On Chrissie Long’s Article About Rush Limbaugh

On Chrissie Long’s Article About Rush Limbaugh

I have heard Rush Limbaugh’s words in several occasions and have gone over some of his books, and my understanding of his recent comments is different than those of Chrissie Long’s. What I think he truly meant based not only on his comments, but also on his long and persistent opposition to President Obama’s health plan, is that he tries to convey that what the American health system badly needs is not a lot of additional regulation, and the takeover of the system by the usually inefficient and proven expensive government, but a good bit of fixing its reality by setting limits to tort law in what is referred to malpractice in medicine, and bringing up competition in the market as the natural regulator of prices.

In my opinion, Rush Limbaugh’s comments intend to convey that the need to travel out of the U.S. for medical care in the future will keep rising for Americans, as the effectiveness of a National Health System -if approved- is very much in doubt. That ineffectiveness in the National Health Services is suffered by Canadians, the English, and Costa Ricans alike. They all admit it too, but they all put up to the problems and inefficiencies of their systems in their own belief that theirs is the only way to have a General Health System. Why does America have to push for more government intervention and regulation to solve its problem instead of continuing to pursue its immensely successful free market ideals? Why not attack this problem by addressing one of the main drivers of high healthcare costs directly?

Let’s remember the main reasons why healthcare in the United States is significantly more expensive than abroad

-First, no other country has a legal system where lawsuits are so common and so drastic than the U.S. This has led American healthcare practitioners and institutions to pay malpractice insurance premiums which can easily exceed one hundred thousand and much more dollars/year per Doctor, Nurse, Technician, and many times that for Hospitals. Although foreign doctors and clinics have medical malpractice insurance as well, their costs are a tiny fraction of that amount.

-Second, the cost of labor, construction, supplies, drugs, energy, taxes, and almost everything other than high technology equipment which is permanently bought and paid for is generally higher in the U.S.

-Third, administrative aspects like paperwork, insurance collections, receivables, bad debt, and compliance are a larger cost burden for U.S. healthcare providers.

Why not do something about the first reason above? Why are any actions against it being ruled out? More than Billion per year spent in litigation and compensations in malpractice suits that over-inflate the costs of everything related to healthcare? This would diminish the enormous cost of insurance for doctors, nurses, technicians and hospitals nationwide, and could therefore also reduce the very expensive and usual practice of defensive

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