To start - Europe sees "stable" population growth because of the nearly 1:1 abortion to live birth ratio it enjoys.
I see what you did there.
To start - Europe sees "stable" population growth because of the nearly 1:1 abortion to live birth ratio it enjoys.
I agree with your argument about healthcare; just because someone is sick or dying doesn't mean they are entitled to treatment.
It amazes me that there are even pre-meds on here that aren't in favor of universal healthcare.
I have what I consider to be "good insurance" and here's a few estimates based on my insurance website's treatment cost estimator for "in network" facilities around Boston:
EMERGENCY CARE BY PHYSICIAN
Emergency department visit of moderate to severe complexity
Estimated Treatment Cost: $261-342
Plan Responsibility: $241-322
Member Responsibility: $20
HIGH COMPLEXITY EMERGENCY DEPT VISIT (PHYSICIAN COST ONLY)
Standard charge for emergency room visit of high degree of difficulty
Estimated Treatment Cost: $177-231
Plan Responsibility: $157-211
Member Responsibility: $20
EMERGENCY ROOM CHARGES FROM FACILITY
Standard charge for use of emergency room
Estimated Treatment Cost: $716-1,292
Plan Responsibility: $616-1,192
Member Responsibility: $100
LAPAROSCOPIC APPENDECTOMY
Estimated Treatment Cost: $9,573-13,463
Plan Responsibility: $9,493-13,383
Member Responsibility: $80
So depending on how I make my way to the ER to be sent for an appendectomy I might spend about $200
I'm glad you mentioned pre-meds specifically (even though you mentioned Doctors later in your post). I think you'll change your mind eventually.
I love seeing the patients who receive ~$1000 per month from the government to live and are still homeless. This guy ended up in a psych hospital but admitted that "I would rather get $1000 in PCP per month and be homeless." People abuse the hell out of the system and I don't feel like giving everyone a free ride.
There are systems in place for those who are hard working and try to succeed.. There are systems in place for those who are disabled and can't provide for themselves. I have no tolerance for the lazy drug addicts who want a free ride for their entire life.
As a doc I'm going to 1) have to make less money and 2) pay more in taxes so that these people "get what they deserve". Yet no one is helping me with my ~$300k in debt. Sounds fair to me!
Can anyone comment on this? MetalgearHMN?
"Poor people are lazy! They don't deserve healthcare. And our country's broke!" - Typical Republican
"Universal healthcare is communist! And it's un-American! And the rich won't make as much money as they used to! And everybody knows that people who support universal healthcare HATE god!" - Typical Tea Party Supporter
I guess two things really are infinite. The Universe and human stupidity.
It amazes me that there are even pre-meds on here that aren't in favor of universal healthcare. Every doctor I've ever met in my entire life has been in favor of it. I don't understand how someone who wants to become a doctor would look the other way as people, potential patients, go untreated.
On another note. I think EMS should definitely be publicly funded. You don't get charged a bill if you call 9-1-1 for any other service, do you? No. Pretty soon they'll be running credit checks in the ED to see whether you'll be able to afford their services or not.
Yeah. I'd like you to tell someone with a curable ailment on their deathbed that they don't deserve treatment. Sorry, but we only treat rich people here. Maybe you could pray?
I disagree. The reason for these high health care costs is because the government is clogging up the system. If health care was open to the free market, prices would go down.
However, if the family could somehow pay for this total bill up front, I would assume they wouldn't have to pay even half as much.
How so? I'm genuinely curious here, not being sarcastic. How does the government make healthcare prices so high, and how would getting "the government" out of healthcare make prices more affordable?
I disagree. The reason for these high health care costs is because the government is clogging up the system. If health care was open to the free market, prices would go down.
I'm also curious. How does open market make prices go down??
How does government make healthcare costs so low?
Medicare costs have doubled every four years since the 60s. That can't all possibly be due to expanded coverage.
Your rebuttal?
In your universe, if someone asks why the room is painted white, you think they're asking why it isn't black?
