78$ for what.I don't know what 'we' stands for.
7/11/2007 2:44:12 PM
78 bucks for something that is apparently 'needed to maintain your health' is expensive. why should i have to pay to be healthy if i otherwise take care of my health? there is no need for checkups and basic medical care to be so expensive, especially medicine.
7/11/2007 2:46:50 PM
[Edited on July 11, 2007 at 2:49 PM. Reason : ^^^]
7/11/2007 2:48:07 PM
7/11/2007 3:02:58 PM
As far as results go, we have almost nothing on Cuba. Life expectancy is only barely higher here. Their infant mortality rate is better (officially, anyway).
7/11/2007 3:24:23 PM
Those statistics just show that you don't need absolutely first-rate doctors, drugs and equipment in order to get good results. You do need those things in order to make American consumers happy, however.
7/11/2007 3:34:45 PM
78 bucks is alot of money to you? I imagine you spend more on beer a month. It is a bargain, but it still doesnt help people whose priorities are out of whack. Its the typical I have money for things I want..not things I need...those should be free. haha. People spend alot more to get thier hair done, and thier education was a year or two and a pair of clippers? We have one piece of equipment that cost over 100k in office. Our chairs cost over 15k each. Why? bc they they are medical equipment and so they jack up the price considerably.
7/11/2007 3:37:44 PM
FREE HEALTHCARE!
7/11/2007 3:40:35 PM
7/11/2007 3:47:17 PM
Thats not what I'm saying at all. I am saying that a) Our system is inefficientb) there are diminishing returns when it comes to doctors, equipment and drugsc) American consumers won't settle for anything less than the very "best" care, i.e. the most expensived) Americans have unhealthy eating and exercising habitsThose factors all contribute to why we "spend more for less" as you put it. There are many more factors at play. In fact, too many to put in one post.[Edited on July 11, 2007 at 4:00 PM. Reason : 2]
7/11/2007 4:00:27 PM
7/11/2007 4:03:43 PM
7/11/2007 4:06:22 PM
7/11/2007 4:06:24 PM
The haircut made laugh. kudosGolden, there is an over demand for healthcare esp when we provide unlimited healthcare to the poor and elderly, with them usually having little financial consequences. I have a 86 year old patient who decided that her 90 year old husband shoudl have chemo. They want to do all that is possible. You should just flush 20k down the toliet. If it doesnt kill him, whats the best possible outcome? I dont really blame them, after all if it doesnt cost you anything..why not?THere are alot of elderly who LOVE to go to the hospital. They like the attention. Ask a nurse, they will usually be able to tell you the name of their revolving door patients.
7/11/2007 4:34:07 PM
7/11/2007 4:40:22 PM
^^ Are you suggesting we just let old people die instead of providing them with healthcare?
7/11/2007 4:46:42 PM
Well, they don't work anymore and aren't contributing to society, isn't the answer obvious?
7/11/2007 4:49:41 PM
What I am suggesting is when something is essentially free, you tend to abuse it. Look at buffets, no way people would eat as much if they had to pay for each plate. So, you often hear do all that is possible..which is fine.. but when you are dealing with medicine and people living to be alot older now, it gets really expensive. We need to set some guidlines. If they want to pay for it, fine its thier money. But its alot easier to spend other peoples money.And if you think that 90 yr old gets chemo under socialized medicine, let me know how your small intestines look, bc your head is really far up there.
7/11/2007 4:51:14 PM
7/11/2007 4:57:55 PM
yes, they ration. Once that number of procedures are done that year.. you wait until next year. Thats why the wait times are so high, and canadians come over the border for procedures.Its just human nature. People dont have money for things they need, but do have money for things they want.[Edited on July 11, 2007 at 5:03 PM. Reason : .]
7/11/2007 5:01:25 PM
and why couldn't a free market system be in place for those people who don't want to wait? i mean that seems only natural.
7/11/2007 5:02:46 PM
In canada its illegal for docs to perform the procedures on someone wanting to pay cash. There is a doc from canada at our hospital. He actually comes down for a couple months to help his income. He told my stepdad he pays close to 60% in income taxes. So he and his partners rotate between working the in the states and working thier practice in canada. Wonders why in the world are we even discussing putting it in here. But acknowledges that american tourists LOVE thier system, bc they get "free" healthcare, but return before they have to actually pay for anything.
7/11/2007 5:07:25 PM
7/11/2007 5:08:27 PM
who said we should base our system on canada's exactly?and also: i'd like some examples of "rationed" procedures.[Edited on July 11, 2007 at 5:10 PM. Reason : .]
