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Near-universal Mexican Healthcare Coverage Results From Science-informed Changes

ananyo writes about improvement to Mexico's healthcare system. From the article: "A revamp of Mexico's beleaguered health-care system is proving to be a runaway success and offers a model for other nations seeking to reform their own systems, according to a review published this week in The Lancet (abstract). The key to the scheme's success is the way in which it has modified its reforms in response to scientific assessments of their effectiveness, the authors say. Launched in a law in 2003, the Mexican scheme was designed to sort out widespread inefficiencies and inconsistencies in the country's health-care system. Some 50 million Mexicans — nearly half the country's population — who previously were not covered by health insurance are now enrolled, leading the scheme's architects to claim that the country has near-universal health-care coverage. As well as the increased coverage, the scheme has seen the number of conditions treated under Mexican public health insurance nearly quintuple. Admittedly, the former health minister Julio Frenk, now dean of the Harvard School of Public Health, is a co-author on the paper."

732 comments

  1. Here I come. by zippo01 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So will I have to go to Mexico for my low price drugs now? Sorry Canada

    1. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So will I have to go to Mexico for my low price drugs now? Sorry Canada

      No. This mean that the United States are the new Mexico. Enjoy your third-world country while it last, each year there are less and less of them.

    2. Re:Here I come. by MagusSlurpy · · Score: 4, Funny

      I don't know about you, but that's already where *I* go. Avoid that nasty border tariff. Plus, they aren't that funky blue color down there, like they are around Albuquerque.

      --
      My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells by the seashore.
    3. Re:Here I come. by Gordonjcp · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You get used to facebook having a "Like" button. Slashdot needs one, for people who don't currently have mod points to go "+1 Funny"

    4. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      No, thanks to a dedication to the free market, BRAVE MEXICAN Capitalists will BRING the Drugs to you.

      Yes, they will brave this COMMUNIST Hellhole for the sake of profit. How noble of them!

    5. Re:Here I come. by Internetuser1248 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Until the Mexican government builds a massive electrified fence all the way across the northern border to stop impoverished US immigrants from stealing their jobs.

    6. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fortunately these Mexican Capitalist Heroes will not let a mere fence stop them. They are building Catapults and Submarines as we speak!

      Besides, I'm pretty sure the Mexican government will let them put up ladders.

    7. Re:Here I come. by crazyjj · · Score: 1

      Because they've solved the healthcare problem, not the income problem.

      --
      What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
    8. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but maybe they will stop coming to the U.S. to have their babies now since they have Universal Healthcare.

    9. Re:Here I come. by Dishevel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And they would.
      Mexico has, ironically a very strict immigration policy.
      While they demand every right in the book for their people coming here. They give no rights or services at all to illegal immigrants there.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    10. Re:Here I come. by firex726 · · Score: 1

      Well you can go to Mexico and see a Dentist and get a procedure at 1/4 the cost of the US; there are even Medical Tours you can take.
      *Plus I can go next door and buy some sweet sweet morphine off the local dealer when my procedure is finished.

    11. Re:Here I come. by samkass · · Score: 1

      (Some of us can only tolerate Slashdot when they change their settings to -5 Funny.)

      --
      E pluribus unum
    12. Re:Here I come. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Dealer? I think you mean pharmacist. You walk into the place and they will write you a legal script.

    13. Re:Here I come. by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You mean, the US, with its state of the art, best of breed health care is worse than covering everyone with crappy care that doesn't offer nearly the same care as available in the US?

      100% coverage that is crappy isn't an improvement.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    14. Re:Here I come. by P-niiice · · Score: 1

      Those problems overlap pretty heavily here in the US. We need to learn a thing or two from Mexico. Seperate the two and maybe we'll make some progress.

    15. Re:Here I come. by Nadaka · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Mexico isn't demanding rights for mexicans immigrating to the US.

      The fucking US constitution demands rights for all people regardless of citizenship (everything but the right to vote).

      It is the mexican immigrants themselves asking for access to services that may or may not be offered under various state and local laws.

      Get your shit right.

    16. Re:Here I come. by tlhIngan · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You mean, the US, with its state of the art, best of breed health care is worse than covering everyone with crappy care that doesn't offer nearly the same care as available in the US?

      100% coverage that is crappy isn't an improvement.

      It's a supply-and-demand problem.

      Canada and Mexico healthcare is basically "free" so demand is high, while supply is limited. Naturally standard of care goes down in order to increase supply. It's also why you get waiting lists and all that.

      US healthcare is expensive, and supply is high, but demand is low (as fewer can afford it, though I thought Obamacare was supposed to fix that). Hence lots of money to spend on shiny new toys to fix people, and no waiting lists. (Of course, there are other costs as well - like people delaying trips to the doctor so they can get more ailments before seeking treatment...).

      Unfortunately, I don't think anyone's figured out where the curves meet, probably because it's considered a basic necessity for a functioning society

    17. Re:Here I come. by afidel · · Score: 4, Informative

      Uh, by just about every objective standard the US is one of the lowest developed nation when it comes to healthcare outcomes is and absolutely the worst when it comes to outcome per dollar spent. How anyone who has ever been involved with the US system of healthcare providers and insurance companies could want to keep it is beyond me.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    18. Re:Here I come. by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      Until the Mexican government builds a massive electrified fence all the way across the northern border to stop impoverished US immigrants from stealing their jobs.

      If the ministers are afraid that the impoverished US immigrants will steal their jobs, does that mean that the Mexican government is a bunch of incompetent jerks in fear of being replaced, or does that mean that the impoverished US immigrants are all liberal arts/political science graduates who didn't get voted for in US elections and could get no useful job at home?

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    19. Re:Here I come. by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The US fails, because it has a HUGE middle man bureaucracy that skims 20% off the top called Insurance. IF I got my "benefits" as salary, I could be much more efficient in my health care dollars than Insurance.

      Case in point, I can get my meds via Insurance for $25 (co-pay) or I can go to Walmart and get them for $12 (which I do). I have insurance, but it is more expensive to use than paying cash. That is not efficient.

      My daughter just spent 4 hours in Emergency, the Insurance paid (after discounts) 16,000. Four grand per hour?

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    20. Re:Here I come. by hoggoth · · Score: 2

      > How anyone who has ever been involved with the US system of healthcare providers and insurance companies could want to keep it is beyond me.

      I think the ones getting million dollar checks from the Healthcare system are pretty pleased with it.
      That would include the insurance company execs and the congressmen they've purchased.

      --
      - For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat /dev/random (may take some time)
    21. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slashdot doesn't have a "like" button because you are supposed to contribute to the discussion by writing a comment. If you want arbitrary voting on posts, take a look at Reddit.

    22. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You mean, the US, with its state of the art, best of breed health care is worse than covering everyone with crappy care that doesn't offer nearly the same care as available in the US?

      Yes.

      Healthcare per capita in the USA is more than double that of France, but the life expectancy of a US newborn is less.

      The USA pays more per person for healthcare than Australia, Austria, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Japan, Luxembourg, New Zealand, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and UK, and has lower life expectancy than any of them.

      The USA spends more than four times what South Korea spends per person on healthcare, and has lower life expectancy.

      So the answer to your question is an emphatic "yes".

