we're a nation of middlemen

https://lemmy.ml/post/41922363

It probably started with healthcare being expensive.
Insurance is why it got expensive

Let me state up front I agree with you. A less charitable reading of what I’m about to say would try to make it seem like I’m putting the blame on other things to deflect. I’m not. Insurance companies fucking suck and are among the reasons it’s expensive.

Like everything it’s more complicated than a single factor. Tying healthcare to jobs is part of it. Boosting the number of people signing up for the military is part of it for both VA insurance and college. The cost of college (with its financial middlemen as well) for doctors is part of it.

Insurance is a huge reason. There are a hundred other little reasons as well, many of them also dealing with financial middlemen, that contribute to the issue. It’s a Gordian Knot of idiocy and when it gets sliced it’s going to be painful and, once the initial pain is done, necessary in hindsight.

That’s not entirely true. I mean, they’re one of the biggest parts of the problem.
Special thanks to the people who made MRI exist! It’s a good thing they can each scan tens of thousands of people.
Vladislav Ivanov (physicist) - Wikipedia

It is the reason why healthcare is up to three times more expensive in the US compared to countries with universal healthcare.

They also have MRI machines in countries with universal healthcare, so that is a completely moot point.

I completely agree but “got more expensive” is a bit of a loaded phrase given what it costs to put together a hospital.

And I bet the MRI in those other countries cost money too, a cost that they will also wouldn’t have incurred a number of decades ago.

An under-appreciated aspect of the insurance industry is the fact that there is typically a multi-year lag between the collection of premiums and the payout of claims. Insurance companies invest the premiums in the meantime and profit off the returns. This allows them (in some cases) to be profitable even when payouts exceed claims. As a result, not only are health insurers not troubled by rising costs, they actually benefit from rising costs because the premiums rise at the same time.
I suspect that is not the only reason but it definitely contributes. Insurance companies are like the bacteria growing on a festering wound making it worse. Otherwise medicine and biotech research/operation is not cheap, personalized medicine even more expensive. The R&D is many times carried out by private companies which mostly care for profit. So fixing healthcare requires more than just getting rid of insurance companies (though they should definitely be gone). Alot of goverment support and correct use of taxes is required too.