12/1/2009 11:59:32 PM
12/2/2009 12:16:57 AM
12/2/2009 6:41:08 AM
12/2/2009 7:50:54 AM
^thank you. And allowing doctors to deduct from their taxes the full cost of seeing non paying patients will reduce the load on hospitals and provide better treatment to patients. But in the end, someone has to pay to keep the lights on.
12/2/2009 12:44:00 PM
^^ so what then is the issue with what amounts to expanding medicare/medicaid via health reform?
12/2/2009 1:00:21 PM
Because that isn't what's being done. Never mind that medicare and medicaid are broken and the we don't even enroll everyone who's eligible for them. Then there's the fact that both are bleeding money left and right to fraud. Can't imagine why I might want to see something different than more of the same.
12/2/2009 3:23:27 PM
you cant expand them. They are heading off the cliff as is. You have to reform them by CUTTING, not expanding. You can start by stop covering braces for medicaid. People who are working cant afford those for thier own kids, yet have to pay for medicaid so they can get braces. Totally upside down.
12/2/2009 3:24:12 PM
lack of covereage is a symptom, not the problem. Expanding medicare would treat the symptom but not the cause.The problem is high healthcare costs. These are what get billed by docs and hospitals NOT what an individual pays their insurance provider. Not what we pay in taxes for medicare.If you decrease the costs of healthcare, you could cover the same ammount of people currently in medicare with fewer tax dollars or expand coverage for the current price.This retard fest thats going on in congress is all about expanding covereage with no thought to cost.
12/2/2009 4:16:44 PM
12/3/2009 4:16:48 PM
i want my free checks for penis and ball cancer (only oral and hand checking vis-a-vie a hot nurse ofc)
12/5/2009 1:26:47 AM
I'd like free stomach and colon cancer checks, since those cancers kill more people than breast cancer.
12/5/2009 10:02:37 AM
12/5/2009 10:08:06 AM
Because it collects taxes for 10 yrs while providing services for 6 (maybe 7). It will NOT save money, logically, how can it?They are saying they are going to cut medicare, but im not sure they have the political will to face that. They have been putting off the planned cuts for years now.btw, I think the Iraq war was only going to cost like 40B.[Edited on December 5, 2009 at 10:13 AM. Reason : .]
12/5/2009 10:12:56 AM
^^ If this were really about cutting costs, no one would be talking about insurance. Seriously, insurance is a god awful way to pay for anything. It substantially raises the costs of day to day expenses on the bet that you will need significantly more payout later. But by definition, that can't happen for most people. In order for insurance to work, most people must pay in substantially more than they will ever get back out. But we're not talking about cutting costs, we're talking about forcing people to buy insurance, taxing them if they don't, and substantially expanding failed systems in the (proven wrong time and again) theory that if the government just throws more tax money at the problem, the problem will go away.It truly fascinates me that any one on this board can tell you buying an extended warranty is a good way to piss away money, but so many of the same people are hell bent on making sure everyone buys an extended warranty for their life. There are other and better ways to solve this than mandating everyone buy insurance. Unfortunately, no one in congress is actually interested in solving this problem.[Edited on December 5, 2009 at 11:01 AM. Reason : sadf]
12/5/2009 10:59:22 AM
Interesting thought... we could ban full coverage health insurance and mandate everyone buy catastrophically high deductible ($5,000/year) health insurance... If you're going to put guns to people's heads, might as well be to implement a system that should work.
12/5/2009 11:33:49 AM
12/5/2009 12:35:41 PM
If your friend had shopped around some he could have slashed his bill at least in half. As such, why do you believe it is impossible to use this information in a medical system? And the incentives are pervasive: "I have a cold, spend $5,000 doing tests" causes "car accident, spend $300,000 fixing me up." If the hospital had any incentive to compete on price, when you friend came in with or without insurance he would have walked out with the insurance provider paying far less. Force everyone to shop around when it is not an emergency, such as the cold, so they don't bankrupt the country when they have the car accident.
12/5/2009 4:25:59 PM
^^ Right, I understand insurance and why it came about. It's a gamble, but the point is, for it to work, the majority of people have to loose the bet, which makes it a shitty way of paying for day to day care. Getting more people on insurance doesn't change that fact, as Massachusetts has shown us, they have the highest insured rate, but the number of people using the ER for basic care keeps climbing, and most of the people with insurance still can't afford the deductibles, procedures aren't being paid for and costs haven't actually gone down.^ This is another problem with this debate. We keep conflating general health care with emergency health care. Emergency care is exactly what insurance is for. But day to day care has plenty of space for shopping around and is where insurance becomes a horrible way to pay for care.
12/5/2009 5:02:29 PM
http://www.newsobserver.com/news/health_science/story/229063.html"Concierge" medical practices - For those graduated and with careers, would you be interested in this type of service as a patient? If not now, in the future? For those still in school, given a very loosely estimated college graduate salary of ~50K/year, would you spend $1,500 to have essentially unlimited access to your physician.I can see why a physician would want to create this type of practice - $1,500 x 500 patients = $750,000. Even taking away half for overhead, which is a very generous estimation because overhead would likely be much less than in a normal practice anyway, you are talking about much more money than an internist would make on average. For the same or greater compensation the physician gets to practice just as I think many would ideally want to practice - you have a greater connection to your patients, you don't constantly feel rushed, etc.
