06-18-2007, 05:19 PM | #1 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Sicko *with spoilers*
I just saw an 'early screening' of Sicko, the new Michael Moore documentary. Wow. I've been looking into the business of medicine more lately, but I ahd no idea 1) just how bad it is in the USA and 2) how amazing it can be elsewhere. I knew that the WHO had named France as the best health care system in the world, but I really had no idea how good it was. I'm not sure how to go about discussing this without spoilers, so I'm going to add the spoiler tag to the thread name.
The American system is broken, and what's worse is that we (a collective all American 'we') have had to become accustomed to the worst health care in the western world. After watching the movie, I called a friend of mine who also has Kaiser. For every 2.4 dollars he earns, Kaiser gets 1. Why? He has a preexisting condition (some type of heart problem, dissimilar to mine, but serious). He, like me, was grandfathered off a family plan onto an individual plan. He's stuck there because he can't get health care elsewhere because of his preexisting condition, and he can't reapply to Kaiser, because they'd drop him like... well they'd drop him. I happened to be in the hospital at the same time as him when I was getting my coarctation of the aorta repaired. My surgery would have cost me around $100,000 had I not been covered. His would have cost $120,000. The funny part is that if he lives to 80, he will have paid over $370,000 ($515/mo x 12 months x 60 years = 370,800). He could have gone back and had three more surgeries for the amount he will have paid, and he's one of those who has received a lot of care from the hospital. So where does the money go? Insurance is the same in any market or business. There are billionaire CEOs that need the money (thank's, capitalism!). That's not the worst of it by far. 45 million Americans don't have health coverage because they can't afford to pay the high costs. If you get sick and go to a hospital uninsured, you'll be lucky to be treated. One instance in the film, Kaiser in Los Angeles would put uninsured sick people in a cab, and drive them over to an area nicknamed 'skid row', Union Rescue Mission. In the instance shown in the movie, a woman was dropped off in a hospital gown, confused and disoriented, unable to even care for herself. They didn't even drop her off at the entrance. When she got inside, it was clear that the bracelet provided by the hospital had been removed, so they couldn't find out who had sent her. This is not a singular occurrence. It has happened over 50 times. USC (one of the richest private schools in the country) County had happened to have dropped off an uninsured patient the day before MM started filming at the Union Rescue Mission. This patient had unfinished stitches on her head, she had several broken ribs, a broken collar bone, and was disoriented as she was dropped off. They didn't ask where to take her. They just threw her in the cab and took her over, shoving her out of the cab. These are American citizens who are being punished for not making enough money by not even being allowed to stay healthy. 45 million Americans are in this group. That's about 15% of out total population. 1 out of every 6.6 people. In France, things are a bit different. I was born in 1983, long before the time of the house call by doctors. Or so I thought. Apparently, in France, doctors still make house-calls. You can go into a hospital, and not only do you not pay for the health care, but they reimburse you for transport to the hospital. This, to me, is madness. It's like politicians telling the truth or a delicious chocolate bar being free of fat, sugars or preservatives. It's a fairy tale. Well, in the US it may be, but in France it's a reality. So how does the government pay for this, you may ask? Taxes, of course. So the French must pay an unreasonable amount of taxes, right? Here's a link to a simple website, text below: Quote:
http://www.frenchentree.com/fe-legal/ http://www.doingbusiness.org/Explore...x?economyid=70 I'll admit that this is not information included in the movie, but looking at it carefully, it's no exorbitant at all. MM found a local middle class family that took in 8,000 Euros a month. They live in one of the more ritzy flats I've seen in my life. They drove two cars. They had a 4 bedroom flat, which ran about $1575 per month. They owe no money at all. Not just medical, but they had no debt outside of their home. Their biggest expense was fruits and veggies. Oh, and their vacations. They're French, after all. One thing that surprised me about the movie, is that Americans are marrying Canadians to get their healthcare. And when you get there, there are no lines. There isn't a shortage of doctors. I'm sure my friendly TFP neighbors to the North can elaborate on this quite well. I'll post more later. Time for dinner. Please, enjoy this movie. |
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06-18-2007, 07:09 PM | #2 (permalink) |
Tilted Cat Head
Administrator
Location: Manhattan, NY
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Well, let's see.
