Posted by dahsdebater on 6/13/2020 2:42:00 PM (view original):
Already posted most of my thoughts on this here. Just about everything I've seen defending the ACA based on actual outcomes is anectdotal. I'm glad Bob is alive. He seems like a good guy. I understand he's convinced this is only true because of the ACA. Maybe he's right. But in the broad picture, outcomes have not improved. We have great statistics on death in the US, by age, cause, and in many cases also wealth. They do not paint a rosy picture of the ACA. Which is why, so many years in, defenders are still talking about "coverage," as if somehow this had superseded actually keeping people alive and well as the primary goal of the healthcare system.
I realize you can't always expect people to click links, but I did start out by saying I had a more detailed account of my thoughts in Dino's thread in the SLB forums. Where I said this - on the linked page - on February 18:
It is an absolute objective fact that morbidity and mortality rates amongst the bottom 25% of Americans increased (got worse) following the passage of the ACA. This was because of the opioid crisis, not the ACA. But trends since then are clearly no better than pre-ACA. It's absolutely not keeping people alive or healthy any more effectively than the preceding healthcare system. And it increased total healthcare spending, largely by introducing lots of new administrative overhead. What's good about that?
Coverage is not an inherent good. The popular defense of the ACA based on numbers of people covered is an obvious fallacy.
I think I've been entirely consistent with this. Honestly, nothing you've argued is really convincing that the ACA
isn't a factor in the increasing mortality - it remains true that more of the increase in mortality in people below Medicare age is from managed health issues than external factors. But it really doesn't matter. What is clear is that the ACA has not
improved healthcare outcomes for low-income Americans, at least in an aggregated statistical sense. With that being the case, I think it's clearly a failure - it's eating up hundreds of billions of tax dollars to not help the American people. And before you downplay that number again, think about how you'd react to a $200 billion bump in military spending. It's a lot of money. Granted, some people who know a lot more about the financial aspects of the healthcare system than I do have argued that this expense will soon be made up, or is already being made up, elsewhere in the system. I assume there is at least some truth to this. As a matter of political philosophy, I'd rather the money not come from taxes, but that's not a real practical consideration. What is, however, is the uncertainty that the expansion of low-compensation plans has placed on PCPs and especially emergency care. It's now the case that a lot of ER docs and some PCPs in large healthcare groups (HMOs, big hospital systems, etc.) produce negative values; that is, their salary and the salary of attached personnel, equipment, etc. exceed the proceeds of their billing. It's really not clear how this could impact our healthcare system, but it's a somewhat scary prospect, and something that surprisingly few people seem to be aware of/concerned about. As overall margins for hospitals go down there is going to be increasing pressure to reduce staffing in ERs. That's not going to be good for anybody.