great article hunt. ThanksYeah a 100 bucks to see a doctor is a shitload of money. Most spend way more than that on cell phones and eating out in a month. Besides, you ever had to call a plumber?Or in a perfect world, you could go to the private practice doctor of your choice and pay him cash at the time of service. If he was too expensive you are free to shop around. In your perfect world dental, do you see resturants operating like police and fire stations where food will be provided to you as needed?
6/13/2009 6:16:04 PM
^^^ That makes FAR too much sense to ever influence policy.
6/14/2009 1:01:28 AM
6/14/2009 9:17:14 PM
I know I want volunteer doctors!
6/14/2009 9:31:27 PM
the number of doctors needed at a towns free clinic would be far fewer than the number of firefighters and police men need to operate in a similar sized town. This would allow for higher pay and an ability for them to be trained properly. Nurses carry the bulk of the work at your average doctors office anyways so only 2 or 3 doctors would be needed to carry a large patient load.the military trains quite a few medics in state universities and a program to provide them jobs after service in state run free clinics would allow them to enter the medical field in a relativly painless way. just a thought.
6/15/2009 10:36:29 AM
6/15/2009 11:28:54 AM
^^ Where would the money come from in a free clinic?
6/15/2009 2:02:58 PM
Sweet!I want to spend my time volunteering in a free health clinic. I learned CPR once, that should be enough for me to treat people, right?
6/15/2009 2:16:58 PM
^^where does money come from for the police and fire departments?taxes!!!I would use a free clinic more often than I would use the police and fire departments. Also increasing the general health of the public seems like a overall good way to save the governments money. We waste enough money fighting pot dealers and other dumb shit.
6/15/2009 3:58:16 PM
just because we fund one piece of dumb shit doesn't mean we should go out and fund something else, too.and, again, I suppose you want your doctors to have the same relative level of education as your policemen and firemen, right?
6/15/2009 5:37:52 PM
I already explained this. The government already pays for medics to go to college to serve in the military. A similar system can be used for these clinics or we could use military medics and doctors to fill the roles.we all help pay for people to go through naval acadamy so I dont see the dif if you trust our naval commanders
6/15/2009 8:20:26 PM
and yet, the same doesn't seem to happen with the police force and firemen. Why, then, would we expect different results from the same attempt?Practically all navy personnel go through firemen's training. Why don't we use former sailors to run and man our fire stations? We have an MP force in the military. Why don't we use the MPs to run and man our police stations?Why don't we go with a proven route: let the market dictate the prices and then people can afford it. The government has been dicking with the market via medicaid and medicare, and yet somehow prices have gotten worse.Let's put it more simply: K-12 is "free." And yet many graduates can't find Iraq on a map. Is that really a program you want to emulate with our health care? I would like a doctor that can find my appendix, thank you very much. Or, more aptly, one that can at least tell me it aint there, since I have had mine removed.
6/15/2009 8:30:53 PM
I'm not talking about doctors fixing your organs here. Im talking doctors that can give general check ups and prevent certain illnesses and problems from getting worse. Im suggesting a free clinic not a free hospital.I would go out on a limb and say many police and firefighters served in the military. Its a great training ground for people. How many swat guys do you think havent had military training?About K-12. NC State is a state school and still filled with idiots who cant find Iraq on a map. AND its funded by taxes. whats your point? People are stupid.
6/15/2009 8:40:58 PM
6/15/2009 8:45:39 PM
it doesnt need to be perfect. We have plenty of shitty doctors that fuck stuff up. Thats why insurance for doctors is so high and makes life difficult for everyone. It seems you believe that every doctor in the private sector is amazing and is going to save everyones life and cure everything. well they dontpoor people cant even afford this and even middle class people cant afford this. I had some wart thing on my stomach when I was 15 and the doctor said they wernt dangerous and took them off and then charged my mom 200 bucks......so the next one I got I just took it off with a needle. people cant afford this shit.[Edited on June 15, 2009 at 8:54 PM. Reason : run on sentance mo fucka]
6/15/2009 8:50:57 PM
6/15/2009 10:04:54 PM
6/15/2009 10:14:08 PM
6/15/2009 10:23:41 PM
6/15/2009 10:46:29 PM
6/15/2009 11:05:42 PM
ya I agree we shouldnt need insurance to go get a regular doctors visit.I was suggesting free clinics as a nice middle ground and it seems we are just nit picking each others comments at this point.
