3/11/2009 9:14:05 PM
The tales i hear of people going overseas are bc its cheaper. Agreed?The tales I hear of people coming here is for access and quality.here is a great example I learned from my CE last week. There is an injection for wet armd, its very expensive but very effective. Thousands per injection. This is covered current in the US. Across the pond? Its covered after you go blind in one eye. Pretty amazing stuff. But i suppose that is why they also have private hospitals in europe too.. bc the quality is SO great in the public ones.. they just wanted something to complain about so they opened up the privates for shits and giggles.Oh i forgot the bit about americans going overseas to test US drugs that are being experimented in other countries bc of fear of lawsuits... sorry i left that one out.[Edited on March 11, 2009 at 9:32 PM. Reason : .]
3/11/2009 9:19:06 PM
Socializing Health Care is not going to improve it. Changing a few things in our current system can improve it greatly.* Introduce Health insurance products that only cover major expenditures* Tort reform
3/11/2009 11:19:43 PM
Between Big Pharma and the health care industry I think some gov't policies need to be removed and other policies should be enacted to make it affordable.Health care costs should be reasonable and attainable for those working full time, have worked (now retired), disabled veterans, those in between jobs after being laid off, and maybe those legitimately a victim of circumstance who can not hold a normal job (ie woman gets hit by a drunk driver who fled scene, rare disease, etc)Nonetheless I think Universal health care is a horrible and gov't should not go into business of overseeing this massive industry. Health care is not a right. I cringe at the thought of working my ass off to subsidize peoples irresponsible, lazy, and destructive lifestyle. Not only due to my own selfishness but also in eliminates people's incentives to act/live responsibly.-No longer faced with high medication costs from obesity related diseases perhaps Tammy Sue will have less incentive to lay off that Triple Thick burger or the never ending past bowl at Olive Garden.- LaShawnda will not tell her boyfriend to wrap his tool since she can have Obama pay the medical costs of a 7th child.- Steve will wait till he finds a new job before quitting the job he hates b.c its not worth the risk of flipping his truck off roading, breaking his leg/neck, and getting stuck with a 90K hospital bill while he has no health insurance.
3/11/2009 11:40:30 PM
I wish we would do a system like Australia has. Everyone pays into the public health insurance, which pays out up to, if I remember correctly, 80% of your costs. Then if you'd like you can buy private health insurance to cover the other 20%. Japan also has a similar system, but their doctors kind of scare me, so I'd prefer Australia's version of health care ^ I can guarantee you health costs are not a consideration to the people you mention in your examples. Under the current system they go to the hospital anyway and everyone else still shoulders the costs of their health care, just at a much higher rate.[Edited on March 11, 2009 at 11:59 PM. Reason : .]
3/11/2009 11:56:14 PM
Health Insurance should be viewed more like house insurance. For instance, house maintenance (repainting, reroofing, re siding, general repairs etc.) costs are not covered under house insurance. Nor should they be. But people have this idea that every medical expense should be covered under health insurance policy. This expectation leads to higher premiums in general. Health insurance should be insurance against major expenditures that a person couldn't possibly pay back in the course of a life time.
3/11/2009 11:57:51 PM
wolfpackgrr is correct, In our area a bulk of the patients using the ER for their primary care have medicaid. But these are, for the most part, adult children and irresponsible people.. so it matters not how much thier visits costs anyone.. bc they dont pay for it anyway. Allowing the ERs to turn away people is the solution. Hoff, I agree with you. The first step is to uncouple employment with health insurance. The govt started this mess and now we have grown with the atttitude that someone else should pay for my insurance if I work. It takes the decision making away from the individual. So as thier involvement in thier healthcare choices lessen, thier expectations increase.. leading to people feeling unsatisfied. There is no reason why we cannot have a govt HSA so people are covered for the big stuff and have tax free money put into YOUR account. This could be purchased through your employer, like a payroll deduction, or purchased on your own. Now if one does not purchase this and has to pay then hospitals/drs should be allowed to deduct some amount of money per month from whatever income they have up to a percentage as incentive to get the insurance and not leach.Cash paying consumers will not only lower healthcare costs it will also increase pressures on practices to keep moving forward in technologies to earn your business, so care should increase as well. We have factual information of that happening now, people just dont want to hear it.