7/11/2007 5:09:00 PM
Actually almost all the ideas thrown around here such as "Canadians come to to the US for care", "We get the best healthcare" and things like "UK residents wait 10 years for flu shots!!1111" aren't entirely true when investigated further.I suppose though, for you to truly understand you needed to have gotten care in another country. Had most american's the opportunity to do that, our system would likely be different.Peacin out o dis thread.
7/11/2007 5:14:04 PM
^^^ Yes and Yes^, ^^, ^^^ You people are truly unfamiliar with the long wait times associated with socialized care in Canada, the UK and other countries? Honestly?Please educate yourself on these health care systems in these countries beyond WHO numbers of life expectancy and infant mortality rates.
7/11/2007 5:28:35 PM
7/11/2007 5:32:25 PM
UK wait times are already discussed in this thread; Here is a blurb about wait times in Canada:
7/11/2007 5:34:23 PM
7/11/2007 5:41:21 PM
7/11/2007 5:53:22 PM
7/11/2007 6:04:58 PM
re: long wait times in socialized healthcare countriesI lived in Japan for a year. Got really nasty sick. Went to a doctor and was treated in under an hour, given medicine at the same time and recovered fully. It cost me nothing. I got a 'bill' in the mail later saying 'you went to the doctor this day and we were charged this much, have a nice day.'HORRIBLE EXPERIENCE.
7/11/2007 6:21:15 PM
YAY for anecdotal evidence!
7/11/2007 6:38:51 PM
Here's what I want to know. If monopolies are bad and the massive conglomeration of companies into mega corporations is bad, how in the word does anyone think that giving the government a monopoly on health care is good?
7/11/2007 7:05:53 PM
7/11/2007 7:17:57 PM
Those wait times are based on elective, non-critical procedures.And I have no problems with someone having to wait 8 weeks for a knee or hip replacement, if it means the people with critical care needs are addressed first.That's the misleading part of the "long wait times" in other countries. Unlike in the US where the wait time is determined by how quickly you can get HMO approval, or how much cash you have.I have to say that watching SiCKO really caused me to look into universal healthcare, and I really think it is the way to go. But I think there are some major differences we can implement to make the system operate much more efficiently than the ones in France and Canada. Basically make the system a non-profit, somewhat based on the UK system, but privately run versus government controlled.You remove the profit incentive on wall-street and I think a non-profit HMO whose revenue comes from taxes that are distributed based on positive performance incentives, rather than on patient turnover as in Canada. It would allow several things to happen. It would still allow for competition within the system as multiple non-profits can open to provide tailored care for different regions and groups while still meeting the need for basic universal healthcare.And for the people who say "OMG 60% income tax in Canada, France et al", we already pay more than DOUBLE per capita what any other country pays to health care. That includes the current medicaid/medicare and private health insurance. The reason these other countries have such insanely high income tax is because of the ridiculous number of other social welfare programs they institute.It would raise the TAX cost on American citizens, but it would LOWER the overall income loss from the average american being paid to healthcare. Most of you are men, who don't realize that when a woman gets married, her insurance SKYROCKETS because of the potential for having a baby, regardless of her age or desire to have children. The average 50 year old in this country pays 5-10 times what a 25 year old does. And it only goes up year after year.When you are 50 or 60, are you prepared to pay 1000-2000 dollars a month for healthcare? Also under most of the social systems, the tax rate is scaled to lessen the burden considerably on the lower income households instead of being a flat percentage or a flat fee.
7/11/2007 7:21:14 PM
7/11/2007 8:04:39 PM
It's not as hard as it sounds. The UK has a system for this that works (although of course it COULD be better).Basically a doctor gets a base salary, somewhere in the range of 100-120k a year. The doctor is then offered "performance incentives".For instance, a patient comes in with a lump in her breast. The doctor identifies it as a benign tumor, no cancer and discharges the patient. If that patient decides to go back to a doctor a month later still feeling ill, and doctor #2 diagnoses it as malignant (the proper diagnosis in this hypothetical situation) and she begins treatment, doctor #2 would recieve a bonus for proper treatment.If a patient comes in and has problems breathing and the doctor diagnoses the person with Asthma and the person doesn't return having the same problems (aka proper diagnosis and treatment) then the doctor is rewarded with a bonus.If a patient is severely overweight and the doctor recommends the person to eat better and exercise, and the patient has lost weight and increased their health at their next checkup, the doctor is rewarded.It's a system where proper diagnosis and better health is rewarded instead of patient turnover and direct recourse cost effectiveness is.In the short term it means a lot more money into the system, because doctors would have the ability to use all of their available resources to ensure proper diagnosis of ailments (which is where the buffet argument comes in) and it allows patients the ability to get essentially unlimited opinions on their diagnosis. However in the long term, it GREATLY decreases the likelyhood that a patient will have to make multiple expensive return visits for the same conditions and over time it greatly decreases the desire for 2nd and 3rd opinions on a diagnosis as people become more trusting that the system will really explore every option it can for their benefit.In this way, patient satisfaction is measured by the ACTUAL medical result, not by the system's interpretation of it. If a patient isn't satisfied, they can go to another doctor, and seek another diagnosis. Under a universal scheme it gives a patient MUCH more leeway to seek out experimental treatment if they so choose and allows doctors much more flexibility in their treatment options.