I have united healthcare. My doctor is on the ground floor of the building I live in in NYC. I call up and make an appointment. I pay my $10 copay. My doctor will come upstairs if I'm not well enough to go downstairs, something you mentioned as "housecalls." I pay approximately $300/month to cover me and my spouse. My prexisting condition is asthma. I copay about $600 for my meds. My father told me some words of wisdom growing up: "Things cost money, there is no such thing as a free lunch. You'll need to make your own way in life since no one will be there to pick up the slack for you." I have a friend who's daughter is dying of cancer. She is spending about $4,000 on medical expensives every month. She's sold off her homes and used up all her retirement. Life sucks sometimes. period.
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06-18-2007, 07:36 PM | #3 (permalink) | |||
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I'm really sorry your friend's daughter is dying of cancer. My aunt died of cancer (though she smoked her lungs out), and it was very sad to watch her deteriorate and have to spend their saving on her care. My uncle was fortunate that he's talented at stocks and was able to get back on his feet a few years after she passed. Had they lived in Canada, the Uk, France, etc., her care would have been free. There wouldn't have been money woes as she was dying, which I imagine would have given my uncle more time to spend with her. |
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06-18-2007, 08:10 PM | #4 (permalink) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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willravel, while I agree that US healthcare can be unfavorably compared to what is available in France, a country with little foreign debt compared to GDP, almost no trade deficit, and 20 percent less poverty per thousand households, despite nearly a 10 percent unemployment rate, I am unable to separate the "healthcare gap" from the larger problem.....the disparity of wealth distribution in the US, compared to in other ODC's.
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My thread dealing with the background of the last true American populist politician, the assassinated Louisiana Senator and former governor, called one of the two "most dangerous men in America by Franklin Roosevelt, and, in his NY Times obituary, a "fascist", <b>Huey Long</b>, did not even garner one reply: Quote:
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06-18-2007, 08:23 PM | #5 (permalink) |
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Just because I didn't post in a thread doesn't mean I didn't read it. Yes, there is an income gap in this country, and it's one of the biggest problems we face. If we had a health care system funded by taxes, health care would no longer be for the rich. We all pay taxes, and we all get coverage. I know this urks a lot of people who love free markets and capitalism and such, but those have not served us in this case. The insurance companies have done to medicine what we've seen happen to everything from war to news media: profit driven business.
I've always liked to look at it like other life dependent services like firefighters and police. I'm sure no one wants a huge private police force or a firefighter you have to pay insurance premiums for (I'm sorry, you only have the Silver fire plan which covers grease fires and electrical fires. Your house will have to burn to the ground, so we can make more money). I'm also familiar with the Sinister 18 families, but this is about bypassing them. When a democrat wins in 2008, which will be Hillary, Obama, or Edwards, we're going to be looking at a real shot at bypassing the 18. If Ron Paul wins, the 18 will just pick up and leave. Heh. Sicko covers a lot about Nixon, Bush and Kaiser. I think you'll enjoy it. |
06-18-2007, 08:59 PM | #6 (permalink) |
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willravel, I don't mean to take out my anger on you...it's just that I wish that we could articulate our vision for the future in a way that truly sets it apart from the anti-government "reform" of the libertarians and the deliberate destruction of the reputation and fiscal stability of the government by the republicans.
I posted about the description of the bi-partisan, "money party" politicians by David Sirota, a few months ago. He's back with this description of the "sell out" by congressional "money party" democrats: http://www.workingassetsblog.com/200..._21_dem_k.html I see Clinton and Obama in their ranks, so I don't share your optimism. We face a rapidly deteriorating federal fiscal and foreign policy environment, and a deteriorating maket fundamentals and US currency environment, as well, as baby boomers begin to turn 62 in a wave that will last until 2023 and involve 47 million, aging folks with deteriorating personal health and wealth, if my projections for housing, stocks, bonds, and paper currency valuation are correct. To avoid mass misery, I see an urgent need for the quick results that a demagogue populist patterned along the lines of a Huey Long, or a Bill Hayward like labor organizer (see the "Reds" thread link) could potentially achieve. I am more radical than possibly anyone here except roachboy, but I am radicalized by the "achievments" of the money party politicians and the neocon corporatists and their business "patrons". What I see coming can be "bloodless" if a ruthless charasmatic populist emerges, and a majority is persuaded to vote it's best interests. Small compromises like expansion of health coverage, without radical reform that includes huge tax increases on the top 5 percent and the near elimination of special interest politics, may actually hasten and exacerbate the violence that I see coming, almost inevitably. Last edited by host; 06-18-2007 at 09:03 PM.. |
06-18-2007, 09:30 PM | #7 (permalink) | ||||||
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06-18-2007, 09:43 PM | #8 (permalink) |
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US healthcare would be so much better and a hell of a lot cheaper if we would stop regulating the crap out of it. The worst effect of the health insurance industry is allowing them to determine who a doctor can and cannot see as a patient.
