By: We Are Tulpa
The Good
Why is it whenever critics discuss monopolies they rarely mention Google? You know Google, the company with a market cap of over $500 billion that controls around 80% of the search market, about 30% of the worldwide digital ads market, and provides its Android operating system to almost 90% of all smartphones used by roughly 25% of all websites, including this one! We can’t forget about the behemoth Apple either. They control 10% to 20% of the smartphone market at any given time, and are the most valuable company in the world! And when your Facebook friends unleash a screed against monopolies they ironically fail to realize that their message is made possible by a company that enjoys 42% of visits to social media platforms.
How is it critics continue to ignore these monopolies, preferring to poke at other sores? Truth is, these are the good monopolies. From Amazon to Uber, many of these relatively new tech companies have achieved enormous gains over incumbents due to superior service to customers. Yet when Bloomberg blames monopolies for income inequality, worker exploitation, slow productivity growth and a lack of business dynamism (whatever the hell that means), they conveniently fail to discuss these good monopolies.
Now I’m not saying the tech world is an ideal model for worker-employer relationships: In fact I think many tech companies, like Amazon, are screwing themselves long-term with their burn-out cultures; but these monopolies were elevated to their positions by doing it better than the rest, and that inconvenient truth destroys the “all monopolies are worse than Hitler” narrative often supported by the right and the left.
As a quick note, I’m using the term monopoly to include monopolistic competition and oligopolies in addition to monopolies. Let the commentariat eviscerate any uncharitable pedants who fail to understand this.
The Bad
So why are consumer outcomes so bad in industries like finance, utilities, and healthcare? How is it that consolidation in these industries just seems to make things more painful for consumers, while tech monopolies have reached dominance by making customers happy?
My Libertarian comrades may be inclined to say “it’s the regulatory environment dumbass” and they have a point. A free-market for internet providers would remove many of the regulatory obstacles to deployment. It would also reduce regulatory risk, or the uncertainty of future regulations that could instantly destroy the earning potential of a new billion-dollar internet provider. A recent example of this risk materialized with Net Neutrality, a policy which limits how internet service providers can respond to bandwidth hogs like Netflix. A free-market, or something close to it, results in lower barriers to entry and less regulatory risk, thus encouraging more competitors to enter the marketplace in a direct assault on entrenched bad monopolies. After all, it’s really not that hard to beat Comcast, if you have lots of cash and a fair playing field.
However, while onerous regulations explain how bad monopolies retain their market position while providing terrible service, it doesn’t fully explain why consolidation is occurring in industries like healthcare. To understand that we have to add one more factor to our model of how bad monopolies are born…consumer irrationality.
The Ugly
Our journey to the center of government meddling in healthcare starts with this contemptible creation:
The food pyramid was brought to life in 1992, thanks to the generous assistance of many food industry groups, and in the face of enormous criticism. Despite that, American’s seemed to jump on board with the “screw fats” and “carbs are good” recommendations it pushed: After the new guidelines were released the average calories from fat became significantly lower. Further, the pyramid influenced a wide range of policies and recommendations from meals in public schools, to dietary guidelines for expectant mothers.
Today we know better. Fats are not an evil that should be avoided at all costs, and many experts are questioning whether saturated fats (long considered the worst of the worst) are actually linked to obesity or heart disease. Meanwhile, those glorious carbohydrates that formed the base of the mighty food pyramid have been sidelined in most modern nutrition programs.
Back to the ’90s, after the government’s food innovation, something very interesting and entirely predictable happened. We got fat. Obesity rates begin to increase sharply in the mid to late ’90s. It was a perfect storm really. Nixon’s corn subsidies had reduced the price of corn products including high-fructose corn syrup. Food suppliers seized on this and offered cheap junk food. Then came the food pyramid, which told us massive intakes of carbs are a good thing. So whether you jumped on the cheap junk food bandwagon, the carbo-load bandwagon, or somewhere in between, your new diet was influenced by good ole Uncle Sam.
Of course with rising obesity rates came rising rates of heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and more. Doctors advocated for taking in less fat and sugar to combat the problem. Cholesterol became a key indicator of your risk for many obesity-related diseases and cholesterol-lowering drugs.
But were doctors targeting the wrong cause all this time? Several new studies have found no or negative relationships between cholesterol and heart disease. Plus, we already covered the growing body of evidence that saturated fats aren’t really bad after all. Of course, if true, it means that thousands of lives have been lost in preventable deaths, billions of dollars wasted, and many lives forever transformed because our favored solutions were about as useful as a Libertarian purity test.
This begs the question how much influence did government nutrition guidelines have on health recommendations? How much did government actions contribute to the obesity epidemic? These are hard questions to answer, but they’re even harder when you’re not looking. Take a glance at some of the major websites weighing in on the obesity epidemic and you’ll be lucky to see a reference to corn subsidies. Don’t bother looking for the government’s promotion of terrible diet advice. Apparently, that bit of history has already been forgotten by most.
Of course, this is the perfect opportunity for a Libertarian moment – a shining example that science and government policy should exist independently, not in direct reliance on one another. Don’t get your hopes up. Salon argues that the government’s newest food meddling innovation, My Plate, still over promotes carbs. But the apparent cause is we just didn’t have the right top men. HuffPo answers the gov food failings by pointing the finger at the evil food industry. After all crony capitalism isn’t a problem inherent in governance; the problem lies in capitalist actors using greed against the noble politicians. How can our great politicians resist the influence of these evil capitalists?
