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Kenneth S. Thompson MD's avatar

ben, i in am process, i hope, of following you into world of writing about this wild world we are in. i am taking your comment on my comment as encouragement!!!

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Kenneth S. Thompson MD's avatar

Ben, thanks for this provocative piece. i agree that we need to find local ways that fit local challenges and that, in part, help to finance them. But I would not scorn centralized financing. The delivery of mental health services is built on the foundation of a built-in market failure. The people with need are the least likely to have the money to pay for it. It’s a perfect example of John Tudor Hart’s Inverse Care Law “the availability of good medical or social care tends to vary inversely with the need of the population served”. Note that it specifies population. While it applies to individuals, its primary application is populations. This means local areas with populations in high need are not likely to have the resources to address them. Turning to them to fund them simply won’t work.

There are two options to get money to places and people where there is none. One i want to dismiss quickly, though it is all the rage. That is the idea of making a market for private money by awarding profits for money invested that reduces the costs of other services- the whole idea of cost offset. This is a set up for gamesmanship and corruption. Of note, the bigger the private money investment, the more problematic this method of obtaining funding becomes.

The second method- centralized taxation with redistribution- is time tested. when there are adequate taxes and ethical redistribution this method actually works and works at scale. it is not perfect-as you note it can be hard to adjust it to local conditions or to take in new innovations. we need to continuously improve these aspects. but i don’t think we want to throw the baby out with the bath. “From each according to their capability, to each according to their need”.

or, following willy sutton, we might want to continue to seek the money we need where it is (at least for now), in the federal coffers.

ken

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