Apr 30th, 2010
You Can Legislate Buying Insurance, But That Doesn’t Mean Everyone Will Buy it
As someone who works in health care, I realize lots of the system is broken. For instance, people who have great jobs with great pay often also have great medical insurance where they have copays close to zero. On the other hand, people with low paying fast food jobs often have medical insurance that’s the bare minimum with large copays, meaning that the people who can afford large copays have none, and the people who can least afford copays have horribly expensive ones.
See what I mean?
Yet, I don’t really think it’s possible to get everyone who is required to buy medical insurance to do so. Why?
Look at the auto insurance situation in Hawai’i. It’s required that every car be insured–yet estimates are that about about 30% of Hawai’i’s drivers are uninsured.
The penalty for being caught driving without insurance is second only to driving under the influence as far as moving violations go. Yet, one out of three Hawai’i drivers have no insurance.
Professionally, I hope that health care improves with these measures; personally, if I was a gambling man, I would put down a rather large amount of money that I will continue to encounter hospitalized patients without insurance on a very regular basis.


