There is no doubt that the cost of health care has become a very large gorilla in the room. The fiscally responsible among us have expressed the need to curtail the use of government funds to care for the citizens who cannot afford health insurance. The more liberal and fiscally irresponsible among us want every one to have access to health care, those idiots! But without the help and cooperation of all of us its just not possible.No matter where you are on this issue, the question remains the same; who is going to pay for that health care; employers, insurance companies, the tax payers, all or none of the above? How come no one asks why it has to cost as much as it does in the first place?
Why haven’t we invested as much effort into eradicating fraud in the health care industry as we did into the debate over who’s going to pay for it? Why haven’t we banned the importation and manufacture of tobacco products? How many billions must a pharmaceutical company make on a drug before enough is enough? How many more obese children will we tolerate before we end up having to supply insulin to half the nation? How many more illegal aliens are we going to allow to use our emergency rooms as health care clinics? These are all questions about preventable circumstances that would save the nation countless billions of dollars each and every year! More than enough to cover the cost of health care for those who don’t have insurance.
The real pig on the farm is the profit motive in the healthcare industry. Not only must the doctors profit, the hospitals must profit, the pharmaceutical companies must profit, the medical equipment suppliers must profit, and as if that isn’t enough, the companies we trust to help us pay for the health care costs, the insurance companies, must profit as well.
Many will argue that the profit motive is why we have state of the art health care in the United States. That may be true enough, but what good is it if we make our selves sick trying to pay for it?
What good is a medical procedure if it ends up bankrupting the patient? Rather than improving the lives of the sick, the health care industry often times ends up ruining the lives of the entire patient’s family.
Some of the hard questions that no one wants to ask are germane to the high costs of health care. Should we keep terminally ill patients alive indefinitely at the will of selfish and foolish family members who don’t have the intestinal fortitude to let go? Should we prevent people with terminal illness who want to be euthanized from ending their lives? Will we really have a shortage of qualified doctors in the U.S. if they don’t become the upper crust of middle class America? Should tobacco continue to be legal in the U.S.? Should healthcare be driven by a profit motive?
When it comes to humanity, when it comes to the health caring of our fellow citizens, should fiduciary responsibilities lie with the shareholders or with the patients? If you answer that question morally and not legally, then the truth will be self evident. We don't need to figure out how to pay for healthcare? The cost of healthcare will continue to rise indefinitely, and unfortunately, our ability to pay for it will not. We need to lower the cost of services rendered, we need to educate parents on the proper dietary habits, we need to eradicate tobacco from our society, and we need to put a stop to foods that we all love but are killing us slowly.
These three industries are keeping each other alive at our expense, Tobacco, Food and Healthcare.
Now go forth and have your Big Mac and a Coke, smoke a cigarette, don't forget to take your Lipitor and your inhaler with you, you're going to need them. Not to long after your arteries are clogged and you can't breathe, I have some Cymbalta for your depression. Not depressed yet, don't worry, you will be.






