Should Kentucky repeal laws that require medical providers to get government permission before opening new facilities?
Kentucky has some of the strictest "Certificate of Need" (CON) laws in America. These rules require doctors to ask their own competitors for permission before they can buy an MRI machine or open a new clinic. Critics call it a "competitor's veto" that keeps healthcare prices high by banning free market competition. Proponents, primarily hospital associations, argue that without these laws, private clinics would cherry-pick wealthy patients with good insurance, leaving rural hospitals with only the uninsured, forcing them to close.
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