The ACA allocated $5 billion for the program to cover uninsurable
patients and about half of that has already been spent, so the program
is being canceled as of this week. Of those patients for whom insurance
was purchased prior to 2011, the average expenditure on their healthcare
was $4.6 million per patient by the end of 2011. The net cost to the
population of insured patients is in the $300-$400 billion range. That
cost paid by the insurance companies for healthcare services will be
distributed to future purchasers of healthcare insurance. The one-time
cost to the government to purchase the insurance was $2.5 billion. The
bulk of the money represents a cost shift to the private sector, not yet
factored in to the next round of rates, which have already increased in
cost.
As a consequence, the IRS, responsible for enforcement
of the health reform act has informed the Congressional Budget Office
(CBO) that the average family in the US will today will owe $20,000
annually for healthcare insurance. That is for the lowest coverage
available that is authorized by government, the Bronze plan.
Gold and Platinum plans may be available, but they may be unaffordable unless you are among the wealthier "1%" of Americans.
What are we to make of this?
Firstly, less than 14% of the people intended to benefit from this healthcare reform plan have actually benefited.
Secondly, over one third of the total money , one
trillion dollars allocated by the health reform act for the decade of
coverage has already been spent on that small number of patients.
Thirdly, the cost burden transferred to the insurance industry
and passed on to the insured population will make private health
insurance cease to exist.
While the extinction of the health insurance industry which is
based upon demographic cost sharing and risk assessment is the goal for
so-called "progressives", the government will end up as the sole third
party payor for healthcare services.
Given the inherent inefficiencies of government and the
lack of competition, it is highly likely the abject failure of the
initial implementation efforts of the Federal healthcare reform
legislation will accelerate in the absence of competition. This is a
fool’s game which will result in the centralization of decision-making
and loss of freedom for individuals, communities, and States.
Chris Casscells, M.D.
Director, Center for Healthcare Policy
Caesar Rodney Institute
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