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"no amount of force can control a free man, a man whose mind is free. No, not the rack, not fission bombs, not anything. You cannot conquer a free man; the most you can do is kill him." |
06-18-2007, 10:24 PM | #9 (permalink) | |
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06-18-2007, 11:10 PM | #10 (permalink) |
All important elusive independent swing voter...
Location: People's Republic of KKKalifornia
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I pay $0 for healthcare, get full benefits and $20 co-pay (or was it $10?) thanks to an employer that values my skills and college education (thank you free market system!!). I don't smoke, drink heavily, nor do drugs. I have no preexisting conditions.
If someone decides to smoke and then gets cancer as a result, well then, I am very sorry but you have to take responsibility for your own actions. I would be very pissed if I had to to subsidize someone elses irresponsible choices. I work very hard for my salary and benefits. So then, would socialized medicine be abused as a fix it all system for irresponsible people? I stay healthy and am careful with my actions because I do not want the expense of health care (especially when before I didn't have any insurance at all. A broken hand cost me $7500 cash). Therefore, I acted responsibly. I think free health care would just open up a wealth of abuse and overburden the system. People abuse the health care system here in LA to the extent that hospitals have to close down and ER centers close too. Having said that, I do agree that the healthcare system is in need of reform. I'm not sure which part needs fixing: doctors, insurance, hospitals, patients or lawsuits. Will, you mentioned that you think the insurance companies are to blame. Can you expand on that a little? I used to think the same thing but I'm not so sure. Maybe Jazz can give us some insight. I do know in my case, I paid $7500 cash for surgery on my broken hand. The doctor gave me a steep discount because he knew I just graduated and therefore no longer covered by school insurance and did not have a job yet. The hospital charged the most despite my financial hardship. They told me that if I had insurance, they would have charged around $25,000. I almost had a heart attack. I actually know why they charge so much but that is for another thread. It's the same with car repair/service too apparently. Different prices depending on whether or not you have insurance. I am interested in hearing about the Canada and UK systems. Last edited by jorgelito; 06-18-2007 at 11:12 PM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost |
06-19-2007, 12:01 AM | #11 (permalink) | |
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http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showpos...7&postcount=19 ....it is all timely, from mainstream sources, and it even details the recent annual profits of major health insurers and the compensation of their executives.... but...it was posted by "host"....so I guess it should be ignored while we all wait for Jazz to "give us some insight".... |
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06-19-2007, 01:36 AM | #12 (permalink) |
People in masks cannot be trusted
Location: NYC
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I would not really mention Clinton taking care of health care. It is 14 years since she started talking about it, and I have yet to see any results. Her current plan she released was very similiar to the one Edwards released (before she did). And do not forget that she was on the board of directors of Walmart which is known for their employees not having health care (though last year I believe their rate went up to 46%).
I am not a Moore fan but I do agree health care is a huge issue. |
06-19-2007, 04:01 AM | #13 (permalink) |
spudly
Location: Ellay
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I have to think that at least part of the problem is that, culturally, in this country we have a hard time making tough ethical decisions through law.
Can you even imagine setting the basic guidelines for what an appropriate level of care would be for specific illnesses? Of course, when it's my grandmother, nothing but the most expensive treatments taken to the farthest extreme will do. When it's yours, well, we ought to be reasonable. Add to this that you can't REALLY standardize (read: socialize) medical care without dredging up the most unpleasant parts of the illegal alien debate.
