استمتع بـUnlimited مع Magzter GOLD

استمتع بـUnlimited مع Magzter GOLD

احصل على وصول غير محدود إلى أكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة وقصة مميزة مقابل

$149.99
 
$74.99/سنة

يحاول ذهب - حر

Open enrollment is healthcare’s most expensive lie

October 27, 2025

|

Los Angeles Times

We waste billions on a shell game, creating the illusion of choice

- NEAL K. SHAH GUEST CONTRIBUTOR

I'M OLD ENOUGH to remember when there was no annual open enrollment. You got health insurance through your employer, and unless you changed jobs or had a major life event, you kept the same plan. Year after year. Simple. Stable. Sane.

Today, we've built a multi-billion-dollar theater production called “open enrollment” that costs more to stage than many small countries spend on their entire healthcare systems. American healthcare wastes approximately $248 billion annually on excess administrative costs, and open enrollment sits at the heart of this hemorrhage. Broker commissions, marketing materials, comparison portals, HR staff hours and the entire infrastructure of manufactured “choice” siphons money that could pay for nurses, doctors and actual patient care.

The promise was competition. Give Americans annual choices between plans, the thinking went, and market forces would drive quality up and costs down. But here’s what actually happened: We created a system in which insurers pay brokers a commission for the employers they sign up — usually a healthy 3% to 6% of the total premium, potentially $50,000 a year for a midsize company — incentivizing them to sell higher-cost plans regardless of quality. We built elaborate comparison tools that let consumers agonize over premiums and deductibles while hiding the only number that actually matters: denial rates.

المزيد من القصص من Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

Grandfather fatally scalded in hotel shower, lawsuit alleges

Terril Johnson had traveled to San José in May to see his granddaughter graduate from San José State the next day and jumped into the hotel shower after a long drive from Los Angeles.

time to read

1 mins

October 29, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

Pursuing ‘a trade strategy, not a China strategy’

Trump promises ‘fantastic’ results, but worries persist over tariffs and technology.

time to read

3 mins

October 29, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

A delay for California crab season

Whale entanglements and domoic acid contamination push commercial Dungeness fishing beyond fall

time to read

2 mins

October 29, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Tupac has a few biographies, but none in this depth

[Tupac, from E1] Dynasty of the 1980s,\" was even adapted into an Emmy-nominated HBO series, \"Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty.

time to read

5 mins

October 29, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

Cultural, leisure events boost tourism during China's National Day holiday

Cultural and leisure events are boosting tourism across China as scenic spots roll out innovative holiday experiences during the eight-day National Day holiday and Mid-Autumn Festival that began on Oct 1.

time to read

1 mins

October 29, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

NEV charging on China's highways hits record high during National Day holiday

China's highway charging for new energy vehicles (NEVs) hit a record high of 123 million kilowatt-hours during the just-concluded eight-day National Day and Mid-Autumn Festival holiday season, an increase of 45.73 percent over the same period of the previous year, official data showed.

time to read

1 min

October 29, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

Authentic dining experiences inspire love of Chinese cuisine in Rome

A restaurant in Rome's de facto Chinatown has established itself as the Italian capital's top destination for authentic Chinese food, attracting curious locals seeking to expand their cultural boundaries.

time to read

2 mins

October 29, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

Should you let young kids watch the World Series?

AT THIS TIME of year, nearly every morning before dawn, my 2.5-year-old wakes up, calls me into his room and looks up into my bleary eyes to ask: “Watch baseball?”

time to read

4 mins

October 29, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

Life-long educator inspires hope among girls in China's remote mountains

The principal of the first senior high school in China to offer free education to girls from poor families has been lighting the torch of hope for communities in the mountains of the country.

time to read

1 min

October 29, 2025

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

HOUR OF POWER

Freeman's encore hits another high note

time to read

4 mins

October 29, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size