    23. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I call bull.
      Many of the surveys of “outcomes” that show other countries spend less for similar or better healthcare than the United States are just intentionally disingenuous (i.e., they lie). The ultimate example is the U.N.’s 2000 World Health Report, which has been extensively cited by the media. For instance, the study included high-speed auto fatalities and murders in their assessment of a country’s life expectancy; people then cite that life expectancy to indict the U.S. healthcare system. Americans drive more often on a more extensive highway system than most others, and we sadly have more crime than many. Reputable studies exclude these fatalities as, while tragic, they are not the fault of the healthcare system and should not be used to judge or modify the healthcare system. With these fatalities excluded, the U.S. ranks 1st in the world on life expectancy. With them included, we rank 19th, based on the UN WHO report. The studies of infant mortality may be even worse, with the comparisons of what constitutes a live birth (and thus an opportunity for mortality) substantially different across countries, with the United States holding itself to the highest standard (and thus producing worse statistics).

      Part of the reason we spend more is other countries have price controls and we don’t. For instance, they restrict the amount drug companies can charge much more than we do. That sounds great; price controls save us money! But if nobody pays for new drugs, they don’t ever get created. Without these controls, our consumers here indeed pay more, but that funds much of the life-saving and life-extending healthcare innovation available for Americans and the rest of the world. It is frankly unfair that the world is free-riding off us. Free-riding means they let us pay for the innovation that benefits them at lower cost. But if nobody pays for the innovation, the innovation just does not happen. If we try to free-ride off ourselves, it doesn’t work—innovation dies for us too. U.S. consumers paying fair prices (not government restricted artificially low prices) does lead to higher U.S. healthcare costs, but the alternative is far worse: Joining the world in severely limiting prices, and not seeing the next generations of new innovations and improvements.

    24. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh the multi-irony!

      1. Slashdot already has a "Like" button. It's just way more advanced, since it doesn't let every idiot use it, but only those with enough karma who are not too new or old.
      2. "+1, Funny" is the only moderation that doesn’t give/take karma, so it’s also the only kind of moderation that is not at all like a "Like" button.
      3. We even have meta-moderation against moderator abuse. (Doesn't work well though.)

      In fact, the only thing missing, is that karma is an absolute value instead of one relative to the reader, since that would prevent the groupthink that made the whole system useless to me. (Reddit has the same problem.)
      I suggested a better system to CmdrTaco & co many years ago, but apparently this is just too much of a mental jump for them, so they are incapable of imagining how it would work

    25. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would be reddit.

    26. Re:Here I come. by Papaspud · · Score: 1

      I'm OK with the Mexican immigrants, it's the ILLEGAL immigrants that most Americans have a problem with. Maybe you haven't noticed, but we are borrowing 40% of the money we are spending right now. I feel sorry for the younger people growing now and to be born, they are getting saddled with a giant debt that will lower this countries standard of living for all but the very wealthy. I am pretty sure when they wrote the constitution, they weren't thinking about equal healthcare for all, citizen or not. I could be wrong, in any case.............. Just my opinion.

      --
      Everything above is my opinion....YMMV
    27. Re:Here I come. by Dishevel · · Score: 0

      Hmm.
      Nice. "The fucking US constitution". Really well done.
      "Get your shit right."

      You mad bro?
      The Mexican government has sued US states over immigration laws.
      The Mexican government has been known for quite some time to actively lobby on behalf of its illegal immigrants in the US.
      Good or bad is not what I am debating here. Have your own opinion if you like. Those are facts.
      Also Mexican immigration policy is fact as well. God forbid some "Dirty fucking Central American scum bag" get government assistance in Mexico.
      The US constitution does not in anyplace I have seen state that illegal immigration should be forgiven as a crime. Nor does it state that as long as they are poor stealing identities is cool. The US Constitution says nothing about giving government benefits to illegal aliens.

      The juxtaposition between what Mexico has been very vocal about expecting from the US on its immigration policies and their own immigration policies are what I was pointing out. Your anger is out of place. I did not twist facts or lie. I did not compare apples and oranges.
      I only pointed out a truth.

      Your automated anger filled response says a lot about you. Very little about the subject.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    28. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You need to look at this graphic before announcing the US has "best of breed" health care. That is the myth that keeps biting us in the rear. We are assuming all that money is actually buying us something. And yes, 100% coverage of any kind is better than a dual tier system where the haves get massively expensive care and the have-nots are left without.

      http://blogs.ngm.com/.a/6a00e0098226918833012876a6070f970c-800wi

    29. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's actually worse than that. You know how much Medicare typically pays on the billed amount?

      20-30%...

      Private insurance only pays out about 30% more than that.

      Seriously.

      And people are clamoring for MORE of that same if they're for Obamacare.

    30. Re:Here I come. by scot4875 · · Score: 2

      State of the art, best of breed for those who can afford it.

      Shitty, expensive, and slow for everybody else. We're the only industrialized country in the world that has a concept of "medical bankruptcy" for a reason.

      Your talking points are years old and have been refuted soundly. If you're going to argue against socialized healthcare, at least come up with something that isn't so obviously wrong.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    31. Re:Here I come. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Sounds about right. Between medical procedures, the cost of the nurses, doctors, EMTs and miscellaneous emergency room maintenance costs that are rolled into that, I can easily see 4 grand an hour.

      By the way, you might get your allergy meds for $12 at Walmart, but if you ever try to pay for a broken bone, whopping cough or heck, cancer, out of your own pocket, you'll be broke in no time flat.

      By the way, the 20% the insurance brokers skim off the top is only a fraction of the delta between healthcare costs in the US and pretty much everywhere else - and that is after accounting for quality of care.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    32. Re:Here I come. by TemporalBeing · · Score: 4, Insightful

      US healthcare is expensive, and supply is high, but demand is low (as fewer can afford it, though I thought Obamacare was supposed to fix that). Hence lots of money to spend on shiny new toys to fix people, and no waiting lists. (Of course, there are other costs as well - like people delaying trips to the doctor so they can get more ailments before seeking treatment...).

      No ObamaCare won't do any such thing in actuality; though it may pretend to do so it will actually make all the costs go up as it lacks any actual cost control mechanism. Their ideas was "make everyone get it and the insurers will lower their prices" but it doesn't work that way - especially when the insurers are the number one or two problem (the other being malpractice lawsuits, which again ObamaCare does nothing to cure).

      If you want real health reform in the US, then you have to address malpractice lawsuits in some meaningful manner, and also address the fact that insurance companies do everything they can to keep from paying anything - which results in 3, 4, or more appeals before a doctor gets paid - each appeal making costs higher as it requires money to file, and personnel to file and track - people that could otherwise be helping service patients. Solve those to things and health care costs will drop dramatically.

      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
    33. Re:Here I come. by pkinetics · · Score: 1

      Hee hee... so all the ACs can rate things up??? I think not.

      For some reason, I can see goatse getting rated with a thousands of likes...

    34. Re:Here I come. by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      No, you're missing the point entirely. Did I say *anything* about voting stuff up?

      It would give a mechanism to see how many people agree or disagree with a post, without the flood of useless "lol me too!11!!!1!!!!!1" AOLer posts that plague slashdot.