3/12/2009 8:54:25 AM
3/12/2009 1:03:04 PM
^the problem with tying health insurance to employers is that, if you don't get to individually shop for your own insurance company. Why can't health insurance be more like car insurance. That way you change jobs or get laid off you will still have coverage under the same insurance company.The FSA/HSA thing is a good idea. Government could legislate a taxfree account to hold money designated only for spending on medical costs. This is a good idea because it allows people to control their money and puts the responsibility of spending it wisely on the individual. This is the most efficient way.
3/12/2009 8:56:58 PM
3/13/2009 7:19:20 AM
you know that it wasn't literally meaning "the hippies," jackass
3/13/2009 12:48:46 PM
3/15/2009 11:22:26 AM
You think its bad now? Obama just put some more CHANGE into healthcare.. he really is trying to force people into govt plans.. imohttp://www.iht.com/articles/2009/03/15/america/health.php"The Obama administration is signaling to Congress that the president could support taxing some employee health benefits, as several influential lawmakers and many economists favor, to help pay for overhauling the U.S. health care system.The proposal is politically problematic for President Barack Obama, however, since it is similar to one he denounced in the presidential campaign as "the largest middle-class tax increase in history." Most Americans with insurance get it from their employers, and taxing workers for the benefit is opposed by union leaders and some businesses.In television advertisements last fall, Mr. Obama criticized his Republican rival for the presidency, Senator John McCain of Arizona, for proposing to tax all employer-provided health benefits. The benefits have long been tax-free, regardless of how generous they are or how much an employee earns. The advertisements did not point out that Mr. McCain, in exchange, wanted to give all families a tax credit to subsidize the purchase of coverage."And dont blame your fathers company raising premiums as them being greedy, i bet they are only passing on a small portion of the increase to the actual employees. Ins premiums are really increasing and will continue to do so as the population ages and people demand/expect more coverage from their ins. Im able to see both sides of it, so in one year our health ins premiums rose 22% while the SAME ins. company cut our dr reimbursements by 4%. To continue to have my wife covered under the group plan at the office would have double to 400/month. We went out and got her covered for a little over 100 a month. One thing most people dont consider is that the employer plans are group plans of which many have older population working for them which will drive the prices higher.
3/15/2009 12:05:13 PM
3/15/2009 12:48:41 PM
Sure Fail boat, your company is in business to make money not provide health ins. So when healthcare costs are increasing faster than profits then they have to make cuts somewhere.Can you rephrase your point on the costs of your healthcare? Im not sure I understand the point you are making.
3/15/2009 12:54:24 PM
3/15/2009 1:08:05 PM
maybe you havent seen my past discussion on this agent, yes I do think getting govt completely out of healthcare is the best answer, but most unlikely. What I do feel we can do very short term is to move to govt HSAs. This tax free money would be yours and you have a cat. policy so the biggies are covered while giving people the options to choose thier own doctors and level of care.(and lowering govt costs) This also changes the practice model back to providing great service and lowering costs. You can see this is exactly the case NOW with uncovered procedures. (procedures/tech improve while costs decline)
3/15/2009 1:20:29 PM
3/15/2009 1:25:14 PM
Failboat, I think you actually back my point. However, you need to realize what insurance is. Ive paid car ins since i was 16 and have only used it to replace a windshield. Look at all that money wasted. I pay 30 dollars a month in life ins. that I hope i never have to use... but you might consider wasted money. But moving PAST that, I do agree with you. If you do not like how your ins company is spending YOUR money the choose another one.. OH thats right, we currently only favor companies to make these decisions and not individuals with our tax code. Your situation is exactly why INDIVIDUALS need more control. You could simply pick another ins. company if it wasnt structured the way things are. And I consider you to be in the top 40% of americans educated on healthcare bc you actually KNOW what ins. company you have. More than half of my patients do not, which is just sad... but shows how people are becoming bystanders in thier own healthcare decisions. That has to change, imo
3/15/2009 1:32:50 PM
3/15/2009 2:29:16 PM
3/15/2009 9:45:45 PM
of course it was our govt who basically pushed the employer provided healthcare... and now people want the govt to continue to provide us with "solutions"? go figure.