I never said that government drives down the cost of healthcare - I was asking how it keeps it artificially high. I don't see how the government deeply affects it either way. You see how that works? How someone can ask a question about one side of the coin without AUTOMATICALLY IMPLYING they believe in the opposite? That sort of dualistic thinking does you no justice.
HEALTHCARE (not Medicare specifically) costs in general have skyrocketed, and that's proof that it is the government's fault? The fact that insurance premiums have increased well beyond the pace of inflation (131% in the past decade) is because of...Medicare?
You can do better than that. Here's a starting point: The cost of pharmaceuticals. Defensive medicine. Inappropriate care for those who do not benefit from it. Obesity. The baby boomers hitting retirement. Complicated billing and administrative costs due to dozens - hundreds - of different insurance companies. The cost of new technology.
You're creating a false polarization of immigration policy between an open border system, and saying "No" to everyone, when in actuality most countries allow immigration to some extent, but not free flow, so it's a middle-ground. We don't say "Sorry, we're full," but we do limit immigration. This is the system (reality) upon which I base my support for socialized medicine.
I understand that you have a bigger picture for world order, and that socialized medicine may be incompatible with that ideal, but I want to focus on policies which can help real people today, with more practical goals of what society will become (meaning I doubt we'll have open borders anytime soon).
I see no need to refrain from implementing socialized medicine while our borders are still semi-closed. If your ideal is ever realized, then perhaps we can reconsider.
I was comparing sustainability in a semi-closed border society. How are those system unsustainable? They have been running for over half a century, do you have reason to believe they will fail anytime soon?
That's a valid point that insurance is optional (although that's no longer the case in the US), however people are not completely denied emergency care when they don't have insurance. This creates a system where people volunteer to pay, and some don't. Then the ones that don't end up getting very sick and can't/don't pay their bills so the volunteers end up paying for them as well. Is this fair? No! Why not require everyone to pay their fair share? The other alternative is to deny care to people who can't afford it, which most people will have trouble doing (think empathy).
First, do you propose that we use healthcare restriction as a form of population control? I find that to be unethical, as it favors the death of the poor, perhaps before they have had a chance to work or climb in society.
Secondly, you make a lot of claims that just aren't backed by real world observations. You claim that welfare states are unsustainable because they allow the poor to breed uncontrollably, and then we will run out of resources. However, examination of European socialized states shows that they have very stable growth rates and some are even shrinking. This is because elevating people out of poverty causes them to reproduce LESS. It is well known that the impoverished have more children, creating some sort of economic stability means that LESS children are born. This is evidenced by the current population biology of European welfare states. Where is the evidence for your assertions, aside from thought experiments?
I'm also curious. How does open market make prices go down??
Well then I'd pay even less. Hospital inpatient services are covered 100% and the 100 ER fee is waived if admitted within 48hrs.It wasn't just an appendectomy. This person had a RUPTURED APPENDIX and a long hospital stay.
Of course, if they had had insurance, it might not have gotten to that point.
Take a look at LASIK, Breast jobs, people compete on price and on quality. You would have the same competition. LASIK can be had for as little as $400 an eye. When it came it out it was 2K per.
In a truly open market, competition and innovation lead to lower prices (in theory). The company that can offer a better, cheaper product will get more customers and, thus, push out the less attractive options. Companies would either offer a suite of services that people would be willing to pay a higher price for or would find ways to cut their costs enough to cater to a more bargain-minded group.
This assumes two things:
1) the companies won't collude to increase prices, and
2) there's no external player attempting to artificially lower prices (i.e., government systems)
An open market is in contrast to a monopoly in which there is no impetus to innovate or provide better outcomes since, regardless, people HAVE to use your services. It'd be nice if the owners of a monopoly would keep their customers in mind and provide outstanding service and prices out of good will, but IMO this would be much more likely to occur in an open market.
Also understand that most people are for regulation in an open market system. It wouldn't simply be a free-for-all where insurance companies get to do whatever they want. The key point is that all companies play by the same rules. The government doesn't because there is an essentially "infinite" purse from which to draw more and more funds. This is how Medicare "works" even though its costs perpetually increase.