This is our first glimpse of consumer irrationality: Reliance on government health guidelines and demanding more government to fix the problem it created in the first place. I don’t fault consumers for buying more corn-based products after subsidies were introduced. That’s perfectly rational behavior. But thinking big papa government has your nutrition covered, seems a bit foolish given it’s track record.
The Uglyer
Through the 1990s on, consumers generally preferred health insurance to paying for health care themselves. There is more history here including government exempting employer-based health benefits from income taxes and wage controls after WWII, but the point is consumers preferred health insurance and the employer-sponsored variety was especially appealing. Health care costs had been increasing disproportionately to inflation for decades, and health providers looked for ways to stay profitable. The answer…consolidation.
The first major consolidation in health care occurred in the 1990s, followed by another wave in 2010 forward. Proponents of consolidation claimed it would reduce costs, result in a higher quality of care and improve the health of affected populations. Studies showed otherwise. Consolidation leads to substantial increases in price and evidence suggests it harms the quality of care. So what is the real reason for consolidation? Consolidation gives hospitals more bargaining power in a local market. In consolidated markets, fees increase anywhere from 20% to 60%. These fees are passed on to the insurer who in turn pass the cost increases on to employers or directly to enrollees. Contrast this with non-consolidated markets where participants cut costs since they lack bargaining power to simply raise fees. So basically consolidation is a way for hospitals to maintain profitability against a rising tide of regulation and cost increases.
The Uglyerer
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) helped along consolidation too. Some claim recent ACA-related consolidation was to combat regulatory uncertainty and that may be true, but many Ocare requirements directly contributed to consolidation and the elimination of small providers.
Under Obamacare medical coding changed to the ICD-10 standard. This meant switching from a standard with 13,000 medical billing codes to a standard with 70,000! The shocking result… cost increases. Survey results show a wide range of implementation costs for small practices, anywhere from $8,000 to over $100,000! There is also continued controversy over whether the new coding will reduce or increase billing costs. Early results indicate a higher rate of claim denials and about 25% less productivity under ICD-10. Additionally, in a survey of 38 medical billing companies, three went out of business due to problems in implementing ICD-10. [Applaud here]
Now, in all fairness, some of these ICD-10 codes are quite good. Imagine a group of healthcare professionals, sitting around a conference table, coming up with gems like:
Bitten by a turtle – W5921XS
Hit or struck by falling object due to accident to canoe or kayak – V9135XA
Struck by macaw – W6112XA
Hurt walking into a lamppost – W2202XA (Who would actually admit this?)
Pedestrian on foot injured in collision with roller-skater, subsequent encounter – V0001XD
Spacecraft crash injuring occupant – V9542XA (Seriously?)
Burn due to water-skis on fire – V9107XA (Has this happened even one time, ever?)
Struck by duck, subsequent encounter – W6162XD
Hurt at the library – Y92241
Sucked into jet engine, subsequent encounter – V9733XD (Twice?)
Unspecified balloon accident injuring occupant – V9600XS (Does this include accidents involving OMWC’s “balloon animals”?)
Hurt at the opera – Y92253
Bizarre personal appearance – R461 (…you talk like a fag, and your shit’s all retarded.)
Problems in relationship with in-laws – Z631
Stabbed while crocheting – Y93D1 (Why not stabbed by crochet needle?)
Prolonged stay in weightless environment – X52
Unspecified event, undetermined intent – Y34 (I’ll bet this one gets used a lot in ERs)
At least these people can do better than the SNL writing staff, so credit where credit’s due!
Of course, a sane person would wonder why it makes a difference whether you were bitten by a Macaw or a Sea Lion; or whether you suffered injuries during the re-entry of your spacecraft or a hard landing in a hot air balloon. Why doesn’t coding simply focus on injuries and treatment because that’s kind of the basis for billing? But that’s why I’m not a medical billing and coding expert I guess.
Other claims about ICD-10 include cost savings from fewer errors, due to the more “granular” coding structure. But that claim is a bit difficult to swallow as one would logically think adopting tens of thousands of more specific codes would result in higher error rates, not lower. ICD-10 is also supposed to reduce fraud by combating over-coding. If anything ICD-10 provides more opportunities to squeeze the system. A fraudster could use closely-related codes, and if called on the gambit, simply claim they didn’t understand the minor difference between one code and the other: A very plausible explanation given a catalog of 70,000 codes to sort through.
Ocare also included mandates for electronic medical records. The average cost of implementation for a single physician practice is a lowly $163,765. There are operational costs too, not to mention the cost of replacement systems when the old ones outlive their usefulness.
Aside from costs, the complexity of implementing electronic medical records (EMR) is causing some doctors to close their practices entirely, opting for direct or concierge pay. Meanwhile, many doctors that comply with EMR are getting burned out, spending time filling out useless forms, troubleshooting computer problems, and typing information into screens. The result is more time spent on compliance and less time with patients.
Large hospitals haven’t been immune from headaches over EMRs either. It turns out that digitizing someone’s entire medical history and putting it on a server is going to attract hackers. In 2015, 253 breaches exposed 113 million patient records. The number of breaches increased in 2016 to 450, while the total number of compromised records decreased to 27.3 million.
One of the big incentives for hackers to target medical records is the potential payoff. While a stolen credit card number may fetch $1 to $3, a stolen EMR goes for around $60! That’s because these records contain such a detailed and diverse amount of information that they can be used in all kinds of schemes. Personally, I find the hacking trend surprising, considering how knowledgeable health care administrators and staff are of IT security.