    35. Re:Here I come. by JosephTX · · Score: 2

      There seems to be a common misconception that no other country could POSSIBLY have better overall health care than the US. What makes you think that providing more coverage means lowering the average service quality? There are more choices than "good for a few" or "crappy for all"; just look at every other developed country in the world.

      But let's just go by this stupid, arbitrary video-game rule where everything has to be balanced out to remain fair, and let's say that "good for a few" and "crappy for all" are the only choices. You know what would be best for most people? "Crappy for all", since crappy access to health care is better than no access to health care.

      And last but not least, LOL at "best of breed health care." Americans seem to think that hospitals are as shiny and seamless as the one House works in, but who can blame them? It's not like they ever get to step inside one.

    36. Re:Here I come. by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Absolutely well said. Also I might add, 100% health insurance coverage does not mean better (or 100%) healthcare goods and services. Also, one last point to add...the U.S. still has, by far, the best and most innovative healthcare system (and coverage) in the world. I suggest anyone interested to listen to this podcast, look at the links, and do some reading here: http://www.econtalk.org/archives/2012/07/scott_atlas_on.html

      The WHO report ranking the world's healthcare systems has been proven time and again to be a ridiculous, and very unbiased set of conclusions from their "scientific studies."

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    37. Re:Here I come. by JosephTX · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Good god, doesn't anyone know how to do a little reading on subjects before giving their lectures? As much as everyone hates insurance companies, they actually contribute very little overall to the cost of health care (less than 10%), and malpractice lawsuits contribute far less than even that. The BIGGEST contributor to the outrageous health care costs in the US is, by far, a lack of pricing regulations over pharmaceutical companies and manufacturers (which every other developed country in the world has) and a willingness by politicians (and insurance companies) to sign contracts with pharmaceutical businesses to meet their ridiculous prices. Why do you think people can go to Mexico to buy the same medicine for less than 1/10th of what they pay for it in the US? It's not like Mexico can afford to subsidize a wide variety of medicine; most of that stuff is completely unsubsidized. It's because pharmaceutical companies know they can charge outrageous prices for cheap medicine knowing that we'll buy it if we have to.

      And "Obamacare" does indeed address this issue, although nowhere near as much as it should, and that was even before it got neutered by the corporate henchmen we know as (mostly Republican) Congressmen. If you seriously think "real" health care reform is just making it impossible for people to sue for botched operations (which can already take years in many states, if it's even permitted), you need to stop watching Fox Noise.

    38. Re:Here I come. by loshwomp · · Score: 1

      The US fails, because it has a HUGE middle man bureaucracy that skims 20% off the top called Insurance.

      Maybe, but it's going to take more than that to explain why the US spends three times as much as the UK, per capita, and the US doesn't even get everyone covered in the process.

    39. Re:Here I come. by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1

      You mean, the US, with its state of the art, best of breed health care is worse than covering everyone with crappy care that doesn't offer nearly the same care as available in the US?

      100% coverage that is crappy isn't an improvement.

      Are you sure your comment isn't just a "God Bless America" comment meant to blindly rant against another country because it's getting more and more difficult to say the USA is the greatest nation in the world?

    40. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Insurance should be more expensive than paying cash. The insurance company is run for profit dude. The problem comes in when we find out how people get their insurance (from their job, which is stupid) and secondly what they use their insurance for (everything, which is also stupid and it's because of #1). Insurance is NOT a cost saving means for the insuree, if the product (healthcare) is used the vendor still needs to be paid, period, furthermore if there is a middleman between the provider and the consumer the costs will go up. Everybody involved needs to make a profit or they won't participate, that includes hospitals as an middleman as well as insurance. (except for in the olden days certain hospitals wouldn't charge poor people, but that particular institution is quite disdained...) the only way for the insuree to save money on healthcare is to not use it (or not use it for X, but does use it for Y). Insurance is ONLY a means to spread risk. That means if X happens it's going to cost you Z, no matter what. That's the cost of fixing X. Insurance allows you to spread the cost Z out over time. All in all that means you should only buy insurance for things that would cause great financial hardship if you got hit with the bill all at once, but not for the little stuff. You shouldn't use it for little stuff because it's going to cost more than paying up front. That's how the system works. Let me give you a car analogy: car insurance should only be used for near total destruction of your vehicle (not physically destroyed but rendered more to fix than to replace) or large damages (your fault) to another's property. You shouldn't use it for oil changes or brake jobs because total cost (insurance + user fees) will almost always be higher.

      That being said the current system in the US for health insurance is really fucked up, and if you can get a lower price via insurance take it. The fact that that happens should tell you that the system is goosed.

    41. Re:Here I come. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Canada and Mexico healthcare is basically "free" so demand is high, while supply is limited. Naturally standard of care goes down in order to increase supply. It's also why you get waiting lists and all that."

      That's an oversimplification. Take the case of Canada for example. It's not just a quantity problem but one of quality as well.

      First, there's the pay problem. A (formerly) Canadian doctor explained it to me: you get paid about the same whether you are a good doctor or a bad doctor, and there is much less spread in income for the different specialties than in the United States. According to him, motivation to be a good doctor, especially in a difficult specialty, is low. Quality of care suffers as a result.

      He really hated the Canadian system, which is why he now lives and practices here.

      But the quantity problem is also real. As a resident of a city that is a medical service hub for hundreds of thousands of square miles, including a decent chunk of Canada: you'd be surprised at how many Canadians will drive 800-1000 miles to get good medical care in the U.S., even though it's "free" where they come from.

      As you say: free or not, it doesn't matter much if you can't get it.

    42. Re:Here I come. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Good god, doesn't anyone know how to do a little reading on subjects before giving their lectures?"

      And the same back at ya.

      Insurance companies are INDIRECTLY responsible for a lot more of the cost than you are reporting. For example, without our insurance "system", prescription drugs would cost a fraction of what they do today. No, that's not a direct cost of insurance that shows on the books, but yes, it is very definitely due to our insurance coverage system.

      There are about a thousand other indirect ways that insurance companies drive up costs.

    43. Re:Here I come. by bogie · · Score: 1

      "IF I got my "benefits" as salary, I could be much more efficient in my health care dollars than Insurance."

      Good idea.... until you get into a car accident or slip and fall and break your hip and have chronic long term pain. Or have some other serious medical condition and it drains your life savings within months. I'm sure some Americans could make that work but not most.

      Fact: Most Americans are terrible at saving money, even ignoring the fact that salaries have been stagnating and our current situation makes saving difficult. If they enable "save and pay your own way" for everyone we'd all be doomed. The only solution is stop this partial Universal Healthcare crap and go Full Universal and abolish the current private Insurance system.

      50 years from now they'll be looking back and wondering what the hell we were thinking allowing private insurance to screw us so badly for so very long.

      --
      If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    44. Re:Here I come. by jeko · · Score: 3, Insightful

      US healthcare is expensive, and supply is high, but demand is low ... and no waiting lists.

      After a recent move, my wife was told by our "Gold-Plated, Big Expensive Best-of-Breed" insurance company that it was a 6-month wait to find a gynecologist in our new Major US City. We have friends in other places who have been told that there would be a one-year wait for an obstetrician. :-) Pediatricians are better, seeing as how they only asked for a three-month wait. I, being a middle-aged father, am of course invincible and have no need of medical care.

