Outsourcing our health care to third world countries? http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061102/ap_on_he_me/outsourcing_health
11/2/2006 12:02:48 PM
This is fantastic news. The price of healthcare here will have to decrease now that it has some degree of substitutability. Hooray!
11/2/2006 12:07:30 PM
I forgot to look at that from that respect, but I don't think that it will be enough of a factor to bring any meaning full reform to our health care system. I know if I needed heart surgery, I'm not going to some third world country to get it. The only real reason to go to a third world country is to get some sort of procedure that is considered illegal here in the states.
11/2/2006 12:55:22 PM
^ which is a good reason. So, how is cheaper health-care going to bring about our demise? Last I checked, falling health-care costs would save us all a lot of $$$
11/2/2006 1:02:01 PM
a guy was on npr talking about a surgery that he received in india (a very expensive and important surgery). and not only was the cost on the order of a tenth of its price in the states, he said that it was by far the best service he has ever received at a hospital.one big disadvantage to this sort of setup is that you can't get followups by the same doctors who did the surgery after you've left the country (at least not in person).
11/2/2006 1:03:24 PM
Why not? If you save 90% on a surgery that runs 100K, you can afford to fly back for followups.
11/2/2006 1:05:16 PM
i'm just saying, if there are complications a month down the road, it might not be feasible to take a 18 hr flight
11/2/2006 1:05:56 PM
I read about that about 6 months ago. The thing is, like 40% of US doctors went to med school outside the US.
11/2/2006 1:09:39 PM
Thats a good point, but there is a point where we have to reform our own system to sustainability. Whats next, we outsource our education systems and local government officials? We outsource our military defense? Is there going to be a point where we simply outsource all our basic functions because we are unwilling to get ourselves back under control? We have already lost a great deal of our manufacturing infrastructure, are we becoming a nation that does nothing but consume without producing anything?
11/2/2006 1:11:50 PM
11/2/2006 1:34:57 PM
While we spend more on health insurance than any other country (public and private combines), our health/mortality statistics are actually behind some third world countries.
11/2/2006 1:54:00 PM
^Not too many 3rd world countries, in reality.But even still, a lot of that is because we are lazy, overfed bastards.But we like it that way. If people enjoy their 70 years mightily, what's the big deal if they don't get 80 years?
11/2/2006 1:59:26 PM
^ here here.
11/2/2006 2:03:14 PM
if you've got $, you will receive unbelievably high quality healthcare in India
11/2/2006 2:11:44 PM
^^ hear, hear
11/2/2006 2:30:00 PM
I think it works because of the lack of accountability. If one of these overseas hospitals botches a procedure, then they don't have nearly the same level of legal recourse that they do here in the United States.Of course, one could argue that it's this very elaborate legal recourse that makes practicing medicine in the United States so expensive to begin with... That, and the paperwork that handles medical payments (ie. the entire insurance machinery).
11/2/2006 3:27:14 PM
11/2/2006 4:35:27 PM
^find some stats on that and i'll believe it.i've heard that claimed, but i've also heard that litigation costs pale in comparison to the differences in medication costs and and labor costs in america.
11/2/2006 4:42:32 PM
Hey, the US ARMY has been doing this for YEARS. My initial medical physicals were all done by Indian/Arab/Asian doctors... (that was 6 years ago)Lucky for me, no probing from the Indian doctor. He was like "Okay, bend over and spred your cheeks,nevermind okay, you are good to go soldier" lol [Edited on November 2, 2006 at 5:01 PM. Reason : .]
11/2/2006 4:58:20 PM
It still bothers me that so many of our jobs have no real substance now due to outsourcing. Instead of producing things the world needs, we're cleaning toilets and dealing with assholish customers in the service industry. It's more my own personal issue, not some broad problem among the populace, i suppose. "Made in the USA" still has a certain pride attached to it.[Edited on November 2, 2006 at 5:48 PM. Reason : .]
11/2/2006 5:46:32 PM
11/2/2006 6:38:10 PM
11/2/2006 7:09:09 PM
Why are we losing jobs?-unions-personal injury lawyers-illegal immigrantsWhich side of the political spectrum supports and nurtures all three?
11/2/2006 7:20:41 PM
^ hawhite people are loosing strawberry picking jobs like CRAZY![Edited on November 2, 2006 at 7:23 PM. Reason : !!!!!!!!!!!]
11/2/2006 7:22:29 PM
^^that personal injury lawyer TOOK MAH JARB!!!
11/2/2006 7:25:41 PM
unions have killed off manufacturing jobs LIKE CRAZY!!!
11/2/2006 7:47:28 PM
as you can see no one attacked your statement about Unions because the other two were beyond retarded.
11/2/2006 7:49:16 PM
fuck you unions for wanting a safe work environment.
11/2/2006 7:54:19 PM
No, fuck the unions for making America globally uncompetitive in most manufacturing industries. See: The Auto IndustryGreat job UAW, you guys make 80K with huge pensions, and it's almost impossible to get fired. Now good luck getting that same job for your kid with Ford and GM filing for bankruptcy in the next few years.
