Big Brother with a Syringe and Scalpel
I was just talking with a friend in the insurance industry who also advises government on some matters of public health policy. He was telling me about an idea that I find simultaneously very interesting and very frightening. Let me say at the outset that I do not think there is currently much support for this idea.
The idea concerns a plan for national health care coverage. To keep cost down and presumably increase overall public health, many preventive and treatment treatments would be made mandatory. It might look something like this: annual check ups and dental exams would be mandatory. So would many vaccinations. If a person had high blood pressure they would have to take hypertension medication; if they had high cholesterol, then taking a statin would be required. People who failed to comply would be cut or have their premiums raised.
The idea, of course, is to reduce costs by detecting and preventing medical conditions before they become serious and thus more costly.
Another part of plan would be to collect a massive patient database in order to judge which treatments were more effective and to identify factors that correlate with both health and specific diseases. This info would be used to refine future health care treatment strategies. This info might also be sold to pharma -- with personal identifying info removed -- to help them identify new disease targets, better tailor new medicines to specific types of patients, and more. The money earned from selling this info would be used to further reduce the premiums paid by the individual. University researchers would have access to this info for research purposes.
If you look at only the medical aspects of this plan, it probably would improve public health, allow us to learn more about disease biology, and help in drug development. However, this plan would be an incredible intrusion on personal freedom. More than it would be worth in my opinion.
Your thoughts?
|