Minnesota
Related: About this forumMinnesota already had a 'high-risk pool' and it didn't fix health care
Theres a lot both parties can agree on when it comes to health care.
Yes, health care is expensive. Yes, people who are unfortunate enough to be sick should still be able to get health insurance. But as soon as you utter the phrase pre-existing conditions, its all political deadlock.
Democrats maintain that there should be mandated coverage for people who are already sick and therefore uninsurable. Republicans say that would be too expensive, usually with the phrases socialized medicine and Obamacare thrown in. The cost of caring for the expensive few shouldnt burden the healthy many, they say. Surely, there can be a sort of monetary pool to take care of these high-risk individuals?
As it turns out, we dont have to weigh one hypothetical health care system against another with the power of our imaginations alone. Minnesota used to have a high-risk pool for people with pre-existing conditions. Like most of the states health care systems, it went by a cumbersome acronym: MCHA (pronounced EM-cha) or the Minnesota Comprehensive Health Association.
Read more: http://www.citypages.com/news/minnesota-already-had-a-high-risk-pool-and-it-didnt-fix-health-care/499692411
msongs
(70,178 posts)area51
(12,142 posts)he made good money at his profession, but he said the high risk pool was very expensive.
geardaddy
(25,346 posts)And I never heard anyone call it Em-cha.
I take this article with a grain of salt. City Pages is no longer an independent paper. It is a subsidiary of the Strib, which is owned by the reich-winger Glen Taylor.