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Cogito ergo spud -- I think, therefore I yam |
06-19-2007, 05:01 AM | #14 (permalink) | |
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Location: Chicago
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Just like always, everyone here likes to lump all the blame in one place. Do the health insurance companies share in that blame? Sure. Are they the only ones? Of course not. I don't think they even get the majority of the blame. We live in a capitalistic society. That's not going to change. There are a couple big problems that I see out there with healthcare and insurance. First, costs are rising. Second, many people cannot get insurance and are forced to self-insure their risk. Second problem first: in a capitalistic society, you have to allow companies to manage their own risks, including insurance companies. That means that you can't force companies to do things they don't want to do without some sort of trade-off. Ask Florida property owners how making that mistake has been working out for them. The biggest problem here is that individuals and smaller groups actually produce more risk for insurance companies than larger ones. It's a little counterintuitive until you realize that accuaries can predict health care costs for large groups much more accurately than small groups and not at all for individuals. Someone who works for a large company is going to get cheaper insurance than someone who is self-employed, almost regardless of any pre-existing conditions. The risk is going to be factored into the premium charged to the large company from the very outset. There are also a number of things that a company can do to lower their premiums, like taking on some of the risk themselves. It's actually much more complicated than this, so let me know if you want more details. I'm trying to paint with as broad a brush as I can. Currently, there's no good fix, but I know of several that are being proposed right now. I have a client who is a large benefits agency (health insurance falls under the benefits umbrella). They are current lobbying their state legislature to be allowed to set up what's called a "risk purchasing group" for the self-employed. Their goal is to get several thousand individuals, along with their families, into this pool to allow them to enjoy the benefits of group buying power. This is current illegal in most states (for some very good reasons, actually), but if they can demonstrate the controls that they want to put in place, it could turn into something very interesting. In a capitalistic system, which again isn't going to change, some people are either going to not be able to afford the coverage or choose not to take it. And that leads me back to my first point, the costs. There are a whole bunch of reasons why the costs are rising, but I don't think you can really blame the insurance carriers for that one. First, its in their (and your, as the insured) interest to keep costs as low as possible. After all, they will make more money if the costs are lower. Thats why they negotiate the cost of procedures up front with the doctors and hospitals that they work with. You can't even blame the doctors and hospitals since they've already contractually agreed to price things the same way, consistently for all customers of the health care insurer. The variable here are new technologies, which are typically very expensive to bring on line, drugs and the uninsured. New technologies, especially hardware, are usually exponetially more expensive in medical applications than elsewhere because of the details, whether those be precision, cleanliness or a combination. That exactitude costs more to produce. Personally, I think that if there's a bad guy it's the drug companies, although I have to admit even they have good reasons to do what they do. Drug companies are moving more and more towards developing long-term drugs rather than ones for short-term use. That means that there aren't nearly as many antibiotics being developed as cholesterol-lowering drugs. After all, you won't take antibiotics for the rest of your life... Another interesting thing to note - whenever you see a drug advertised, you can bet that it will be a long-term drug. You're going to want to pop a woody for the rest of your life, but clearing up that nasty cough is secondary. The uninsured are the 1000 lb gorilla in the room. Honestly, they force everyone's prices up. In almost any other industry, they'd be ignored because they aren't anyone's customers nor are they necessarily desirable as customers (there are obvious exceptions). Everyone agrees that ignoring them is the wrong thing to do not only from a public health point of view but also from a humanitarian one. There's been talk of "forced placements" with health insurers, where the uninsured sign up with the state and are assigned an insurance company. There's a similar system in place for Workers Compensation insurance, but the fatal flaw here is that most of the uninsured can't afford the premiums for a number of reasons. First, employers typically absorb between 25% and 75% of the cost of the premium, depending on how their plan in set up. The employee contribution typically only pays a portion of the premium, especially if the employer has a large self insured retention and is gambling that there will be little erosion of it. The uninsured, who are mostly poor, can't afford the costs because their underwritten individually, and they are typically in mediocre health at best. Its my professional opinion that a universal healthcare system will not happen in the US in the next 10 years. Beyond that, it's grows more possible the farther you get away from the present, but the system, as it exists now, is too powerful to overturn easily. It's much more probable that the uninsured will be covered by a quasi-government entity, although I have no idea how that would be funded.
