Originally posted by ShockerPrez
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Originally posted by ShockerPrez View PostCosts are high for healthcare, but a lot of it is because we have the best care.
Originally posted by ShockerPrez View PostSo, before we just jump to the conclusion that our benevolent government, who in their endless love for its citizens, will pay for all of our health needs out of the goodness of their hearts, perhaps there are better ways.
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Originally posted by jdshock View PostPlease cite your source. I'm not sure I've seen very many metrics that would ever put US on top.
Before you jump to the conclusion that single payer proponents believe the basis for a single payer system is that the government has "endless love for its citizens," perhaps you should engage in the discussion going on here and understand that people are actively discussing pros and cons of the system."When life hands you lemons, make lemonade." Better have some sugar and water too, or else your lemonade will suck!
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Originally posted by ShockerPrez View PostWhat country would you prefer to be in if you were sick?
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Originally posted by ShockCrazy View PostWell for an expectant mother EVERY OTHER MODERN INDUSTRIAL COUNTRY. Pasting this again for emphasis: https://ourworldindata.org/the-link-...nding-us-focus
Im serious. Are they from the measles, or auto accidents? If you truly would rather give birth in a UK hospital or Wesley Medical Centers birthing suite, then thats your choice. But I would rather be in the U.S.
Charlie Gard and his parents were ready to spend a million dollars to come here.
Why?"When life hands you lemons, make lemonade." Better have some sugar and water too, or else your lemonade will suck!
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Originally posted by ShockerPrez View PostWhat country would you prefer to be in if you were sick?
Both of those countries seem to be rather like the US in terms of economic advancement, lifestyle, industrialization. Hard to gind two countries more like the US.The future's so bright - I gotta wear shades.
We like to cut down nets and get sized for championship rings.
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Originally posted by ShockerPrez View PostWhat are the causes of death?
Im serious. Are they from the measles, or auto accidents? If you truly would rather give birth in a UK hospital or Wesley Medical Centers birthing suite, then thats your choice. But I would rather be in the U.S.
Charlie Gard and his parents were ready to spend a million dollars to come here.
Why?
So you are going to take one anecdote instead of real data? What about all the Americans who go to Canada for treatment or order prescriptions from Canada?
Edit: To add again that Charlie Gard scenario is again SINGLE PROVIDER, and not what we are discussing anyways.Last edited by ShockCrazy; August 1, 2017, 01:46 PM.
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Originally posted by ShockCrazy View PostWell for an expectant mother EVERY OTHER MODERN INDUSTRIAL COUNTRY. Pasting this again for emphasis: https://ourworldindata.org/the-link-...nding-us-focus
The main cause of the US not placing higher is lifestyle. We eat like ****, we don't exercize, we smoke and our front door for healthcare is the er. Hence, we don't visit the doctor before we are sick even though most insurance plans include check ups as part of the policy.
Income inequality does play a role, as does expense, but how we take care of ourselves and how we live our lives has everything to do with where the US places. If youcget sick, you want to be in thecUS, not elsewhere. It may cost more, but if two similar healthy people presented, one in the US and one elsewhere, you want to be the person presenting in the US. Unfortunately, we are fat, lazy, cigarette smoking, whiskey drinking slobs, our lufestyles set us behind the rest of the world before we ever show up for help.
There are three rules that I live by: never get less than twelve hours sleep; never play cards with a guy who has the same first name as a city; and never get involved with a woman with a tattoo of a dagger on her body. Now you stick to that, and everything else is cream cheese.
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Originally posted by ShockCrazy View PostI absolutely would prefer another country. Seriously you are fine with the fact that twice as many infants die per 1000 infants born compared to any other industrial country? It's laughable you think that auto accidents would have enough statistical impact on this number at this scale. We are talking millions of births in a year. And nearly three times as many women die in child birth or in child birth related complications compared to any other industrial country, in what insane scenario is this OK?
So you are going to take one anecdote instead of real data? What about all the Americans who go to Canada for treatment or order prescriptions from Canada?
I just dont see the great push by Americans going elsewhere for their care. I do see the reverse."When life hands you lemons, make lemonade." Better have some sugar and water too, or else your lemonade will suck!
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Originally posted by MoValley John View PostStrawman.
The main cause of the US not placing higher is lifestyle. We eat like ****, we don't exercize, we smoke and our front door for healthcare is the er. Hence, we don't visit the doctor before we are sick even though most insurance plans include check ups as part of the policy.
Income inequality does play a role, as does expense, but how we take care of ourselves and how we live our lives has everything to do with where the US places. If youcget sick, you want to be in thecUS, not elsewhere. It may cost more, but if two similar healthy people presented, one in the US and one elsewhere, you want to be the person presenting in the US. Unfortunately, we are fat, lazy, cigarette smoking, whiskey drinking slobs, our lufestyles set us behind the rest of the world before we ever show up for help.
http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1528032.1528035
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Originally posted by ShockerPrez View PostWhat are the causes of death?
Im serious. Are they from the measles, or auto accidents? If you truly would rather give birth in a UK hospital or Wesley Medical Centers birthing suite, then thats your choice. But I would rather be in the U.S.
Charlie Gard and his parents were ready to spend a million dollars to come here.
Why?
In the US, Gard's procedure would have been denied by insurance just as it was denied by the UK, and for the same reasons. The procedure was almost certainly not going to work, it would cost a ton of money, and the doctor's themselves thought it would only prolong Gard's suffering.
Steve Jobs was ready to spend millions in acupuncture sessions and visiting spiritualists, but that doesn't mean they were better than getting real medicine.
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Originally posted by ShockerPrez View PostI think I would just rather know what the data means. How long is an infant considered an infant, e.g. what is counted as a birth as opposed to a miscarriage in those countries? Are they dying in the hospital, or when they are at home? That's all.
I just dont see the great push by Americans going elsewhere for their care. I do see the reverse.
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Originally posted by ShockerPrez View PostWhat country would you prefer to be in if you were sick?
The WHO says 36 other countries are better options: http://thepatientfactor.com/canadian...ealth-systems/
And this medical journal says 34 other countries: http://www.thelancet.com/journals/la...818-8/abstract
We have to get over this false pretense that we're #1 at everything because, ya know, 'Merica!
Sometimes government control sucks. Sometimes the free market sucks. The idea that one of these systems is the answer for everything is demonstrably false."It's amazing to watch Ron slide into that open area, Fred will find him and it's straight cash homie."--HCGM
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Originally posted by Rocky Mountain Shock View PostSometimes government control sucks. Sometimes the free market sucks. The idea that one of these systems is the answer for everything is demonstrably false.
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