Regarding Health Care Reform - Page 2
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uiCk
Canada1925 Posts
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uiCk
Canada1925 Posts
On September 19 2009 04:45 Saddened Izzy wrote: Wow uiCk way to try to make yourself seem more competent by correcting me. Guess what I will actually type. I have a speech to text program and using speech to text programs are always lacking in perfection. It is interesting you point out cancer because treatment time is very important. So It might take some time is actually very costly to your own health. we get it. what i dont get is that if u cant afford = death? ;( edit: in no way was i correcting you, i was just pointing out the fact that alot of americans "hear" about our healthcare (glenn beck? llol) even though you dont live here. isolated case of beurocratic evenets where someone died while waiting for treatment very possible, but this is about US health care, if u wanna debate the effectiveness of Canadian health care open new thread. point is: you think health care in US is fine? you don't? if you don't, what can u do to fix it? | ||
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KwarK
United States42673 Posts
On September 19 2009 04:45 Saddened Izzy wrote: Wow uiCk way to try to make yourself seem more competent by correcting me. Guess what I will actually type. I have a speech to text program and using speech to text programs are always lacking in perfection. It is interesting you point out cancer because treatment time is very important. So It might take some time is actually very costly to your own health. Which is why public healthcare systems provide things like free checkups for people at high risk of cancer to catch them early and deal with them when they're more treatable. It saves money too, the cost of 99 wasted tests for every 1 person you save is cheaper than waiting for the symptoms to force them to you and needing expensive drugs and specialist care to treat them. Private has no incentive to try and lower the overall cost of healthcare, nor to engage in preventative care. | ||
Louder
United States2276 Posts
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Saddened Izzy
United States198 Posts
you must understand about the American healthcare system is that the insurance companies have the doctors and hospitals and their occupations and clinics, and it is all connected is basically one giant moneymaker An independent item for public option because I do not see any other way to force them to lower borrowing costs. When they are basically cohorts agreeing to have the price of a certain thing and do the certain practices in the name of what profit of course. it is also interesting in the US health care debate that there has been little talk about how the CEOs of the companies huge salaries of doctors are paid huge amounts for two exhibits seen. Basically, I have been little talk about payouts, because it comes down to the people pushing a public auction of those people who are. And that is basically what we are fighting about not whether or not health care is necessary. We will knowledge public options are great. Slowly, we have things like Medicare and Medi-Cal but frankly, people do not believe the cost-effective for us to provide that service and fear mongers and dogmatic people. Boy, everybody else into believing that it will dispose further into more debt and a complete failure. | ||
Louder
United States2276 Posts
On September 19 2009 05:02 Saddened Izzy wrote: the argument that government involvement is inherently faulty is pretty much true. Evidence? | ||
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Chill
Calgary25980 Posts
On September 19 2009 04:55 Louder wrote: Citation needed.Insurance companies deny 1 in 5 prescriptions. Insurance CEOs average $34,000,000 per year salary. Citation needed. Irrelevent.They actively drop coverage on people who use it / need it most. Citation needed. Arbitrary.Many have, in their corporate mission, statements about how denial of care is central to profit. Citation REALLY needed.The notion that the market will right all is wrong, and history proves as much. Look back to working conditions during the industrial revolution, for example. The guys "creating jobs" and "powering the economy" were doing so by brutal mistreatment of employees, including children. But they did turn a profit! The insurance companies of today are the same ... | ||
Saddened Izzy
United States198 Posts
simple infrastructure or most of our infrastructure is near 50 years old, and guess what most of it was designed only to last about 50 years with maintenance. And yet our government does not regularly update and maintain it. Our roads and our power grids are all sub-par. places in New England and New York mainly the Northeast, though log system is nearly toxic areas where groundwater leakage and other great listings are common events, and basically turning on tap water is equivalent to showering yourself into the ecoli of course these places are usually small towns and sell it on the main light in the media. The government never be as great in certain areas because they are not looking for profit blessings and more obligation. That is something they can do very well, because they are aching of profit necessarily as the number one goal. http://www.infrastructurereportcard.org/ | ||
uiCk
Canada1925 Posts
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Saddened Izzy
United States198 Posts
On September 19 2009 05:22 uiCk wrote: infrastructure is major issue with many gouverments all over the world, has absolutly nothing to do with health care. But it shows how the American government does think long term. And health care is long term =p America used to have the world best in everything infrastructure it what made it so freaking great.Shit things like bridges falling down people never head of that happening in the US scene the like 1920's. It's to make a point that overall can't totally trust the American government to pull though in the long term.. which if you read the earlier post i didn't mean i was against the American government giving a public option it just meant my belief was that it was going to be a very bumpy start. | ||
uiCk
Canada1925 Posts
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KwarK
United States42673 Posts