How about doing something crazy, something radical. Having a years worth of savings, so that you can deal with the fact you might be laid off?
Thanks for the explanation.
So if health insurance was an open market deal, who would make the rules?? I assume the government. Since healthcare is going to be required soon, won't companies just hike up their prices. Idk.
So an example of open market is car insurance. Right?
Take a look at LASIK, Breast jobs, people compete on price and on quality. You would have the same competition. LASIK can be had for as little as $400 an eye. When it came it out it was 2K per.
No, it's not the government's fault. I didn't ask whose fault it was. I'm also not talking about all of the sociological factors that you mentioned. I'm simply talking about health insurance, and, IMO, a private system that is publicly regulated is more sustainable and will lead to better outcomes than a publicly funded system. The costs of pharmaceuticals, obesity, and new technology is outside the scope of this discussion and is really moving in an entirely different direction.
Medicare costs have doubled every four years since the 60s. Private insurance premiums have increased, but not at such a rate (according to your data, this would be ~250% increase in government costs versus ~150% for private costs in the past decade).
I'm answering your question indirectly. I can't point to specific ways the private market reduces costs or how the government system increases costs. If I could, I would be a CEO of an insurer or the head of HHS. I can only point to the effects, and the data suggests that government costs increase at a faster rate than private costs.
Nice try, bro. I especially like that attempt at patronizing me.
The so-called free market works when applied to elective out-patient procedures with low overhead and a multitude of providers. That does not extrapolate into the health care system at large, and the reasons should be obvious. When a patient is going to really rack up some expenditure through, say, major cardiac surgery, organ transplantation, or cancer therapy, one does not typically comparison shop for ERs, ORs, ICUs, chemotherapy, etc. In emergent situations decisions are made by proximity; in non-emergent ones reputation plays more of a role.
Here is an interesting graph to chew on:
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I'm glad you mentioned pre-meds specifically (even though you mentioned Doctors later in your post). I think you'll change your mind eventually.
I love seeing the patients who receive ~$1000 per month from the government to live and are still homeless. This guy ended up in a psych hospital but admitted that "I would rather get $1000 in PCP per month and be homeless." People abuse the hell out of the system and I don't feel like giving everyone a free ride.
There are systems in place for those who are hard working and try to succeed.. There are systems in place for those who are disabled and can't provide for themselves. I have no tolerance for the lazy drug addicts who want a free ride for their entire life.
As a doc I'm going to 1) have to make less money and 2) pay more in taxes so that these people "get what they deserve". Yet no one is helping me with my ~$300k in debt. Sounds fair to me!
I suppose that's a good point about the whole debt thing. it would be easier it everything was publicly funded, including higher education (just look at Europe). In the UK, although i don't think the universities there are completely publicly funded, the doctors accept a lower salary in exchange for less liability (they don't pay their own malpractice insurance from their paycheck).
my point is, basically, Europe has it right.
I suppose that's a good point about the whole debt thing. it would be easier it everything was publicly funded, including higher education (just look at Europe). In the UK, although i don't think the universities there are completely publicly funded, the doctors accept a lower salary in exchange for less liability (they don't pay their own malpractice insurance from their paycheck).
my point is, basically, Europe has it right.
Hmm, so you want to make 60,000 (I don't have the exact figures about how much the European docs make) while paying most of that in taxes to get a free med school education. Wrong.
Hmm, so you want to make 60,000 (I don't have the exact figures about how much the European docs make) while paying most of that in taxes to get a free med school education. Wrong.
The US alternative is to have ~200,000 in med school debt (its heavily variable based on your rent and personal lifestyle. Some people choose more expensive schools for the experience when they have the option of attending a cheaper med school)
For example, I'll have about 180,000 in debt after med school (it will go down slightly in residency since I'll be renting a cheap apartment--no mortgage) and will have to devote 33,000 GROSS for 20 years to pay it off.
