Socialized health care would have made coronavirus worse, not betterWashington Times, Apr 25, 2020, Kelli Ward
The vast majority of Americans would immediately object to a government official having the power to take an elderly person off of a ventilator to make room for somebody else. As a physician and a human being, I find even the thought to be both ethically and morally reprehensible, but under a government-run, socialized health care system that would become the new normal in America.
During the current COVID-19 crisis, we are seeing the importance of building up overcapacity in our health care system. This is wise in case of local or regional crises such as major storms, earthquakes, accidents or terror attacks, and likewise, the current pandemic proves it must also take place at the national level.
Government-run systems simply do not produce overcapacity. In fact, they are incapable of producing it. At his April 14 White House press briefing, President Trump pointed out the facts to prove it. Italy has 12.5 ICU beds per 100,000 people in their population; France has 11.6; Spain has 9.7; and the United Kingdom has 6.6. For years, advocates of moving our country toward socialized medicine have pointed to these countries as models to emulate.
However, contrast that with the United States’ still largely private health care system where we have 34.7 ICU beds per 100,000 people. Moreover, hospital systems were on a building boom in the late 1990s and early 2000s, as they scaled up capacity in anticipation of the baby boomer generation reaching retirement age.
Then Americans were force-fed Obamacare.
Government officials, in all their wisdom, decided that people would get a card saying they had insurance but would no longer use hospital emergency rooms for primary care. The hospital systems did what the government mandated and moved away from the hospital model to an urgent care model, where patients are less likely to see a doctor. As a result, they began building urgent care centers instead of hospitals.
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