It’s Bad
In a bid to one-up cancer, the ACA included even more hits for the health care industry. One issue is non-payment by Obamacare enrollees. Doctors have faced difficulty verifying whether a patient with Ocare actually paid their premium or not. Office staff either have to spend upwards of an hour on the phone to try to verify a premium is paid, or take the risk of not getting reimbursed for care. This is all thanks to the 90-day grace period under ACA.
ACA included hefty cuts to Medicare and Medicaid payouts too. The former had average payouts reduced by 21.2% while the latter faced a 42.8% decrease in average payouts. I bet you’ll never guess what happened next! Shockingly, many doctors stopped accepting new Medicaid and Medicare patients, or just outright refused patients with the offending coverage. But while the little guys were either stuck with lower payouts or saying no to patients, good old market consolidation provided a great way for the big guys to make up the shortfalls. In consolidated markets, hospitals simply passed the lost reimbursement fees on to private insurance. What a way to win: Government saves money from entitlement programs by passing it on to private insurance, thanks to consolidated markets, which they helped enable. Win-win!
Of course, there was also the obligatory dose of crony capitalism in ACA, but hell, that doesn’t seem very important when weighed against the other effects. And no Ocare criticism would be complete without mentioning that restricting insurers from considering pre-existing conditions, increased costs for everyone. It effectively punished healthy people for those that treat their bodies like progressives treat a black Republican, but let’s get back to consolidation.
So to recap, consumers push for health insurance which kicks off the first big industry consolidation in the ’90s. Health care costs continue to rise and the light-bringer gives us Ocare, which pushes many small providers out of the market, and fuels even more consolidation of the big players. But maybe you’re not convinced consumers were really acting irrationally here. After all, if your employer is going to cover half of your health insurance cost, isn’t that better than trying to pay in cash? No.
Health insurance by its very nature increases cost. First, you are pooling risk so healthy people pay for less healthy ones. There is nothing wrong with this for catastrophic coverage if you share costs with other responsible parties. However, when you’re paying for my uncle who drinks nothing but diet Coke and Vodka, you’re wasting your money. Then there is the expense of medical billing and coding, claim processing, customer service, all sorts of other administrative costs, and then profit. When you accept health insurance, you accept all the expensive baggage that goes with it.
There is absolutely no sane reason to have health insurance cover your regular doctor’s visit or a trip to urgent care to get checked out for strep throat! If more people paid in cash, everyone would pay less. Of course, I’m aware of the challenges in trying to go all-in cash in today’s marketplace. Many providers just don’t get it and will offer you little to no discounts for cash payments, even though creating an insurance claim is costlier. So that’s the mess rational actors have to deal with. But, it boggles the mind how many Americans cannot grasp this principle: Insurance does not reduce costs, it increases them. Use it for the bankruptcy-inducing stuff only! I think it’s time to end this mental exercise and replace it with empirical evidence.
Exhibit 1:
Salvation lies in Oklahoma City, just off the 77. This is where Libertarianism is winning hearts, minds, and wallets. The Surgery Center of Oklahoma boasts of a praiseworthy 4.4 stars on Google Places and big savings on many surgical procedures. The savings are so big that Oklahoma’s public employee’s insurance fund covers 100% of the cost of any procedure performed there. Take that insurance to a regular a hospital and you’ll pay the deductible and co-pay. That’s because the prices at area hospitals are so much more expensive, the state will still pay more even if an employee covers the deductible and co-pay!
Exhibit 2:
If you are godly or care to fake it, cost-sharing ministries offer huge savings! Under Medi-Share a 30-year old would pay only $132 a month for medical sharing with a $5,000 annual household portion (basically a deductible). If you meet their health requirements your monthly payment drops to $117. Meanwhile, your average bronze plan on Obamacare has an average deductible of $6,000, an out-of-pocket maximum of $6,900, and a monthly premium of $311. Want to take a step up in coverage? An Ocare gold plan with a $1,200 deductible and a $4,900 out-of-pocket maximum, on average, costs $460 a month. But if the power of Christ compels you to buy a cost-sharing plan with a $1,250 annual household portion, you’ll pay only $235 a month, $207 if healthy. Bear in mind with cost sharing plans once you hit your annual household portion, covered medical procedures are 100% covered. Under normal insurance, once you hit your deductible, you’ll have to pay something like 20% of all medical costs until you hit the out-of-pocket maximum. That means with cost-sharing, you are saving in monthly costs and saving on big procedures!
In a rational world, consumers would look at health sharing ministries and ask what are they doing to get costs that low? But alas, this is not a rational world. Insert one tale of corruption and another legitimate contract dispute, both of which can easily be settled in the courts, and politicians scream “see we must regulate.” Professor Tim Jost of Lee University School of Law is particularly “concerned that you have people joining because they’re trying to find cheap coverage or because they’re ideologically opposed to the Affordable Care Act, or people who aren’t committed.” Oh, the horror. In fact, the health sharing ministry, Medi-Share, ran into problems operating in Kentucky. Apparently, the issue was that all users were paying into one shared fund. Medi-Share solved the problem by having people pay into their own individual funds and then transferring money between accounts to cover medical expenses. Good thing government was there to avert that crisis. Imagine the horror of using one account instead of tens of thousands, to manage the same money.
In a rational world, consumers would demand catastrophic coverage or none at all. In rationale world, employees would swamp HR departments and managers demanding they cut out insurance and save everyone some money. In a rational world, people would completely reject Obamacare and demand congress to allow secular medical sharing programs. In a rational world, those with extreme health conditions that can’t pay would rely on the charity of others to cover their bills, not government force. Irrationality is all around us.