3/16/2009 10:23:25 AM
I'm ready for healthcare reform. The routine physical I went to is going to cost me over four hundred bucks. And I have [crappy] insurance.I'm staying away from doctors from now on. That or asking exactly how much everything costs.
3/16/2009 10:26:31 AM
If you would have paid cash, I guarantee it would not be close to that much. THere is no way a doctor get 400 bucks for a routine physical. Unless you had them run extra tests and/or have a high deductible.We get paid on an established level 4 patient 78 bucks I believe.
3/16/2009 12:01:58 PM
ability to obtain health care should be based on ability to work.no work, no care.this goes for all providers, public and private. no handouts. be strong.not to mention, the harder you work, the healthier you are.
3/16/2009 9:50:58 PM
3/16/2009 10:40:05 PM
yes, the intricate conspiracy way. obama is sitting somewhere stroking a cat and cackling at the thought of defeating the heroic libertarian american.V BECAUSE ITS ALL A HUGE CONSPIRACY, PROBABLY FROM THE TRILATERAL COMMISSION[Edited on March 16, 2009 at 11:01 PM. Reason : .]
3/16/2009 10:59:02 PM
Question: If government <funded/paid for/provided/managed/universal/single payer/regulated/insert term of the day> heathcare is the answer to all that ails us, why do we need private insurers to pay for wounded veteran care? Can't the government use this subset of the american populace and show us just how fantastic GovCare would be for the rest of us?
3/16/2009 10:59:20 PM
That's a good point.Obama expanded the SCHIP program and got more people into the gov't system, many of which already had private health care.
3/16/2009 11:13:40 PM
3/16/2009 11:33:29 PM
3/17/2009 1:28:10 AM
No offense, but some of you guys who I previously thought were fairly level-headed individuals are now sounding like Kooky nutjobs when ranting about Obama conspiracy theories. It's funny how this always happens to seemingly normal people after their candidate loses an election.
3/17/2009 9:06:32 AM
3/17/2009 9:26:00 AM
3/17/2009 9:43:48 AM
3/17/2009 10:32:15 AM
^^ how you pay your doctor can have huge impacts on how much you'll pay. I've been to some doctors where if you pay cash and all at once you get nearly 40% off the bill. By contrast when I went to the hospital not only did they charge full price when I paid via insurance, but they actually charged the insurance company more than the bill they gave me at checkout.
3/17/2009 12:58:58 PM
3/17/2009 1:45:48 PM
here's another good Fresh Air interview from last week. It's with a doctor talking about end of life care. It's not specifically about "healthcare reform" or the current administration's plans, but to does touch on some current problems and some potential areas for reformhttp://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=102638208
4/12/2009 1:53:05 PM
OMG FRESH AIR LIBERAL COMMUNISM!!!!!
4/12/2009 2:59:36 PM
yes, and her ideology is clearly the topic of conversation when she's talking to a doctor about his dying mother.
4/12/2009 5:16:31 PM
From economist, Keith Hennessey's blog - a rough breakdown of the uninsured as measured by the census bureau. The entire post (via the link below) is well worth reading).http://keithhennessey.com/2009/04/09/how-many-uninsured-people-need-additional-help-from-taxpayers/
4/12/2009 8:21:59 PM
4/12/2009 8:57:58 PM
I'm sure that most people have seen this video, but in case you haven't:FRONTLINE: Sick Around the Worldhttp://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/video/flv/generic.html?s=frol02p101&continuous=1And from http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/sickaroundtheworld/countries/models.html, Health Care Systems - The Four Basic Models:
4/12/2009 11:30:52 PM
4/13/2009 12:18:12 AM
4/13/2009 6:27:42 AM
^^^ Interesting stuff on that site.
4/13/2009 6:37:12 AM
dear god that was so blatantly biased it wasn't funny.
4/13/2009 11:36:24 PM
why don't you elaborate on what you find to be biased and give some support?
4/13/2009 11:48:59 PM
4/14/2009 7:45:49 AM
^^ let's see:glowing reviews for the gov't-run systems. Doom and gloom for the market-based system. Very little mention of the rationing of care that occurs in every gov't run system.And how about this gem:
4/14/2009 8:31:45 AM