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It just dawned on me that if you have a health insurance plan that requires you to pay 20% and/or a copay for visits, you are actually paying for just SOME of the administrative costs for that visit/procedure - not for health care itself. If you have a plan that requires 30% payment from the patient, then you are pretty much covering just the administrative costs for that procedure.
If you are on Medicare, the administrative costs would be only 3% as opposed to 30% for private insurance.
I think if people really understood that their co-pays are just paying for the insurance company's administrative costs, they might think more seriously about single payer. I think it is a decent talking point for the upcoming elections where the health care bill will be under attack.
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