Message from @Sophie
Discord ID: 679416717054574653
They clearly do not
In fact you literally supported my point
Use your brain for 2 seconds
> Our analysis of insurance claims data shows that the more rigid regulations increase the price of a well-child medical exam by 3 to 16 %
>
> This finding indicates that CON laws may not be protecting access to rural health care, but are instead correlated with decreases in rural access.
Ok, let me respond
WC visits are not a pertinent metric, because ya a non-emergency preventative care metric
Well child visits lower the cost of future healthcare. What more regulations do is lower the cost of emergency room visits
WC visits are cheap cheap cheap. 3-16 doesn’t matter.
CON laws
Yes, it's an example of how deregulation lowers prices.
CON laws prevent Medicaid abuse
Removing these barriers reduce prices universally.
If you repeal them, faculties abuse Medicaid
No, it’s an example on how regulation lowers prices
Technically my plan requires gutting medicaid.
You frontload the cost
There are no regulations that you speak off.
Yeah, I know
Literally the ACA
Lowered prices
It ended up with higher prices of insurance.
No, it did not.
The year before it was inacted it was slowing.
Prices ended up rising faster.
That is a lie.
I'll be back later.
I would love to see you in a room with some hedge fund guys saying what you’re saying right now
You would be mercilessly ridiculed for how ill-informed you are.
The diploma mills were encouraged by a public that abhorred government regulation or any interference with the rights of the common man to do as he wished. There were no licensing requirements for medical personnel or professional oversight. In the face of declining respectability, physicians, anxious to reestablish their credentials, began to use more extreme depletion methods. Their model was Benjamin Rush, who as a leading physician at the turn of the century proposed using more extreme bleeding and purging. The poorly trained could point to the dramatic effects of their therapies as a form of success.
But not all people accepted this “heroic” medicine. The result was a proliferation of competing health initiatives, a growth of medical sectarians such as homeopaths, hydropaths, new botanical theorists such as Thomsonianism as well as fitness gurus such as Sylvester Graham and John Harvey Kellogg. The sugar-coated pill advertised by a variety of entrepreneurs also competed freely. They had only to patent the shape of the bottles. There was no control over their ingredients. The medical scene in the nineteenth century was a chaotic free-for-all.
I'm back.
@Puerto Rican Nelson Comparing 1800s to now is idiotic, especially in the light of evidence that shows occupational licensing doesn't improve quality.
> The provision of health care to low-income Americans remains an ongoing policy challenge. In this paper, I examine how important changes to occupational licensing laws for nurse practitioners and physician assistants have affected cost and access to health care for Medicaid patients. The results suggest that allowing physician assistants to prescribe drugs (including controlled substances) is associated with a substantial (more than 11 percent) reduction in the dollar amount of outpatient claims per Medicaid recipient. I find little evidence that expanded scope of practice has affected proxies for access to care such as total claims and total care days. Relaxing occupational licensing requirements by broadening the scope of practice for healthcare providers may represent a low-cost alternative to providing quality care to America’s poor."
https://www.mercatus.org/system/files/Timmons-Scope-of-Practice-v2.pdf
@Sophie Going back to what I was saying, a WC exam is reduced by a fair amount with occupational licensing barriers removed moderately.
That's universal for the entire healthcare system.
do pharma companies want single payer?
basically do the opposite of whatever they want
right?
Well Pharma companies would be right single payer sucks, they would be wrong when they oppose importing drugs from other countries (Trump is doing this).
we actually rely heavily on china to produce our drugs
needs to end
You had your free market paradise. Fake doctors built empires on fake medicine, and nobody was able to practically afford anything. That's why the insurance industry began.