11/2/2006 8:41:05 PM
the unions didn't adjust for competition, unfortunately. they serve a good purpose (procuring health care and safe conditions), but they live in a selfish little vaccum when it comes to wages and pensions. there's no way we can compete with superior products at a lower price paying better wages to workers than i make w/ a BA.with that said, part of the blame falls with management as well. the big 3 havent paid attention to the world market and are paying for it now. japan makes superior cars that people want to buy worldwide. we make cars geared toward joe bob jakes and leroy jackson in kentucky who buy cars for looks, not functionality like most consumers do.Toyota puts out the Yaris, we put out the fucking PT Cruiser. I personally have no sympathy for US auto makers in general. They shot themselves in the foot with shitty products and now they're paying for it on the world market. [Edited on November 2, 2006 at 9:10 PM. Reason : .]
11/2/2006 9:07:11 PM
11/2/2006 10:27:32 PM
true enough. i think a lot of the problem is the attention the media gives to the big 3, which makes it seem car manufacturing here in the states is on the downswing (car DESIGN in the states, however, is god-awful). i read an article about a mercedes factory in alabama recently that offered near-union wages w/o the union. it's just popped up in the past 10 years and is doing quite well.[Edited on November 2, 2006 at 10:31 PM. Reason : .]
11/2/2006 10:31:07 PM
bottomline = This will not be our (U.S.) century....
11/2/2006 11:59:18 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_tourism
11/3/2006 12:24:49 AM
Things look pretty good in those charts, under Clinton. Why don't we just reinstitute his policies?
11/3/2006 12:51:43 AM
Because the surging tech sector had a lot more to do with our late '90's economic boom than anything Clinton did?
11/3/2006 1:12:57 AM
So how significant are things like unions, lawyers, and immigrants then?
11/3/2006 1:18:32 AM
very significant. all three are in the corner of the far left.
11/3/2006 1:22:55 AM
Kinda makes a single-payer system look kinda nice doesn't it.
11/3/2006 3:34:47 AM
11/3/2006 7:48:06 AM
11/3/2006 7:58:05 AM
11/3/2006 8:35:48 AM
^^ Yes it is. Auto plants are already moving in droves out of Western Europe for cheap and controllable labor in Eastern Europe. With obvious exceptions, a few German Car Makers are legally prevented from supplying domestic sales via foreign production.Flyin Ryan I'm affraid not. Look where the Japanese are locating their factories, Right to Work States. Of course, they may have unions but they were posibly set up by the company and sometimes include managers in the Union leadership. This is not a bad thing, better communication between the company and its work force is good and can make everyones life easier. Also, being in a Right to Work State engenders a better work ethic and calmer demeaner when it comes to negotiations. Meanwhile, most North Eastern Unions are configured in an adversarial system, often with non-worker leadership and tend to lack transparency, which leads to corruption and makes it hard for the company to negotiate. As such, I'm pretty sure GM is paying its union workers a bit more than Toyota is, especially when you point out the lower cost of living in the south. But this is not a problem, it is unreasonable for Automotive Workers to expect a salary far in excess of similarly skilled workers elsewhere in the same city. [Edited on November 3, 2006 at 8:48 AM. Reason : .,.]
11/3/2006 8:37:06 AM
I love graphs so much! Here are some more for those among us interested to analyze! Look at the bottom left. Today, in 2006, we are producing almost three times as much semiconductors as we did in 2002! In the Industrial Materials graph you can see Huricaine Katrina take a whack out of our energy production! In the non-Industrial Materials graph you can see the housing boom shoot up the supply of construction materials, only to level off, presumably waiting for Other Business production to catch up and more correctly justify the over investment. [Edited on November 3, 2006 at 8:56 AM. Reason : .,.]
11/3/2006 8:50:32 AM
^ Indiana is not a right-to-work state and all three plants I detailed were in Indiana. Companies are moving non-union labor overseas as well. My company prefers having any high-level engineering work given to an Indian joint venture engineering firm instead of developing engineering resources here in such work, and we are required to give them so many hours of work per year. Our engineers are not unionized. There are other companies doing the same thing as well with non-unionized labor, IT companies for example.Also, our economy is on the cusp of a recession most likely starting in Q2 2007 according to some economists. The reason is that our economy has become dependent on credit and consumption instead of production.Since you like charts so much, here you go:http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/bronson/2006/1019.html
11/3/2006 9:02:40 AM
The majority of foreign automaker plants in the US are not union. And none of those unions come close to having the kind of clout that UAW has.Ford and GM are struggling mightily under the enormous health care and pension costs of an old, fat workforce.
11/3/2006 10:20:07 AM
The plants in Indiana are all UAW. Except for Auburn Gear, UAW has that state on lockdown.
11/3/2006 10:40:36 AM
Flying Ryan is making a convincing argument that the unions are not the problem.Experimentally, the plants he mentions are like the control group, and the failing plants are like the experimental. If they both have unions, and one is succeeding and one is failing, then unions can't be the cause.
11/3/2006 11:52:18 AM
Like I said the unions are organized differently and with different objectives. Being "Union" does not automatically make you uncompetitive. Just as companies are managed differently, so are unions. As a company's management can kill it, so can the management of a union.
11/3/2006 1:21:57 PM
11/3/2006 2:05:59 PM