Joey D
Premium
- 47,302
- Lakes of the North, MI
- GTP_Joey
- GTP Joey
That's me. I'm just one big expense to the healthcare system even though without what I do, the hospital wouldn't be able to get paid.They are required for the business to run but don't generate income for the business.
There are a ton of reasons why healthcare costs in the US are asinine. You can point the finger at the government, though, for one of the biggest reasons. Medicare and Medicaid are terrible, expensive, and don't work very well, but they're what a majority of unhealthy and old people have, so health systems cater to them. While I'm not entirely in favour of doing away with Medicare and Medicaid, it needs to be revamped, but thanks to lobbying and politicians needing their "donations" you won't see it change that much.
Another big reason is malpractice. People sue health systems for everything. Did your 101-year-old mother die in the hospital? Lawsuit. Did your 15-week premature baby die in the hospital? Lawsuit. Did you ignore the doctor's instructions and end up paralyzed after a procedure? Lawsuit. Even if the health system is on track to win, it's often cheaper to pay out instead of going to court over it. Civil courts need to better triage healthcare lawsuits because while there are definitely screw-ups from the hospital that require compensation, much of the time, it's just someone not understanding why their loved one died.
After that, there's a sizable percentage of people who just don't pay for their healthcare, even if they're able to. They claim that they're "poor" and then proceed to pay $10 a month on a $100k heart surgery bill. On top of that you have people who treat the ED like it's an urgent care. Have a sore throat? ED. Break a fingernail? ED. Skinned knee? ED. It's stupid and costly while tying up the ED for people who actually need it. The absolute worst offenders of this too are people on government provided healthcare, especially the Native population. Where I work, there's a huge Ute population and they use the ED like it's their family practice. There's nothing we can do about it either. Same goes for the homeless. They claim they have chest pain, get all these tests run in the ED, and really all they want is a bed and some food. Of course they're unable to pay too.
We write off millions in charity care every month and all that does is make it more difficult to run the health system and provide quality care. Meanwhile, everything is getting more expensive and no one wants to work for peanuts, especially medical staff who's gone to school and had some stupid amount of debt.
The problem though is that I haven't the foggiest idea how you fix it without just offing a chunk of the population, which obviously isn't a good solution.