- Joined
- May 27, 2004
- Messages
- 66
- Reaction score
- 0
Any thoughts??
Jessiemmc said:Any thoughts??
MadameLULU said:The fact that we spend the most $$ and dont even have the best healthcare outcomes in the world. When I mean healthcare outcomes, I am referring to the standard indicators that public health and others use to guage the health of a nation. Thats pretty sad. We are ranked #35 or so in infant mortality rates.
medic170 said:Ranked by whom? Overall, we do indeed have the best healthcare and outcomes in the world!!!
mshheaddoc said:How can you say that? Ranked overall by clinical data that shows overall life expectancy lower to other industrialized countries? You really think we have the best healthcare? With millions of people a year who get none? 😕
George Bush is what's wrong.Jessiemmc said:Any thoughts??
medic170 said:Again, ranked by whom? Liberal pollsters?
bewitched1081 said:well of course you can never say this in an interview, but i think we all need to turn the looking glass toward ourselves, our future selves. as future physicians, will we put our own interests above our patients?
marr said:I do hope that HMO would turn more of their profit back toward the patients instead of satisfying their investor's pocket. Just look up in major business journal on these HMO and see how much a profit margin they have. It's insane that they would raise insurance rate eventhough they are making a healthy profit.
elee20 said:George Bush is what's wrong.
PreMedAdAG said:this is very helpful.. please post more and post resources if you have them
dnelsen said:www.pnhp.org
physicians for a national health program
This is a very good site that seems to endorse the single payer system (government would replace insurance companies, but doctors are still private)
medic170 said:Socialize everything, that way nobody will have to worry about personal responsibility
Whatever!medic170 said:You are whats wrong
dnelsen said:The single payer system they propose isn't socialized medicine you turd-burglar......read the site.
medic170 said:You are whats wrong
😀medic170 said:That is really mature. Sticks and stones.......
TiggidyTooth said:Oh it is, how enlightening... 🙄
dnelsen said:😀
Some thoughts/observations on medicine from my short exposure to the field:
-ANYONE can receive treatment (at least in minnesota, and I think nationally) regardless of whether or not they have insurance. Granted, they will receive a huge bill, but most don't bother paying it. It is illegal to deny treatment to people who show up at the county hospital.
-Regarding the point above, many uninsured people end up coming to the ER for colds, the flu, and other minor ailments that would normally be taken care of by a primary care physician. This is a huge waste of money and time!
-Minnesota doesn't allow for-profit HMOs to do business in the state. Although, even the not-for-profit HMOs have been accused (and rightfully so) of wasting money (expensive golf outings, ridiculous executive salaries, etc.)
It seems the problem isn't access to healthcare, because as I mentioned above, you can receive it regardless of your ability to pay. However, the unbearable high cost of medical treatment for those without insurance is often a deterring factor in their receipt of medical care. The doctors are then forced to charge more to cover the X percent that they know can't/won't pay and as a result our insurance goes up... and on and on it goes...
dnelsen said:😀
Some thoughts/observations on medicine from my short exposure to the field:
-ANYONE can receive treatment (at least in minnesota, and I think nationally) regardless of whether or not they have insurance. Granted, they will receive a huge bill, but most don't bother paying it. It is illegal to deny treatment to people who show up at the county hospital.
-Regarding the point above, many uninsured people end up coming to the ER for colds, the flu, and other minor ailments that would normally be taken care of by a primary care physician. This is a huge waste of money and time!
-Minnesota doesn't allow for-profit HMOs to do business in the state. Although, even the not-for-profit HMOs have been accused (and rightfully so) of wasting money (expensive golf outings, ridiculous executive salaries, etc.)
