Yes, the "good" components (prexisting conditions and some additional regulation) could be supplemented with the removal of interstate barriers and tort reform at a minimum. Unfortunately politics have made most believe that the Republicans had no alternative plan or ideas; nothing could be farther from the truth. Unfotunately we'll likely never see a compromise bill at this point. Because the D's had 60 votes they shut out the R's for the last year; it's not likely the R's will play nice now that Obama needs them.
There were some great Republican ideas, most were shot down in favor of a Republican plan that does little or nothing for anyone. This is all business on both sides. I'm actually amazed the Dems got as much from the Senate plan as they did. Thankfully, the House plan would never see the light of day.
The largest component of waste in the healthcare system as structured is red tape and paperwork. Administrative costs are huge, which is why the healthcare industry keeps growing. There's profit in paperwork, so I don't expect that to get cutout anytime soon.
There's a huge difference between healthcare and health insurance. Unfortunately, it's easy to make people think they are one in the same. With any of the ideas proposed so far, from either party, healthcare costs will continue to spiral upward, Medicare/Medicaid will continue to eat up a disproportionate chunk of the budgets, and private health insurance will continue to be burdensome to anybody or company that pays it. The day of reckoning will be when people/companies stop paying, or pass so much of the cost to employees that they say Stop.
Until then, I expect little to change. New hires will probably be offered lesser plans, or have to pay more and more of their paychecks than older employees. Medicare will have to stop the bleeding at some point, and will continue to ask for more dollars, and pay even less to doctors and hospitals. In case anybody has any strange notions, seniors now that have Medicare only are not treated, shall we say, the same as those with great plans from previous employers plus Medicare. There are different levels of healthcare, has been for years.
As the Boomer generation continues to retire in great numbers, this will all come to a head soon enough. I guarantee that all the political ideology and sound-bites in the world will not stop the enormous demand for a change in the system as it exists. No politician can survive the focused attack of 60 million seniors