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"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - B. Franklin "There ought to be limits to freedom." - George W. Bush "We have met the enemy and he is us." - Pogo |
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06-19-2007, 06:02 AM | #15 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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interesting post, mister jazz...objections to it:
capitalism is not one thing: there can be and are any number of institutional arrangements that operate within that general context--there is no contradiction between capitalism and universal health care. capitalism has no "natural logic" to it--there is no normative capitalist system relative to which others can be parsed. the american system follows not from any such natural logic within capitalism: it follows from political choices made by "representatives" from within the ruling oligarchy.... the french model is far more interesting and effective than is the british. it is a mixed system: the only reason that it is not a part of the debate concerning potential models for a system less barbaric than the present one in the states--which operates according to a logic that (i'll say this again) amounts to the assumption that the lives of the children of the wealthy are worth more than the lives of the children of the poor---seems to me a function of linguistic ignorance/chauvinism (take your pick, they're the same thing from different angles). the french system delivers better health care on a more equitably basis than does the american and than does the british/canadian model. period. it is also a curiously bureaucratic system which profiles in the way the french state does--which is based on a different legal tradition than you have in the states--so if the americans were to come to their collective senses and realise that there is something ethically Wrong about a medical system that is stratified on class lines in terms of access and were to adopt the french model, it would look quite differently than it does in france.
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06-19-2007, 06:12 AM | #16 (permalink) |
Asshole
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Location: Chicago
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roachboy - I certainly agree with your universal logic arguement, and I have no experience or knowledge of the French system and will defer to those that do.
That said, the health insurance industry works within the free market. Perhaps that is a better term than the overarching "capitalism". The free market allows consumers, whether they be corporate or individual, to chose the plan that best meets their needs and budget. The obvious flaw is the group that can't (or in some cases won't) pay the premiums necessary to offset their risk. Those people end up costing the system billions of dollars and remains one of the biggest reasons that doctors and hospitals agitate for higher prices from the insurers. The insurers, on the other hand, can demonstrate that their clients/insureds do not deserve to pay the higher prices because they are in better health and cost less to treat. They also have the benefit of group negotiations.
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"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - B. Franklin "There ought to be limits to freedom." - George W. Bush "We have met the enemy and he is us." - Pogo |
06-19-2007, 06:33 AM | #17 (permalink) |
Psycho
Location: Sweden - Land of the sodomite damned
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I just saw Sicko and I was shocked by seeing how the less fortunate can be treated. I'm seriously going to stop complaining about high taxes here in Sweden. For the first time in my life I'm actually happy we have them (And how fucked up is that?).
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If atheism is a religion, then not collecting stamps is a hobby. |
06-19-2007, 09:30 AM | #18 (permalink) | ||||||||||||
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Jazz, so you're saying doctors (who are making less than in the 80s and 90s), new technology (something that has always been present in medicine), and drug companies (I COMPLETELY AGREE ON THIS ONE). I have trouble believing that the skyrocketing costs can really be attributed to doctors or technology in any big way. When I was getting my heart surgery in the late 80s, the Catscan machines and EKG machines were very expensive. As I understand it, as a layman who's simply spent a lot of time talking to doctors, a great deal of the money is going into administration, insurance, and prescriptions. I would call those the big three reasons, based on my understanding. May I ask what you would do to help those 45m who are uninsured in the capitalist system you were describing? Quote:
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06-19-2007, 10:16 AM | #21 (permalink) | |||
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06-19-2007, 10:39 AM | #22 (permalink) | ||
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New technologies cost more than I think you realize. The cutting edge machines can run into the millions of dollars now, but I'll conceed the point for the moment since it's not a huge part of my equation. Administration is another large cost, but no more so than in the past, even with HIPPA. Malpractice insurance varies greatly from doctor to doctor. Some (usually general practicioners) buy it individually. Most buy it through a group or hospital. Malpractice coverage skyrocketed a few years ago for a few reasons, one of the chief ones being that some new models came out showing that claims were beginning to skyrocket. Illinois's largest malpratice carrier is a mutual (meaning it's owned by its insureds), and they had to charge a significant increase in order to stay solvent. The reason for the model changes came from the number of new malpractice claims out there as well as the higher verdict amounts. Many lawyers found some easy targets in the medical community, particularly among doctors with addiction problems. Whether the doctor did anything wrong or not started to become less relevant since a cocaine problem basically demonized the defendant from the start. will, I'm a liability broker. You're lucky that I know all the big words that I do. I can't fix anything because it's not something I have any hands-on knowledge about; ask me about fixing the 3rd party liability system and I can offer opinions until I'm blue in the face. That qualifier firmly in place, I will venture to say that some of the uninsured are just dumb. I can't be any nicer than that because if you have the ability to buy health coverage and chose not to, I find that to be a completely selfish and frankly moronic decision. You may be young and healthy today, but that doesn't mean that a Flying Elvis isn't going to come hurtling out of the sky and break your pelvis or that you won't develop drug resistant TB because jackoff thought it was ok to fly internationally on your flight to Buenos Aires. That's not the position of the majority of uninsureds, however. For those who can't afford the coverage for whatever reason, I think that there needs to be an amalgom of forced placement and public subsidies. I imagine it working where the state pays the majority of the premium with the individual contributing what they can, possibly on a sliding scale. That doesn't work for the truly desititute, and I don't have a quick and easy solution for those.
