Mark Hansen wrote:I merely stated that if a safe, cheap, reasonable alternative treatment for cancer, in this case, specifically, IV vitamin C, was proved to be effective in treating cancer, then any insurance company would jump on it in a heartbeat, because "their costs", the money they pay out for treatment of cancer, would plummet.
You're not getting it. They are not 'their costs'. They are 'our' costs. That is what insurance is. An agreement that the insurer will pay the insured's costs when the insured is faced with a lump sum medical bill that he cannot pay. Insurance is a loan, or more accurately, a mortgage. Do banks want the costs of homes to plummet, so they write smaller loans and collect less interest? Of course not. Do health insurers want people to find cheaper treatments, so they require smaller loans ( policies ) from the health insurer? Of course not. Your whole argument is like you think we live in a single payer taxdollar funded system, where there would be an incentive to make people healthy for less. We live in a profit-driven system, and therefore, rising health care costs and rising premiums are good news for the profit-based industry.
I'm amazed that you aren't seeing this.
mark hansen wrote:Hopefully, that would translate into lower premiums for people like you and me, although I wouldn't hold my breathe waiting for this to happen.
And why are lower premiums good news for anyone but you or me? Did Exxon buy you a hybrid car this morning so you can stop buying their gas?
mark hansen wrote:I guess I don't understand why you think a cheap effective alternative treatment wouldn't be in their interests also.
Mark, they are in the business of selling health care and the insurance to pay for it, that's why! Damn... I know you know what capitalism is. It must be the concept of treatment that is making you think that corporate medicine has your interests at heart, and is always doing what it takes to lower health care costs. Think of it as a product. If you held the exclusive license to sell donuts that cost $12 a dozen in Chicago, would you expect Donuts, Inc. to welcome with open arms the woman who bakes donuts in her kitchen and sells them to her friends for $2 a dozen?
Control of the marketplace and the cost structure is why they won't eagerly sell you cheap alternative treatments- you're aware of the battle to buy meds from Canada, right? Doesn't that current event tell you a lot more about who big pharm is looking out for than some fantasy you have about the insurance companies and their friends in corporate medicine getting together to give you Vitamin C for your cancer? If health insurers are on your side, why can't you get cheaper Canadian pills covered by your US insurer??
Christ, Mark. They're in it for the money.