Looks like the Democrats are positioning themselves to really hit the pedal to the medal next year with a new health care reform plan...that's more like Hillary's envisioning it seems. I'll take it, so long as it means overhauling the current system.I'm not a fan of mandates, and I want single payer - but maybe this takes us on the first step to single payer...in fact it could be seen as highly likely to....From Paul Krugman's blog:Hopeful signs on health carehttp://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/11/12/hopeful-signs-on-health-care/
11/12/2008 3:00:15 PM
I too oppose man dates.
11/12/2008 3:06:15 PM
Personally, I'm worried that this will only exasperate our current problem of rising health care costs. Paul Krugman himself has pointed out that Medicare and Medicaid might run into problems in coming years because paying for the health care of our aging populace in the face of rising health care costs will require significant tax hikes. Do we really think that expanding the federal government's obligation to cover MORE people's health care costs is really the solution (this would be the result of creating the public insurance alternative and expanding medicaid as Obama and Hillary and Edwards proposed)???
11/12/2008 3:36:47 PM
Honestly, I'm just glad the issue is being discussed instead of being brushed under the rug.
11/12/2008 3:40:43 PM
Do you have a source? He also said and I quote that...
11/12/2008 3:46:23 PM
And as an aside, I think Jason Furman (one of Obama's economic advisers) has a better plan. Here is some excerpts that popped up through out the blogsphere. Furman's plan was actually similar to John McCain's to the extent that both sought to increase the share of health care costs (that individuals are responsible for if you want people to be responsible for their health, you can't totally insulate them from the costs of their actions) while using measures such as tax-credits to help lower income individuals afford health insurance. Here's an exceprt:
11/12/2008 3:52:12 PM
Kainen, A source for what? Krugman's view that Medicare is likely facing a cost crisis that will force us to make hard choices? Yes, I have one.
11/12/2008 4:03:33 PM
universal health care would be a nightmare here. how many of our government organizations are well run?
11/12/2008 4:13:37 PM
^ universal health care is not the same as "government run health care." We're still a long way off from single-payer systems, but I'm scared we're getting close.
11/12/2008 4:17:08 PM
Yeah, that's it - thanks. I just wanted some context, and I got it....I agree with most of what is posted here.I don't believe the problem is [wholly] represented by greed...but I do think the current system is unprincipled. For example, insurers have all the incentive in the world to mitigate risk by denying coverage to people with pre-existing medical issues. Their actions have led to quality medicine being more expensive and creates an impossibility for those that need the care. Just a reminder that I believe health care is a right, and we're one of the only countries to not take care of it's people....and with premiums that have doubled since 2001 and expenditures as a nation per capita more than any other country in the world - tell me why we have worse health quality per person than other civilized/industrialized nations?Premiums rise daily but with less and less coverage. It's broken. I think the closer we move to single payer the better off we are.
11/12/2008 4:17:54 PM
It's only "universal" in that it'd cover those who don't have coverage. Is there a scenario worse than our current system of emergency-room-as-family-doctor?And I think we would all agree that preventative care is cheaper in the long run.
11/12/2008 4:19:59 PM
11/12/2008 4:24:43 PM
Even if we're working on the assumption that we shouldn't just let people die?
11/12/2008 4:26:49 PM
Boone, Of course you would think that. For the more educated among us....