It seems the problem isn't access to healthcare, because as I mentioned above, you can receive it regardless of your ability to pay. However, the unbearable high cost of medical treatment for those without insurance is often a deterring factor in their receipt of medical care. The doctors are then forced to charge more to cover the X percent that they know can't/won't pay and as a result our insurance goes up... and on and on it goes...
ajnak182 said:Nelson, while I agree with most of what you've said, I'm in opposition to your belief that access to care is not a prime issue. True, county hospitals cannot deny care. However, the lack of access to primary care for the uninsured results in the flooding of county hospitals, which become less able to handle real emergencies and often have no option but to make their patients wait for incredibly long periods of time for things easily treated by a nurse practitioner or primary care doc. Furthermore, medical bills are responsible for approximately 1/3 of homelessness. While they can't deny you care, they can send your bill to a debt collection agency. Since those bills are normally so large, $700-$1000 for a fracture (based on personal experience) for example, a person living paycheck to paycheck trying to now pay off that bill is in for some seriously tough times once the debt collector comes knocking. It's scenarios like these that really make me a supporter of universal healthcare where government acts only as a representative for insurance holders (the U.S. population) but has very limited control over the operation of whatever entity manages the healthcare program (kind of like the Federal Treasury, maybe?) and healthcare providers remain private. Basically, what PNHP seems to advocate.
AJ
BGGA said:In this age of managed care, where the shrinking surpluses generated from insured patients can no longer absorb the losses that physicians acquire from treating the uninsured, what are the doctors choices?
elee20 said:George Bush is what's wrong.
mamaMD said:Ohh so we didn't have any problems at all before GWB took office? LOL This is one issue where it's not that simple to just point fingers. The thing is, this has been a problem for a long time and it's getting worse and no one has been able to fix it (Clinton, Bush, etc) partly because people like Bush, Kerry, Clinton, whoever, are so damn rich they have no clue.
I think there are so many freaking problems, I would have no clue where to even start. Bush stays in office its going to still go downhill, Kerry takes office its still going to go downhill.
Cerbernator said:Why does everyone think socializing is somehow going to make medicine better? Its not like medicine will no longer cost someone money. It's not like the government has a great track record with huge social programs. I see something along the lines of a huge money sucking government run HMO if we get a "national" healthcare program.
constructor said:if you look at some of the world's most successful healthcare systems (sweden, norway, canada, france), it is apparent that having a government single-payer system operate within the framework of private medical practice is working very well in reality. i don't know if it will work as well in the united states because we already have so many entrenched customs that make the reform much more difficult than in the other countries, but i certainly think it would be the best option in the long run because it cuts down on a lot of the administrative complexities and costs that you have when there are so many intermediary players in a system like ours.
medic170 said:Waiting 9 months for surgery, or 4 weeks to see a PCP is "successful" A lot of patients from those countries end up coming to the U.S. for surgeries because they are stuck on a waitlist in their socialized system.
MadameLULU said:The fact that we spend the most $$ and dont even have the best healthcare outcomes in the world. When I mean healthcare outcomes, I am referring to the standard indicators that public health and others use to guage the health of a nation. Thats pretty sad. We are ranked #35 or so in infant mortality rates.
constructor said:you are completely wrong... you might want to actually read up on how things work in those countries before you respond so you at least sound like you have something semi-intelligent to say. the people who come here for surgeries from other countries are generally very wealthy and want to try an experimental procedure or some procedure that is in the preliminary stages. this means they only come here during exceptional circumstances (they have tried many treatment options and haven't experienced success, for example), not simply because they want to have something done soon. the other countries i mentioned are actually very good with both the waiting time and the access, two things that only work as a tradeoff in our system unfortunately...
Fed Meat said:This is really untrue. If you look at 5-year cancer survival rates, the US is hands down the most effective healthcare system in the world (US 5-year colon cancer survival rate is 60%. In the UK, it's 36% in 1999). True, we don't have nurses showing up at the house of new borns and making sure they have all their injections and starting a long-term relationship.
I'm not convinced that infant mortality has much to do with the quality of healthcare being offered, at least in this country. It probably has more to do with societal views on healthcare and accessibility.
medic170 said:Ok then, so they come here when "they have tried many treatment options and haven't experienced success," I guess if there system is better, why don't they have those innovative treatments avaliable to them there? Looks like our system is better after all since we have all the innovative treatments avaliable. Furthermore, going on what you have said, how does there system eliminate disparities when, as you stated, even in those countries, the wealthy get better health care (since they come here for innovative treatments)?