Which providers?The problem isn't the providers, it's systemic.
10/14/2013 11:43:56 PM
The prices charged by the providers. Although the insurance companies don't negotiate on those prices so they are complicit. Probably because the higher prices are, the greater profit they make on the same percent margin they charge for the services they sell. So yes, it's systemic. But if providers were more honest in what they charged the patient, things would be a lot better.
10/14/2013 11:51:24 PM
It seems the unpredictable prices are due to gaps in coverage. People who don't have any coverage will still get cared for by our society, so the providers charge who they can what they can to make up for this. An individual mandate helps solve this problem, as well as gov. Stipends to providers for the outliers who don't choose coverage.
10/14/2013 11:59:43 PM
all of them. and yes. the problem is a systemic one within every healthcare provider from small docs on up to the largest hospital systems. it ranges from racketeering on stuff like imaging to waste on unnecessary procedures to lack of controls leading to mistakes in care. anyone who blames insurance is basically an idiot who has no idea how healthcare in the us works. The problem is 90% providers 10% insurance and like 9% of the insurance problems would go away with better insurance reforms (national regulation instead of state, national exchanges, standard billing codes, etc...)anyone who brings up concerns about fixing care for outliers is also an idiot. Proper controls on the most common procedures will bring down costs and improve care more than anything else. Its about saving $10 on a procedure done a million times a week instead of saving $100000 on one done a dozen times a year. You start with the biggest savings that improve care the most and then you move on from there.Saying "oh, heres a blank check to do whatever, have fun doc!" doesn't help anyone
10/15/2013 12:03:26 AM
You're talking about micromanaging legislatively the day-day work days of doctors it seems, which I don't think is the right thing to do, for various reasons. I'd think that the threat of lawsuits is the best force to keep those factors in check. Let doctors do their jobs, but if they happen to mess up, punish them. ACA already sets payouts for some procedures which acts as a price control. If this is really a problem (I don't know, have never looked into it), they might could expand that.
10/15/2013 9:44:04 AM
threat of law suit is half the reason healthcare costs balloon to what they are currently. Don't be obtuse.The new american dream of getting rich through law suit causes so many unnecessarybullshit tests to be run daily it's mindboggling.hell I do EKG's on 18 year olds with known history of asthma because "shortness of breath" can be an indicator of cardiac issues, and we have to rule out the 1 in 5 million chance someone has Brugada's syndrome, or WPW. threat of law suit is helping nothing. the problem is nothing in our healthcare system is run with any common sense]
10/15/2013 8:29:11 PM
10/15/2013 9:03:46 PM
10/16/2013 9:25:27 AM
I'd like to see a graph of insurance costs and healthcare costs over time. Then I'd like to figure out when health insurance went from something relatively cheap that covered you for major disasters (car wreck, cancer, etc) rather than paying out for every single sick visit for you and your entire family. I'd like to see if those two things overlap.I think when insurance became a safety net for all medical procedures, from the mundane to the spectacular, that is when costs started skyrocketing. I mean, why is it so much to ask for someone to pay a doctor's visit in full when they go, but still walk around with the piece of mind that if in that dr's visit, they find malignant tumors, you won't go bankrupt? If we could get back to such a system (and I know we can't at this point) I think costs would come back down. Also, try to suppress the whole "test your ass till the cows come home" mentality. Testing to prevent litigation is a problem. I had a gastrointestinal problem, and after a colonoscopy, and endoscopy, and blood tests, they found nothing wrong. Anybody wanna guess what all those tests cost? That is an expensive piece of mind - for me and my doctor.
10/16/2013 12:32:14 PM
10/16/2013 2:03:42 PM
10/16/2013 2:24:40 PM
Minimum standards are very different that price floors.Just read "The Jungle" if you want to know what setting minimum standards can do.
