Why A Single-Payer Healthcare System Is Inevitable

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/why-a-single-payer-healthcare-system-is-inevitable_us_57bb38d0e4b0b51733a4e665?&utm_campaign=KHN%3A+Daily+Health+Policy+Report&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=33278487&_hsenc=p2ANqtz–pFhM1yVmgKE5kBJSkJqgzGm6EX86cVbU_jxP8glbnNrQH2CY9ktk8qbzIisOdLEgV0JX5fgsxqoDwrFym5ZxmTnCJOw&_hsmi=33278487

The best argument for a single-payer health plan is the recent decision by giant health insurer Aetna to bail out next year from 11 of the 15 states where it sells Obamacare plans.Aetna’s decision follows similar moves by UnitedHealth Group, the nation’s largest health insurer, and by Humana, another one of the giants.

All claim they’re not making enough money because too many people with serious health problems are using the Obamacare exchanges, and not enough healthy people are signing up.

The problem isn’t Obamacare per se. It lies in the structure of private markets for health insurance – which creates powerful incentives to avoid sick people and attract healthy ones. Obamacare is just making this structural problem more obvious.

In a nutshell, the more sick people and the fewer healthy people a private for-profit insurer attracts, the less competitive that insurer becomes relative to other insurers that don’t attract as high a percentage of the sick but a higher percentage of the healthy.

Eventually, insurers that take in too many sick and too few healthy people are driven out of business.

If insurers had no idea who’d be sick and who’d be healthy when they sign up for insurance (and keep them insured at the same price even after they become sick), this wouldn’t be a problem. But they do know – and they’re developing more and more sophisticated ways of finding out.

Colorado campaign supporting universal healthcare ballot measure enlists Bernie Sanders

Colorado campaign supporting universal healthcare ballot measure enlists Bernie Sanders

Getty Images/ Jeff Mitchell

Backers of ColoradoCare — the state ballot initiative that would establish universal healthcare in Colorado — think they have the perfect job for former presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders.

With the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia behind him, Sanders “comes to Colorado and campaigns for single-payer — and we win,” said T.R. Reid, one of the architects of ColoradoCare. The initiative aims to provide every resident of Colorado with affordable health insurance. Sanders made universal coverage one of the cornerstones of his presidential bid.

The proposal comes with a $38 billion annual price tag — to be paid by a tax on workers and businesses. The program would eliminate the need for insurance premiums and deductibles, and proponents claim it would save the state and individuals a lot of money.
Reid said the backers of ColoradoCare have pitched Sanders’ team, hoping he will campaign on behalf of the measure that will come before voters in November.

Sanders has already championed the issue in the state — he pushed for a single-payer system during his Democratic primary campaign in Colorado. It was one of his key healthcare positions, and it got thousands of his supporters cheering at an event in Denver in February.

U.S. inches closer to national single-payer plan conversation

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/us-inches-closer-to-national-single-payer-plan-conversation/418939/

 

A quick primer on healthcare in the 2016 presidential election

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/a-quick-primer-on-healthcare-in-the-2016-presidential-election/414370/

2016 Presidential candidates: Where they stand on healthcare

http://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/slideshow/2016-candidates-where-they-stand-healthcare?mkt_tok=3RkMMJWWfF9wsRonuqTNd%2B%2FhmjTEU5z16ukvX6%2B%2Fh4kz2EFye%2BLIHETpodcMTcBqMrzYDBceEJhqyQJxPr3MLtINwNlqRhPrCg%3D%3D

Health Care’s Continental Divide

http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2016-01-22/health-care-s-continental-divide

<p>Take a deep breath.</p>
 Photographer: Adam Berry/Getty Images

Bernie Sanders restarted the debate about single-payer health care on Sunday by proposing “Medicare for all.” Leonid Bershidsky pointed outthat in Europe, his idea would hardly be radical. But Megan McArdle finds the Sanders plan implausible in the U.S. Bloomberg View invited them to debate whether American health care could imitate Europe’s.

Why Medicare could eventually become the basis for our single-payer healthcare system

http://www.fiercehealthfinance.com/story/why-medicare-could-eventually-become-basis-our-single-payer-healthcare-syst/2015-12-14?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mkt_tok=3RkMMJWWfF9wsRonvqjKce%252FhmjTEU5z14ukkX6a2lMI%252F0ER3fOvrPUfGjI4ARMBjN6%252BTFAwTG5toziV8R7LMKM1ty9MQWxTk

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