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"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - B. Franklin "There ought to be limits to freedom." - George W. Bush "We have met the enemy and he is us." - Pogo |
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06-19-2007, 10:49 AM | #23 (permalink) | ||||||
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Nothing about Jeb Bush and his european Cuban south florida political base, and their influence on keeping up the financial and trade embargo on CUba and it's effect on Cuba's healthcare system..... Instead of wondering why third world Cuba, hobbled by extreme economic conditions and by the US embargo, still manages a lower infant mortality rate, per the CIA Factbook data, compared to the rate in the US, powerclown tows his "party line"....let's cut apart Michael Moore !!!!!!!!! It's old, powerclown....sheeeesh !!!!!!!!! Quote:
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06-19-2007, 11:01 AM | #25 (permalink) | ||
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That said, it's not going to happen. For one thing, lots of folks don't want it to, particularly Congressmen who have large healthcare insurers employing people in their jurisdiction. All those folks would either immediately be out of work or become federal employees. Most likely, the group would become a combination of the two. Assuming I live as long as the actuaries say I'm going to (about another 50 years), it's possible that we'll make some great strides in that direction within my lifetime. It won't happen overnight, and it won't happen without the current uninsured being taken care of first. It's the necessary progression, especially given the current legislative climate. I don't see that happening until at least 2010, and as I mentioned in my first post, I have no idea where they're going to raise the money. Maybe they'll take Rod Blagoevich's worst idea ever and put a gross receipts tax on every business in the country. Quote:
Then there's the problem of who ISN'T going to be included in the group. There's the very real problem of discrimination based on real or perceived disadvantages to allowing someone to participate. The issue of pre-existing conditions, etc. would only increase it. The big question is exactly how it would be set up, whether or not there would be an amount retained by the pool somehow to offset the risk and if people wanted multiple options. I can give you more details if you'd like, but I can't really do it without using some techical terms. There's also the issue of fraud against the consumer, where the administrator of the purchasing group would take the money and run. My own company was the victim of that about 8 or 9 years of that. Given who's doing this, there's not much chance, but it exists. Basically, my point was that both sides need to make sure that the other one has all the right legal controls in place
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"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - B. Franklin "There ought to be limits to freedom." - George W. Bush "We have met the enemy and he is us." - Pogo |
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06-19-2007, 11:04 AM | #26 (permalink) | |||||||
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What if just emergency care were covered in a social program like fire and police? It's dealing with the immediate problem, which seems more than comparable to fire crime (firemen prevent the fire from getting worse, doctors prevent the wound from getting worse; firemen put out the fire, doctors clean and stitch the wound). I'm wondering if you could sit down with a man that works two jobs and still can't afford health coverage and tell him, "You're SOL." Quote:
Do you have statistical information available to you on this? I think it'd be really helpful. I know most doctors are against socialized medicine (and a lot of that has to do with the fact that they believe they'll be making a lot less and seeing a lot more patients, which is a big fat myth). Quote:
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MM is right about this, there is a problem. Last edited by Willravel; 06-19-2007 at 11:05 AM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost |
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06-19-2007, 11:11 AM | #27 (permalink) | |
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No more bullshit, powerclown. Moore has found a way to get people's attention, to make them think and to discuss our real problems, He's only a messenger.....WTF is your purpose......your agenda????? |
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06-19-2007, 11:34 AM | #28 (permalink) | |||||
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As far as single payer - no. Not at all. Single payer means that someone pays all of their own bills outside the health insurance system. They are the "single payer". My proposal would have the individual apply through the state, be assigned a health insurer who's already writing business in the state and assigned into a plan with the payment burden being shouldered by the state for the most part.