6/15/2009 11:23:16 PM
6/15/2009 11:41:40 PM
6/16/2009 7:16:43 AM
just because we dont have a say in the matter doesnt mean there isnt a competition.there is cometition between companies that make brakes yet we have no say in what brakes our cars have.also the guy paying $1200 is a private contractor and doesnt work for a company.
6/16/2009 12:36:21 PM
6/16/2009 5:34:00 PM
6/16/2009 5:38:48 PM
I've bought plenty of brakes there.is this a common thing?
6/16/2009 5:42:01 PM
who gives a shit about brakes - you're getting distracted with bullshit examples
6/16/2009 5:43:17 PM
this may be true. and, let's be honest, I'm sure I can choose between different types of brakes as an option on the car, anyway, so the example given is already ridiculous
6/16/2009 5:45:25 PM
I just heard that some veterans hospital didnt clean their colon cleaning stuff and gave 10k people hiv or hep C.so I give up with this free clinic thing.
6/16/2009 6:01:55 PM
thx for the troll
6/16/2009 6:06:50 PM
This could just as easily be placed in the Obama credibility thread...
6/17/2009 6:23:04 PM
6/17/2009 8:02:11 PM
I was answering your question as to how a competitive system between private companies would generate lower costs than a government system, not directly talking about the original proposals, however, all of the points given would apply to the proposal. As for the government getting involved with fraud claims. If they're subsidizing it, I assure you they will be involved.[Edited on June 17, 2009 at 9:54 PM. Reason : adsf]
6/17/2009 9:54:00 PM
[Edited on June 18, 2009 at 10:58 AM. Reason : img]
6/18/2009 10:56:49 AM
ObamaCare Sticker Shock A $1.6 trillion deficit boost, and the uninsured will still be with us.
6/19/2009 10:03:35 AM
The following, from economist, Greg Mankiw, should be kept in the minds of those who point to certain international stats to justify socialized health care...
6/19/2009 12:48:54 PM
The Affordable Health Choices Act exempts members of congress...
6/19/2009 5:06:10 PM
man. talk about double-talk. way to go, Obama. CHANGE WE CAN BELIEVE IN!not only will we get big-gubment healthcare, we'll get HMOs again! Hot damn! That worked out so well last time!I think this should serve as a big "I told you so" to everyone who claimed that gov't healthcare wouldn't lead to rationing. This legislation fucking states it in all but name.]
6/19/2009 5:15:52 PM
6/20/2009 5:08:30 PM
^ thanks for posting the same article that was just posted.
6/21/2009 8:39:50 PM
Well, don't I feel sheepish
6/21/2009 10:20:29 PM
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2009/06/24/state_cuts_its_health_coverage_by_115m/
6/26/2009 8:05:33 AM
I do not see what the problem is with a system in which if you have a "reasonable" income and you CHOOSE to not receive health insurance even if its "affordable" than u simply do not get service. Of course we will provide the medicaid or HMO plans like that status quo for underpriviledged people many with legitimate needs. For the former group though if you are leasing a lexus, have a 60" TV, and get your clothes new from the mall; yet do not have health insurance. Sucks but too bad when u get denied for medical treatment shoulda had your priorities straight
6/26/2009 8:28:07 AM
6/28/2009 12:29:39 AM
here's a discussion of the "healthcare rationing" scare tactic that opponents of any gov't run program useshttp://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/03/rationing-health-care-what-does-it-mean/
7/5/2009 5:11:04 PM
^ i havent read your link yet, but people are suggesting that an alternate reform to fix some of those issues is to allow interstate competition for healthcare. One criticism of this is that the expenditures are related to regional factors, and it doesn't make sense for a provider of healthcare to someone in the desolate, cold, isolated North Dakota wilderness to have to compete with providers of someone in the populated, temperate, urban areas of California.