On September 19 2009 05:23 Saddened Izzy wrote: But it shows how the American government does think long term. And health care is long term =p America used to have the world best in everything infrastructure it what made it so freaking great. It's to make a point that overall can't totally trust the American government to pull though. which if you read the earlier post i didn't mean i was against the American government giving a public option it just meant my belief was that it was going to be a very bumpy start. No. Every Government is bad at infrastructure because it's somewhere they can take money and have no short term bad consequences. You can increase spending on infrastructure in line with inflation and have people go "I guess that makes sense" or you can not mention it at all and go "YAY, TAX CUTS!". Politicians need votes, people don't ask where the money is saved and they won't notice everything is falling apart for a few years. It happened to the British public transport system for decades until everything stopped working at once and a huge overhaul was needed. But that hasn't happened for healthcare because people recognise that when you cut the budget you cut the services and that means doctors for them. Maybe it's because the NHS in the UK is an institution that is politically sacred but if you take money from it for tax cuts people don't think "we can use that extra cash to go private", they think "now I won't get seen as quickly at the hospital". Either way, public healthcare does not suffer the same negligence effect of other less obvious and practical services. | ||
uiCk
Canada1925 Posts
(lol theres a picture linking obama with Che) (lol at linking george soros with socalism scheme/theory) | ||
HnR)hT
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United States3468 Posts
Just say to them that the concept of government, after all, has its justifications. That will definitely set them straight. | ||
Caller
Poland8075 Posts
That is correct. Insurance is an example of market failure. However, their rationale for what to do is all wrong. The problem here is this: a) insurers are taking on a risk whenever they take on a new person in their insurance plan. b) as such, they raise rates to compensate for high risks, because they are never 100% sure person X is going to get cancer or not, even if he gets a checkup and everything. c) as a result, healthy people like person Y are not going to have a strong incentive to get insurance because what's the point if you're healthy? They would purchase insurance either later on, when they are more at risk, or when the price is lower. d) As a result, with a less healthy risk pool, insurance companies raise rates again, driving more people out of the market because it exceeds their risk and needs. e) in the end, you have a lot of "low quality" consumers, i.e. sick people. If the insurance company is to stay liquid, let alone afloat, it must control costs somehow. f) it does so by increasing costs of insurance, as well as by cutting the amount that they pay to doctors. Doctors are forced to subscribe to insurance plans to attract patients, and thus they charge uninsured people way more than insured people (and i'm not talking about the copay, i'm talking about the cost of a procedure, total. The cost for an insured person is 300$, and the insurance company pays another 300$ for a certain procedure that one of my family recently undertook. The cost for an uninsured person is $10,000.) g) As a result, uninsured people cannot get healthcare, because it is way too expensive for them to do so. And low income families tend to have worse health outcomes than upper class families, due to the fact that they eat more unhealthy foods, and do not see doctors as much as they would like, due to the high costs. Therefore, the more subtle diseases that cost much more to treat end up emerging among them in higher numbers. When they then try to get insurance, they are obviously refused, because it is equivalent to the insurance company taking on debt. And here is the problem. It's not "greed" or any of that bullcrap that people say when they come from the left. The left is right, for the wrong reasons, and the right is wrong, for the right reasons. The answer isn't a government takeover of healthcare, because Medicare is a huge reason why healthcare costs are so high, and Medicare is a large part of government healthcare. Since Medicare tends to care for all seniors, and often these seniors require expensive procedures (due to their age), the average expenditure for Medicare persons is quite high. As a result, since Medicare has no incentive to cut costs, and doctors have an incentive to raise costs (because of private insurers), doctors charge Medicare high amounts of money, which is causing the system to become expensive and unstable. Leaving them to the market of insurance, however, is equally bad, as again it would be the market failure that I have described above. The solution is to make no insurance a viable alternative to insurance. The initial purpose of insurance was to supplement high healthcare costs, such as chemotherapy and the like-it wasn't to subsidize a trip to the doctor for a checkup or to get shots or whatever. The market price for a checkup among doctors who refuse to take insurance is quite low-around $30, which is a far cry from the hundreds that are charged to an insurance company. In fact, if you were to increase the supply of doctors (by for instance making it easier, more affordable, and more acceptance into medical school), you would drive this cost down further. And a checkup can help to prevent much more expensive problems from being present in the future. Detecting a cancer right when it starts is much, much cheaper than fighting it when its metastasizing all across the body and when you have symptoms. Right now, only insured people tend to go for a checkup. Make it so uninsured people can go for a checkup, and you'll wipe out those who go to the Emergency room and costs thousands for a minor problem. You'll allow the private market to drive down costs by providing the right incentives. You restore power back into the hands of the doctors, and you also cause the insurance companies to drive down costs to compete with the policies of those without insurance. For expensive procedures, that's what insurance should be used for. You don't get car insurance (aside from the legal ramifications) because you want to get a tune up. You use it in case some jackass totals your car. You don't get house insurance because you want to change the roof. You get it in case some jackass burns down your house. Why should health insurance be any different? | ||
citi.zen
2509 Posts
