Harvard Medical School Dean: Health “reform” a failure
by Brian T. Schwartz | 1:30 am, November 25, 2009 | Comments Off
Some choice words from Jeffrey S. Flier, Dean of Harvard’s Medical School. Some excerpts from his Wall Street Journal article:
Our health-care system suffers from problems of cost, access and quality, and needs major reform. Tax policy drives employment-based insurance; this begets overinsurance and drives costs upward while creating inequities for the unemployed and self-employed. A regulatory morass limits innovation. And deep flaws in Medicare and Medicaid drive spending without optimizing care. …
… there are no provisions to substantively control the growth of costs or raise the quality of care.
… In discussions with dozens of health-care leaders and economists, I find near unanimity of opinion that, whatever its shape, the final legislation that will emerge from Congress will markedly accelerate national health-care spending rather than restrain it. Likewise, nearly all agree that the legislation would do little or nothing to improve quality or change health-care’s dysfunctional delivery system.
… currently proposed federal legislation would undermine any potential for real innovation in insurance and the provision of care. It would do so by overregulating the health-care system in the service of special interests such as insurance companies, hospitals, professional organizations and pharmaceutical companies, rather than the patients who should be our primary concern.
Read the whole article: Health ‘Reform’ Gets a Failing Grade.
(Via Grace-Marie Turner’s summary of the politics behind getting the Dem’s bill passed. )