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"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - B. Franklin "There ought to be limits to freedom." - George W. Bush "We have met the enemy and he is us." - Pogo |
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06-19-2007, 11:55 AM | #29 (permalink) | |||||
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Those who can afford health insurance, have no preexisting conditions and don't get it are dumbfucks. On that we agree. Quote:
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06-19-2007, 12:01 PM | #30 (permalink) |
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I am admittedly an extremist when it comes to the issue of health care. I believe that allowing citizens to be destroyed by illness is as bad as allowing their homes to be bombed by a foreign country. Lack of access to health care is a weapon of mass destruction that has killed far more Americans than terrorists could dream of. Denying adequate health care on the basis of finances is in my mind akin to levying the death penalty for poverty. But like I said, I'm a wee bit of an extremist on this issue.
I support all efforts that result in more people having better access to comprehensive health care, but the only ultimate goal of my tack is to achieve universal, comprehensive, guaranteed health care for every single citizen regardless of any factor beyond their need for care. It's not a question of whether we can afford it or not. We can't afford not to. It's not about addressing the needs of poor people or working people or rich people. It is for all people regardless. It's not about getting companies to shoulder the burden. Companies should be able to focus on their business, not covering their employees' medical costs. It's about the fact that American citizens are dying because our health care system is not comprehensive, nor universal. Working parents are unable to cover their children. Elderly have to gamble on which card will cover what they need to stay healthy. Young people around the country are routinely weighing the cost of medical insurance against getting a college education or making other important investments in their future. More bankrupties are due to medical costs than all other factors combined. Yeah, I'm an extremist; I admit it. I believe that this issue is one of great moral and social importance and if we don't improve matters, our children will have every right to be ashamed of our actions, and look sadly back on us when they read their history books. |
06-19-2007, 12:02 PM | #31 (permalink) |
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Did you know that Moore is as popular in Syria as he is in Beverly Hills? I have to draw the line when Michael Moore and fanatic hezbollah terrorist maniac Hassan Nasrallah espouse the same opinions of America. This is not to say there is nothing in a conversation on the state of the American health system of course, just that Moore is a most unfortunate medium by which to raise peoples awareness on an important issue.
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06-19-2007, 12:13 PM | #33 (permalink) | |
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06-19-2007, 12:15 PM | #34 (permalink) | |
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According to this page, about 20% of the average French gross salary goes into the incredible system they have, which is the most expensive of all social medical programs in the world. Germany is about 13%, according to this site. This lists the average annual rates for people of different ages under the UK's NHS. Note that even at NHS's most expensive, it's only $220 per month, which is probably a lot less than the national average in the US. Last edited by Willravel; 06-19-2007 at 12:30 PM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost |
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06-19-2007, 12:42 PM | #35 (permalink) |
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will, I'm not talking about anything like prisons in the slightest. Let me elaborate my point and perhaps make it clearer:
An individual, for whatever reason, finds himself without insurance. He applies to the state fund. The state takes the next insurance carrier in the queue (as a part of the benefit of writing health insurance for anyone in the state all carriers join the pool) and assigns that carrier to the individual who then underwrites the individual and assigns them a premium. The state then pays a significant portion of that premium with the individual paying the rest. The individual thereby has healthcare coverage. There are some big pitfalls that even someone like myself who only knows enough to be dangerous about health insurance can see. Namely, is the individual treated as such or is there a greater plan in place that is accessible? Is there a deductible or retention in place for the state? How do you pay for it? Is there a cap on the coverage? There are others beyond this, but these 3 seem good enough to start. The carrier has to administer everything, make the payments and negotiate the terms with the providers. The state takes the financial burden. The individual has the coverage and, at least theoretically, contributes. I don't know where your prison analogy came from, will. Honestly, that question disturbs me because I thought up to now that I'd done a decent job describing what I had in mind, but apparently I wasn't even close.
