首页
登录
职称英语
Let’s Not Hide Health Costs We are awash in health-care proposals. Presi
Let’s Not Hide Health Costs We are awash in health-care proposals. Presi
游客
2024-12-23
30
管理
问题
Let’s Not Hide Health Costs
We are awash in health-care proposals. President Bush has one. So does California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden has a plan, as does a coalition led by Families USA (a liberal advocacy group) and America’s Health Insurance Plans (a trade group). To some extent, all these plans and others aim to provide insurance to the estimated 47 million Americans who lack it—a situation widely deplored as a national disgrace. But the real significance of all these proposals, I submit, lies elsewhere.
For decades, Americans have treated health care as if it exists in a separate economic and political world: when people need care, they should get it; costs should remain out of sight.
About 60 percent of Americans receive insurance through their employers; to most workers, the full costs are unknown. The 65-and-older population and many poor people receive government insurance. Except for modest Medicare premiums and payroll taxes, costs are largely buried in federal and state budgets.
It is this segregation of health care from everything else that is now crumbling—and the various health proposals are just one sign. We see others all the time. For example, even with employer-provided insurance, workers’ monthly premiums (which cover only part of the costs) have skyrocketed. From 1999 to 2006, they doubled from $129 to $248.
Look at Massachusetts. Last year the then Gov. Mitt Romney made headlines by signing legislation to cover all the state’s uninsured. The law required that everyone with incomes three times the federal poverty line buy "affordable" insurance (people with incomes below that threshold would be subsidized on a sliding scale). Romney suggested annual premiums for a single worker might total $2,400. But when insurance companies recently provided real estimates, the cost was much higher: $4,560. Is it a sensible policy to force workers with a $30,000 income— about triple the poverty line— to spend nearly a sixth of their budget on health insurance, as opposed to food, rent or transportation? Good question.
The hard questions won’t sit still, because health care (now a sixth of the economy, up from an 11th in 1980) is too big to be hidden. Myths abound. Contrary to conventional wisdom, the doubling of premiums for employer-provided coverage doesn’t mean companies shifted a greater share of costs to workers. In both 1999 and 2006, premiums covered 27 percent of costs, says Paul Fronstin of the Employee Benefit Research Institute. It’s simply the rapid rise in total health spending that’s depressed workers’ take-home pay.
One myth about the uninsured is that, because they’re heavy users of emergency-room services, providing them with insurance (and regular care) would actually lower their costs. This may be true for some—but not most. The trouble is that the uninsured don’t really use emergency rooms heavily. A study on the journal Health Affairs finds that their use is similar to that of people with private insurance—and half that of people with Medicaid. The upshot is that extending insurance to all the uninsured would be costly, because they would get more and (presumably) better care. John Sheils of the Lewin Group estimates the annual cost of their care would rise 75 percent to $145 billion.
Our health-care system will inevitably combine government regulation and private enterprise. But what should the mix be? Which patients, providers and technologies should be subsidized and why? How important is health care compared with other public and private goals? Will an expanding healthcare sector spur the economy—or, through high taxes and insurance premiums, retard it? We have refused to have this debate for obvious reasons. A friend of mine recently had a near-death experience; he survived only because he had superb medical care. Debating health care makes us queasy, because it pits moral imperatives (including the right to live) against coldhearted economics.
I don’t intend to examine—at least now—all the new proposals. Some would do better at some goals (say, protecting the poor) than at others (say, controlling costs). But the Bush proposal does have one huge virtue: it exposes health-care costs to the broad public. By not taxing employer-paid insurance, the government now provides a huge invisible subsidy to workers. Bush wouldn’t end the subsidy, but by modifying it with specific deductions for insurance ($15,000 for families, $7,500 for singles), he would force most workers to see the costs. By contrast, some other proposals disguise their costs. Schwarzenegger’s plan shifts costs to the federal government, doctors and hospitals. It’s clever, but it perpetuates the illusion that health care is cheap—or even free.
However our health system evolves—with more government control or more market influence—Americans need to come to a more realistic understanding of its limits. Underestimating its costs and exaggerating its benefits guarantees disappointment. If the present outpouring of proposals signals a start of our needed debate, then it is long overdue. [br] What can be inferred from the passage about health care in America?
选项
A、American health care is cheap.
B、The government can afford to pay health cost.
C、Health care has become a problem to be heeded.
D、Health care is not so serious as to affect the economy.
答案
C
解析
从全文的分析可以得出如下结论,美国的卫生保健体制应引起人们的足够重视,而不是像人们想象的那样,费用低廉甚至是免费的。故C为正确答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3881550.html
相关试题推荐
Fast-foodfirmshavetobeathick-skinnedbunch.Healthexpertsregularlyl
Fast-foodfirmshavetobeathick-skinnedbunch.Healthexpertsregularlyl
Whatisthesinglelargestproblemfacingthehealthcaresystemtoday?[br][or
Whatisthesinglelargestproblemfacingthehealthcaresystemtoday?[br][or
Whatisthesinglelargestproblemfacingthehealthcaresystemtoday?[original
Stressisverycloselyrelatedtoourhealth,especiallypsychologicalhealt
Asoneofthemanyoutgrowthsofthesweepingfederalhealthcarelaw,heal
Asoneofthemanyoutgrowthsofthesweepingfederalhealthcarelaw,heal
Asoneofthemanyoutgrowthsofthesweepingfederalhealthcarelaw,heal
Asoneofthemanyoutgrowthsofthesweepingfederalhealthcarelaw,heal
随机试题
Whenaconsumerfindsthatanitemsheorheboughtisfaultyordoesnot【B1
[originaltext]W:Comein.OhhelloJack.Haveaseat.Right...yousaidyouwan
AsToyotaandHummerhavelearned,growingtoofastcanbeadangerousthing
[originaltext]M:Haveyouheardaboutthenewrestaurant—ThePearl?SusanandI
由于配电设备种类繁多、数量庞杂、地域性强,相互之间存在着地理上和逻辑上的密切关系
下列()不属于除氧层的设备。A.连续排污扩容器 B.除氧器 C.软水加热
《药品生产许可证》有效期为()。A.5年 B.30日 C.15日 D.60
(2021年真题)《中国药典》义,“无引湿性”系指药物的引|湿性增重小于A.0.
下列不属于作为物流节点的综合货运枢纽在物流系统中功能的是( )。A.衔接功能
施工单位进场后应依据( )提供的工程地质勘查报告、基坑开挖范围内及影响范围内的各
最新回复
(
0
)