
Originally Posted by
spitvenom
I had a feeling you did so I knew you would give a straight answer. So you put out 1500 a month. Doesn't it make you a little mad that you still have to pay co-pays, get generic drugs not name brand, and still could be denied some type of treatment. You are paying for something and you still may not get what you want.
Yes, it sometimes does.
However, the alternative with government-run single-payer insurance is that if I am denied, I HAVE NO OPTIONS.
In the current system, if my insurance denies me the service or product I need, I have the option of buying that service or product myself. Or obtaining it through a charity. There are options. Those options may be expensive, and paying the extra cost may piss me off.
But in a single-payer system, if I am denied that product or service I have no other option to obtain it. If the seervice or product is delayed due to long lines, I have no other option for getting it.
I would rather have a system where I am forced to pay more than I really want in order to get what I need to stay healthy or get better than have a system where I cannot obtain what I need no matter what I'm willing to pay.
There's a reason that so many Canadians come over the border to the USA for their medical care. If they were denied the care in Canada, they have no other way of obtaining it. If they are being forced to wait on lines until the treatment becomes available, they STILL have no other way of obtaining. The only one allowed to pay for a medical service in Canada is the government.
Whereas, if I am denied care by my insurance, I can STILL get that treatment by paying for it myself. Yes, I'll be angry about it. And I will probably challenge my insurance company on it. And if I don't get satisfaction, I might change insurance companies.
But better the option of being angry than no option at all.
True skinny people do get Stress test etc. But if a third of the country wasn't obese I think we would have a lot less.
I HOPE not. Hopefully if 1/3 of the country wasn't obese, we'd just have fewer stress tests that come back POSITIVE and more that come back NEGATIVE. I would hope that the country getting healthier didn't result in a reduction of preventive health care.
I am not saying get Frances health care system here and run with it. I am saying look at what works and how it can be applied here. Look at all the health care system and pick what works and what doesn't.
That I can agree with.
But here's the kicker... any part that has the government involved is the part that doesn't work.
Australia has a good two-tier government/private system. So does Israel. The government system covers CATASTROPHIC CARE ONLY, maybe with a few odds and ends added in after that. But basically it's catastrophic care. Anything over and above that, you pay for private/supplemental insurance.
I would be willing to look at government-run catastrophic care.
But we already HAVE catastrophic care in the USA. Between the EMTALA law and the provisions of Medicaid (for the impoverished) and Medicare (for the elderly and disabled), free clinics (some of which are government-run), charitable foundations for medical aid, the COBRA laws, etc. we already have a pretty good catastrophic-care option in place. And I'm all in favor of improving that catastrophic care by fixing the rules in Medicare and Medicaid and COBRA and EMTALA to help those who fall through their cracks.
But I am against giving the government more power than that. When a government has more power than that, that's when we, the average joes have historically gotten screwed by the government.
True health care reform, as I have said before, has to come from other places.
We need tort reform. Tort reform alone would lower the costs of medical care by as much as 60%. We could use the Texas model, which created a panel that decides whether medical malpractice cases have merit BEFORE they ever get to trial. In the past two years, this has resulted in an influx of doctors into Texas, lower malpractice insurance premiums, a decrease in defensive medicine, and an across-the-board decrease in medical expenses.
We can lower the cost of health care instantly by making health costs (including insurance premiums, copays, out of pocket costs, etc.) tax free. That equates to a roughly 30% decrease in the cost of health care in real dollars.
We can increase health insurance portability between states and open up insurance companies to competition. Right now someone living in a state can only buy medical insurance in that state. Some states only have one or two insurance companies. That limits competition and drives up costs. By changing those rules, we increase competition and lower insurance premium costs almost instantly... and can count on better service as well.
We can change the laws to allow for "build-your-own-policy" insurance systems. You pay a basic (very low) amount for catastrophic care, and then buy the additional options you want for yourself and your family. You pay ONLY for what you need, and get only what you want. If you want wellcare visits for your children, but don't want to pay for massage therapy that you're never going to use, you can do that, and end up paying less than for a policy that has "everything" except the option to opt out. That would make at least catastrophic or basic care MUCH MORE ACCESSIBLE to low income families and decrease the number of uninsured.
We can lower taxes in general in order to increase disposable income, and make insurance more affordable to everyone.
We need to look at DEREGULATING the medical industry not increasing the regulations. The largest cost to any hospital, health care provider, etc. after medical malpractice costs is the cost of compliance with government regulations. I spent 3 years working for a large NY State-run hospital in Hospital Administration. I saw the numbers. It was stagering how much a hospital, even a well-run hospital, spends on complaince issues. Ditto for drug companies, and insurance companies. I'm not saying we should have NO regulation, but what we've got now is overkill, and it's hurting the American people. We need to lower those regulatory costs.
We need to DE-UNIONIZE the hospitals. Right now, a union-shop hospital essentially has the same problem that GM and Chrystler had before their banruptcies. Union hospitals pay for THREE WORKFORCES: The one that is currently working, the pensions for the ones that retired in the past 20 years, and the pensions of those who retired MORE than 20 years ago. Plus the union payments they have to make. Plus the cost of redundancy of employment required by union contracts. (Unions force employers to have two employees for some positions where just one employee would be sufficient. That's one of the tricks unions use to keep their annual dues up.) The health care employment costs associated with unions is astronomical, and just as that model could not be sustained by GM and Chrystler, it cannot be sustained by the medical community either. This needs to be reformed.
Since private insurance is cheaper when you have group coverage, let everyone who is collecting unemployment insurance in every state form their own group via the state unemployment office. This group can then find the group coverage that suits them best. Even if they have to pay out of pocket, they'll be paying group rates that are cheaper than trying to pay the individual rate. (Or as an alternative, allow the formation of insurance co-ops NOT RUN BY THE GOVERNMENT, which amounts to essentially the same thing.) This is a VERY viable option for lowering costs, especially in these economic times.
As an ABSOLUTE LAST RESORT, the government could give uninsured citizens a stipend to pay for their health insurance (adjustable based on family size). It could be in the form of a check or in the form of a health care voucher accepted by insurance companies. This stipend would have a time limitation built in so that it doesn't become an "evergreen" welfare program. But it will give families some time to get their feet back under them after a job loss that lasts more than a couple of months by allowing them to purchase the insurance plan of their choice. It is NOT meant to be a permanent benefit and should have a cut-off of, say, 18 months or 2 years. After that, you're on COBRA and pay for your insurance yourself.
You see, there are a lot of options to look at other than government-run health care models. We need to stop looking at France, the UK, Canada, Belgium and any other country for our "model" and build our OWN model based on good, strong, effective free-market principals. We don't need to model ourselves on other countries, and we CERTAINLY don't have to completely change a system that works over 90% of the time for over 90% of the people. The sledgehammer approach to fixing health care (destroy the entire system in order to replace it with a new one) can't work. But we have options that CAN work and have worked in the past when they were allowed to and weren't interfered with from the outside.
I'm not against reforming our health care system, Spitvenom. I'm against THE PROPOSALS COMING FROM THE LEFT, because there are better, more effective reforms available that allow more personal freedom and still lower cost and increase accessibility.
Elliot