10/16/2013 2:35:23 PM
I feel like the food industry was more of an issue of asymmetric information than standards. Sure, we solved the problem with standards, but it doesn't necessarily follow from that that the consumer wanted standards over information.Legally, you don't really have a right to produce a book like "The Jungle". As journalism, it enjoys some protections in publication, but the act of taking the footage to begin with can be legally prohibited by the producer, even from their own customers. If you want something to attack the philosophical libertarian ground with, that's a pretty good shot. We can engage in voluntary transactions, but what if someone won't voluntarily tell me what the transaction they're selling you is?I do have some sense that the ACA will simplify the product in a way that buyers actually have a chance to understand. This point was made well here:Sorry if I already posted that video. But it's quite convincing. The way insurers set up the system before the ACA made it nigh impossible to honestly buy health insurance. The product was just so intractably complicated...
10/16/2013 3:19:25 PM
[Edited on October 16, 2013 at 3:21 PM. Reason : .]
10/16/2013 3:20:52 PM
^^ amusing and interesting.
10/16/2013 4:06:49 PM
I just got a bill in the mail for $206 for a visit I made to urgent care back in May when I paid $123 up front. I had separated my shoulder and got an x-ray, a very brief doctor's exam, and a sling. How am I getting charged twice as much now as I was informed it would cost at the time I was there? How is this even a fucking thing?Fuck current healthcare, that shit is broken as shit. Obamacare cannot possibly get here soon enough.
10/16/2013 10:36:48 PM
ACA in tactboehner losesT party dead?
10/16/2013 11:04:59 PM
R Party dead
10/17/2013 12:03:50 AM
10/17/2013 9:51:08 AM
10/17/2013 10:14:57 AM
[Edited on October 17, 2013 at 10:18 AM. Reason : .]
10/17/2013 10:16:32 AM
^^ yeah your initial charge was just for the doctor visit. Your new bill should specify exactly what the charges are for, and likely they're from the radiologist. That's how I was billed when I had x-rays done during a visit, two separate bills. Took them forever to send the bill for the x-ray.
10/17/2013 10:22:57 AM
Ya that's not changing.
10/17/2013 11:01:18 AM
10/17/2013 9:33:47 PM
it's amazing how badly the 'pubs fucked themselves on the ACA showdown/gov't shutdown. Now the dems are wanting to do exactly what the 'pubs shut the gov't down over: delay the individual mandate. Only, the 'pubs didn't get any other concessions for it, AND they made the entire country fucking hate them at the same time. That's an impressive level of political incompetence
10/27/2013 12:06:44 AM
It's interesting how many people who have enrolled in medicaid vs. a private health plan under ACA.http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505267_162-57609254/medicaid-enrollment-spike-a-threat-to-obamacare-structure/
10/27/2013 5:32:08 PM
Sounds like insurance companies don't want to lower their prices.
10/27/2013 6:27:43 PM
Why would they?
10/27/2013 6:48:12 PM
Sounds like insurance companies don't want to lower their prices go bankrupt.
10/27/2013 9:20:03 PM
Businesses will be businesses; much to the lefts supreme shock.Oh hey, IMStoned420, try not to blow a gasket this time you crazy bastard.
10/27/2013 11:32:23 PM
Well, let's see. A basic review of supply and demand determines that if they want to increase demand, they should lower their prices. A competitor has come along and undercut those artificially inflated prices. They're fucking themselves in the ass by not lowering them. It's almost as if everything with the ACA is going to plan except for the insurance companies reacting to the new market.Something is extremely wrong with our capitalistic system when even supply and demand is broken.
10/28/2013 4:35:50 AM
10/28/2013 8:05:19 AM
They capped profits, and have forced them to accept people how are going to be massive expenses that they wouldn't have previously had to take. Cost doesn't automatically decrease because of volume, there are other factors.
10/28/2013 3:08:34 PM
Economists have always known that supply and demand has been broken, except in a tiny set of circumstances. It's like when you learn about Newton's laws of motion, but they don't tell you about all the exceptions to when it doesn't REALLY work.