For decades economists assumed real humans acted perfectly rational, but behavioral economics won that debate. Today, we have many examples of human irrationality. Sometimes, people just don’t do the math. It seems this is one of those times.
I think it’s time for one last recap: So government contributed to the obesity epidemic, which increased health care costs and probably increased demand for managed health care (health insurance). The gov’s food innovations seemingly influenced doctors to use the wrong solutions which cost a lot of money and a lot of lives. Consumers irrationally continued to view health insurance as the best way to pay for health care, even though if they did the math, cash-based options and catastrophic plans would have left them richer. Hospitals responded to increased costs and increased use of health insurance through consolidation: Consolidation gave them the power to demand higher fees from insurers, which insurers passed on to employers and private insurance enrollees. With costs on the rise, and the masses all in for health insurance or free coverage, Chocolate Jesus gave us all the STD known as the Affordable Care Act. This resulted in health insurance cost increases and more consolidation. So now we have a lower quality of care at a higher price with fewer options. But before you belligerently swear at Obama on your front lawn, remember to give a shout out to all the pricks that never realized health insurance was a bad deal. If people would have preferred direct or concierge pay options, with a little bit of catastrophic coverage, our health care landscape could like a lot more like the Surgery Center of Oklahoma Center, and a lot less like Lena Dunham.
Irrationally Libertarian
Many of us accepted Libertarianism into our hearts through logic and rational analysis. It could be a pragmatic perspective that government top men are incapable of making better decisions than individuals and free markets; and have completely failed to move the needle in a positive direction on society’s biggest problems. Or perhaps it is a strategic approach: The realization that the best way to deal with conflicting conservative and liberal ideologies, each wanting to impose their own views on everyone else, is to maximize freedom for all. Or it could be a moral approach, based on the fundamental right that no man has the right to rule over another. The point is most of us are driven to Libertarianism due to rationality. Irrationality is our enemy.
A good test of consumer irrationality is what I like to call the Walmart test: How many people complain about Walmart’s use of foreign labor, worker exploitation, and terrible customer service, but refuse to take their money anywhere else? This disassociation in cause and effect is a huge problem for Libertarians, as many of these consumers will then call on government to solve the problems in which they believe the oppressed consumer is powerless to address directly. This is the Achilles’ heel to Libertarian governance, an ever-present desire to create utopia through big government. For sustainable Libertarian governance to work, we must have buy-in from a critical mass of mostly rational actors that understand their dollars and time are votes in a free market! The case of health insurance consolidation shows us that most irrationalities don’t see less government as a solution; they simply want a different flavor of government solutions.
With this in mind, Libertarianism cannot succeed by responding to emotional appeals and inane political rhetoric in kind. Instead, we must continue to support logic and rational thought. Only that will fully convert the unbelievers and help us build a rational barricade against bubbles and government intervention, as we march for free markets. Simply getting regulatory victories is not enough. If we could enact a limited government tomorrow, in line with the original intent of the Constitution, the backlash would quickly destroy our gains in freedom. The people are not ready for Libertarianism. Joseph de Maistre said it best, “Every nation gets the government it deserves.” If we deserved Libertarian governance, we’d have it.
Now bow before the best-sourced article in all of Glibertaria! I assume my honorary degree from Columbia is in the mail.
This is probably the best ACA article I’ve read since it passed.
So you had to read the article to know what was in it?
I didn’t read it all.
I skipped over exhibit 1 and 2. *hangs head in shame*
They should be beaten with a large club, with nails in it.
Not for nothing, but Comcast beats the fuck out of my local tele-co.
You’d think being local, they’d actually offer customer service. Unless you consider being figuratively told to fuck-off right to your face as customer service.
The first major consolidation in health care occurred in the 1990s, followed by another wave in 2010 forward. Proponents of consolidation claimed it would reduce costs, result in a higher quality of care and improve the health of affected populations. Studies showed otherwise.
We just need to consolidate harder.
Single payer will fix everything.
Single payer will fix everything.
As in ‘Spay and neuter your taxpayers’?
Single-payer legal care for the win.
Because there’s not one lawyer out there who does anything worth more than minimum wage.
Spacecraft crash injuring occupant – V9542XA (Seriously?)
Let’s be honest- treatment costs for the injuries incurred in a crashed spacecraft are probably going to be pretty low.
Well somebody has to pick up all the pieces of meat and at least try to put them back together, ya?
I bet Musk lobbied to get that one in.
Space X executive – 2018: Elon, the craft is ready for your historic trip around the moon.
Elon: Shhh, shut up you fool! Where’s that crash test dummy. Make that thing look like me before you stuff it in the cockpit!
*AHEM* Do you know how much The Six Million Dollar Man would cost today?!?!?!
If it were run like the F-35 program, Steve Austin would have exploded while trying to limp out of the operating room.
He would have new legs but they wouldn’t bend. While he went around in his wheelchair, he would talk about how he could beat down any MMA fighter in the world – after his next few software upgrades sometime in the next decade.
$29,647,423.94?
*slow clap*
Ahhhh! ICD-10! The bane of my existence.
I was in a meeting for several hours this morning on which ICD-10 codes MLCP (Medicare Limited Coverage Plans) will pay on – and how do we get doctors to code correctly.
Good times.
Every time I see that, I think of One D Ten T codes.
