Mark Hansen wrote: but wouldn't a low cost, reasonably safe treatment like the use of Vitamin C be encouraged by health insurance companies (which, by the way, I have no love for either) as a way to keep their costs down?
Whoa. Hold on. 'their costs'??? The cost of health insurance is the cost borne by the health insurance customer. They're
our costs, and their profits. Their job is to sell us insurance, which is a loan: it allows us to be able to pay a big medical bill all at once, and in return for the coverage ( loan ), we pay them premiums which include interest. They let us pay slowly and they pay the hospitals quickly, and the difference between what they collect from us and what they pay the hospitals is their profit.
Where do you see the insurance company motive for cheap alternative medicine replacing corporate medicine? That breaks the circuit. The insurance companies have no interest in healthy people who get healthy cheaply without using corporate med, because that reduces rates. Insurance companies make the most money off people who suffer from long, protracted illnesses or catastrophic illnesses, like cancer, because an abundance of such people in society escalates the insurance rates for all of us. People that eat right and exercise and live without constant health care problems into old age are poison to health insurers and corporate med.
Come on, Mark. The insurance companies and the health care industry have two enemies:
Healthy people.
People who get healthy without buying their products.
What you are suggesting is sort of like suggesting that the banks would be happy if fellow citizens banded together into groups to share their savings and promote business using internally-generated money the way many Koreans do, reducing the demand for credit from the interest-charging banks.
Are you going to tell me next that the funeral home industry would back a secret potion that let people live forever?