Thursday, May 08, 2014

ObamaCare Two Tier Health Care : Back to Square One

Bottom line here is when all is said and done concerning ObamaCare, those that need health care insurance will not have it, and as a result of the reduction in pay to doctors to treat subsidized patients, the disadvantaged will not have insurance or health care.

Do you get the message? Mr Obama trotted out his plan to save the poor, less then 9% of the population, by changing how we provide care, he actually destroyed the health system for everyone, all 161 million working individuals and the other 140 million that are not working.

Welcome to the new reality of progressive socialism as brought to us by the liberal democrats. Was this the plan from the beginning?

ObamaCare Creating Two-Tier System
Source: Scott W. Atlas, "The Coming Two-Tier Health System," Wall Street Journal, April 30, 2014

May 6, 2014

Americans most dependent on public insurance will have less and less access to medical care under ObamaCare, writes Scott Atlas, a physician and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.

Reimbursement rates for Medicare and Medicaid are already low, a fact that has led doctors to refuse to treat those patients. With reimbursements falling even further, more doctors will begin to refuse those with government insurance plans.

President Obama has touted the Affordable Care Act as increasing insurance choices, but this is not what those in the exchange are seeing.
  • Consumers in 16 states have the option of just three or fewer insurers, and the average number of plans offered in individual states has dropped from 117 in 2013 down to just 41 in the exchanges.
  • In order to meet the requirements of the law, the plans that insurers are offering are very restrictive and do not include some of the best hospitals in America. According to a study by McKinsey, 33 percent of individual insurance offerings contained narrow networks in 2010. This year, 68 percent of options have narrow networks.
  • The vast majority of the best cancer hospitals -- including MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston and Seattle Children's Hospital -- are not included in most state exchange plans.
Patients who can afford it are signing up at concierge practices. Today, there are an estimated 4,400 concierge physicians -- 30 percent more than just last year. And according to a survey from Merritt Hawkins, 7 to 10 percent of doctors plan to move to concierge or cash-only practices within the next three years.

Europe has already experienced a two-tiered health care system.
  • Six million British citizens who can afford to do so purchase private insurance today, despite the fact that they already pay for the National Health Service.
  • More than 50,000 travel outside of the United Kingdom each year in order to receive treatment abroad -- spending more than $250 million in the process.
  • Sweden has seen similar trends, with 500,000 of its citizens now using private insurance.
The United States will see similar divisions if ObamaCare remains in place. Those who can afford private care will have access to it, while those dependent upon government systems will have fewer choices and less access to their doctors.
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