10/28/2013 3:10:49 PM
http://money.cnn.com/2013/10/29/technology/obamacare-security/index.html?iid=LeadGlad I haven't had to use this site and never got to successfully create an account.
10/29/2013 4:42:48 PM
There's no way it's actually running on 1 server blade...edit: appears that part of the "article" is false.[Edited on October 29, 2013 at 5:15 PM. Reason : ]
10/29/2013 5:12:40 PM
10/29/2013 7:16:12 PM
I predict the next administration lie about Obamacare to fall will be the "it will reduce the deficit" whopper
10/29/2013 8:07:59 PM
"If you like your current plan, you can keep your current plan"Lol.No way Bush would've been able to get away with that. But hey, even NBC is starting to smell a rat. They published a pretty scathing article earlier, at least in NBC terms, of how so many people are losing the plan they like b/c the plan doesn't fit new regulations.The White House knew this was going to happen, and kept saying time and time again that people would be able to keep the plan they have if they want to. Of the 19 million people who were already in the individual insurance market (non-employer sponsored insurance), up to 80% may lose their current plan. But"If you like your current plan, you can keep your current plan"Go ahead and repeat the current administrations spin...that they're "transitions not cancellations." If people are getting transitioned, they are getting sticker shock with the new plan they are "transitioned" to.[Edited on October 29, 2013 at 9:11 PM. Reason : asdf]
10/29/2013 8:59:03 PM
Maybe if Republicans hadn't cried wolf so many damn times before now there would be some legitimate concern about this. But at this point lots of people who would otherwise care about this issue are dismissing it out of spite for Republicans.
10/29/2013 9:33:25 PM
10/30/2013 7:08:56 AM
I'm really glad to hear that all of the higher premiums that Americans are being forced to pay are helping an outstanding segment of our society:http://money.cnn.com/2013/11/01/smallbusiness/sex-workers-obamacare/index.html?source=cnn_bin
11/1/2013 9:58:04 AM
Actually I am glad to hear it. The safer we can make the sex industry the better.
11/1/2013 10:06:14 AM
Yes, at the great expense of thousands who don't make a living in breaking the law. To be fair, the article also cites erotic dancers and erotic massage therapists, and in two states prostitution isn't breaking the law, but still.Its ok for Joe Middle Class's insurance to go from 400/month for his family to 1500, just to cover these folks? And I guarandamntee you that Joe Middle Class won't qualify for a subsidy, while Ms. Rottencrotch will probably be able to get subsidies.
11/1/2013 10:13:06 AM
Yes, it's OK for society to pay for the well-being of others. We can argue about what level of payment is reasonable but investments which improve society and reduce my (or someone I care about) chance of being mugged or getting an STD are investments worth making.
11/1/2013 10:37:49 AM
rjrmfuel is getting tripped up by lazy reportingreplace "sex worker" with any other low income person if you are having trouble with the story. who cares if some people are celebrating something, it's insignificant.
11/1/2013 10:40:24 AM
Not all low-income employees make a living by breaking their state's laws.
11/1/2013 10:49:17 AM
The law regarding sex work is unjust. I'm not compelled by this line of argument in the least. Prostitution should be legal in all states and regulated. If Obamacare makes it slightly more regulated then awesome.
11/1/2013 10:53:06 AM
i don't know how to better describe why that is just an inconsequential article and that the topic involved is unrelated in any way to ACA
11/1/2013 11:02:04 AM
The argument here isn't about the justification of the law. Its a law, some body, at some point deemed it illegal to sell your body for sex. Like weed, many people feel it shouldn't be a law, but it is, was, and people had to abide by it.But I'm not sure what concerns me more...the fact that families are expected to come up with 1100 more out of pocket per month out of their budget to pay for someone else's potentially poor decisions, or the fact that people think thats 100% ok.1100...for many people that is an extra mortgage payment. BAM! Just all of a sudden coming out of the budget. How many people do you know have 1100 dollars worth of disposable income they can just throw away.
11/1/2013 11:10:26 AM