really, it wouldn't take a massive change, size wise, more a change of leadership and having that leadership absolutely shift priorities. Most of the source issues can be traced back to the corporate interests being preserved, for sheer profit, throughout all government spending programs. Yes, there is bureaucratic loss and overhead, but for most programs with private sector comparison, the overhead is far less for government when you take the stockholder demand for short term profit out of the equation to some extent.Spidey wrote:There is absolutely no evidence that the government is going to change its ways any time soon.
“But this time it’ll be different…I promise.”
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ACA didn't have that aspect as a target. Single payer nations address that by providing incentives(largely scholarship incentives) to educate and train more healthcare professionals. As it is, the US is coming along, but the AIDS scare left a generation-sized hole in healthcare professionals that is starting to refill with younger professionals. When I went into laboratory science, most programs teaching that were closing down for lack of students. Probably, only the fact that I'd studied some virology in grad school kept me from the fear of that virus. Digression aside, the point is that some aspects of the supply side are cyclical, some can be tweaked in the proper direction. However, I don't see why you feel that the fix should be in any way tied to changing basic healthcare from a privilege to a birthright and going to a single payer system. That is akin to expecting the Agriculture Bill to also fix the issues around soybean prices. Every legislative act need not be some sort of Omnibus bill. That is precisely WHY we see some the excess you decry.Speaking of supply and demand, insufficient supply is one of the price drivers in the healthcare industry, please explain how single payer addresses that issue. Hell while you are at it please explain where the ACA addresses that issue.