Its not that bad. EM can make 250,000 GROSS so I could be pulling in 217,000 GROSS instead of 250,000. It sucks to pay so much since med school tuition is ~3 times more expensive than it was in the early 1980's in real dollars (not absolute dollars) but its NOT a game-changer.
I don't understand why people get so irrational because of debt. Wait--OVERLY irrational.
I'm not a surgical resident or attending, but in this case, for an acute case... I don't believe you'd be doing a laproscopic procedure. It would probably be open so the abdomen can be flushed, etc. I don't think there is time for ports to be placed.I have what I consider to be "good insurance" and here's a few estimates based on my insurance website's treatment cost estimator for "in network" facilities around Boston:
EMERGENCY CARE BY PHYSICIAN
Emergency department visit of moderate to severe complexity
Estimated Treatment Cost: $261-342
Plan Responsibility: $241-322
Member Responsibility: $20
HIGH COMPLEXITY EMERGENCY DEPT VISIT (PHYSICIAN COST ONLY)
Standard charge for emergency room visit of high degree of difficulty
Estimated Treatment Cost: $177-231
Plan Responsibility: $157-211
Member Responsibility: $20
EMERGENCY ROOM CHARGES FROM FACILITY
Standard charge for use of emergency room
Estimated Treatment Cost: $716-1,292
Plan Responsibility: $616-1,192
Member Responsibility: $100
LAPAROSCOPIC APPENDECTOMY
Estimated Treatment Cost: $9,573-13,463
Plan Responsibility: $9,493-13,383
Member Responsibility: $80
So depending on how I make my way to the ER to be sent for an appendectomy I might spend about $200
I disagree. The reason for these high health care costs is because the government is clogging up the system. If health care was open to the free market, prices would go down.
2) there's no external player attempting to artificially lower prices (i.e., government systems)
The key point is that all companies play by the same rules. The government doesn't because there is an essentially "infinite" purse from which to draw more and more funds. This is how Medicare "works" even though its costs perpetually increase.
Medicare costs have doubled every four years since the 60s. Private insurance premiums have increased, but not at such a rate (according to your data, this would be ~250% increase in government costs versus ~150% for private costs in the past decade).
No, it's not the government's fault. I didn't ask whose fault it was. I'm also not talking about all of the sociological factors that you mentioned.
The government doesn't because there is an essentially "infinite" purse from which to draw more and more funds. This is how Medicare "works" even though its costs perpetually increase.
I'm answering your question indirectly. I can't point to specific ways the private market reduces costs or how the government system increases costs. If I could, I would be a CEO of an insurer or the head of HHS. I can only point to the effects, and the data suggests that government costs increase at a faster rate than private costs.
If we want to lower health care costs, then we need to break up the MD/DO licensing cartel that limits the number of health care providers. If somebody wants to go to their barbershop for discount neurosurgery, that should be their choice
Quite frankly I'm of the opinion pony up or die.
Old enough to lack empathy for people who elect to self immolate themselves.
Old enough to lack empathy for people who elect to self immolate themselves.
Quite frankly I'm of the opinion pony up or die. I don't believe there is a right to healthcare. I also believe the US spends way too much on chemo for terminal onc patients. Insurers shouldn't have to pay for life extending but non-lifesaving treatments. As to CT surg most of that is brought on by a lifetime of poor decisions, most healthy, svelte people don't need quadruple bypasses.
Everyone has healthcare ACCESS. What people want is the rich to pay for the poor's healthcare. This is the inherent disagreement: is healthcare a RIGHT? (answer, no, because you have to infringe on other people's rights if you make it a right.) Then, if healthcare is not a right, why should everyone have it? How can we afford to pay for everyone to have it? What are the effects of making everyone's healthcare "free?" (PS protip: no good is free in life.)
FlowRate said:The government is inherently inefficient. That is why it influences prices; you have to deal with all of the extra paperwork, the employees to do your paperwork for you, the government employees who do the paperwork for the government, the fat cat bastards who make up reasons for more paperwork, etc. etc.
