9/10/2008 6:40:14 PM
don't know if i'm missing something here, but i'm pretty sure the argument would be that a poor person is much more affected by a $5,000 a year than an affluent person.
9/10/2008 6:53:17 PM
9/10/2008 7:26:25 PM
I thought people always complained we spent too much money on poor people.
9/10/2008 7:44:06 PM
^That complaint is invalidated by this study? The rich are probably paying for their own health care while the poor are relying on someone else to pay for it. The people that complained about spending too much on the poor will go right on complaining because they are still paying for their health care.I thought the point of the quote above, at least from the opening paragraph, was that the notion that poor people received inferior health care because they were poor might not be based in reality.
9/10/2008 8:06:40 PM
Well this study says nothing about care or type of care, just total spending. You can still ask:1) Why are these people going in? Id imagine someone with lots of money would be more inclined to go in for a sinus infection than someone who is poor. Someone who is poor might not have the best diet/exercise opportunity, so maybe theyre going in for obesity, disease, etc while the rich are going in for things less serious.2) The quality of care is not addressed at all. The cost certainly reflects some measure of quality but doesnt tell the whole story3) Im assuming the study is for all age groups? Who knows4) Has this changed over timeetc etc etcNot trying to question anything, just trying to show that only so much can be taken from this
9/10/2008 9:13:57 PM
fat poor people.
9/10/2008 9:41:45 PM
It may have helped to post the article in its entirety to get a better sense of context.
9/10/2008 10:08:02 PM
http://www.investorguide.com/taxtrackr/[Edited on September 15, 2008 at 8:56 AM. Reason : this is interesting]
9/15/2008 8:51:03 AM
Colemania, but the point is that this is a major shift in the current policy debate. For example, in presidential politics, the argument the Obama campaign seems to be giving is that if you are poor, you cannot afford private insurance, therefore you cannot afford to purchase health care services once you get sick. To fix this problem he proposes forcing private insurance companies to sell health insurance to anyone that wants it.In reality, this study indicates that even though many "poor" people don't have private insurance, existing government programs actually already provides them with assistance so that they can afford the same ammount health care services as "rich" people purchase (measured in dollars). IOW: the problem the Obama health care plan is set out to fix may not exist (and if you believe critics of the plan, like Paul Krugman, it may actually create new problems).Now, if you want to ask wheter "poor" people still receive a lower quality of care (maybe hospitals in poor areas are worse? doctors less competent? don't know what argument you want to make), that is certainly a legit question. But that is a fundamental shift in health care policy discourse. Up until now, everyone has been focused on the ability to afford health care. But it looks like those worries may be unfounded.Of course, this is just one study.[Edited on September 15, 2008 at 12:11 PM. Reason : ``]
9/15/2008 12:10:52 PM
Anecdotal evidence makes it clear many poor and middle class folks lack access to health care. It's not an invented problem.
9/15/2008 12:21:36 PM
^ That being the case, this study then indicates that the government sucks at providing health care, as despite the fact that they spend as much as private companies, the don't provide equal care. Yet people still believe that universal government coverage is the way to go.
9/15/2008 1:42:19 PM
b/c the govt does a bang-up job on controlling our education system. why don't we give them the healthcare systemnext up: let's give them the power companies, heck why not? b/c hey, free energy!
9/15/2008 1:44:10 PM
^^ Perhaps. On the other hand, the example from other countries counters that. They spend less on health care but have superior overall health results. It could be that the specific arrangement in this country, to use your term, sucks. That doesn't mean any possible government program would be similarly full of fail.
9/15/2008 1:52:04 PM
Most other countries are also have significantly smaller populations and less area in which the population is contained. I fairly certain a socialized healthcare system could work on a state level, even though I would despise it, but when you get to the federal level, you start running into problems just from the sheer size and inefficiencies.
9/15/2008 2:17:35 PM
9/15/2008 3:09:08 PM
9/15/2008 4:59:18 PM
^ or it could be due to the fact that we effectively have a government-run monopoly in K-12 education. Without providing parents a choice in schools, schools/bureaucrats are not incentivized to meet the needs of their customers.message_topic.aspx?topic=536651
9/15/2008 5:46:25 PM
it's not that the government can't do anything these days.. it's more.....BUT THE GOVERNMENT CAN DO ANYTHING BETTER!!!11btw, take note all republicans and democrats.You have more sway in this country with how you spend your dollars than with how you cast your vote this November. Keep that in mind.Obama nor Hillary will be able to get free healthcare for this country. Perhaps a form of it, but it ain't gonna happen.B/c hey, free everything!!!11[Edited on September 15, 2008 at 6:22 PM. Reason : s]
9/15/2008 6:22:16 PM
9/15/2008 7:41:30 PM
9/15/2008 10:22:08 PM
9/15/2008 10:34:54 PM
Flawed logic. I don't know what you are trying to prove but lets keep in mind that rich people tend to stay healthy relative to poor people because they have access to other health related things that surely aren't counted in this "spending". Also poor people live in unhealthy environments (working, living conditions) so the risks are just much greater.A better study would be to look at spending data on poor people vs rich people with the same health problems. IE rich diabetic vs poor diabetic.