      We've seen this trend replicated in three different cities across the US. Our family and friends are seeing the same trends. We are both fortunate and blessed and are what passes for "well-off" in the current economy, meaning we can afford to buy new clothes and school supplies at the end of August. If WE are having issues, I cringe to imagine what it's like for people in the same situation I grew up in.

      My wife, who grew up in one of those Socialist Hellscapes Fox keeps warning us about, does not understand why any of this should be a problem. She likens living in the US to seeing a movie star in person. You're in love with the glamour until you meet the real person who dropped out of high school to indulge a drug addiction and eating disorder for a couple of decades.

      Unfortunately, I don't think anyone's figured out where the curves meet, probably because it's considered a basic necessity for a functioning society

      Healthcare, like the military, fire department, and the mail, is a classic market failure. Patients put their lives in the hands of their doctor. There is no time to haggle over price in an ambulance. Despite all the hoopla about "informed consent" and "patient responsibility," even doctors are discouraged from trying to treat their own illnesses, because people who are sick are by definition unable to make detached, clear-headed choices. Furthermore, patients haven't gone to medical school, didn't pass board specializations and haven't spent twenty years of their lives in a hospital. At some point, you have to trust your doctor, because Google and WebMD just doesn't cut it.

      That dependence and need for trust totally guts any power the patient might have in a business negotiation.

      I don't think anyone's figured out where the curves meet

      Sure they have. Given time, Demand will pay any price Supply asks. I'm a middle-aged father. Statistically speaking, I'll die from a preventable but untreated medical condition because I want to spare my family the worry and expense of my healthcare. But my kids? I'll go all unhinged John Winchester over that. My kid gets sick with anything worse than the sniffles, and I'll hand over my wallet, bank accounts, 401k, mortgage, whatever. You want it, it's yours.

      It gets worse. Even if YOU are able to negotiate in the marketplace for optimum services, what about those less fortunate than you? No, I'm not making a moral argument for charity. I've learned better than to try to argue for ethics or morality. I'm making an argument for YOUR health. We need a national healthcare system, and yes, you want to keep that alcoholic bum in the best health we possibly can -- and yeah, I'm including dental here -- because communicable diseases spread. Some random bum has a dental abscess that gives some bug a place to camp out, and suddenly he's literally spraying viruses every time he opens his mouth. Some poor busboy passes him on the way to work, and before you know it, your silverware's getting wiped down with that virus.

      Now, I know that some people don't wanna pay for that bum's healthcare, but you have to ask yourself. Do you wanna pay some tiny fraction of a percent for a national healthcare system, or do you want to pay for your personal lengthy hospitalization?

      --
      He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
    45. Re:Here I come. by ClickOnThis · · Score: 1

      US healthcare is expensive, and supply is high, but demand is low (as fewer can afford it, though I thought Obamacare was supposed to fix that). Hence lots of money to spend on shiny new toys to fix people, and no waiting lists. (Of course, there are other costs as well - like people delaying trips to the doctor so they can get more ailments before seeking treatment...).

      No ObamaCare won't do any such thing in actuality; though it may pretend to do so it will actually make all the costs go up as it lacks any actual cost control mechanism. Their ideas was "make everyone get it and the insurers will lower their prices" but it doesn't work that way - especially when the insurers are the number one or two problem (the other being malpractice lawsuits, which again ObamaCare does nothing to cure).

      Citations please? I'll wait...

      --
      If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
    46. Re:Here I come. by mspohr · · Score: 1

      Mexico has always had cheaper drugs than Canada.
      In California, it's easy to pop across the border to one on the pharmacies that serve medical tourists.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    47. Re:Here I come. by johnlcallaway · · Score: 1

      You forgot hospitals and doctors. Why should a three day/two night stay in a US hospital be billed at $42K, even though the insurance only has to pay $12K (actual values from my bills). I could get a luxury room in a hotel and a 24x7 private nurse for $42K. And probably have enough left over for the ambulance ride once or twice a day for the tests they ran.

      And how about specialists making $500K or more a year?

      Seems like there are plenty of places to reduce costs. If only there was some type of system so that people could get estimates for services to be rendered, shop around and compare costs, and find the place that suits them best?? Just like we do for cars???

      Here is an example of what is wrong. My son got hurt and didn't have any money, so he called a hospital to find out what it would cost to xray his ankle to see if it was broken. Because he knew if it was just sprained, there was very little anyone could do other than tell him to 'stay off it'. They hospital refused to quote a price, because there was no way they knew how much it could cost because they didn't know what was wrong. In other words, if all he wanted to get was an xray and have a doctor tell him if the ankle was broken, they wouldn't do it. So he told them 'never mind .. I'll try somewhere else'. The next day, he got a call back. They had arranged to have the exact service he wanted at a price he could afford as long as he was willing to accept the that the treatment was purely diagnostic in nature, and that no other services would be rendered. (As he thought, his ankle was just sprained and there was nothing they could have done for it anyway.)

      Second example: I have glaucoma and get pressure checks ever 4-6 months. I asked the doctor why his tech did a check, then he did. He said she did a screening check, while his was more accurate. I said that didn't make sense, if he always did it, why bother with the screening? His reply .. don't worry, your insurance covers it. When I explained that I had a high deductible plan and I had to pay for it, the screening stopped. I wonder how many tests are done 'because insurance covers it'.

      Funny how competition and questions can force hospitals to do what we want in the price range we want. Too bad all politicians want to do is demonize the one force that is actually helping to keep costs down by forcing hospitals to reduce their prices (i.e. insurance companies) instead of tackling the larger industry that is the problem.

      --
      I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
    48. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You hit it right on the money. Nobody can afford it, but it being forced to buy it, making them even poorer, and even more unable to pay their emergency room bills. Hospitals are closing left and right after Obamacare. I work for a hospital, and the only reason we're still alive is because we're large enough to tell the insurance companies what kind of payments they're going to give us - they'd lose a lot of their profits if we were to drop them as an insurer. However, any hospital smaller than us has been shutting down. It's back to corporatism. The exact opposite of what we were told. Then again, with our current president, nobody should be surprised at broken promises.

    49. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Part of the reason why pharmaceuticals cost a lot in America is because the American health care consumer is funding the basic research to develop new drugs. Consumers in other countries benefit from that by being able to purchase the drugs for a much cheaper price. If the drugs didn't cost a lot in America, the world wouldn't have them at all.

    50. Re:Here I come. by SlippyToad · · Score: 1

      Cue a bunch of Glenn Beck website links.

      --
      One day I feel I'm ahead of the wheel / the next it's rolling over me / I can get back on / I can get back on
    51. Re:Here I come. by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      The parent post brought to you by Eli Lilly & Glaxo Smith Kline.

      Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain.

    52. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My daughter just spent 4 hours in Emergency, the Insurance paid (after discounts) 16,000. Four grand per hour?

      And that is how they cover the uninsured. Hospitals will treat you in emergencies even if you can't pay or have no insurance. They over charge those that can pay to make up for those that can't. However, those that can't pay will avoid (less expensive) health care exams (since they can't afford them and it's not an emergency) and so they end up in the hospital (expensive) because they never got a checkup or found out they needed blood pressure medication.

