It is going to be this or outright single pay for all. Anything else you end up paying at least $2.00 in order to pay $1.00. This obviously nonsense that the insurance industry refuses to give up on. Go to single payer and competing jurisdictions will tend to drive prices down across the board. State control is wonderful for exactly that.
This approach is actually promising. Better yet i want to see healer's circles created. The trained doctor remains the principle diagnostician but also the expert in medical language itself. This matters when skilled healers are called upon to provide specific services. Far too long these folks have been marginalized by our so called professionals.
Slowly we are seeing a better way. i also want to see a spiritual diagnostic protocol created as well similar to what was actually achieved by Edgar Cayce. This will wonderfully guide the doctor's technical diagnostics as well and plausibly avoid missed issues.
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A new kind of doctor's office charges a monthly fee and doesn't take insurance — and it could be the future of medicine
Dr. Bryan Hill spent his career working as a
pediatrician, teaching at a university, and working at a hospital. But
in March 2016, he decided he no longer wanted a boss.
He took some time off, then one day he got a call asking if he'd be
up for doing a house call for a woman whose son was sick. He agreed, and
by the end of that visit, he realized he wanted to treat patients
without dealing with any of the insurance requirements.
Then he learned about a totally different way to run a doctor's
office. It's called direct primary care, and it works like this: Instead
of accepting insurance for routine visits and drugs, these practices
charge a monthly membership fee that covers most of what the average
patient needs, including visits and drugs at much lower prices.
That sounded good to him. In September, Hill opened his direct-primary-care pediatrics practice, Gold Standard Pediatrics, in South Carolina.
Hill is part of a small but fast-growing movement of pediatricians,
family-medicine physicians, and internists who are opting for this
different model. It's happening at a time when high-deductible health plans are on the rise
— a survey in September found that 51% of workers had a plan that
required them to pay up to $1,000 out of pocket for healthcare until
insurance picks up most of the rest.
That means consumers have a clearer picture of how much they're
spending on healthcare and are having to pay more. At the same time,
primary-care doctors in the traditional system are feeling the pressure
under the typical fee-for-service model in which doctors are
incentivized to see more patients for less time to maximize profits.
Direct primary care has the potential to simplify basic doctor
visits, allowing a doctor to focus solely on the patient. But there are
also concerns about the effect that separating insurance from primary
care could have on the rest of the healthcare system — that and doctors
often have to accept lower pay in exchange for less stress.
How direct primary care works
For
Brent Long and his family, paying for healthcare is now like paying a
cellphone bill. Since they joined Black Bag Family Healthcare in Johnson
City, Tennessee, about two years ago, the family has paid about $150 a month to belong to the practice.
Long joined around the time he was shifting his insurance to a
high-deductible health plan. There were two reasons he decided to switch
and start paying for all six members of his family to get direct
primary care: the cost-effectiveness of not having to deal with copays
or urgent-care visits, and the fact that it could easily fit his
family's busy lifestyle that doesn't jibe with spending hours in waiting
rooms.
Included in that monthly fee are basic checkups, same-day or next-day
appointments, and — a big boon to patients — the ability to obtain
medications and lab tests at or near wholesale prices.
Direct primary care also comes with near-constant access to a doctor —
talking via FaceTime while the family is on vacation, or taking an
emergency trip to the office to get stitches after a bad fall on a
Saturday night. Because direct primary care doesn't take insurance,
there are no copays and no costs beyond the monthly fee.
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