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"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - B. Franklin "There ought to be limits to freedom." - George W. Bush "We have met the enemy and he is us." - Pogo |
06-19-2007, 12:49 PM | #36 (permalink) | |
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06-19-2007, 12:59 PM | #37 (permalink) | |||
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06-19-2007, 01:02 PM | #38 (permalink) |
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Understandable. I was definately skeptical when I heard that Micheal Moore was making another film. Yet, after watching it, I have to admit that his argument was pursuasive, informative and well defined. Even his usual bias was subdued.
It certainly doesn't lack in poignancy either. Last edited by Ch'i; 06-19-2007 at 01:04 PM.. |
06-19-2007, 01:44 PM | #39 (permalink) | |
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According to the WHO's international health statistics, here are some intersting points: Per capita total expenditure on health (% of GDP in parenthesis) and the percentage that is paid through government expenditure: Australia: $3,123 (9.6%) - 67.5% government Canada: $3,038 (9.8%) - 69.8% government France: $3,464 (10.5%) - 78.4% government Germany: $3,521 (10.6%) - 76.9% government India: $31 (5.0%) - 17.3% government Italy: $2,580 (8.7%) - 75.1% government Japan: $2,823 (7.8%) - 81.3% government New Zealand: $2,040 (8.4%) - 77.4% government Norway: $5,405 (9.7%) - 83.5% government Russia: $245 (6.0%) - 61.3% government Sweden: $3,532 (9.1%) - 84.9% government United Kingdom: $2,900 (8.1%) - 86.3% government United States: $6,096 (15.4%) - 44.7% government Why are we Americans, supposed masters of getting the best deal, so willing to pay so much for so little? 15.4% of our GDP! That's 50% more than most any other developed nation, and even then a huge swathe of people are left with inadequate care. Only one nation in the world (Tuvalu, at 16.6%) spends more. I have no problem spending the money that needs to be spent, but please can we get some better value for our money? One thing I don't know about this statistic is whether it includes only money actually spent on health care, or all the money spent on the organizations that pay for the health care (i.e. does it only count money paid to doctors, or all the cost of premiums)? If the former (which I suspect) then we really pay a lot more on top of our 15.4% to support the insurance industry. When I hear that we can't afford it, I cringe. France has a fine system of health care, and does it for 2/3 the cost of our system and covers everyone in the country to boot. I know there is not a system in the world that is without issues, but many of these countries routinely are rated as providing better health care across the board than the average care in the United States, and here many people can't even get that. |
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06-19-2007, 02:21 PM | #40 (permalink) |
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Location: essex ma
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i cant imagine caring what conservatives think of michael moore.
it seems par for the course that when confronted with problematic information in the context of a film he made, the response is "moore is a blowhard" or some other such. not able to mount a coherent critique of the positions outlined, or anything remotely like a solution to the problems he raises--unwilling to even acknowledge there is a problem (except to say that moore "trivializes" it by being the person who made sicko)--all that remains is ad hominem. well, moore is not my favorite documentary film-maker--he is not even on the list of the top 10 or 15 i just drew up in my head as i sit here---but he is pretty good at presenting complex problems in a well-researched way to a popular audience across a medium that folk generally view as entertainment. like any documentary film-maker, this presentation comes in the form of arguments, and the arguments are clear--whether you agree with them or not, they ARE clear. there are often problems or holes with the arguments, and personally i sometimes wish that someone else would make these films--but the fact is that moore does what he does and it is good that he does it BECAUSE like the films or not, from whatever political perspective, they generate debates and they also provide a coherent starting point for those debate. this is very different from conservative opinion management tactics, which substitute superficial and crude sloganeering for analysis, which when analysis does happen uses indefensable categories in crude ways to generate conclusions that are of a piece with the political starting point of a piece and which are NOT about fostering the messy process of debate across all positions, but only debate with those who are Other. and even that's not debate. it is slogan rehearsal. you know, shit like "michael moore is a blowhard"... so powerclown: if you dont like moore, make different, better films. go for it. i am sure its easy--if you think michael moore is such a fool, then you must also think that what he does is easy, and so prove how easy it is and do some films yourself. do it and show the results. then we'll see what is actually up, yes? it's like walking around a contemporary art gallery with someone who looks around and says: "well that's stupid: i could have done that" to which the only response is "why didnt you?"
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite Last edited by roachboy; 06-19-2007 at 02:26 PM.. |
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