The discussion digressed into infrastructure. I love Kwark's post about it being an easy place to cut money from. Unfortunately, I do not think things are that simple. The problem goes deeper, as voters simply refuse to back the dedicated revenue streams needed to pay for the stuff they use. For example: a vehicle per mile tax for cars could pay for the roads we use. As a politician you may favor this tax, but good luck ever getting elected proposing it! Instead, we have a gas tax that hasn't been increased since 1993 (its not even a percentage tax, its fixed). Not surprisingly, the highway trust fund (where the gas tax money goes) is broke, and now needs ongoing subsidies. It seems it will get $20bn this year, but this does not say anything about what will happen next year, or the one after that. Nobody has the guts to tackle the real issue here and find a dedicated revenue stream for a long term solution (a vmt tax, or increasing and indexing the gas tax to inflation, etc). This is just an example... but the bottom line is that voter awareness/understanding is part of the problem here. | ||
citi.zen
2509 Posts
On September 19 2009 06:13 Caller wrote: In fact, if you were to increase the supply of doctors (by for instance making it easier, more affordable, and more acceptance into medical school), you would drive this cost down further. This supply of doctors will be a huge deal in the coming years, especially if you want more people to get regular checkups. I linked to this post before, but can't help doing so again. Required reading really. | ||
BlackJack
United States10498 Posts
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Caller
Poland8075 Posts
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KwarK
United States42673 Posts
On September 19 2009 06:13 Caller wrote: Everybody blames the market for being inefficient in this case. That is correct. Insurance is an example of market failure. However, their rationale for what to do is all wrong. The problem here is this: a) insurers are taking on a risk whenever they take on a new person in their insurance plan. b) as such, they raise rates to compensate for high risks, because they are never 100% sure person X is going to get cancer or not, even if he gets a checkup and everything. c) as a result, healthy people like person Y are not going to have a strong incentive to get insurance because what's the point if you're healthy? They would purchase insurance either later on, when they are more at risk, or when the price is lower. d) As a result, with a less healthy risk pool, insurance companies raise rates again, driving more people out of the market because it exceeds their risk and needs. e) in the end, you have a lot of "low quality" consumers, i.e. sick people. If the insurance company is to stay liquid, let alone afloat, it must control costs somehow. f) it does so by increasing costs of insurance, as well as by cutting the amount that they pay to doctors. Doctors are forced to subscribe to insurance plans to attract patients, and thus they charge uninsured people way more than insured people (and i'm not talking about the copay, i'm talking about the cost of a procedure, total. The cost for an insured person is 300$, and the insurance company pays another 300$ for a certain procedure that one of my family recently undertook. The cost for an uninsured person is $10,000.) g) As a result, uninsured people cannot get healthcare, because it is way too expensive for them to do so. And low income families tend to have worse health outcomes than upper class families, due to the fact that they eat more unhealthy foods, and do not see doctors as much as they would like, due to the high costs. Therefore, the more subtle diseases that cost much more to treat end up emerging among them in higher numbers. When they then try to get insurance, they are obviously refused, because it is equivalent to the insurance company taking on debt. And here is the problem. It's not "greed" or any of that bullcrap that people say when they come from the left. The left is right, for the wrong reasons, and the right is wrong, for the right reasons. The answer isn't a government takeover of healthcare, because Medicare is a huge reason why healthcare costs are so high, and Medicare is a large part of government healthcare. Since Medicare tends to care for all seniors, and often these seniors require expensive procedures (due to their age), the average expenditure for Medicare persons is quite high. As a result, since Medicare has no incentive to cut costs, and doctors have an incentive to raise costs (because of private insurers), doctors charge Medicare high amounts of money, which is causing the system to become expensive and unstable. Leaving them to the market of insurance, however, is equally bad, as again it would be the market failure that I have described above. The solution is to make no insurance a viable alternative to insurance. The initial purpose of insurance was to supplement high healthcare costs, such as chemotherapy and the like-it wasn't to subsidize a trip to the doctor for a checkup or to get shots or whatever. The market price for a checkup among doctors who refuse to take insurance is quite low-around $30, which is a far cry from the hundreds that are charged to an insurance company. In fact, if you were to increase the supply of doctors (by for instance making it easier, more affordable, and more acceptance into medical school), you would drive this cost down further. And a checkup can help to prevent much more expensive problems from being present in the future. Detecting a cancer right when it starts is much, much cheaper than fighting it when its metastasizing all across the body and when you have symptoms. Right now, only insured people tend to go for a checkup. Make it so uninsured people can go for a checkup, and you'll wipe out those who go to the Emergency room and costs thousands for a minor problem. You'll allow the private market to drive down costs by providing the right incentives. You restore power back into the hands of the doctors, and you also cause the insurance companies to drive down costs to compete with the policies of those without insurance. For expensive procedures, that's what insurance should be used for. You don't get car insurance (aside from the legal ramifications) because you want to get a tune up. You use it in case some jackass totals your car. You don't get house insurance because you want to change the roof. You get it in case some jackass burns down your house. Why should health insurance be any different? An excellent post. I agree with most of what you said and I would definitely hail a more effective private healthcare system in the US as a success. While I don't believe you addressed the intrinsic advantages of public over private you succinctly explained why the current system is such a mess. | ||
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