The administrative structure of the U.S. health care system consumes a large share of health spending. In 1999, administrative spending consumed at least 31.0 percent of health spending, according to a report in todays New England Journal of Medicine. In contrast, administrative costs in Canada, which has had a national health program since 1971, are about 16.7% of health spending.
In 1969 administrative personnel accounted for 18.2% of the health care work force in the U.S. By 1999 administrations share had risen to 27.3% of total employees a 50% increase. This figure excludes the 926,000 employees in life/health insurance firms, and 724,000 employed in insurance brokerages. Overall, at least 31.0% of health spending was devoted to administration in the U.S. in 1999.
In contrast, administrations share of health employment in Canada (where a national health program has been in place since 1971) grew only 17% between 1971 and 1986, and has remained virtually unchanged since 1986. In 1996 administrative workers accounted for 19.1% of health employees vs. 27.3% in the late 1990s in the U.S. (both of these figure exclude health insurance company workers, who are far more numerous in the U.S. Administration consumed 16.7% of Canadian health spending in 1999.
The huge gap in administrative costs between the U.S. and Canada arises from their differing mechanisms of paying for health care. While Canada has a single insurance plan, or single-payer, in each province that pays the bills for everyone, the U.S. has a complex and fragmented payment structure built around thousands of different insurance plans, each with its own regulations on coverage, eligibility, and documentation.
The participation of private insurers raises administrative costs. The small private insurance sectors in Australia, Canada, Germany, and the Netherlands all have high overheads: 15.8%, 13.2%, 20.4% and 10.4% respectively, far higher than the 1% to 4% overhead of public insurance programs. Functions essential to private insurance but absent in public programs - e.g. underwriting, marketing, and corporate services - account for about two-thirds of private insurers' overhead. In addition, private insurers have incentives to erect administrative hurdles - by complicating and stalling payment they can hold premiums longer, boosting their interest income. Such hurdles also discourage some patients and providers from pursuing claims.
A fragmented payment structure is intrinsically more expensive than a single payer system. For insurers, it means the duplication of claims processing facilities and reduced insured-group size, which increases overhead.
Fragmentation also raises costs for providers who deal with multitudes of different insurance plans - at least 755 in Seattle alone. This means providers must determine each patients insurance coverage and eligibility for a particular service, and keep track of varying co-payments, referral networks, approval requirements and formularies. In contrast, Canadian physicians send virtually all bills to a single insurer using a simple billing form or computer program, and may refer patients to any colleague or hospital.
The multiplicity of insurers also precludes paying hospitals on a lump sum, or global-budgeted basis as in Canada. Global budgets eliminate most billing, and simplify internal accounting since costs and charges need not be attributed to individual patients and insurers.
A family's healthcare coverage lapsed while one of them was between jobs, and as luck would have it they had a serious medical issue, a ruptured appendix. This is their bill for $76,574.85.
![]()
An insurance company would be able to pay a fraction of that, but this family has to pay cash out of pocket and will likely go bankrupt because of this. Plus the hospital is probably overcharging for one of the myriad reasons (make up for low insurance payments, medicare payments, etc).
Source
The thread is full of people from New Zealand, Canada, UK etc. telling us how stupid we are. Frankly I think they're right.[/QUOTE
I would ask for an itemize list of thoes pharmacy items; seems a little heavy.
Does this apply to children too? If parents do not have adequate insurance for their children, should they be allowed to die? If not, then do you support universal health care rights for children and if so, at what age would you go from "support" to "let them die if they can't pay?"
I'm not a surgical resident or attending, but in this case, for an acute case... I don't believe you'd be doing a laproscopic procedure. It would probably be open so the abdomen can be flushed, etc. I don't think there is time for ports to be placed.
Anyone care to comment/correct?
Old enough to lack empathy for people who elect to self immolate themselves.
Old enough to lack empathy for people who elect to self immolate themselves.
You shouldn't be procreating if you can't afford to support kids.
You shouldn't be procreating if you can't afford to support kids.