    53. Re:Here I come. by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      Get out of here Newt.

    54. Re:Here I come. by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      You guys have fenced off a prime pasture that people have clamored for years to have a road built to access. Now you are complaining because people are forced to walk through the mud?

      My poorly stated point is anyone who supports Obama Care would 10 times prefer a single payer system, but we will take what we can get, baby steps are better then sitting down and crying.

    55. Re:Here I come. by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      You say pay them $3 more per pill so they can do research, they end up using fifty cents from each pill to fund research, $2 to advertise / pay doctors, and fifty cents for bonuses.
      I say cut off that $3 and we will pay $1.50 in taxes that actually get spent on research.

    56. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Second example: I have glaucoma and get pressure checks ever 4-6 months. I asked the doctor why his tech did a check, then he did. He said she did a screening check, while his was more accurate. I said that didn't make sense, if he always did it, why bother with the screening? His reply .. don't worry, your insurance covers it. When I explained that I had a high deductible plan and I had to pay for it, the screening stopped. I wonder how many tests are done 'because insurance covers it'.

      Yup... could never figure this one out. I don't have glaucoma, but my family has always had somewhat elevated pressures in our eyes. What's worse, I simply can't do the "puff test" without reacting in a way that makes the reading higher than it should be. If that's noted in my file, what would be the point of doing the screen every time?

    57. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "IF I got my "benefits" as salary, I could be much more efficient in my health care dollars than Insurance."

      Good idea.... until you get into a car accident or slip and fall and break your hip and have chronic long term pain. Or have some other serious medical condition and it drains your life savings within months. I'm sure some Americans could make that work but not most.

      Fact: Most Americans are terrible at saving money, even ignoring the fact that salaries have been stagnating and our current situation makes saving difficult. If they enable "save and pay your own way" for everyone we'd all be doomed. The only solution is stop this partial Universal Healthcare crap and go Full Universal and abolish the current private Insurance system.

      50 years from now they'll be looking back and wondering what the hell we were thinking allowing private insurance to screw us so badly for so very long.

      I think you missed his point. While you might infer he would prefer no insurance at all, that's not an implication he's necessarily making.He already has insurance as part of his "total compensation plan" from work. He'd much rather have that total compensation be in total cash form, because he could then buy a better insurance plan.

      His insurance plan, which he's nominally compensated for "$3-6k/yr" in TCO, is more expensive to use with the copay to buy pills than not having any insurance plan at all. So when he buys his pills, he pretends he doesn't have insurance and gets them the cheaper way.

      So, using the OPs example:
      A) Insurance, $5k/yr, +$25 for pills.
      B) No Insurance, $0/yr, $12 for pills.

      In case B, he has the option to find a different insurance policy than what his employer offers, and $5013 to with which to spend on it.

      Employer provided insurance coverage is not taxed the way income is, because...[long anti-rich lobbying loophole rant, partially related to wage control act during the "legitimate" war], but he ends up with better coverage for his pills and his disaster care options either way.

    58. Re:Here I come. by leromarinvit · · Score: 1

      IF I got my "benefits" as salary, I could be much more efficient in my health care dollars than Insurance.

      That only works as long as you never have to spend more on health care than you can afford. That's exactly what insurance is supposed to prevent - of course somebody who is never ill pays more than he ever receives. That's by design. It's also what prevents you from dying if you suddenly need some treatment that costs $HUGE_AMOUNT which you don't have.

      Of course, this says nothing about stupid inefficiencies within the insurance system, like your example (and many others). But I would never ever want to be without health insurance.

      --
      Proud member of the Ferengi Socialist Party.
    59. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, except that probably 20% of case B's won't buy insurance. Thus, you need a penalty to prevent free riders. (Single-payer is still better, though the Singapore HSA thing is also intriguing).

    60. Re:Here I come. by tachin1 · · Score: 0

      Going from no coverage to crappy coverage is by all measures an improvement.

      The problem is you believe that conditions are the same, in Mexico you don't have "Insurance" in the sense that you have an insurance company which mediates between you and your health provider. You pay your part as a sort of tax (You don't have to go pay anywhere, it gets deducted from your paycheck so your employer takes care of this), and the hospitals take all of that and budget it towards trying to take care of everybody. Since this is a goverment dependency, its non profit so hopefully (this is the problem in Mexico) all your money goes to pay doctors and medicine.

      Example: My son fell head first while trying to jump in a stairwell, since I was a rights holder, my wife and son are automatically covered. The good news is that he was fine, no bleeding just a bump on his head, we went to the emergency room the doctor ordered some xrays, found nothing, got some medicine for the pain and some topical antiseptics and a small bandage for his hand. We were in and out in about an hour, didn't pay a cent.

      At one point I hurt my hand, went to the doctor and the doctor said i needed to take two weeks off, gave me the necesary paperwork to take to my workplace, gave it to them, told them I'd be back in two weeks, after two weeks the doctor told me to take another week for rest, took the paperwork to my workplace again, no questions asked. At the end of the month got back to work then went back to the hospital, got a check for 60% of missed wages and cashed it at the bank.

      One of my employees broke both of his ankles, took about a year and a half off of work while he recovered and was in physical therapy (Again, at no cost to him) and received 60% of his paycheck. Once he was able, he got back to work.

      So yes, its better because there is no question about being covered, you pay for insurance which acts as a sort of membership fee, and once you are in the door, you'll get the best treatment a third world country can give (by real doctors, not Dr Nick Riviera). Your job and financial security are protected by our most effective laws, (Employers FEAR social security sanctions for not complying).

      I guess I really want to press the fact that your objections are misdirected. Its not just about getting care, its about a system that considers how to best keep you healthy with limited resources instead of having a system that has a vast amount of resources but gets to make decisions for you about healthcare based on being profitable. under your system, the insurance companies are your rich stingy uncle that is burdened with having to take care of you and doctors are contractors called in to perform whatever the insurance company is willing to pay for.

      --
      I'm always right, except when i'm not.
    61. Re:Here I come. by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

      You make an excellent point. We are breeding nearly untreatable tuberculosis in hobos nationwide, and once there are enough infected people outside the healthcare system it will start to really take off. I think basic care should be universal to avoid epidemics from taking hold.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    62. Re:Here I come. by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      And "Obamacare" does indeed address this issue, although nowhere near as much as it should, and that was even before it got neutered by the corporate henchmen we know as (mostly Republican) Congressmen.

      Data? As far as I know, no serious Republican suggestion was included in Obamacare. All the neutering was done to appease Blue Dog Democrats -- and even then, it barely got enough votes to pass muster.

    63. Re:Here I come. by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      Healthcare, like the military, fire department, and the mail, is a classic market failure. Patients put their lives in the hands of their doctor. There is no time to haggle over price in an ambulance.

