Saturday, October 10, 2009

 

Health Care Reform Challenge

On September 7th, 2009, in a speech to the AFL-CIO, President Obama challenged opponents to the Democratic health care reform proposals set forth in H.R. 3200 to come up with their own proposals.

Then on September 9th, 2009, in a speech to a Joint Session of Congress, President Obama again challenged opponents to come up with their own proposals.

Of course, as became apparent during the sometimes raucous town hall meetings held during the August recess, many, and likely a majority, of us feel that the Democratic proposals offer nothing more than the nationalization of our health care system, which will ultimately result in health care rationing, likely based upon an individual’s potential contribution to society, an idea advocated by some of President Obama’s closest advisors.  Massive tax increases and unsustainable deficits will ultimately force the United States into bankruptcy and economic ruin.

I will take up President Obama on his challenge by laying out specific reform proposals.  However, unlike the Democratic proposals, for the most part, these reforms operate within the private sector.

The health care system is in need of reform. I don’t think that any of us disagree with that assertion. Where we disagree is in what kind of reform we need.

I see changes to the following areas as the best approach to health care reform:

These changes will make the health care system more responsible to the needs of the people, while addressing major problems, in the health insurance industry, in the health care delivery system, in the legal profession, and in government regulatory oversight.

Commentary

Some people have expressed the concern that the requirement that the plaintiff pay court costs and legal fees if a jury finds that a lawsuit was unwarranted will discourage legitimate filings.  I disagree.  This provision is targeted at otherwise egregious cases where the intent of the plaintiff is to extort money from the defendant, who in the current environment may be encouraged to accept an otherwise unjust settlement, reasoning that it is cheaper to settle than to win a Pyrrhic victory.

Revision History


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