1dI0t.
That’s one of the possible response codes for the ID-10(t) form.
Our transition went way more smoothly than expected. Our EMR provider ended up doing a lot of the heavy lifting after having told us for a while that they would not be doing a lot of the heavy lifting and that we’d be manually setting up tables ourselves. Billing, reporting and the doctors aren’t having much trouble with it but the patient reps and support staff keep getting upset about codes not using the same phrasing as the doctors are using even if they’re equivalent diagnoses (ie radial styloid tenosynovitis/de Quervains syndrome)
and how do we get doctors to code correctly.
ie which codes pay the first time they are submitted.
Submit them as many times as you like, if the codes don’t match their guidelines, MLCP ain’t paying.
Great article – and the end cap puts it all in perspective.
Btw – We are Tulpa – that very name puts fear into my heart. I was expecting the worst but ended up being pleasantly surprised.
That’s something only Tulpa would write…
Or Tulpa would write this to throw off suspicion…
*squints*
Tulpa is Sicilian ?
#obcurereference
“Keep your frends close, keep your Tulpas even closer”?
Princess Bride
Wow. You people put a lot of work into these articles.
Nice job on this one.
This one was particularly well sourced and thorough. BASTARD. Gonna make the rest of us look bad…
Except Eddie’s footnoting
What do you mean, “you people”?
Crocheting uses hooks. Knitting uses needles.
ICD10 implementation has quite possibly been the worst thing to come out of Obamacare. I know of a few doctors with small practices who were forced to cut their own salary in order to hire somebody to handle it (some might say that’s a good thing….)
I mean we were going to implement it anyway. It got log-rolled into ACA provisions. The standards have been out globally since what 1992? WHO released or was on the verge of releasing ICD-11 while we were implementing 10, and it was mostly an iteration to clean up the problems with 10, which we should’ve just skipped like Microsoft did Windows 9.
My favorite was asking whether my doctor’s staff was ready and they’d never even heard of “ICD-9 10s”* The doctor just rolled his eyes and said he was planning to retire soon anyway and the other doctors in the practice would have to deal with it.
*I’ve never been so delighted by a failure to understand an iterative numbering system in my life.
Is this another euphemism sir?
Mebbe
Like ‘Lumber Jacking’?
The health-care system isn’t easy for the doctors or the patients; it’s easy for the bureaucrats.
^Tulpa
< Tulpa Tulpa >
Is that the expectation value of Tulpa squared?
I know around here there are actually billboards promoting ICD 10 by showing some of the more ridiculous and esoteric codes available. I even saw a few TV ads about it. I’m shocked they didn’t put a middle finger at the bottom with the words “and you paid us to make it!”
I hate to have to say this, but it’s just facing reality. We are NEVER getting rid of government intrusion into Healthcare. I mean, sure, the government has been interfering in that market for a long time, but the passage of the ACA guaranteed that this will continue to get worse, forever. Amazing how fast Republicans, after all these years of trying to repeal this pile of shit, suddenly change from ‘repeal’ to ‘ repeal and replace‘ at the very moment they gained the power to actually do it. No replacement will be better than Obamacare, because future administrations and congresses will be able to do add to and tweak this ad infinitum. It will just keep growing and mutating until it horrible in ways that actually make today’s ACA look like a panacea.
“We are NEVER getting rid of government intrusion into Healthcare.”
When over 1/6 of the economy is involved in an industry government is not going to let that industry go on without a government hand in the till. It’s about the money. It is always about the money. They dont give a flying fuck about healthcare, their goal is to get their beak wet, thats all. They simply cannot do anything other than making it worse and more expensive.
^^^ infinity this.
That plus the illogical moral halo which renders all healthcare providers (even plastic surgeons, and hospital administrators, natch!) morally pure avatars of kindness makes healthcare the PERFECT industry for government.
Whaddaya mean “illogical”?
I can’t find it, but I recall George Will’s column the day after Obamacare passed. Basically saying that America was now addicted to some sort of national health insurance, and that wasn’t going to change. So in that sense, Obamacare has been a success. The government needs to run healthcare, we are just haggling over the details.
Because nobody was receiving health insurance from the government before Obamacare? HURRR?
~1/3rd of the market was medicare/medicaid, before Obamacare. That ship done sailed.
it boggles the mind how many Americans cannot grasp this principle: Insurance does not reduce costs, it increases them.
Silly libertarian, insurance makes everything FREE!
Meh, this sort of pretends that there’s a hard line between those things when there’s not. The so-called ‘purely rational’ arguments that simply point to markets and say, “LOOK = THEY WORK (waves spreadsheet)” is not sufficient to address the person who simply goes, “But that’s not *fair*”; there is no logic of ‘fairness*’ which cuts through to the opponent’s conception of what a justly-organized society should require. Ultimately you need to approach the other person’s hierarchy-of-assumptions and get them to emotionally re-order them such that ‘liberty’ becomes a more-tangible good to them** than the social-approval that comes from echoing collectivist rhetoric.
(*and pointing out that their conception of ‘fairness’ is actually founded on their own unconscious desire to simply ‘hurt’ those more successful than themselves doesn’t actually make them go, “oh” and concede that their ideas are invalid
** why people become more conservative as they age, imo – its only partly because of greater experience and awareness of the material world, but far more about the fact that there’s far less value associated with peer-approval)
Disclosure = I skimmed this piece and just read the beginning and ending. So if this is totally irrelevant, forgive me, i’m eating lunch.
