In the end, I admit, it doesn't matter. The U.S. will have single payor at some point.
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Originally posted by ShockerPrez View PostI just dont see that incentive to enter the medical field as a doctor or a business increasing. And single payor will inevitably lead to rationing, I fear.
Even Obama admitted that.
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Originally posted by Rocky Mountain Shock View Post
If we would have universal coverage, it would take an act of Congress (probably literally) to get hospitals to budge off of those prices to reflect the savings of not having to provide free service to the uninsured and indigent.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 Rocky Mountain Shock View PostI'm not sure I understand what you're saying. Perhaps I wasn't clear in my statement. I'm merely saying uninhibited capitalism without government intervention is not always the best method to provide goods and services. It depends on the situation. For years the best method to send a letter across town or across the country was the USPS, a quasi-governmental agency. Having tens, or hundreds, or thousands of private postal services would have been impractical. Likewise, having every mile of roadway in this country a private toll road also makes no sense.
It seems to me that ShockerPrez is advocating the free market is a fix for everything, especially healthcare. I disagree.
At the same time, I do believe that those willing to pay should be able to have the best doctors and services, and the option to attain their medical needs privately should not be infringrd upon.
I would also be in favor of perhaps mandating medical students serve their residency years in low income clinics and hospitals to increase access in those underserved areas.
Drug prices could decrease by reducing FDA standards in bringing them to market and reducing patent periods until generics come online.
Tort reform would also help. Reducing malpractice insurance costs would help."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 PostI am not for complete free market. I believe that a mandate to buy catastrophic insurance makes sense, for instance. And Im not in favor of cutting medicaid and medicare. There needs to be an avenue for those that need it.
At the same time, I do believe that those willing to pay should be able to have the best doctors and services, and the option to attain their medical needs privately should not be infringrd upon.
I would also be in favor of perhaps mandating medical students serve their residency years in low income clinics and hospitals to increase access in those underserved areas.
Drug prices could decrease by reducing FDA standards in bringing them to market and reducing patent periods until generics come online.
Tort reform would also help. Reducing malpractice insurance costs would help.
Even communist China has private insurance. In fact, China's private market is booming thanks to an expanding middle class and increasingly inadequate public options, and is expected to produce a GDP of $744B by 2020. Russia, Cuba, etc. all have private insurance markets offering comprehensive coverage.
So while single payer will heavily hurt private insurance, it won't kill it. But I will say that the potential lost jobs and companies should be a concern to any that want to move to a single payer system. If we enact a poorly thought out single payer system it will significant negative downsides in the short-term.
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Originally posted by Aargh View Postthey sort of have to do that to cover the cost of the uninsured people who show up in the ER for routine medical treatment. We're paying for the uninsured now, it's just hid in the costs of service to any who can pay or who have insurance.
If we would have universal coverage, it would take an act of Congress (probably literally) to get hospitals to budge off of those prices to reflect the savings of not having to provide free service to the uninsured and indigent.
The whole system is a mess regardless of free market or single payor.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?
If you have a child with a complication, there is absolutely no better place to be than in the U.S., period, and honestly, it's not even close.Kung Wu say, man who read woman like book, prefer braille!
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Originally posted by MoValley John View Posthttps://www.drugabuse.gov/related-to...nence-syndrome
The number of addicted babies born in The US vs. England isn't even close. We are birthing addicted babies at a shocking rate.
And this is just one reason our infant mortality rate is high.Kung Wu say, man who read woman like book, prefer braille!
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I specced out an accounting system for a CPA firm that specialized in working with hospitals over a 3-state area. The amount of detail they had to be able to provide to justify costs to Medicare and Medicaid was insane. As I recall everythoing was based on a cost-plus basis, and incredibly nit-picking detail was required for every cost. Without the documentation to back up a cost, the cost was denied.
For some odd reason accountants on one side of a transaction tend to never trust the accountants on the other side of the transaction.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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On the subject of babies...
...I worked with a man whose wife ended up on fertility meds in order to become pregnant. She ended up with triplets. They were born prematurely. One of them will be on a feeding tube her entire life.
The bill for that was over $250,000 and that was well over 10 years ago.
Is that a cost that should be shared among all of us, or is that an example of behavior known to lead to medical complications (risky behavior) and should be the responsibility of those engaging in that risky behavior?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 Aargh View PostOn the subject of babies...
...I worked with a man whose wife ended up on fertility meds in order to become pregnant. She ended up with triplets. They were born prematurely. One of them will be on a feeding tube her entire life.
The bill for that was over $250,000 and that was well over 10 years ago.
Is that a cost that should be shared among all of us, or is that an example of behavior known to lead to medical complications (risky behavior) and should be the responsibility of those engaging in that risky behavior?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 CBB_Fan View PostThe VA is actually single-provider, versus Medicare which is single-payer. It is well worth pointing the difference because in practical terms they represent two fairly different levels of government intervention.
In a single payer system, the government pays. You go to the hospital, get treated, and eventually the hospital gets the money for the service from the government (and them, from tax payers). There is a still a private market of hospitals, insurers, and pharmaceutical companies competing to keep costs low.
In single provider, the government provides. They run the hospitals, the run the pharmaceutical companies, they run the research. If they don't think a procedure is worth paying for, you can't turn to a competitor because the government is the only option.
A big reason the VA is so inefficient (even over other government programs) is that the government directly administers VA Medical Centers. This results in all sorts of silly mandated inefficiencies. For example, the government makes VA doctors translate medical records from one hospital to another themselves (a big problem when every military branch has its own set of medical records). Private hospitals hire medical records specialists, which is far more efficient and doesn't force doctors into doing needless paperwork. Then you have use-it-or-lose budgeting, impossible to fire administrative employees, long wait times, etc.
Even if we do go to single-payer, it will be more like Medicare and less like the VHA, and it isn't really a choice. To have something like the VHA or NHS the government would need to essentially buy out or bring in every hospital and private practice. Just the dealing with the laws of 50 different states would make it difficult, let alone trying to bring in 4,862 hospitals and about a million doctors into the federal system (which currently has 212 hospitals, to give some idea to the scale).Originally posted by SHOXJOCK View PostTotally agree on your take on the VA being inefficient. If you take all of the budget that the VA spends on medical and hospital care of veterans and give it to Medicare. Then move the veteran's over to Medicare, Veterans will be better off and we could close all of the VA hospitals and get rid of thousands of federal employees, not overnight maybe over 3 years. A win for Veterans and the smaller government people like myself.Yes I know it's still government but at least it's more efficient.Originally posted by SHOXJOCK View PostYes I know it's still government but at least it's more efficient.Originally posted by Kung Wu View PostMore efficient than what?
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Originally posted by Aargh View PostI specced out an accounting system for a CPA firm that specialized in working with hospitals over a 3-state area. The amount of detail they had to be able to provide to justify costs to Medicare and Medicaid was insane. As I recall everythoing was based on a cost-plus basis, and incredibly nit-picking detail was required for every cost. Without the documentation to back up a cost, the cost was denied.
For some odd reason accountants on one side of a transaction tend to never trust the accountants on the other side of the transaction.Kung Wu say, man who read woman like book, prefer braille!
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