      Sigh, one of the greatest lies ever spoken about US healthcare. Emergency care is a very small segment of total healthcare cost (http://www.acep.org/content.aspx?id=25902). Most of the time you do have time to choose your doctor or whatnot. More importantly, you have plenty of time to choose your insurer prior to something happening. Costs are high because we're a sick country that doesn't mind spending a metric fuckton of money to extend the life of a terminal patient a few extra months. 27% of Medicare's budget goes towards end-of-life coverage: http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/health/2006-10-18-end-of-life-costs_x.htm

    64. Re:Here I come. by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1

      US healthcare is expensive, and supply is high, but demand is low (as fewer can afford it, though I thought Obamacare was supposed to fix that). Hence lots of money to spend on shiny new toys to fix people, and no waiting lists. (Of course, there are other costs as well - like people delaying trips to the doctor so they can get more ailments before seeking treatment...).

      No ObamaCare won't do any such thing in actuality; though it may pretend to do so it will actually make all the costs go up as it lacks any actual cost control mechanism. Their ideas was "make everyone get it and the insurers will lower their prices" but it doesn't work that way - especially when the insurers are the number one or two problem (the other being malpractice lawsuits, which again ObamaCare does nothing to cure).

      Citations please? I'll wait...

      Can't find the link for the first one now but:

      1. A doctor made the news in the last two years for refusing all insurance companies. He cut his overhead costs by 2/3rds and was able to pass that on to his patients as he no longer had to do appeals. My father-in-law is also a doctor, and they do have to file and re-file to get paid the bare minimums. You bill may say $42k, but that's only so they'll actually get paid the $12k it actually cost them - and that barely breaks even.

      2. Malpractice insurance has been driving up prices for doctor's and been one of the signficant cost drivers over the last decade. Nothing to do with the quality of the doctor - and its mainly lawsuit driven. It has also pushed a lot of doctors out of the profession, and has been in the news for the last 5 years or so. No one is expecting it to get better any time soon.

      Unless you fix the cost drivers, then you are not fixing the problem. No matter how much you fix the pin hole leaks in an aging house with copper pipes, you won't solve the continual leaking until you replace all the pipes (the problem) either with new copper and a filter to get the chemicals out, or with PVC pipes.

      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
    65. Re:Here I come. by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      The US fails, because it has a HUGE middle man bureaucracy that skims 20% off the top called Insurance.

      Bureaucracy is right, but the insurance companies aren't doing the skimming. They're lucky if their profit margins top 10%. The vast majority are below.

    66. Re:Here I come. by sjames · · Score: 1

      Citation needed. Where other than a wild guess do you get the idea that health care in Mexico is even slightly below the U.S. standards?

      Everything I have heard suggests that health care in Mexico and Canada are AT LEAST as good as in the U.S.

    67. Re:Here I come. by sjames · · Score: 1

      The market is completely broken in the U.S. how else can you have a good or service where the price is high, the supply plentiful, and demand low?

    68. Re:Here I come. by sjames · · Score: 1

      My daughter just spent 4 hours in Emergency, the Insurance paid (after discounts) 16,000. Four grand per hour?

      That is utterly shameful. 4 hours total services cost nearly half of a median annual income.

    69. Re:Here I come. by jeko · · Score: 1

      More importantly, you have plenty of time to choose your insurer prior to something happening.

      Hi, welcome to the US where we have massive unemployment and employer-based health insurance. Most people have zero choice in their healthcare provider. Most people consider themselves lucky just to HAVE a healthcare provider.

      I looked at your cite, which says nothing about wasting money to keep people alive. It argues hospice is more cost-effective and offers better care than hospitalization. You added the ghoulish bit about wasting money to keep people alive for a few extra months all by yourself.

      Costs are high because we're a sick country that doesn't mind spending a metric fuckton of money to extend the life of a terminal patient a few extra months.

      Well, gee, Mr. Potter, how much do you think some old coot's life is worth? I can totally understand and support "extraordinary measures/heroic intervention/quality-of-life/Do Not Resuscitate" issues and I understand there comes a point when you're just extending the patient's suffering, but that's not the argument you made. YOU are the reason why legalizing medically-assisted suicide is controversial. The whole argument against legalizing doctor-assisted suicide is the fear that old people would be pressured to die before their time because of financial, rather than medical reasons.

      And there you are.

      How much are a few extra months worth? A few extra months with my family? A few extra months with my wife? A few extra months to say good-bye? Sometimes even just a few extra minutes are everything...

      Of course, that argument just bounced right off of you.

      The sort of mind that could spew this out:

      Costs are high because we're a sick country that doesn't mind spending a metric fuckton of money to extend the life of a terminal patient a few extra months.

      Wow. Just wow. I'm sorry. I'm so sorry. The kind of mental pain and anguish necessary to build such solitary callousness...

      I'm sorry.

      --
      He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
    70. Re:Here I come. by johnnick · · Score: 1

      >It would give a mechanism to see how many people agree or disagree with a post, without the flood of useless "lol me
      >too!11!!!1!!!!!1" AOLer posts that plague slashdot

      In other words, you've just described what Digg used to be.

      --
      "The plural of anecdote is not data."
    71. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would like to point out that there is a marginal cost versus average cost issue in pharmaceuticals.

      We (as the /. collective) have heard the arguments as it relates to music, and we have mostly agreed that, upon the death of the big labels, guys in their garages will still make music. I'm not entirely sure that guys in their garages will make new antibiotics, cures for diseases, etc.

      As it stands, I think the USA makes up the difference between average cost and marginal cost, for the rest of the world. If not us, who?

    72. Re:Here I come. by BooMonster · · Score: 1

      This. When you go to any other business for goods or services, you expect the price up front. If hospitals had to post (yes, this would have to be a big, searchable spreadsheet, not a three page menu) all their services and the prices thereof, things would change pretty quick. Also, medical professionals could only charge a few different rate (cash/credit/insurance/payment plan) rather than bill at the highest rate possible and then "accept" less from insurers.

    73. Re:Here I come. by BooMonster · · Score: 1

      Slashdot needs a "-1, Ad Hominem" mod.

    74. Re:Here I come. by JosephTX · · Score: 1

      $42k? That's disgusting. yeah, I left out the hospitals themselves but I don't disagree with you. Charging that kind of price just to get basic care would probably get you thrown in prison in most developed countries.

    75. Re:Here I come. by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      (insert Santayana quote here)

    76. Re:Here I come. by NIckGorton · · Score: 1

      Your 10% figure is correct but misleading. It is correct in that insurance companies take 10% from the total figure we spend on health care in the US. It is misleading in that the total health care spending is a combination of private insurance AND public insurance.

      If you look at the percentage that insurers add to the cost of health care FOR INSURED PEOPLE only, the figure is more than double that. In fact, part of Obamacare is limiting the percentage that private insurers take off the top for “profit and administration” to ONLY 15%. If you look at the percentage taken off for administration (obviously 0 profit) taken off VA healthcare, government employee care, straight Medicare (i.e. not Medicare that is administered through private insurers), etc that percentage is in the low single digits (varies between programs a little – the VA is the best bet and most efficient of all dollar for dollar).

      Though even if you take your 10% figure at face value, that means that insurance companies are funneling off 1.7% of the total US GDP for doing work slightly less valuable than a wet kleenex. That amounts to 250 BILLION dollars a year.

      Lets however compare that to the administrative cost for traditional Medicare plans (the CBO calls it 2% for traditional MediCare plans and 11% for those run through private insurance companies.) Lets even round that 2% up to 5% to account for arguments about whether its really 2% or 4.6 or whatever.