Purely rational arguments won’t carry the day. People respond to emotional arguments, so the challenge is to argue emotionally against government control. I always like to point out that when the government runs something, a good chunk of the money goes to fund retirement benefits that are better than what you get in the private sector. YOU work to 65 and beyond to fund your own retirement, AND for the bureaucrat to retire at age 55 with free health care. What’s “fair” about that ?
…
this may just be awkward phrasing, but i think its not exactly right
its not so much ‘arguing emotionally’ (for me) as much as ‘recognizing that reason is only effective when it takes into account people’s emotional bases for ordering their priorities”
We’re probably saying the same thing, but different ways.
You can’t just tell someone “that doesn’t work” and whip out the facts that prove their ideas about ‘fairness’ produce terrible outcomes; you have to get them to consider that the goal of a “flatter” (more egalitarian) society is actually morally undesirable. because they don’t care about the details, they just think that ‘inequality’ is wrong and that ‘trying to fix it’ is always best, regardless of how costly or ineffective the effort.
We are on the same page. You can cite facts and logic all day long, and still have someone say, “but that’s not fair”.
So that is my challenge to this august group, how do you argue “emotionally” for libertarian ideas ?
Or as a great American said, ‘recognizing that reason is only effective when it takes into account people’s emotional bases for ordering their priorities”.
You can start the conversation by asking “Who owns you?”
So that is my challenge to this august group, how do you argue “emotionally” for libertarian ideas ?
“What’s fair about forcing people to do something? If you have to threaten people to get them to do it, doesn’t that mean they don’t think its fair?”
Might be a way of getting a conversation going about what’s fair, and who says.
I guess we can debate whether the first principles of ethical systems are logical or emotional in basis; and I think you could make satisfactory arguments on both accounts. People don’t have to understand the details of economics, but they do need to understand that their dollars are their vote, and swindlers come in all shapes and sizes. Without this basic economic and financial literacy, I think any flavor of Libertarian government is doomed.
I’m interested in doing a series of “This is what big government looks like” posters or such. Sure, it’s propaganda, but the good (Libertarian) kind.
SFW. Not a fake. Apologies for the site though.
http://illuminatisymbols.info/transport-for-london/
Jesus tap dancing Christ… self awareness is a rare commodity nowadays isn’t it?
I love the retro look to that one. Makes me feel all warm and Airstrip-One-y.
There’s another one I’m looking for that is basically “If you haven’t done anything wrong, you shouldn’t mind us spying on you”.
Don’t ignore the famous one:
https://images.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=https%3A%2F%2Fsydneytrads.files.wordpress.com%2F2015%2F02%2Fanarcho-tyranny-wants-more-government-gets-more-government.jpg%3Fw%3D547%26h%3D387&f=1
One for Jesse …
https://hateandanger.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/looks-like-youve-had-a-bit-too-much-to-think-support-your-local-thought-police-dont-speak-out-or-question-closed-minds-stop-thought-crimes.jpg
The point is, simply getting buy-in from people who say “ya that Libertarianism looks good,” isn’t enough. If a critical mass of people don’t understand the link between their role in a free market economy and outcomes, you going to have lots of people getting hurt with no idea why. They will then call you an idiot for convincing them to join your science project and demand top men implement consumer protections.
Fantastic article. Would read again.
This begs the question how much influence did government nutrition guidelines have on health recommendations?
You really want Nikki to show up here? Cuz’ this is how you do it.
yeah, little bit.
You mean the, “no one is allowed to say ‘begs the question’ unless they’re referencing the fallacy”-thing?
I think SugarFree is up to the task of being our resident pedant on that point.
I’m pretty much in agreement about that being incorrect-usage, but i still do it every now and then.
When someone makes it that easy to troll them on the internet it’s basically your civic duty to do so.
Are you calling Nikki some variety of low-hanging-fruit?
And .. you know who else was a low-hangin…. aww, forget it.
Liberace. I had to it was just too easy.
I think SugarFree is up to the task of being our resident pedant on that point.
As long as I get to remain the pedant on apostrophe abuse.
Who’s gonna run the Oxford Comma department?
Ooh, ooh! *frantically waves hand in air*
“I still do it every now and then.”
Then stop.
I am at the bottom of the list of pedants but that one is like someone throwing salt in my eyes and simultaneously squeezing my testicles with a pair of pliers.
… go on …
It gets you aroused?
And then there’s “per se”.
Don’t get me started on “segue”.
Walking is a lot easier than taking a segue.
*ponders submitting multi-part article on the distinction between “begging the question” and “assuming the conclusion”, takes nap instead*
I think there is a distinction to be made here. I used “begs the question” as a synonym for “raises the question” to communicate that I thought this was the next logical inquiry in a chain of inquiry. Otherwise what premise was assumed in the conclusion?
I have got to say, I love the last two words of the URL for this article… I didn’t notice them until I went to share it:
“needs-editing”
Haha. Someone (probably me) forgot to update the URL to match the title when it moved from draft to pending. You might in the future see ones with URLs that say things like (Needs Pictures) and a few other internal tags.
/why-the-non-aggression-principle-can-eat-shit-what-fucking-tulpa-wrote-this/
SSHHH!! You will undermine our aura of infallibility!!!!!! Say it’s an inside joke!!!
…
Oh, wait, they can see all this…
*runs away*
NEVER WRITING ANOTHER ARTICLE AGAIN! Damn it Jesse!
No “needs editing” disclaimer can ever make up for misused apostrophes
I have only read the first paragraph so far, but I will start with answering its questions by pointing out that if you have less than 100% of the market share, you aren’t a monopoly.
