Viewpoints: Health Care Costs Are About More Than Economics; Did The Danger Of Painkillers Go Unnoticed By The FDA?
A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.
Reimbursement incentives are crucial in health care. The bottom line is, well, the bottom line. But one reason we still have haven鈥檛 got a tight handle on health care costs is that they are too often treated only as an issue of economics, rather than medicine. The limits of this approach are clear. Health care costs in the United States have been rising much faster than inflation for a long time. When Medicare was created in 1965, for example, the United States was spending about 6 percent of GOP on health care. Today the number is about 18 percent, or $3.4 trillion in 2016. (Marschall S. Runge, 10/9)
For better or worse, the FDA is the primary gatekeeper separating dangerous drugs from the American public. It feel asleep at the wheel, and states like Ohio are facing the consequences. (J.D. Vance, 10/11)
In their abortive last-ditch effort to get rid of the Affordable Care Act (and gut Medicaid in the process) before the Sept. 30 end of the fiscal year, Senate Republicans didn鈥檛 get around to reauthorizing the Children鈥檚 Health Insurance Program. For 20 years, CHIP has enjoyed broad bipartisan support, and still might if GOP lawmakers can stop turning every health care issue into an argument about Obamacare. (10/9)
Congress needs to reauthorize CHIP for five years. It鈥檚 up to the Republican leaders who鈥檝e been stalwart supporters of care for children to keep their party from using CHIP as a weapon in the war on Obamacare. (10/10)
Congress has essentially unlimited power to impose regulations on firearms. But lawmakers do not want to act. So this country鈥檚 epidemic of gun deaths will continue. Considering that reality, Congress should at the very least ensure Americans have health insurance. (10/10)
Our health care system is waking up to the fact that the health of individuals and families does not depend solely on good coverage and good medical care; it also requires us to address social and other factors that are major contributors to a person鈥檚 physical and mental well-being. That鈥檚 why more and more clinics are screening incoming patients for challenges in areas ranging from housing conditions, nutrition, access to transportation, and even their ability to afford utilities. It鈥檚 why the American Academy of Pediatrics urged its members not only to screen all patients for food insecurity but to refer parents to appropriate agencies. It is also why some hospitals, to reduce readmissions, have brought organizations like Health Leads into their discharge planning to connect patients with social services. (Stuart Butler, 10/5)
I know that there are many places and people out there, right now, who are trying their best to reach out and help those who are struggling with depression. And it seems simple enough to those on the outside. Reach out, get help and you can beat depression. But like I said, depression is relentless and doesn鈥檛 give up so easily. Just like with alcoholism and drug addiction. Depression keeps pounding at you, whispering in your ear, trying to bring you back in to its fold. So even those people who are fortunate enough to have all the resources in the world can still end up bowing down to its will. (Becky Galloway, 10/10)
The White House is right to end the burden on religious objectors. But it is the birth-control mandate itself that should be scrapped. Contraception is legal, cheap, and available everywhere. Why are the feds meddling where they aren鈥檛 needed? (Jeff Jacoby, 10/10)
A Kansas couple trying to keep their 2-year-old grandson from being vaccinated sees themselves as fighting 鈥渢he religious police.鈥 Which makes it sound like they鈥檙e comparing the State of Kansas to Saudi Arabia鈥檚 Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, who until not that long ago went around beating Islamic dress code violators with canes. (Melinda Henneberger, 10/9)
Was it really so unreasonable for Cook County to try to add a 鈥渟in tax鈥 to sugary drinks? I鈥檓 asking now that the hugely unpopular tax appears dead 鈥 Tuesday鈥檚 committee vote at the County Board presaged a full repeal Wednesday 鈥 and perspectives are less clouded by rage and indignation. (Eric Zorn, 10/10)