cheaply, and both insurance companies and
the government are able to exercise considerable market power in
negotiating prices.

A recent report by the industry group America's Health Insurance Plans
inadvertently highlights the problem.

The report, meant to highlight private insurers' role in keeping down
costs, also shows how distorted the pricing system has become. One
example: An out-of-network doctor in California billed $4,500 for an
outpatient office visit for which Medicare would only pay $145.

Expensive diagnostics are lucrative for doctors and comforting for
insured patients, who can blissfully ignore the high costs that
ultimately get redistributed through higher premiums.

http://www.forbes.com/2009/08/18/health-care-prices-business-washington-reform.html

------------
SIDE NOTE: keep in mind that doctors can negotiate with any insurer
they like.  In other words, providers can be Medicare only, Medicare +
1 private insurer, or everyone.  That increase those admin costs
because now the provider has to service every claim form on the
planet, but it also means he can pull the ole switcharoo:

He can pretend to love Medicare, while giving priority appointments to
his highest negotiated rate for common services.  And it might be his
admin staff that makes this decision so he/she might not even know!

For example, if I'm an admin for Dr. Johnson I might decide I like
Medicare patients because of the *volume* of services they're likely
to need, but also choose to give priority appointments to patients
with insurance coverage X because we've got the best negotiated rate
with them.

And, of course, I'd LOVE uninsured or underinsured people because
they'll be paying my list rates.

And also keep in mind that doctors aren't employees of a hospital;
they're bringing their insurance patients there in exchange for perks
which the hospital bills back to insurance via those negotiated rates.

So that doctor that likes to commute by helicopter?  That cost shows
up in the hospital's rates.  Which raises premiums and causes
bankruptcies.

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