The Federal Government Should Clean Up its own Medicare Mess Before Taking on the Entire Health Care System


The New Testament book of Matthew contains a well-known allegorical tale known as the “Parable of the Ten Talents.” In this story, Jesus told of a man who entrusted his property to three servants while he was away. One servant was given five silver talents; another two; and a third one. The first two servants put that which their master had given them to good use, and doubled his money while he was away. The third servant, who had been given but one talent, buried the valuable quantity of silver to preserve it until his master returned, neither risking its safety nor putting it to good use while its owner was away.

Upon his return, the two servants who had taken that which he had entrusted them with and used it wisely during his absence presented their master with their earnings. He replied to each, “Well done, my good and faithful servant! You have been faithful with a few things; I will put you in charge of many things.”

The third servant, who had merely protected that portion of his master’s wealth with which he had been entrusted, presented the single talent upon the man’s return. Seeing this, the master flew into a rage, chastising the “wicked, lazy servant” for allowing cowardice and irresponsibility to prevent his putting the master’s money to good use and ordering the servant to surrender his talent to the servant who had proved his resourcefulness and trustworthiness by doubling his master’s five talents.

The moral of this New Testament parable – be a good steward of a little and you will be trusted with more, but poor stewardship will lose you the privilege of being trusted with anything in the future – is recalled to mind by the federal government’s current attempt to take over the American health care system. The 33 years Medicare has been in existence have provided the federal government with an opportunity to demonstrate what type of steward its legislators and bureaucrats will be of a national health care program millions of Americans are trusting for their coverage and care.

“Medicare is… a government-run health care plan that people are very happy with,” said President Obama, at a late July town hall meeting in an effort to defend Medicare as a popular and successful example of government health care at its best.

A simple look at the numbers is enough to rebuff Obama’s claim that the program is an example of the federal government being a good steward of American health care dollars and coverage, while also serving to demonstrate the government’s inability to accurately predict the future costs of its programs (a very important fact to keep in mind in light of Congress’ claims that a health care overhaul can be undertaken without costing future generations trillions).

At its inception in 1966, Medicare carried an annual price tag of $3 billion. Its Congressional founders predicted that cost would rise to $12 billion a year by 1990 – a figure that accounted for inflation.

The true cost of Medicare is stunning. In 1990, rather than costing American taxpayers $12 billion, Medicare cost $107 billion – an increase of 800% over the government’s best guess at the program’s cost 23 years before. That cost has increased exponentially as the years have passed since 1990. This year, $484 billion will be spent on mandatory Medicare outlays; by 2018, that number will be $885.1 billion, according to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office. The total amount owed Medicare beneficiaries (American workers who are at least 22 years old and who have paid into the system, meaning they are due Medicare coverage upon retirement) is a staggering $32.3 trillion – an amount over twice America’s GDP, and nearly five times the publicized national debt.

The fact that the federal government has allowed a key health coverage program with which it has been entrusted to fall over thirty trillion dollars in debt should send a powerful message about Washington’s ability (or, more correctly, inability) to be a good steward of Americans’ health care dollars and coverage.

Further, the fact that Congress has refused to do away with a law requiring seniors to enroll in Medicare or forfeit their Social Security benefits – a regulation that is currently being challenged in federal court by a group of plaintiffs led by former Republican Congressman Dick Armey – for fear of losing massive numbers of seniors to private health coverage serves to reinforce both the undesirability of the government-run program. It also demonstrates the federal government’s willingness, when given the opportunity, to force citizens onto the rolls of government care by denying them the opportunity to choose their coverage.

Medicare, the chief example of health care as run by the federal government, is an utter mess that is losing doctors, resorting to anti-choice laws to keep seniors enrolled, and hemorrhaging taxpayer dollars by the trillions. President Obama and his allies in the Democratic-led Congress should demonstrate their ability to be good stewards of the people’s health care dollars and coverage by fixing their own Medicare mess before they seek to expand their grip on America’s health care system as a whole.

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6 Comments Leave a comment

5^5 Jeff !

Old_Crow Wednesday, August 12th at 1:50PM EDT (link)

“Enlightened statesmen will not always be at the helm.” — James Madison
“So this is how liberty dies.. with thunderous applause” — Star Wars III

 

Perspective...

tantytantalus Wednesday, August 12th at 2:03PM EDT (link)

$484 billion is almost half of total revenues the government received from individual income taxes last year. Medicare already costs the nation an obscene amount, and covers a very limited percentage of Americans right now…

There’s next to no way a universal Medicare system would be feasible, without massive tax increases or other such measures in order to pay for it.