11/12/2008 4:37:06 PM
I dont believe anyone who is an adult has a right to healthcare. I dont have a right to own a car. I dont have a right to a mechanic's services. That said, I see no reason why children should not be covered by some program. If a person chooses to purchase healthcare, then great...but it is not a right like life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.[Edited on November 12, 2008 at 4:46 PM. Reason : ,,]
11/12/2008 4:45:05 PM
11/12/2008 4:50:06 PM
11/12/2008 5:00:02 PM
Boone, It's cheaper to fight cancer if you diagnose it early, but that doesn't mean it is cheaper in the sense of reducing that person's health care expenditures. After all, even if they don't spend all that money fighting the cancer, they will likely spend even more money on other medical expenses because they will live longer (old age is expensive). But I'm seeing a disturbing trend in this thread--the idea that "we" (as if the government represents society) should spend however much it takes to make people's lives as long as possible. I seriously doubt Boone would be making the same arguments for fighting crime--spending as much money as needed to prevent every crime in America. Why? Well because he's a bleeding heart that finds force distasteful, even in defense of the innocent. But also because no one wants to devote 80% of their pay check to fighting crime.We live in a world of scarcity folks. There are only so many doctors, hospital beds, nurses, MRI machines, etc to go around at anyone time. If I spend an hour with a doctor, that's one less hour for someone else to spend with him. That means that SOME PEOPLE SIMPLY WILL NOT GET CARE NO MATTER WHAT WE DO. The only thing we can do is decide how to allocate the resources.This is exactly how it is in Canada too, where they ration health care with wait lines instead of dollar bills. This is simply the world you live in. And nothing can change it. [Edited on November 12, 2008 at 6:03 PM. Reason : ``]
11/12/2008 5:38:31 PM
wait... didnt you used to be Hillary's #1 Fan?
11/12/2008 5:52:12 PM
^ No?
11/12/2008 5:58:12 PM
11/12/2008 6:03:53 PM
^ Um. I wasn't talking about Obama's plan (in fact this thread isn't even about Obama's plan at all except as it realtes to the one being formulated by congressional dems). I was referring to your and Kainen's idea that "health care is a right", which apparently implies that we spend "whatever it takes" to protect people from ever not receiving care. And with regards to your edited version of my bolded text, THAT'S EXACTLY MY POINT! Police protection is no different than any other service, including medical services. Crime prevention resources are scarce and have to be rationed. IOW: NOT EVERYONE CAN BE PROTECTED AND WE CAN'T PREVENT ALL CRIME.So thanks for totally missing the obvious point I was making.[Edited on November 12, 2008 at 6:22 PM. Reason : ``]
11/12/2008 6:21:36 PM
11/12/2008 6:27:32 PM
11/12/2008 6:31:18 PM
I appreciate the good productive discussion here....but we're getting into territory covered by the other big health care thread you started socks....you drew the exact same analogy and I answered it there. At the time I talked about how although health care may not in a strict sense be a 'right' it certainly though is a 'responsibility'...and morally one that I think is important.Using 'rights' in the sense of 'freedoms' is really bogging down my argument because you are doing exactly what I expect you and libertarians, conservatives to do - draw an analogy that doesn't really compare. For instance, education is not a 'right' by the strict sense of the word...it's an obligation though of any composed society. Clothing is not a 'right', it's an obligation. If there is someone naked in the street, as a society we are obligated to try to help them out with a shirt...and we do. Same way with food. That's how I see healthcare, an obligation or responsibility that our people are entitled to. Try to understand the difference, I probably shouldn't have said the word 'right' because this always happens.
11/12/2008 6:38:24 PM
so, here's a question, Kainen.If we were able to make it so that people could afford routine health care on their own without a gov't program, would you accept that?I ask this because many of the problems alleged to exist with insurance exist only because it is practically necessary to have insurance in order to afford any kind of health care. So, in trying to get people insurance, we are treating the symptom and not the problem. The problem is that health care is expensive, not that insurance is expensive.^ And, for the record, we are not obligated at all to provide anyone a fucking shirt. We really shouldn't be obligated to provide an education for anyone. The more "obligations" you make, the more the government must infringe on people's actual rights in order to meet those "obligations."]
11/12/2008 7:13:05 PM
Kainen,But we do not give people shirts or food by socializing those industries as you were suggesting earlier (single payer health insurance). Instead we provide them with various forms of income subsidies. I don't see why health care should be different.PS* Education is an exception, but how many people celebrate the quality of public schools? Competition would improve schools the same way it would improve health care.[Edited on November 12, 2008 at 8:05 PM. Reason : ``]
11/12/2008 8:03:56 PM
11/12/2008 8:16:11 PM
and he is ignoring the fact that as the government covers to costs for more people, this will drive the cost up for those who aren't covered for the government, thus making it harder for even them to pay for their healthcare. That, frankly, is what has happened thanks to medicare and medicaid and sCHIP.
