Consumer-Choice Health plan (second of two parts). A national-health-insurance proposal based on regulated competition in the private sector.

Medical costs are straining public finances. Direct economic regulation will raise costs, retard beneficial innovation and be increasingly burdensome to physicians. As an alternative, I suggest that the government change financial incentives by creating a system of competing health plans in which physicians and consumers can benefit from using resources wisely. Main proposals consist of changed tax laws, Medicare and Medicaid to subsidize individual premium payments by an amount based on financial and predicted medical need, as well as subsidies usable only for premiums in qualified health insurance or delivery plans operating under rules that include periodic open enrollment, community rating by actuarial category, premium rating by market area and a limit on each person's out-of pocket costs. Also, efficient systems should be allowed to pass on the full savings to consumers. Finally, incremental changes should be made in the present system to alter it fundamentally, but gradually and voluntarily. Freedom of choice for consumers and physicians should be preserved.

[1]  Gibson Rm,et al.  National health expenditures, fiscal year 1976. , 1976 .

[2]  R. Egdahl Foundations for Medical Care. , 1973, The New England journal of medicine.

[3]  A. Ruddock Federal employees health benefits program. I. History and future of the federal program--1964. , 1966, American journal of public health and the nation's health.