And now I get to paragraph 4. My response: Technically correct is the best kind of correct.
I assume you mean that you are technically correct, not the author. Because calling something by the wrong name and then saying yeah I’m gonna call this thing by the wrong name, doesn’t absolve you, especially on a word like monopoly which has a precise meaning.
A true monopoly must be the sole seller of a product AND have no close substitutes. But true monopolies, oligopolies and monopolistic competition all have price-making power – i.e. downward sloping demand curves. In a perfectly competitive environment, firms have a flat demand curve: They can only accept the market price and cannot influence it. That is really what is relevant for this article.
I avoided having to qualify every specific monopoly reference because it adds nothing to the discussion.
Also, the monopolistic designation changes depending on the specific industry and geographic scope. Many hospital conglomerates have true monopolies on “advanced” care within their local markets. Expand the industry to include all healthcare providers and that no longer holds true. The same holds true if you zoom out of the local market. Making all of these qualifications in the article would have bored everyone to sleep. that’s why I just didn’t bother.
Stabbed while crocheting
Is this presumed to be a self-inflicted wound?
Or is this the result of a difference of opinion regarding the appropriate culinary (you perverts) uses of lard, down at the Old Ladies’ Home?
I thought it was “the person was crocheting when someone stabbed them with another implement”
It’s pretty damn hard to stab yourself with a crochet hook. Maybe they mean ‘stabbed in eye’?
“Took a shiv in the ribs from a fellow inmate, whilst crocheting”
Somehow, that adaptation of West Side Story lost something in translation when the Womens’ Knitware Guild ran it last Christmas.
But did you see their re-enactment of the attack on Pearl harbor ?
If you can’t cite the code, no hospital treatment for you!
There’s probably a code that you have to use on that code in order to distinguish.
codeception.
This is mostly because the codes build on a relatively standard pattern, which is what allows you to build the ridiculous ones.
V9542XA for example is
External causes of morbidity V00-Y99
Air and space transport accidents V95-V97
Accident to powered aircraft causing injury to occupant V95-
.2x is private fixed wing aircraft, .3x would be commercial fixed wing aircraft, .4x would be powered spacecraft, etc
Most of these codes are optional to explain the actual injury that occurred and is mostly for tracking purposes (ie not actually used that often in the real world). The injury illness codes use different leading letters based on affected systems (respiratory, musculo-skeletal, etc)
“Crushed larynx caused by falling lithium/cobalt battery from autonomous, flying car”
As Ricky Steamboat can attest, a crushed larynx results from Randy Macho Man Savage using The Savage Elbow and a rail, not from flying cars.
THIS IS WHERE I MEANT TO SAY “IF YOU CAN’T CITE THE CODE, NO TREATMENT FOR YOU”
I read an argument by some health policy expert that the codes were for tracking the sources of outbreaks and such. Doesn’t seem too compelling given some of the codes though.
Looking at that absurd list tells me that nothing is presumed. Perhaps your spouse grew tired of you ignoring them while you crocheted and stabbed you with a screwdriver.
No doubt there is a ‘stabbed while brushing teeth’ on the list as well.
Whoever came up with that list needs to have multiple codes applied to them. Whoever came up with the idea that the list should be created should have twice as many
“Whoever came up with that list needs to have multiple codes applied to them”
All over their bodies. With a dull needle.
Woohoo!
http://nbc4i.com/2017/03/15/amazon-adds-alcohol-to-prime-now-deliveries-in-columbus-market/
It’s truly the end of the world. Don’t they have some heroic politician in the Columbus area that can save people from this impending apocalypse? And my gawd, they’ve got Cincy too! I’m sure glad I moved away, no driving over drunken children lying in the streets for me!
Damn it! Up here in Cleveland I’ve got to go get my own alcohol like the old days.
Woo hoo! Wait, whadyamean “Columbus area” doesn’t extend to Jacktown… ?! motherlovin ratbaggers… I didn’t want your stupid Blackout Stout anyway.
Also the warehouse is in the teeming metropolis of Etna, not Columbus. /pedant.
Jesus, MN just repealed the law banning off-sale alcohol on Sunday. Delivery seems a long way off for us in the hinterlands.
Oh, and first post from long time lurker (here and other site). Figures it would be about alcohol. Anyone need a drink?
Do they deliver good alcohol?
I feel like showing up at a medical facility with a bandage on my head, and claiming “I was struck in the head by a macaw while trying to plug a leak in my kayak” and seeing how they try and reconcile that.
You really should do that and make sure to film it. It could be the first for Glibertarian TV.
S00.01XA Abrasion of scalp, initial encounter.
i suppose having bits of claw/beak sticking out of my skull would up the ante at all?
I guess if it’s an open wound with foreign body we’d go more
S01.04XA Puncture wound with foreign body of scalp, initial encounter
or perhaps
S01.05XA Open bite of scalp, initial encounter
You’re ruining the narrative. What if there are macaw feathers in his hair?
Attacked by macaw which escaped from poachers who also run a human trafficking ring.
what is the point of having the details subcategories if you aren’t going to use them?
I mean, I know why the companion codes exist, but I haven’t seen any incentives for providers to generate a bunch of extraneous data that can be mulled over by labor bureaucrats, so…no point at all.
Jesse!
Stop trying to rain on our parade with your so-called “facts”!
Jesse what’s your take on the “granularity” of the ICD10 codes vs. 9? How minor (or major) are the differences between codes for a given condition/treatment now?