7/5/2009 5:30:18 PM
^^ I don't think I've ever seen anyone arguing against government health care claim that there isn't rationing under the current system. Rather the claim is that under a government run system, rationing will occur based on political whims, arbitrary governmental fiat and nonsensical government nannying, and all of that in addition to the natural rationing that with have to occur simply due to the fact that medical knowledge and care is not unlimited, nor is the tax payer's pocketbook (despite our politicians thoughts to the contrary). And further, as we can see above, when the tax funds start dwindling, your healthcare "right" suddenly gets less important.As to long wait times, under the current system, those waits are due to natural limits. There are only so many neurologists, brain surgeons and cancer specialists, and your wait time is directly tied to how many of these resources are available. By comparison, under government systems, in addition to natural limits and waits, you will also see waits due to such things as some law maker deciding that in order to make things fair, only so many specialists will be allowed to practice in a certain area. And they will only be able to take so many patients. In addition, such idiotic moves like tying compensation to medicare rates won't accurately reflect the costs of specialists, and so you will see less specialists and more general practitioners as the benefits of being a specialist just won't be there.As to approved doctors, you can still go to your old doctor, in fact, chances are good even under your current plan your insurance will pay benefits, just not as much. By comparison under a government run system, you could very well find that even if you want to pay out of pocket for a service, you can't because of some moronic decision to limit the number of procedures a doctor can do or claim in a given time period. Of course like all such things, the artificial constraints put in place by the government will generate a black market, and just like now, only more so, the absolute best care will be reserved for those with the money and the connections to get it. Everyone else will go without.As to the bureaucrat, you have a fundamental misunderstanding as to who employs these bureaucrats. They will be employed by politicians, who in turn are not employed by the people, but by the lobbyists, who incidentally in this horrible cock up of a system that we would end up with will be the medical industry. Aetna, UHC, and BCBS will be their employers because they will be the ones making the political contributions, and any mid level bureaucrat who doesn't toe the line will soon find themselves having their .gov care subsidized.Further, his customers aren't the tax payers either, it will be the insurance companies and the doctors. Once again, the care of individuals just like now, will be between bean counters, pencil pushers and lawyers. The only difference will be under .gov care, not only will you not have the option to just go ahead and buy your own care and the hell with the insurance company, but you will also have no recourse because the people who make the decisions about your care are the same people who will decide if such decisions are legal in the first place.The public is not served by having their health insurance, their health provider and their legal recourse against the failings of both to be the same entity. When the .gov care politicians decide that the only care they will pay for is the cheaper politically favored treatment and fine any doctor who dares to provide the other one, what recourse will you have? Yes, you can sue the government, but when it comes to battling a massive entity in court, I would rather be fighting a private company than the government.Lastly, no one has claimed that our system is ideal. Multiple times I and other have expressed a very real need for change to our system, however, the proposed government plans will not make the system better. Instead, they will cary almost all of the existing problems, plus a host of new ones. But don't take our word for it, ask a few military folks, ask them how much they love Tri-Care. Or even better, ask our veterans how wonderful working with the VA hospitals is. Or even better than that, why don't we ask Obama why, if he is so certain that government healthcare and government provided insurance is the way to go, does he favor taking the care of our veterans off of the government pocketbook and onto the private supplemental insurances our vets carry (http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/03/17/obama.veterans/). Surely, if government healthcare is the cure for what ails our health system, the government wouldn't be looking for ways to reduce the care it already provides? Surely we could point to the VA care system and Tri-Care as shinning examples of how healthcare should be run.But we can't.
7/5/2009 7:55:27 PM
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7/5/2009 9:53:18 PM