To: Everyone
Who Cares
RE: Fixing
our Health Insurance System
I have presented the ideas
discussed here to most of the
U.S.
Representatives and both
U.S.
Senators from
California. If you feel these concepts have merit, please
contact your U.S. Congressional Representatives and Senators and encourage them
to take action now.
Based on my
extensive professional and personal experience with health insurance, I have
seen and heard all types of suggestions and complaints about health insurance
in
America
. As a result, I have formulated some ideas on
how the system can be made substantially better.
I have been a
health insurance agent for more than twenty years and my wife recently
passed away after a three-year battle with breast cancer, with medical bills
(covered by insurance) of close to $1,000,000, so I can speak to the issues
better than most.
I oppose a
government run single payer health plan for many reasons. The idea of having the government deciding
what medical procedures I can have is not what I want, and I believe that most
Americans would not enjoy that aspect of a government run health plan.
Another very
significant reason I oppose such a plan is that it will result in health care
rationing. Many people point to the
Canadian system in advocating a universal single payer health plan. Right now, many Canadians are forced to wait
and wait for various procedures. Those
who can afford it, come to the
U.S.
and pay for their treatment.
There are three
significant, but not that difficult or costly, things that can be done to
significantly improve the situation:
1) Allow
health insurers to offer their programs nationally and agents to sell across
state lines. There is already legislation that has been introduced in the
House and Senate to do this. The result would be more options for all
Americans and more competitive pricing on health insurance policies.
2) Create
an "assigned risk" system that requires each health insurer to take
their fair share of high risk individuals with a ceiling on how much more they
can charge these people over their preferred and standard rates.
Spreading that risk equally between all insurers in the market would enable
those people who can not now get individual health insurance to do so and could
be done without making the cost of health insurance for healthier people that
much more expensive.
3) For
those who can afford to obtain health insurance and choose not to, make it
impossible for them to discharge their medical bills through bankruptcy or
statutes of limitations. This would create the incentive for everybody to
purchase health insurance and would result in lower costs for everyone.
I am sure there
would be some fine tuning required on the above ideas to make everything work,
but this sure beats more costly, bureaucratic program that would limit our
choices and truly result in rationed health care.
There is a lot
of health insurance rhetoric out there, but there are solutions other than
getting the government more involved in our private lives. While I agree
that some government intervention and mandates are necessary to fix our
healthcare system, a socialized program is not the answer.
Thank you for
taking the time to consider my suggestions.
Sincerely,
Steve Gorman
President
Alternative
Health Insurance Services