
Nope.
'Nuff said. I'm glad we had this talk.
p.s. I love the bumper sticker!
"Some say ..." so many people flock to this blog, there has been a measurable drop in national productivity and employment since it's inception. Piffle. Orszag needs to find someone else to blame his "bangless bucks" predicament on.
And while I'm on the topic: Big ups to Obama on healthcare. By convincing everyone that he's really gonna do something, anything ... maybe even something a little nuts, ya never know ... he has finally scared people into a REAL conversation about what healthcare should be. Brilliant.
I agree with him: something DOES need to be done about health care. I'd even support his plan if it contained no new deficit spending,

- Acknowledge that we have problems and that the status quo is unacceptable? Check!
- Improve efficiency? Check!
- Make better use of technology? Check!
- Prevent diseases rather than treating them? Check!
- Use cheaper, generic drugs when they're just as effective as name-brands? Check!
- Allow pharmacies deliver bottles of Advil to hospital bedsides, rather than charging the patient $10 a pill? Check.
- Follow the SEC's lead and require (all but the smallest) healthcare providers to publish uniform, comparable statistics about the customer satisfaction, effectiveness, and cost? Cha-check!
- Give people the option of a low-cost, 24-hour clinic instead of the ER for garden-variety treatments? Check! In fact, authorize ERs to march their dumb untreated butts right out the door and across the street to the clinic.
- Share results of tests among healthcare providers, instead of re-running the same diagnostic multiple times? Double-check!
David Axelrod, himself, said this week there was universal agreement on 80% of their ideas. Sounds like enough for a plan to me. Let's pass it and start to get at least a little relief. Would we delay a heart bypass in the ER until everyone had agreed what to do about the patient's high cholesterol? Of course not.
That is not to suggest we should choose Band-Aid surgery over treating the insidious underlying problems. Its just a sensible triage. Nurse?
Stay tuned for my thoughts on those underlying issues in the next blog entry.
No comments:
Post a Comment