      Then lets take your figure of 255 billion – but we will use the correct denominator. Forty-five percent of US expenditures are (prior to Obamacare) are from public programs. So 255billion/(GDP * percent of GDP spent on health care *percent of private insurance) = 255billion/(15trillion * 0.17 *0.55) = 18%. This 18% is (shockingly) quite similar to the percentages quoted by people not wanting to obfuscate the data. Its actually a bit of a low ball figure for that, but again to give you the benefit of the doubt. In addition, that's the reason why the limit on profits/admin of 15% that is part of Obamacare was fought by health insurers. If 15% is less than what they were taking off the top already, why did they fight it?

      So lets say the entire US expenditure on health insurance were administered through a MediCare for all plan versus an average private plan. Fifteen trillion*17% of GDP*18% admin/profit = 459 billion is the cost for private companies administering it. Fifteen trillion*17% of GDP*5% admin = 127 billion is the cost for private companies administering it.

      That's a lot of zeroes in between those numbers. 332,000,000,000 to be exact. Plus, Medicare is good insurance. Most seniors on Medicare LIKE their insurance – whether or not its traditional Medicare or more expensive Medicare Advantage plans.

      So why not just offer that plan to everyone? Its a simple solution: if you like your insurance that you have, fine. If you don't have insurance and make too much for the Medicaid programs, you have a choice: any one of many insurance plans on the exchange, or to buy into Medicare for the average cost of traditional Medicare for existing Medicare recipients. So if Medicare costs $7,000 per person per year, anyone could buy into it for $7,000 per year.

      Why do you think the insurers fought that – the Public Option – tooth an nail? Because they knew they could not compete unless they brought their margins down to match Medicare. Its the simplest math in the fucking universe: If you only spend $0.82 for every dollar you take in, you will spend less than if you paid $0.95 for every dollar you take in. And that expenditure – whether 82 or 95 cents is the actual payment for doctors, medicines, hospitals, etc. If you can't understand that, go refresh your algebra on the Kahn Academy.

    77. Re:Here I come. by Doctor_Jest · · Score: 1

      http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/explainer/2010/04/fuera_de_aqu.html

      Perhaps Dishevel meant illegal immigrants when he mentioned "they".

      --
      It's the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man.
    78. Re:Here I come. by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

      That very well might be why they fail at PRICE, but not quality.
      The simple fact is, that even if you can afford it it is quantitatively worse than most other developed nations.

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    79. Re:Here I come. by NIckGorton · · Score: 1

      Here is an example of what is wrong. My son got hurt and didn't have any money, so he called a hospital to find out what it would cost to xray his ankle to see if it was broken. Because he knew if it was just sprained, there was very little anyone could do other than tell him to 'stay off it'. They hospital refused to quote a price, because there was no way they knew how much it could cost because they didn't know what was wrong. In other words, if all he wanted to get was an xray and have a doctor tell him if the ankle was broken, they wouldn't do it.

      There are several reasons this is the case:

      1. 1) Hospitals that are subject to EMTALA (a.k.a. all except the VA) are prevented from telling you the cost of possible services prior to a medical screening exam (MSE) by a physician or a mid-level like an NP or PA. This is to ensure that hospitals don't use cost to dissuade people from seeking care. If a hospital answers that question they can be subject to a fuckton of fines. I am surprised they called back.
      2. 2) The real reason that a MSE is important (other than to avoid fines for violating EMTALA) is that not every sprain needs an X-Ray. The Ottowa Ankle Rules are very useful to eliminate the need for XRay in about 30% of people presenting with acute traumatic ankle pain.
      3. 3) The FDA and states regulate medical treatments and tests for a good reason. If you made medical test/treatments like a vending machine, you would harm way more people than you help. Full body CTs are a good example (though these still required a physician's order, they were essentially provided to anyone with the $ to pay for it.) The brochures showed you the father of 4 who had a stage 1 kidney cancer diagnosed and treated, but not the ten other people who had incidental findings that once discovered had to be followed up... landing people in the hospital, with invasive procedures, and sometimes disabling complications from these unnecessary investigations. If you look at the cost-benefit for tests like this, the cost weigh outweighs the benefit, but that doesn't stop people who have no concept of basic math, much less Bayes Theorem, from getting the test. That's the reason that lotteries are so so popular: tax on those who can't do math.
      4. 4) Without an exam the diagnostic value of an ankle Xray is diminished (also a Bayesian deal). The pre-test probability of disease effects the performance of the test. As an example, think of a test for HIV that has a 1% false positive rate (but for simplicity assume no false negatives). If you do that test in an individual in a population with 0.1% incidence of HIV, and it is positive, 90% of the time the person with the positive result doesn't have HIV. In a population with a 20% incidence, 95% of the time they really do have HIV. So there is an additional negative of testing not directed by history/exam in that its less accurate. (Which is why I am surprised that the Radiologist who volunteered to read it did... the malpractice vulnerability increases with decreased accuracy.)

      Finally, if your son wants a cheaper option next time, try a NP staffed clinic. In some states you even will find them in big box stores or pharmacies. They are a better value especially if you have something simple like an ankle injury.

    80. Re:Here I come. by Kyusaku+Natsume · · Score: 1

      USA's system is only best of breed for the ones that can afford to pay for it. The average health care in Mexico is way cheaper than the same care in USA, even if you adjust for purchasing power, and is easier and cheaper here with private insurance to get a very good service in a private hospital. A good american friend was amazed how cheap were medical services here versus a similar service in her natal Wisconsin. A 30 times difference in the price for a routine checkout with the gynecologist is absolutely insane.

      --
      Mexico: 100% conservative's America now!
    81. Re:Here I come. by Shadow99_1 · · Score: 1

      If doctors not listening to a word you say and writing out painkillers for you without doing any tests beyond blood work,when you have a diseased gallbladder that is causing you crippling pain, is 'best of breed' then the world is in deep shit.

      If you can't guess that was a recent experience of mine and when I finally went through over a half dozen doctors to get someone who could explain week long bouts of crippling abdominal in my right side... I find out I've actually had the condition for over a decade... and no doctor had ever noticed until the damage was so great it had to be removed immediately...

      Mark me not impressed with US healthcare....

      --
      we are all invisible unless we choose otherwise
    82. Re:Here I come. by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      didn't feel like reposting this comment, http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3061257&cid=41073045

      My argument has substance.

    83. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I actually fly overseas to get preventative and major healthcare; even with the plane ticket it's still cheaper this way.

    84. Re:Here I come. by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      So will I have to go to Mexico for my low price drugs now? Sorry Canada

      Actually, it costs me $8.00 roughly as a monthly dispensing fee, and 80% of the drug cost until I reach my yearly quota of $1000.00.

      Thereafter the prescription drugs are free, except for the monthly dispensing fee.

      And I don't have to go to Mexico. Of course, it is impossible to even think of going to the USA.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    85. Re:Here I come. by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      US healthcare is expensive, and supply is high, but demand is low (as fewer can afford it, though I thought Obamacare was supposed to fix that). Hence lots of money to spend on shiny new toys to fix people, and no waiting lists. (Of course, there are other costs as well - like people delaying trips to the doctor so they can get more ailments before seeking treatment...).

