in my state? It's more likely than you think.http://www.news-record.com/content/2012/02/13/article/nc_hospitals_dont_want_trials_for_disputed_bills
2/14/2012 2:56:28 AM
No competition.No questions/disputes.No oversight.No transparency.= consumer getting screwed.
2/14/2012 3:18:49 AM
2/14/2012 10:16:16 AM
How is "we kept you alive during a heart attack so you must give us basically all your money" not post-hoc extortion?
2/14/2012 11:55:57 AM
2/14/2012 12:09:24 PM
OK here's the itemized bill:-Meds and their administration $260-Room fee & operational costs $3300-Examination $230-Offset for legal liability risk $7000-Insurance invoice inflation $5000-Insurance clerical work $2000-Regulatory compliance costs/Difference between state-regulated care cost and actual cost $2000
2/14/2012 12:26:12 PM
Are there any example of countries that have less government control over healthcare and end up with lower prices and better service? Because last time I checked, the US has the least government control over healthcare out of all the OECD nations and we pay more than anyone else for everything from basic care to major surgery. Seriously, is there an example to point to here or just a hypothetical abstracted scenario?[Edited on February 14, 2012 at 12:41 PM. Reason : .]
2/14/2012 12:40:57 PM
How do you quantify control? If it's sheer number of federal and state regulations pertaining to or at least affecting health care or insurance, the U.S. probably takes the cake on that.Countries with relatively successful health care models are smaller in population and are more culturally homogeneous. No one has ever pulled off universal health care in a country like the United States. If it's going to be done it would have to be on the state level. The federal government is entirely incapable of doing it. One size fits all isn't going to work here.
2/14/2012 12:54:51 PM
So in other words you have no examples of a model for us to follow except an abstract, hypothetical one.
2/14/2012 1:19:00 PM
2/14/2012 1:26:37 PM
2/14/2012 1:29:34 PM
You're comparing a country with a population of 4 million and a territory of 20,000 square miles with the United States? You're proving my fucking point here.[Edited on February 14, 2012 at 1:31 PM. Reason : ]
2/14/2012 1:31:02 PM
2/14/2012 1:32:38 PM
^^Yes, and a GDP that amounts to 0.3% of ours. Yet again, they manage to provide free healthcare to their entire population, which is generally much poorer and less productive than ours. It must be magic.[Edited on February 14, 2012 at 1:34 PM. Reason : :]
2/14/2012 1:34:25 PM
You haven't made a point at all destroyer. All you've done is said, over and over again, "Diversity + big size = no healthcare. That's just how it is. It just is, trust me."Oh yeah let's not forget Japan, 1/3 our population and nearly the size of California. Oh but they don't have black people, so they don't count.[Edited on February 14, 2012 at 1:38 PM. Reason : .]
2/14/2012 1:36:30 PM
2/14/2012 1:42:26 PM
2/14/2012 1:56:14 PM
2/14/2012 2:53:56 PM
2/14/2012 3:00:22 PM
i can't wait for 5 years from now when gas is $10 a gallon, and almost depleted from reserves, we haven't invested in electric cars or nuclear energy and we have a huge energy crisis, and we pretend like we can still afford universal healthcare, and take care of every single 'needy' person on the planet.it's gonna be awesome.
2/14/2012 4:19:31 PM
I'll continue to shake in my boots at the threat of future crisis while ignoring the present one"This is the best we can do" is not a credible argument coming from the people intentionally lowering the bar, sorry
2/14/2012 4:21:55 PM
it's gonna be funny seeing you happily going to the doctor for free paying 45-50% taxes and also paying $10 for a single gallon of gas in your 20mpg Tahoe. sure you'll have great health, and yet for some odd reason still living in a tiny apartment barely affording any meager type of entertainment despite your $130,000 annual salary.complaining and wondering what went wrong with our economy since liberal presidents had their way and finally got their wish of a near 100% entitlement society. "guize i thought it would all just magically work like the obamator said it would"
2/14/2012 4:40:46 PM
haha it's super-astounding how little you understand of the opposition and how they thinkmeanwhile they have you mapped the fuck out
2/14/2012 5:22:34 PM
I wouldn't really say I have him mapped the fuck out so much as I just totally disregard any idea that originates in that lizard brain of his.Destroyer, I feel like you can see how ridiculous pack_bryan is as well. Well, he's a lot closer to you in policy positions than you think he is. Get out of that ideological corner you've backed yourself into and come meet the sane people sitting at the table in the middle of the room.