I mean, if you see corporations and/or The Rich as a green, shining dipping pool to siphon money out of, I suppose universal medicare still seems like a bright idea. But beyond that, I have no idea how the nation could support an expanded public healthcare system.

 

Right on the Mark

misterh Wednesday, August 12th at 3:03PM EDT (link)

Great Post.

Totally on the mark. The fiscal health of medicare should give people pause when looking at the proposed reform of the whole system.

Mr. H
http://www.allhands-ondeck.blogspot.com/

 

The Heritage Foundation has been saying this forever

Scope Wednesday, August 12th at 4:46PM EDT (link)

They have been warning about the out of control costs of Medicare, and the need for real reform of the entire system.

Speaking of the Healthcare debate, I had to copy a part of a post from a Liberal that supports Obamacare from another site-

The beginning of section 8 of our US Constitution

Section 8. The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises, to pay the debts and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States; but all duties, imposts and excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;

As you see, the Constitution does grant Congress the power to provide for the general welfare of the United States–i.e. healthcare

That is just how desperate the Libs are. And, this was posted on a Tea Party site.

 

Let's not forget about Medicaid

scottbomb Wednesday, August 12th at 7:20PM EDT (link)

A friend of mine who I’ve known for six years is disabled and under 65. Thanks to certian rules, she doesn’t qullify for Medicare so she survives on Medicaid. It took her two years to prove to the government that she’s disabled in the first place. Homeless during this time, she cleaned houses and sold her possessions to buy anti-seizure medicine.

Medicaid pays so poorly, finding a doctor is a real challenge for her. When she moved to Dallas, she tried to utilize the public hospital (the famous Parkland, where JFK was pronounced dead) but they wouldn’t help her because she didn’t live in Dallas County. It’s been 5 years now and she still doesn’t have a rhumatologist or a neurologist. When she calls Medicaid to help her find doctors, they give her a couple of numbers only to find out later they aren’t accepting new (Medicaid) patients. Isn’t that odd? When I need a specialist, I just look them up on my insurance company’s website and - joila! I have a specialist.

It gets even better. She moved to Ft. Worth a year ago. She’d like to find a primary care physician that’s closer to her but so far she has found no one. Medicaid actually pays a taxi to pick her up and take her to her doctor in Carrollton, a Dallas suburb about 50 miles away, and back. That’s 100 miles round trip. The taxi driver ends up making about as much (if not more) than the doctor. You would think that Medicaid would help her find a closer doctor for this reason alone but no… that would be too efficient for government.

Last week, I took her to a dentist. $235 out of my pocket because Medicaid doesn’t cover dental for those under 21. He referred her to an oral surgeon because the problem is beyond his scope. Of course the surgeon doesn’t take Medicaid so I took her to a nearby ER. There wasn’t much the doctor could do except order a CT scan to make sure it wasn’t cancer. He mentioned taking her to JPS (Ft. Worth’s public hospital) but when he found out she lived outside the county, he said, “that’s too bad.” He wouldn’t elaborate and changed the subject quickly before I could ask him why that made a difference. *sigh*

Thanks be to God, she did manage to find an oral surgeon that will see her next week. Finding a doctor that quickly was a miracle. I suspect it may have been someone the ER doc know as he did giver her a couple of phone numbers. That was a miracle.

So there you have it, public heath care in all it’s glory. I could go on (limits on prescriptions, no reimbursment for ambulance tranportation, etc.). And guess what? President HopeChange and the Democrats in Congress, the ones who claim to care so much for the poor, want to cut Medicaid as well.

As I’ve said before, indigent health care is broken but it can be fixed. There’s no need to throw the baby out with the bath water!

P.S. Ask Parkland what happened when they sent a bill to Mexico for all the illegal aliens they treat. Better yet, ask them what DIDN’T happen.

http://www.HowObamaGotElected.com

“The American people will never knowingly adopt socialism. But, under the name of ‘liberalism’, they will adopt every fragment of the socialist program, until one day America will be a socialist nation, without knowing how it happened.” - Norman Thomas, U.S. Socialist Party presidential candidate 1940, 1944 and 1948

 

Final solution

fisk2521 Thursday, August 13th at 9:45AM EDT (link)

My husband just turned 65… he was ‘forced’ to apply for Medicare. Our private insurance no longer pays when you turn 65…. it relies on Medicare.

He would have much rather kept his private insurance, which costs much more; but he couldn’t. That is exactly what will happen with this universal healthcare plan Obama is lying about. Medicare is the example we should all look to when we want to see how this will all end…it’s right in front of us this minute.

Medicare is going bankrupt, people have no choice and the ’solution’ to this appears to be ‘cut costs by denying care’ and advising early deaths.

Sounds like a solution doesn’t it….the final solution.

LDavis

 

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