11/12/2008 8:24:00 PM
^ I am not sure how that follows. There is a reasonable arguement that expanding coverage will reduce private costs because it reduces indigent care.
11/12/2008 8:36:02 PM
^ kwsmith2, What I was saying was that we don't have enough health care resources for everyone to have equal access to them. Like I said, if I spend an hour with a doctor, that's an hour someone else cannot spend with the doctor. This implies that someone will have to go untreated. Now maybe we can rellocate resources toward uses with higher marginal benefits, but that is a different question.
11/12/2008 9:44:58 PM
Shouldn't we be over-joyed that gov't healthcare is right around the corner? After all, that's part of the hope and change.Forget the fact that there are going to be fewer doctors coming out of medical school. That massive rationing will occur. That the "duty to die" will be thrust upon the elderly voters in Florida and elsewhere who were scared that the republicans were going to take away their social security.The democrats are going to take away their lives.
11/14/2008 12:22:27 PM
Earthdogg, stop spewing semi moonbat, and highly retarded garbage without any evidence to back the matter up.The US is ranked under practically ever other industrialized nation (all of which offer UHC) in healthcare quality.Thats a clear QED to every junk argument you've made so far.Unless you have some sterling evidence that doesn't rely on random strawmen, then stop posting on this matter.
11/14/2008 4:29:57 PM
Oh no, not this shit again.The World Health Organization, the one that keeps ranking the US down at the bottom of industrialized nations in healthcare, is driven by ideology and anything but objective. They use 5 measures to determine their rankings, but only 2 of them are actually measures of health care, life expectancy and responsiveness. The funny thing is that the US ranks 24th overall in life expectancy and 1st overall in responsiveness, but yet somehow ends up 37th in overall care. Thats because the WHO uses socialistic measures like "Fairness in financial contribution" as measures of health care. Honestly, how the fuck is "Fairness in financial contribution" a measure of health care? How do they even judge it?It's nonsense, and repeating the WHO rankings only perpetuates this nonsense. Insured Americans receive superior care to just about everyone else in the world. Yes, we have a problem with the uninsured, but the idea that our health care system is horrible has gotta stop. It's horribly expensive, but that's mostly because we pay for the best doctors, the best drugs, and the most expensive equipment, and all of it is available right away. That kind of service costs money.[Edited on November 14, 2008 at 5:09 PM. Reason : 2]
11/14/2008 4:53:12 PM
SandSanta, Despite what some partisans would have you think, it's actually very difficult to show that universal health care systems result in better health outcomes. Much more difficult than just pointing out that French live longer than Americans or other metrics like that. A person's health is a function of many things--diet, exercise, genetics, environment, etc--beyond just whether one has insurance or whether the state pays for your access to health care. Greg Mankiw had an NYT column earlier this year that had a pretty take down of the most popular statistics used by proponents of universal health care. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/04/business/04view.html?_r=1&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink&oref=sloginHere is my favorite excepts (that's probably relevant to the unnamed stats you have mind).Living Longer In Canada Doesn't Mean Canadians Recieve better Health Care. Quote :"The differences between the neighbors are indeed significant. Life expectancy at birth is 2.6 years greater for Canadian men than for American men...These facts are often taken as evidence for the inadequacy of the American health system. But a recent study by June and Dave O’Neill, economists at Baruch College, from which these numbers come, [b]shows that the difference in health outcomes has more to do with broader social forces.For example, Americans are more likely than Canadians to die by accident or by homicide...Americans are also more likely to be obese, leading to heart disease and other medical problems. "Infant Morality Rates Don't Tell You Much Either.Quote :"In the United States, 7.5 percent of babies are born weighing less than 2,500 grams (about 5.5 pounds), compared with 5.7 percent in Canada. In both nations, these infants have more than 10 times the mortality rate of larger babies. Low birth weights are in turn correlated with teenage motherhood. (One theory is that a teenage mother is still growing and thus competing with the fetus for nutrients.) The rate of teenage motherhood, according to the O’Neill study, is almost three times higher in the United States than it is in Canada.Whatever its merits, a Canadian-style system of national health insurance is unlikely to change the sexual mores of American youth."