12/7/2009 12:12:07 PM
As I've mentioned many times before, I think two of the huge problems with our health system are subsidized, employer-provided benefits, and the fact that insurance is now used for all medical expenses, not just emergencies. Now, the solution to the first problem is easy enough: stop giving companies tax breaks to provide benefits, which would force people to buy their own individual plan. There would be an incentive to stay healthy, as it would result in a decreased premium.On the second issue though, what is the solution? The insurance companies, as far as I know, are the ones that chose to start covering everything, not just catastrophic illness. They're still making money, but it's not good for the cost of the average person. The only thing I know to do is to let all insurance companies compete across state lines, which could only bring down premiums. Even that isn't a solution for the actual cost of healthcare, though. Office visits without insurance will destroy you. Hospital without insurance...you're done, son. So, I'm sort of at a loss. Is this just a situation where we have greatly increased demand for healthcare due to a predominantly unhealthy "American lifestyle"? Are "reasonable and customary" charges by the insurance companies forcing doctors to charge less for certain services than they would normally, resulting in increasing prices across the board? What's really driving prices up?
12/7/2009 12:24:38 PM
^^ Inevitable, as the costs of caring for patients goes up, while reimbursement goes down, doctors will start trading volume for quality. As I've mentioned at least a half dozen times in this thread, everyone having insurance does not in any way mean that everyone has access to health care, or can afford that care, and no matter where you set the base line, there will be haves and have nots and the haves will have better care.
12/7/2009 1:22:42 PM
12/7/2009 4:10:50 PM
i would be Favors Health Care Reform: Opposes Plan (Prevents Real Reform)
12/7/2009 4:28:49 PM
^^ link?
12/7/2009 4:34:18 PM
Yeah, you have to wonder why they didn't include that option.
12/7/2009 4:35:13 PM
^ because everyone is trapped in the retard group think that its either public insurance or private insurance and theres no other possible solution
12/7/2009 4:40:23 PM
http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/2009/12/in-polls-much-opposition-to-health-care.html
12/7/2009 6:13:23 PM
12/9/2009 12:21:19 AM
^that article is a month old, not sure how accurately it reflects the current debate. I also notice that, unlike most news agencies that usually start off by referring to the President as President before switching to Mr. Obama or just Obama, that article never mentions title. It is a small thing, but it can often give away one's political sentiments.A a more relevant article to post today might be something like:http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/12/08/health.care/index.html
12/9/2009 1:11:59 AM
nonprofit private option + buy-in for medicare for those 55-65. that seems like a pretty important piece.
12/9/2009 1:31:21 AM
I already have a nonprofit private option in my BC/BS
12/9/2009 10:06:47 AM
Racist
12/9/2009 10:24:57 AM
lol
12/9/2009 3:11:27 PM
12/10/2009 8:06:08 AM
haha wow... race-card card
12/10/2009 10:24:39 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/12/11/health.care.benefit.caps/index.htmli'm so sick of this damned healthcare debate. i mean seriously, the senate and house bills are so damned far apart now that it's going to take forever to get this shit merged, and then it'll probably go back to committee and start this bullshit all over again.i'm sorry obama i really wanted you to succeed on this, but it's going to [FAIL]
12/11/2009 5:15:17 PM
well i dont think many people thought anything would pass the house or the senate so its gotten further than people thoughtbut both sides know that they cannot affort to have no reform passed soon
12/11/2009 10:50:39 PM
which means that some half-assed, watered down, concessions riddled piece of shit will pass, just for the sake of passing something. terrific.
12/11/2009 11:48:17 PM
thats the situation america is in, a divided country with a president who insists on bipartisanship
12/12/2009 12:33:26 AM
^lol. wow
12/12/2009 9:51:45 AM
^ Now there is some illuminating analysis ...
12/12/2009 11:25:35 AM
haha, i knew that saying obama insists on bipartisanship would raise a few eyebrowsbut the fact is he could've taken a much more partisan route and pushed the bill through, and you must admit that
12/12/2009 11:54:33 AM
^ obama definitely is insisting on bipartisanship more than he needs to, and there are gripes about this in the liberal netizens. This is possibly a source of some of his loss of support among the independents, i would wager.for example:http://www.wired.com/underwire/2009/12/alt-text-obama-science/ Wily Obama Won’t Let Science-y Stuff Divide Us
12/12/2009 12:09:31 PM
lafta, the bill isnt going through because it lacks democratic support, not bc Obama wants the republicans to like it. hahaYou will see them push through something. imo
12/14/2009 10:49:40 AM
12/14/2009 10:56:02 AM
12/14/2009 1:14:48 PM
i say we build a healthcare bill that not only gives a minimum required healthcare to our own citizens who are entitled to it via birthright, but to the rest of the world. b/c why be racist and selfish? aren't we all humans?
12/14/2009 1:27:55 PM
In honor of his continually evolving excuses for obstruction and his general douchebaggery ever since he realized that he can hold the Dems by the balls and squeeze all he wants, I have decided to send Senator Joseph Lieberman a box of douches from Walgreens.Yes it's juvenile, but it's quite satisfying.[Edited on December 14, 2009 at 1:43 PM. Reason : I keep not wanting to spell it LIEberman...]
12/14/2009 1:40:06 PM
Joseph Leiberman is the cockblocking man. And the other >40 people that agree with him. Love it. Right up your motherfucking liberal assholes too.ha
12/14/2009 1:42:59 PM