If an individual's
body mass index isn't a purely personal matter, what is? We have the right to choose between
healthy food or junk food, even if the latter is more likely to result in
obesity
and related health problems. But once our choices affect others,
there's a natural conflict between individual freedom and social
responsibility. In a nation where rising healthcare costs and
diminished access to medical care are issues of grave concern, personal
decisions are no longer strictly private. The treatment of obesity- and
smoking-related disease is tremendously expensive, which in turns
drives up health insurance premiums for everyone, as well as raising
the costs for
Medicaid, Medicare and health coverage for public employees.
These legitimate concerns have resulted in a raft of nanny-state
proposals to shape the public's dietary habits by taxing this food or
that drink or by outlawing free toys that accompany unhealthy
children's meals at some restaurants. Such proposals raise inevitable
questions of fairness and effectiveness. Does it make sense to tax a
can of soda but not a fruit juice that contains more calories per cup
and very little additional nutrition? Would a vitamin-fortified soda be
exempt from the tax? And it's hard to figure out whether the bigger
obesity culprit is a small order of fried chicken at a fast-foot outlet
or a giant slab of prime rib at a pricey restaurant. Or, as many
dietitians now think, maybe it's the carbs; has the time come for a
public pasta tax? In any case, there is much uncertainty about whether
such tactics would have any effect on the country's collective bulging
belly.
We prefer the approach most recently proposed in Arizona, where
officials hope to levy a $50 annual fee on some Medicaid patients who
don't take steps to improve their health. It is vague at this point how
the proposal would work, who would be liable for the fee and under what
circumstances; but some examples mentioned are obese patients who fail
to follow their doctors' plans for
losing weight, smokers who shun programs to help them quit the habit or certain
diabetes patients who ignore medical advice on lifestyle changes that would improve their lab results.
News reports have cast the Arizona fees as a way to bring in more money
for the state's Medicaid program, which might then be able to afford to
reinstitute coverage for organ transplants for poor people. Even if
that were the point — and it's not — there's no way the state would
save money in the short term with what some are calling a "fat tax."
Administrative expenses alone would be higher than the $50 fee; the
state would have to figure out which Medicaid recipients were affected,
oversee progress and deal with appeals. In addition, the state would
pay for at least some level of treatment, such as smoking-cessation
programs or regular doctor visits for diet check-ins and advice.
Instead, the program is expected to help Arizona's bottom line over
time, by reducing healthcare costs for those patients.
Private companies already are trying similar strategies, with financial incentives for employees who make the kinds of smart decisions that are associated with better health.
Safeway,
for instance, offers significant discounts on health insurance premiums
to employees who don't smoke and who maintain healthy weight,
blood-pressure and cholesterol levels. The company reported that its
per-person healthcare costs remained flat for four years during which
such costs rose 38% for most companies.
For several years, Alabama has levied a health insurance surcharge
on state employees who smoke or are obese and who fail to seek help for
these conditions. Several other states have approved similar policies.
Of course, carrots — by which we mean incentives for healthier behavior, not the
beta carotene-rich
vegetables — are more popular with the public than sticks such as
surcharges. But those terms lose some of their meaning when it comes to
healthcare, with its rapidly rising costs. Whether it's a surcharge or
an incentive
makes no difference — people who lead healthier
lifestyles pay less, while the higher costs associated with obesity,
smoking and a life on the couch are assumed by those who generate them.
chi flat iron
chi hair straightener
chi ceramic flat iron
chi flat iron pink
buy chi flat iron
Commentaires
Il n'y a aucun commentaire sur cet article.