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I'm certainly no expert in healthcare but I think the billing process takes
a very large chunk of the dollar paid. I used to go to an old dentist that had no staff and took only cash. If credit was needed it was from him. He wrote it in his notebook and you paid when you came back. I assume he sent you packing if the bill got too large and he felt you could pay. I do know that he wrote it off, if he knew you couldn't pay. His prices were about 50% of what other dentists charged and my father skipped the dental insurance offered by his work because there was no need. My current dentist has a full time staff of at least 4 that deal with billing because the insurance companies are such a pain to deal with (busy father-son office). So for 2 dentists and 4 hygienists he needs 4 people to do billing. That has to add up to a good percentage of the incoming cash to be eaten up in overhead related directly to the problems with collection. I don't know what the big picture solution may be but I was reading an article about a few doctors offices that have gone to a cash only system and dropped their prices accordingly. The article stated that a large number of their patients were self employed people that were more than happy to switch their coverage to catastrophic and pay cash for normal office visits and tests. The upside was the doctors actually pocketed more per patient and were able to cut their patient load to a reasonable level which provided a better level of service for their patients. .. "Bill Tuthill" wrote in message ... Tinkerntom wrote: Hillary Care was a startup program that would have cost several trillion by itself, with no guarantee that it would work, and a history of big government boondoggles and porkbarrel politics supporting programs that don't work. If I remember right, they estimated 1.7 trillion, and politician estimates are always low when they are the ones trying to sell the program! But what is another 500 billion +/-, we would have gotten, mediocre medical care, by doctors who gave up really caring, after standing in long lines, waiting for our slice of the American Pie. So how is that different from our current health care system? The current employer-based insurance-reimbursement system is a shambles. A single-payer system could very well result in a lower percentage of GDP being paid for health care. In 1990 the US spent more on health care per capita than any other western nation, and by 1996 spent even more as a % of GDP. Total 1990 Healthcare Expenditures Nation Per Capita Percent ========================================== United States $2,566 12.1 (1996=13.6%) Canada 1,770 9.3 France 1,532 8.8 Sweden 1,451 8.6 Germany 1,486 8.1 Switzerland 1,633 7.7 Italy 1,236 7.7 Norway 1,184 7.4 Japan 1,171 6.5 United Kingdom 972 6.2 [ http://www.corporatism.netfirms.com/universal.htm ] |
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