Lol the government wants to control cost on an industry they control? You really are that naive. More problems means more money in their pockets.
Prevention starts and ends with the patient. Period. You dont need a doctor to not eat fast food the majority of your meals. You dont need a doctor to spend an hour outside.
And your conclusion is false sense we have millions of people with preventable diseases already going to the doctors. And looking at our collective fat asses it doesnt look like it's working. The reason is, it's not more doctors we need. Or even access to them. It's more personal responsibility.
I was told I had a vitamin D deficiency. Doc gave me a script. I asked isnt this what my body produces from sunlight? Sure enough it was. Why the eff I need a script for something I get for free? But yeah sure Dr Seuss is going to get the Smith family from eating a big mac for breakfast lunch and dinner.
Only way it works is if the government steps in. Pretty funny you made fun of hog for thinking the government was going control everything. And then in this post you call for the government controlling us to keep us healthy.
LMAO, Do you know what single payer means? The government is taking over costs and insurance. They still have to pay costs to hospitals/etc. So yes they want to control costs... They don't want to pay more. Lobbyists for private care is what you are thinking of...which is the system we have now.
So if prevention is only based on the individual... Why do other countries with these systems do so much better on prevention than we do? It's about instilling a culture.
If 100 people know by common sense that brushing their teeth several times a day is the good thing to do. 75 might, 25 might decide not to.
If 100 people go to the dentist and hear "you need to brush your teeth because you are at risk of developing cavities, gingivitis, and yellowing." Then that number is likely going to rise to 90-95.
So yes it starts with the individual but that is far from the only factor.
Personal responsibility only goes so far. Yes some people with preventable diseases do go to the doctor and still end up with it, but many more do not. It's not going to fix everything, but would it improve it hell yes!
One issue in your logic is that the current system where there is little collective responsibility means there isn't a collective (and thereby individual) cost.
Healthcare costs are collective regardless because hospitals can't deny care to someone who needs it. So if someone gets a preventable condition and needs care, they still get it and when they can't pay for it. The hospital covers it and the cost gets passed along to insurance companies who raise it on the rest of us.
Single Payer just gives us greater control of a cost we are already paying.
Not going to get into your Vitamin D deficiency. Many people do need more of it, it's an incredibly vital vitamin. Could he be prescribing it to make more? Depends on what type of practice and insurance set up he has.
I made fun of hog for assuming I want the government to control every aspect of life. Should the government insure healthcare to all (and thereby increase preventative measures)? Yes absolutely.
Saying I want government to control health insurance is far different than saying I want government to say take control of every industry, all wealth, and start monitoring my living room.