9/15/2008 11:02:27 PM
9/15/2008 11:37:59 PM
9/15/2008 11:53:59 PM
that is not a valid source. It does NOT factor in those who are eligible for medicaid and medicare. as well, it factors in illegal immigrants.oh, and way to list an article that requires a username and password, silly.]
9/15/2008 11:55:36 PM
9/16/2008 12:00:39 AM
GV, that is the same number that gets floated around frequently, but as boro pointed out, that doesn't consider who is actually eligible for existing programs. It also doesn't even attempt to measure how many of those people don't have insurance simply because they can't afford it versus people that simply don't want insurance (i went 2 months without insurance when I was between jobs a few years ago, would I have been counted?).PS* Medscape asks me username and password too. [Edited on September 16, 2008 at 12:02 AM. Reason : ``]
9/16/2008 12:01:24 AM
i like how you edited out the original link that DOES require a username and password. come on, man.
9/16/2008 12:02:01 AM
It only requires such when linked directly. Click on it from Google and it works fine. That's the cause of the problem.
9/16/2008 12:03:49 AM
and yet, you provided us the direct link...
9/16/2008 12:05:28 AM
I didn't know the damn thing would be funky. I got there from Google and merely copied the URL.Anyways, 75% of 47 million would be about 35 million. More than 10% of the population.[Edited on September 16, 2008 at 12:09 AM. Reason : ten percent]
9/16/2008 12:07:17 AM
well, how about you not call somebody a liar when you can't fucking reference something correctly, ok?
9/16/2008 12:08:55 AM
I won't take responsibility for funky sites.(The liar bit was meant to be tongue-in-cheek.)
9/16/2008 12:11:22 AM
man, TSB's sarcasm detectors have been totally off today but, typical liberal: won't take responsibility for his mistakes]
9/16/2008 12:13:56 AM
I'm a radical, not a liberal. Other than that, you're correct. I won't take responsibility for the insanity of a site hiding the content if you click on the URL and press enter! If I've encountered that before, it was a long time ago.
9/16/2008 12:19:00 AM
in a land far, far away
9/16/2008 12:19:46 AM
GV,You forgot to mention that your BCBS link also mentions that another 20% of uninsured individuals can afford insurance that are not elidgble for public programs. That means only 56% of that 47 million actually is not elidgble for government programs like medicaid and medicare and cannot afford private alternatives. That is 26 million people or about 9% of the 300 million people that live in the United States (just using the sources you provided), which is actually about what the national poverty rate is. That is a very very sad fact, but not a national emergency. Access simply is not the problem.[Edited on September 16, 2008 at 12:26 AM. Reason : ``]
9/16/2008 12:25:07 AM
and, guess how many of those 26million are illegal immigrants, socks?
9/16/2008 12:27:19 AM
Health care is an issue for more than just the uninsured. (Or, in this case, an issue for more than just the uninsured who really can't afford insurance and who don't quality for Medicaid.) Even if you have health insurance, a major disaster might still leave you in the poorhouse. Insurance companies pull all sorts of shady shit to deny claims.
9/16/2008 12:35:55 AM
ooooooooh, switching gears, are we...
9/16/2008 12:39:44 AM
What choice do I have? I consider the fact that millions lack health insurance a major problem. Y'all don't. I'm not sure where to go with that. We've established the facts. We react to them differently. Apparently, the uninsured masses aren't enough to catch your attention. I figure the real struggles the insured face might.
9/16/2008 12:49:55 AM
well, you can't even show that there are truly uninsured masses. The best you can come up with are figures that show that the number of "uninsured" is massively inflated.
9/16/2008 12:55:12 AM
Again, I don't where to go from here. I consider millions to be masses. If you don't, you don't. I also fail to see why you discount the many millions who lack health insurance for other reasons. What good does being eligible for Medicaid do if you aren't actually enrolled? What good does having the ability to afford health insurance do once you're already facing giant medical bills?
9/16/2008 1:02:26 AM
9/16/2008 6:58:33 AM
GoldenViper, But you are not considering the fact that these are not the same people from year to year. As I just pointed out, I went without health insurance back in 2005 for 2 or 3 months after I graduated. How many of those millions of people are actually young men and women just entering the work force?Look, I seriously doubt 9% of the population spend their entire lives without seeing a doctor. And that number is still probably inflated because of cyclical factors not related to structural problems in the health care market (when the economy turns sour, it isn't a surprise that people are losing their jobs and their health insurance, it's actually one way we measure whether the economy is turning sour to begin with). That isn't even to mention the problems AAb brought up.None of this reveals a major problem with health care access in this country. Now, if you want to talk about people that already have insurance, they would be much more concerned about rising health care costs than anything else. Which is exactly what I'm saying.
9/16/2008 7:03:55 AM
9/16/2008 11:06:31 AM
9/16/2008 2:21:16 PM
The current system includes 47 million people without insurance.
9/16/2008 2:32:46 PM
way to use that overinflated figure again. really not helping your argument when you keep going back to refuted claims.
9/16/2008 10:55:11 PM