7/11/2007 8:22:43 PM
Well, it's better than waiting over a year:
7/11/2007 8:40:38 PM
^ from your article
7/11/2007 8:53:39 PM
7/11/2007 8:53:58 PM
Again, we are talking about ELECTIVE SURGERY.This is not about waiting in line if you have a cold, or you get injured. For GP visits, you are looking at completely normal wait times, if not less. Which is like 90% of people's visits to the doctor. If you have a cold, or the flu, or any ILLNESS that needs to be diagnosed, you are seen immediately. For CRITICAL CARE, you are looking at faster response time in a universal system.
7/11/2007 9:00:27 PM
7/11/2007 9:22:30 PM
7/11/2007 9:45:13 PM
7/11/2007 9:48:20 PM
Look that the study I linked to earlier. Wait times in both Canada and in the US were worse than in the UK, Germany, Australia, and New Zealand.
7/11/2007 9:51:57 PM
1) I've already addressed the huge problems with the recent policy reforms to the NHS system. The reforms were fucking awful in the first place, the implementation of them has been even worse, and the whole system is a giant clusterfuck right now.There's more than one way to implement this, the UK is one of dozens, but good job hand picking your data.2) 462,000 in 30 years. In the US it's 195,000 a year. http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=11856Next retarded comparison?^I was addressing the critical care wait, sorry I wasn't clear about that It's a very good article to show the benefits of universal care for General Practioner visits.[Edited on July 11, 2007 at 10:00 PM. Reason : .]
7/11/2007 9:59:51 PM
Its comparing apples to oranges. According to a Canadian Medical Association Journal article, "U.S. Hospitals Use Waiting-List Woes to Woo Canadians" (2/22/2000), "British Columbia patients fed up with sojourns on waiting lists as they await tests or treatment are being wooed by a hospital in Washington state that has begun offering package deals. A second U.S. hospital is also considering marketing its services." One of the attractions is that an MRI, which can take anywhere from 10 to 28 weeks in Canada, can be had in two days at Olympic Memorial Hospital in Port Angeles, Wash. Already, Cleveland is Canada's hip-replacement center. The Vancouver, British Columbia-based Fraser Institute has a yearly publication titled, "Waiting Your Turn." Its 2006 edition gives waiting times, by treatments, from a person's referral by a general practitioner to treatment by a specialist. The shortest waiting time was for oncology (4.9 weeks). The longest waiting time was for orthopedic surgery (40.3 weeks), followed by plastic surgery (35.4 weeks) and neurosurgery (31.7 weeks). Believe what you want to. But no way it takes 10 months to see an orthopedic, or almost nine MONTHs to see a nuero. I could get someone into a neuro in a matter of days. You guys are seriously kidding yourself. Yes it might take weeks to get a primary care appointment, but emergency patients always get worked in.Ever heard of these little things called prime care? You can get seen in a matter of hours. These of course arent as popular since they require you to pay for services. Those silly bastards. [Edited on July 11, 2007 at 10:07 PM. Reason : .][Edited on July 11, 2007 at 10:08 PM. Reason : grammer]
7/11/2007 10:05:44 PM
Very good points. For people with money, they can get care immediately. For the rest of us, it allows us to GET treated at all.
7/11/2007 10:15:14 PM
poor people are given insuance and can get treament. However, the wait times are long bc its pays shitty, so few doctors take it in some areas. People who choose not to have insurance run the risk of having to pay an assload if something bad happens. I do think there should be less regulations with insurances and allow people to shop for it, just like auto ins.Listening to some of your kids make me wonder, how do you think doctors offices are run? They are no different than a hardware shop. There is overhead that has to be paid, SOMEONE has to actually PAY for the services. Even though the insurances want to pay us less, we arent given the same option to pay less in salaries, insurance, rent, electricity, etc. We have a very poor insurance that pays us 27 bucks for an exam. We lose money on these patients, however its our way of helping people. My boss works the free clinic. Its one thing to choose to do charity, its another to force you to.
7/11/2007 10:27:25 PM