All the Care that Money Will Buy

John Goodman: All the Care that Money Will Buy

I believe we could spend our entire national income on health care. Not by frittering money away, but by spending it on goods and services that even in small ways could improve the odds of better health. (Examples below.)

I find that most people in health policy agree with that assessment, but rarely do they see its logical (and I would say obvious) implication. If we spent all our income on health, we would have nothing to eat, nothing to wear, no place to sleep. There would be only health care. Since that’s clearly an undesirable state of affairs, it must be good for people to refrain from obtaining all the useful care that money will buy. Further, such restraint needs to be exercised quite often.

What brings this to mind is a new RAND study finding that people with Health Savings Account plans consume less care than people with conventional insurance and have lower health care costs. The people who were studied cut back on such “useful care” as mammograms, screenings for cervical and colorectal cancer and even childhood vaccinations.

Some critics pounced on this result and claimed that consumer-directed care is bad for patients. The critics are, of course, very wrong. …

… In fact, the patients’ behavior is exactly what you would expect from a rational consumer of any product. When something is free the temptation is to take everything that is offered. The incentive to distinguish between what is “necessary” or “useful” and “unnecessary” or “unuseful” is largely nonexistent. When you have to pay market prices, however, you have an incentive to pay more attention — figuring out what’s “unnecessary” and dropping that as well as those “necessary” items whose value is less than their price. …

… Spending all of other peoples’ money on health care is easy, like taking candy from a baby.  To prevent that from happening, public or private bureaucracies can ration your care and tell you what services you can and cannot have.  Or, you could manage more of your own health care dollars and make you own choices between health care and other uses of money. …


Comments

2 responses to “All the Care that Money Will Buy”

  1. ceemac Avatar
    ceemac

    Goodman’s thinking has one major flaw. He (and Kruse?) assume that most people are have to competence to make medical decisions.
    I have to disagree. I do not have the competence to make the decisions Goodman insists that I make. I do not have a medical education. I’m not uneducated(I have a BS in Chemistry and Bio. Plus grad degrees in Theology and education). But I know my limits.
    In a part of the article you did not quote Goodman said “If not getting a $100 test keeps you awake at night, by all means get the test.” That’s not what would keep me awake at night. It would be fear of making the wrong decision. If I have the test and didn’t need it that is a wrong decision. If I don’t have the test and I needed it that a wrong decision. If the decision is made by a Dr then I don’t lose any sleep at all.

  2. You raise an interesting question,ceemac. I was having a discussion recently with a surgeon friend who also teaches. He was talking about the how the pendulum keeps swinging between the doctor basically directing health care and the patient using the doctor as an auto-mechanic. 😉
    I agree that we are not capable of knowing enough to make decisions on our own. But no doctor or bureaucrat can know the different value that each person places on various components that go into making a decision even if the patient had full information an understanding. It seems to me that a physician could be my partner in understanding the costs and risk of various actions. I wouldn’t be making decisions alone. For those who just want the doctor to tell them what to do, they can go that route. But those who want to be more judicious could and would.
    My main interest in the article is how well he demonstrates that we don’t have unlimited resources and that some means of rationing …. by the market or government agents … must occur. You can’t just say health care is a right and act as if there are no cost implications.

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