11/14/2008 5:20:04 PM
11/14/2008 5:25:16 PM
You and your goddamned social engineering.
11/14/2008 5:39:01 PM
It's the fastest way to a Star Trek-like society.
11/14/2008 5:42:03 PM
11/14/2008 6:47:32 PM
Oh it's you, the slow one again
11/14/2008 6:59:25 PM
11/14/2008 7:35:06 PM
yes. doctors saying "quit smoking" has really worked. People aren't smoking because smoking is no longer the popular thing to do, as well as the fact that you are practically hated by the hippies if you smoke. It has nothing to do w/ doctors telling their patients not to smoke.Likewise, people aren't going to lose weight just cause their doctor tells them to. Hell, we have so many drugs today that are all about not changing your dietary and exercise habits. Obviously doctors aren't getting through to people, so there's no reason to think they will start now.But, by all means, continue with your ad hominem when someone calls out wishful thinking. It really does make you look smart
11/14/2008 7:44:46 PM
11/14/2008 8:08:58 PM
moron
11/14/2008 9:19:17 PM
11/14/2008 9:29:29 PM
^ Yes, it has clearly been proven how easily governments can manipulate the behavior of its citizenry. Just ask King George III, King Louis XVI, Abraham Lincoln, Chiang Kai-Shek, the Romanovs, Brezhnev, Gorbachev, FUCK ask George W Bush etc etc. OMG BUT THOSE ARE SO DIFFERENT (they weren't Democrats)!!!Listen, if the lesson you got from your psychology courses (or fucking statisitcs!?!?) was that people are easily controlled or manipulated by a benevolent government, then YOU DIDN'T LEARN ANYTHING.And speaking of "benevolent governments", one reason I'm skeptical of extending government power over our personal lives is that there is no guarantee their motives will be virtuous (check out public choice theory). And oddly enough, most Democrats I know agree with me...WHEN THEY TALK ABOUT BUSH! 4 years ago, Dems were so worried about military tribunals, warantless wiretaps, and the President tramping on our freedoms. But now that our party is in power, it will be all rainbows and hope and change!!!! Give the more power, because now it will use it for good and the evil Republicans will never gain office again!! Fuck that shit. The whole party has turned into a bunch of loons.[Edited on November 15, 2008 at 1:39 AM. Reason : partisan fucking elitist bullshit]
11/15/2008 1:22:21 AM
11/15/2008 10:28:53 AM
thoughts?http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/patients/articles/?storyId=25468
3/11/2009 7:47:53 PM
^the part on baucus turned me off because hes one of the few dems that doesnt want the amount you can deduct for giving to charities to decrease...which is where 318 billion of healthcare is supposed to be generated from...they make it sound like hes in the medical lobbys pocket when he is against the plan to fund ~1/2 of it
3/11/2009 8:09:23 PM
just bc someone has free health insurance gives no gurantees that they will behave responsibly.Ask an on call OBG how many medicaid girls they have show up for birth that have had no prenatal care and they no NOTHING about. Will be an interesting experience for most of you guys.Let govt cover LESS, will provide people will more choices, lower costs, while maintaining innovation and quality of care.Everyone agrees healthcare costs are rising right? I can think of several procedures that have not only gotten cheaper (50% in some cases) but gotten far more advanced with technology over the last decade... the big difference? non-covered services.. people actually pay for them.. holly shit.You see the idea of collectivism is that everyone should have the same thing.. and if I can afford to have this and you cant.. then neither of us should have it. So it forces quality down.You can use all your stats you want, I always remember my stat professor saying you can make the numbers say whatever you want, but show me another country with the excesses we enjoy here, the fatty food, lazy life style, total abundance.. hell our poor are obese. Then ask yourself why people come to this country for healthcare from the stat superior systems?Oh, one more thing, hospitals should be able to refuse care based on diagnosis. Stops a lot of this BS.
3/11/2009 9:06:30 PM