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Rick Santorum on health care: not much to write home about

David E. Williams is co-founder of MedPharma Partners LLC

David E. Williams is co-founder of MedPharma Partners LLC

Guest blog post by David E. Williams, co-founder of MedPharma Partners LLC

Rick Santorum on health care: not much to write home about

Posted: 08 Feb 2012 01:03 PM PST

Rick Santorum won three GOP contests yesterday: Minnesota, Colorado and Missouri, so I decided to take a look at where he stands on health care. Turns out his health care platform is just a predictable jeremiad of anti-Obama rants plus a collection of well-worn Republican feel-good proposals that would have little practical impact if enacted. That’s all you really need to know about it, but if you want more, here’s a point-by-point guide: 
The section of his website is entitled “Repeal and Replace ObamaCare with PATIENT-CENTERED HEALTHCARE” and has two tenets:

It’s interesting that he’s calling for universal, affordable access. Sounds a lot like the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA). The only difference is this piece about “government bureaucrats.” I wonder what specific elements of PPACA he means by this –because I don’t see a lot of interference in “health care decisions” in the Act relative to the pre-PPACA days.

It’s hard to argue with the idea of “targeted” and “patient-centered” solutions. And actually, that’s the path taken by PPACA. Didn’t opponents criticize the length of the bill? A lot of that is because there are many different targeted approaches taken: some for individuals, others for small business, others for medium sized organizations, still others for large entities. Other targeted interventions are in place for high-risk patients, and there is an innovation center to support the efforts of those who want to try new approaches. I will argue with Santorum’s appeal for “market-driven” solutions –which is going to mean many people are not insurable and that their premiums will rise and policies will be canceled when they get sick. And PPACA is simply not a government-run health care system as I have explained.

Santorum lays out his plan in “THE SANTORUM HEALTH CARE SOLUTION.”

“Priority number 1 = repeal ObamaCare,” which he describes as “job-destroying,” “heavy handed,” “cruel.” Nice rhetoric, but no facts to back it up.

He then ticks off a set of unoriginal antidotes, that pretty much echo the uninspiring “replace” long-promised by the Congressional GOP:

And that’s it.

Let’s face it, these proposals will not lead to “every American” having “access to high-quality, affordable health care.” In fact they really won’t lead anywhere productive.

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