2/14/2012 5:37:23 PM
2/14/2012 5:38:13 PM
2/14/2012 6:07:15 PM
How do you feel about public funding of fire departments?
2/14/2012 6:23:00 PM
I think I'd rather buy insurance than pay taxes, but I don't really have a problem with them. Local fire departments work rather effectively, although there's little doubt that a private agency would do it cheaper and more effectively due to competition.That's not what we're talking about, though. We're talking about federally funded and managed health care programs. My entire argument is that a national program with a diverse population of 315 million is not likely to work. Do you think we should have a federal fire department? How well do you think that would work?
2/14/2012 6:33:57 PM
2/14/2012 6:39:09 PM
The free market works for elective care because it's elective. Consumers don't risk their lives by saying "no".
2/14/2012 7:07:47 PM
And non elective care is already provided by EMTALA. Most health care is elective, or at the very least non emergent and could be shopped around. There are problems with our current system to be sure, but they are with the fact that opaque pricing and insurance makes it nearly impossible to price shop, and since insurance is linked to your employment rather than you as a person, shopping for insurance is usually a no go as well.
2/14/2012 7:19:51 PM
hospitals are run by idiots and staffed by idiots. They run retardedly long shifts and then shift the costs of their mistakes and waste onto insurance and patients.if you want to fix healthcare costs you need to target providers first and do some serious digging into their practices.this will never happen because the healthcare industrial complex makes way too much fucking money for the people it supports,
2/14/2012 8:01:29 PM
2/14/2012 8:02:46 PM
2/14/2012 8:37:08 PM
I was unaware that my default position is "the only solutions are government solutions." Thank you for enlightening me?Yes, your inability to follow your ideology beyond the tip of your nose is myopic. Or maybe it's blindness--I'm not a doctor.If the world worked the way you think it should, civilization literally would not exist.
2/14/2012 9:16:02 PM
2/14/2012 9:29:52 PM
d357r0y3r literally cannot conceive of how he might benefit from a road he will never drive down, a fire department he will never call, or the good health of someone he will never meet.I am at a loss as to how any group of people, believing firmly that no effort or expenditure should be made towards anything not directly benefiting them as individuals, could ever possibly form a society of any size or significanceBut that's just me.]
2/14/2012 10:19:33 PM
That was pretty eloquently put.I also wanted to add that this:
2/14/2012 11:32:02 PM
2/15/2012 1:37:38 AM
2/15/2012 7:52:07 AM
2/15/2012 7:53:45 AM
2/15/2012 9:41:03 AM
2/15/2012 10:08:35 AM
Government legislating cost of healthcare ... ?!?!You mean like how congress passes a "doc fix" every few months, literally setting Medicare payment rates for physicians?This is nothing new. Asinine, but not new. If patients can drag hospitals to court, costs will just be further shifted, per usual.
2/15/2012 10:22:16 AM
2/15/2012 10:38:55 AM
2/15/2012 10:44:30 AM
2/15/2012 10:51:36 AM
So you think ~20k is reasonable for a fairly routine 3-day stay in a hospital? You don't think this man at least has a right to understand why he was charged so much?[Edited on February 15, 2012 at 11:04 AM. Reason : ]
2/15/2012 11:02:46 AM
^^It is simply human nature and basic economics. As the costs of goods or services changes, so does consumption of that good/service. As the price of healthcare for the individual goes down, they consume more. No talking points, just reason.There is no utopia mrfrog. You cannot provide the best of everything, to everyone and it be free to all.And sorry if I touched a nerve, I just get pissed seeing people afford crap they dont need then bitch about paying or bitch that someone else isnt paying enough for the stuff they actually need. Ive seen kids who couldnt see to get out of a room go without glasses for a year as the "parent" waits for the insurance to be eligible for the "free" glasses. Then pull out a damn Iphone.In your movie theater example, are you suggesting that the individual pay for the services they use? If so I agree with you.^regardless of what "I think" is reasonable. The people who made those charges do. (the federal govt) So you should be happy, they have it under control. It wasnt that evil hospital, the govt ok'd it. [Edited on February 15, 2012 at 11:08 AM. Reason : .]
2/15/2012 11:05:54 AM
Actually no. This whole time we've been talking about how much a business charged a customer in a private transaction.
2/15/2012 11:10:22 AM