Nobody’s really been able to assume the mantle of awesome since “Bum Fights” were removed from Youtube.
You may have a winning proposition with this.
LOL.
I accidentally struck a tree while crocheting in my kayak and a macaw fell out and hit me in the head and one of the crochet hooks went into my leg!
Oh dear. You just gave Frank a concussion.
did you post it over there?
I don’t have a degree in helping commies.
Meh. I’m content to let him and the clearly like-minded individuals over there continue to believe in their patchwork tapestry of baldertwaddle, and erect all manner of strawmen for them to fearlessly battle in support of it.
Having finally read the whole thing…
excellent piece, kudos, a worthwhile contribution.
*BUT
Probably still needs a second draft, on the low end just to strip out the typos and to clean up some paragraphs, and maybe consider streamlining the middle sections, because the transition from ‘big picture’ stuff to ‘yakking about billing codes’ and then back doesn’t really feel very smooth or natural.
I was expecting a Barry White song. :zips fly back up:
Fair criticism! I didn’t like those transitions either, but I didn’t feel like refining it more after I put it together the first time. I just wanted to get it out. I guess I will never stand shoulder to shoulder with other great Columbia Journalism School Alumni…Thank you for crushing my dreams.
-Sucked into jet engine, subsequent encounter – V9733XD (Twice?)
-Bizarre personal appearance – R461 (…you talk like a fag, and your shit’s all retarded.)
As I chuckled, I realized these are real.
Then the chuckles and giggles turned to sighs.
Sucked into jet engine, subsequent encounter is a subsequent encounter with the doctor, not with a jet engine…
After being sucked in a jet engine, all subsequent encounters involve a wet vac and a bright red hefty bag.
I highly doubt you are going to need two trips, much less one.
I mean, you might.
Well actually…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v2v1Pgpzp88
That makes more sense.
Hurt at the opera – Y92253
Been there, done that.
Abraham Lincoln approves.
That was a play. Totally different code.
I can’t wait until we call the doctor and get the following automated message:
Listen carefully as the codes have changed.
I gave myself a blister at the ballet once. What’s the code, dammit?
What if it was an injury at a play IN an opera house?
Somewhere a high ranking insurance exec is reading this while reaching for his phone.
God I hate the food pyramid so much.
You just haven’t had Marilyn Manson explain it to you.
Scotch doesn’t appear ANYWHERE on it!
Scotch is used to preserve the mummy inside the pyramid.
No scotch and low fat. It’s like they want me to be miserable.
::checks food log:: ~108 grams of fat today. Good day.
It’s times like this I’m glad I have an amazing metabolism thanks to genetics.
*Proceeds to drink from fat-bucket*
108? Sounds about a quart low to me.
*Whips out tub of crisco*
The only guide to nutrition that I need.
Hilarious take on how I structure my diet.
You do realize structuring is a federal offense, right?
Three felonies a day, baby!
Hahah! I do love the quote, “Your body can’t tell the difference between the carbs in brown rice and brown-ies.”
I was anticipating Mr. Creosote ordering dinner.
I assume my honorary degree from Columbia is in the mail.
For this, you might even get an honorary degree from America!
OP doesn’t even have a Master’s degree in Journalism from Columbia University.
Heh, I can’t believe that’s not been retracted.
It’s worse than not been retracted there isn’t even a little asterisk or ‘oh hey btw he was totally right about everything’ ANYWHERE ON THE FUCKING PAGE!
To give them credit at the top of the story there is a list of “Updates to this Story”. That basically say that everything below is BS.
Oh wait, it gets better, WAY better. Did you see the note at the bottom of the article?
If that is not the single most delicious piece of irony in the history of the world then please do not show me cause I think it would kill me.
Here’s her Linkedin page:
Anna Merlan
Senior investigative reporter
Gizmodo Media Group
Who is Gizmodo Media Group?
Senior investigative reporter?
LOL!
Gizmodo Media Group is whatever is left of the Gawker Media Group after Peter Thiel got done with them.
The formerly-gay guy?
Thiel is still gay
sarc tag implied.
I like the comments. It makes me hate people.
I use the food pyramid. I just reverse the order.
Finally there is justice in the Tamir Rice incident!
His relatives can sure rest easy now.
What’s the ICD-10 code for a STEVE SMITH encounter?
It’s gonna be whatever the local police call code is for “Sexual attack by wild animal”.
Whatever the code for anal prolapse is.
Let’s see, code for ‘coarse hair forcefully embedded into vaginal walls…..’
T74.21XA Adult sexual abuse, confirmed, initial encounter
X39.8 XA Other exposure to forces of nature, initial encounter
I had some blood drawn this eeek
The insurance costs for the lab work was $511
I paid $98 cash price.
I’m trying to figure out if I need anything done, just so I can use these guys:
https://surgerycenterok.com/pricing/
“Sucked into jet engine, subsequent encounter – V9733XD (Twice?)”
I’m totally nitpicking here, but… In medical coding, “subsequent encounter” means a follow-up visit for the same jet engine incident, not a visit after being sucked into a jet engine for the second time.
It’s funnier the other way.
Fantastic article! Every free market innovation that works in health care eventually (and sometimes quickly) gets crushed by zealot lawyers or the oh so benevolent government.
Unfortunately the march to Balkanized socialized medicine continues unimpeded. In the case of the US the costs would swallow so much more of our economy than it already does. The only hope now is independent practitioners making small changes where they can.