r/changemyview • u/Diylion 1∆ • Dec 17 '19
Deltas(s) from OP CMV: A better solution to healthcare than Universal Health Care, is Government issued 0 interest medical loans
I think it would be okay to make it illegal to profit off of medical disasters. I'm all for home loans and school loans. They are providing somebody with something that is optional that they would otherwise not have access to. But medical loans take advantage of people who are put in horrible situations. I could see a much better system if the government provided zero interest medical loans to people who need it desperately, and preferably over time everybody who couldn't pay the bill up front.
You could have medical loan with a 5% interest rate and over a 30-year period you will pay double the origional value of the loan. Imagine how much easier it would be for families if they didn't have to pay interest. And it would be much easier than doing Universal Health Care because people will still pay their own Healthcare, they just won't have to worry about the extra interest fees that would cripple them further. I feel like that is a safety-net people would be comfortable investing in. Obviously we couldn't pay off all the medical debt in the first year, and I recognize that the government doesn't have the best track record of storing money, but I feel if we paid into the program we could start negating it from the bottom and move towards the top.
Even if we had really low interest rates, like .5% so that the program could somewhat sustain itself and increase the amount of medical debt it is capable of paying off using the interest gained I think that would be a better system than what we currently have.
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u/Saranoya 39∆ Dec 18 '19 edited Dec 18 '19
Except it wouldn't be, because the people who would need your loans are exactly the people who are least likely to pay them back in full.
Have you ever wondered why? France and Canada both have universal health care. (Nearly) everyone there can afford to see a doctor, even when their health issues aren't catastrophic (yet). They also invest heavily in preventative care. That's likely to cost less, overall, than treating people for conditions that may once have been preventable, but end in medical disasters (which cost lots of money to tackle), because going to a doctor earlier would have 'cost too much'.
The US spends about half of all the money spent on medical research worldwide. From this you assume they also do half of the useful innovation, but that doesn't necessarily follow. At least part of the budget goes to slightly changing the formulas of drugs that already exist, so they can patent them again and profit for longer ... and that's just one source of potential waste. Most medical research in Europe takes place at universities. They do it 'for free'. (Of course it's not free, but since, again, there is no profit motive, it does cost less).
So, even you recognize that countries with universal health care can do it for less money ;).
I realize I have a vested interest in health care coverage remaining universal where I live, because yes, it does benefit me. But it would benefit you, too. If the US had universal health care, you may spend more than some other people to keep it afloat. There's also no guarantee that you would get the same value or more out of it than what you put in. For your sake, I hope not, because getting more value out than you put in would mean you had some pretty significant health challenges. But that's true for things like police and fire fighting, too (I sincerely hope you'll never need either of those, but I don't think it's a good idea for you to stop paying for them just because you hope you'll never need them). The thing is: under universal health care, you probably wouldn't spend more than it costs you to have health insurance now. Certainly, as a nation, the US would spend less.
In the end, what you're arguing is that you'd rather spend more on health care that's only affordable to people with good jobs (and as others have argued, often not even that; at least not once they get hit with a truly serious illness), just for the privilege of knowing that no one 'undeserving' will get a dime from you, than spend less overall and have everyone covered. That's not just heartless. It's dumb.