Los Angeles Times

Business case for single-payer

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Re “Single-payer care is a pipe dream,” column, March 12

George Skelton’s March 12 column hits me where it counts: my pocketbook.

Coming from the smallbusin­ess community, I have felt the financial pain of our current healthcare system on the bottom line. Skyrocketi­ng costs, rationed health plans and telephone books of insurance paperwork make for a competitiv­e nightmare in this state.

Americans are the only entreprene­urs in today’s global economy forced to endure such an expensive and wasteful way of providing healthcare. Germany, Japan, Israel, China and all of our other wealthy trade partners have healthcare systems that give their businesses a global advantage over American ones.

We can spread risk better by putting everyone in the same pool and control costs by providing a comprehens­ive health benefit package that is the same for all citizens and then pay for it with some kind of payroll tax. In America, this is called Medicare.

My business vote for governor goes to Gavin Newsom.

Richard Fertell Walnut Creek, Calif.

Skelton is right that a state single-player plan is a terrible idea.

No government entity in the U.S. has been able to bring healthcare costs under control. Medicare faces serious financial challenges. What makes the California Legislatur­e think it can control costs better than the feds?

I am not as optimistic as Skelton that this is just a pipe dream. I think the Democratic supermajor­ity in Sacramento could very well pass a single-payer bill. I also think that President Trump would love to limit the federal government’s liability for Medicare while also shifting the financial burden for all of California’s healthcare to the state.

I do think we need a system of universal healthcare, but both parties should work together in Congress to create a whole new system based on both the Democrats’ concept of universal coverage and the Republican­s’ principle of some individual choice.

After all, the feds can print money. All California can do is tax. Arthur L. Wisot, MD Rolling Hills Estates

Skelton and Antonio Villaraigo­sa are both wrong. We currently do provide insurance for everyone in emergency rooms.

Single-payer healthcare will end up costing California $37 billion less than we are currently spending, according to one analysis. It will insure everyone. It will enable people to get comprehens­ive and preventive care, which will ultimately cost less than accessing care in an emergency room.

It will save lives because people without insurance die. It’s the hard truth.

With healthcare costs continuing to rise, California can’t afford not to enact a single-payer plan. We nurses understand this better than anyone.

Maryann Kachur Pleasant Hill, Calif.

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