      No ObamaCare won't do any such thing in actuality; though it may pretend to do so it will actually make all the costs go up as it lacks any actual cost control mechanism. Their ideas was "make everyone get it and the insurers will lower their prices" but it doesn't work that way - especially when the insurers are the number one or two problem (the other being malpractice lawsuits, which again ObamaCare does nothing to cure).

      If you want real health reform in the US, then you have to address malpractice lawsuits in some meaningful manner, and also address the fact that insurance companies do everything they can to keep from paying anything - which results in 3, 4, or more appeals before a doctor gets paid - each appeal making costs higher as it requires money to file, and personnel to file and track - people that could otherwise be helping service patients. Solve those to things and health care costs will drop dramatically.

      Bravo... You are right on!!.

      In Quebec, doctors are by law, prevented from being sued for malpractice. But the College of physicians is scrutineering the doctors very closely. With no law suits, the quality of doctor has not suffered, and patients are not dying or being more injured than if there was lawsuites. Doctors are free to see more critically ill patients, and live with less stress because they are protected.

      A Doctors net net pay after expenses is about the same as their USA counterpart, who have high insurance expenses to protect the doctor from (frivolous) law suites.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    86. Re:Here I come. by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      Good god, doesn't anyone know how to do a little reading on subjects before giving their lectures? As much as everyone hates insurance companies, they actually contribute very little overall to the cost of health care (less than 10%), and malpractice lawsuits contribute far less than even that. The BIGGEST contributor to the outrageous health care costs in the US is, by far, a lack of pricing regulations over pharmaceutical companies and manufacturers (which every other developed country in the world has) and a willingness by politicians (and insurance companies) to sign contracts with pharmaceutical businesses to meet their ridiculous prices. Why do you think people can go to Mexico to buy the same medicine for less than 1/10th of what they pay for it in the US? It's not like Mexico can afford to subsidize a wide variety of medicine; most of that stuff is completely unsubsidized. It's because pharmaceutical companies know they can charge outrageous prices for cheap medicine knowing that we'll buy it if we have to.

      And "Obamacare" does indeed address this issue, although nowhere near as much as it should, and that was even before it got neutered by the corporate henchmen we know as (mostly Republican) Congressmen. If you seriously think "real" health care reform is just making it impossible for people to sue for botched operations (which can already take years in many states, if it's even permitted), you need to stop watching Fox Noise.

      We in Canada know well what gouging is taking place. The provinces are moving together to purchase generics en masse. They also learned to not have a single source of supply. Sandoz, a large generic manufacturer shut itself down when some issues with medications and sanitary manufacturing were detected. They were the lowest bidder. They are now back on line, and the governments are looking to having two suppliers of every medication. One thing about prescription drugs though, is that the government does not approve every new drug that comes onto the market. They are very very careful to ensure the drug has merit, and that lower cost alternative cocktail solutions will be a good alternative. If you also have private insurance, perhaps that insurance plan will cover the new drugs -- drugs without a good history of worthwhile results.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    87. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, because there is no "objective" standard. The socialists who monitor such things start with, "Is health care socialized and universal?" and mark the US down before considering the quality of care.

      Having been uninsured in the US, and a victim of British NHS, I'd much rather be poor in America.

      You're also assuming that Americans give a shit what anyone else thinks, or that they should.

      And yes, "universal" care that is shitty, that most of the population can't get to because they have no transport, is still shitty, and merely propaganda from a third world shithole government. I hear Cuba's great, too.

      So, how many illegals are trying to get into Mexico or Cuba? Take your time.

    88. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed. It's disgraceful that other nations ignore the real world market price of drugs and refuse to pay a fair price, therefore forcing Americans to underwrite the expense.

      If European socialist paradises charged a fair price for medication, the US prices would go down, too.

      It's much like New Zealand's self-aggrandizing bullshit that they have a tiny military, and the US is soooo militaristic, when they know fucking well that they're too far away from any relevant threat for anyone to bother with, and if anyone did, the US and Australia would bail their whining asses out.

      And the companies charge less in Mexico because they know no one can pay a real price there.

      The penalty for being the best is having to subsidize the lesser parts of the world--Europe and Central/South America.

    89. Re:Here I come. by nobodie · · Score: 1

      AND, there are macro-economic and micro (personal in this case) economic forces as well. You are working at a macro level, but most people care about themselves. Just as the care-givers, equipment manufacturers, pharmacorps and care-providers (hospitals/clinics) think of themselves as number 1 in the equation. The role of government is to recognize that there is a way that balances all the needs and all the requirements. The implementation of that plan that recognizes a balanced and healthy approach to that equation which is positive. Why can't we do that?

      1) we have created and support a system that works for only one sector of the equation, the part with the most money: therefore big Pharma and big equipment destroy the equation.

      2) as a result, the users, the healthy, the ill, the broken or dying, are not an important part of the equation. Because of that inequality, people, the users, don't use unless they are very protected from the cost by the insurance companies. Because of this, the big companies keep their prices high, because their equipment is not used often. They also constantly try to introduce something "new, improved, fewer side-effects, better results" that they can get a higher profit margin from thus perpetuating a vicious circle.

      Eg: When I was in China, my doctor recommended a CAT scan. His hospital had them for about $1000. I went to the public hospital and got it done for $250.00. At the public hospital I waited in line, got called out of a group 30 or more people waiting for one of two CAT scanners. I went in, laid down, the scan was taken, an IV flushed a something into me and they took more pictures, I was told I was finished and headed out past the next patient who had a special cap on his head to keep his head in one piece after a scooter crash. Total time about 5-6 minutes in the scanner room. The photos were delivered to me two days later. The difference between the $1000 private hospital and the $250 public was that at the private I would get a "private room" scan with a personal nurse to translate for me. The public one had the tech behind a screen giving me terse instructions in Chinese. We expect babying, the Chinese don't and they save so much money because of it that it makes me want to cry. You are ripped off because of your sense of entitlement.

      3) so the system is NOT an equation, we have expectations based on what the big players want to give us and want to make us pay for. My CAT scan showed I had no cancer. When I got to the US the doctor poo=pooed the scan and demanded a biopsy. If it wasn't for the insurance company it would have been $5000.00 Still it was more than the CAT scan, and all the care, blood tests and sonograms done in China put together: the results all proved the same thing. I was cheated of my time and money and the insurance company was cheated as well.

      We are not getting good care, we are getting worse care than I could get in China last year. The systems used by other countries are the best for 95% of their citizens. The remaining 5%, well, how many are going without treatment today in America?

      --
      Subversion of spatial scale luxury decoration ideas.
    90. Re:Here I come. by DedTV · · Score: 1
      My family doctor (who is also a family friend) spends 3-5 hours every day filling out paperwork that he has to process personally to meet insurance/legal guidelines and regulations, that's 3-5 hours of his 10-12 hour day that he's not seeing patents or generating income. He also has to employ 2 assistants to make the phone calls and fill out the paperwork he doesn't have to do personally and they don't work for free or without benefits.

      He also has issues like having to have 2 different X-Ray machines because different insurance companies have different diagnostic requirements before they'll authorize procedures.
      Back in the 80s, he worked 10 hours a day, saw 40-50 patents a day and made more than $250k a year. Now, he works 10-12 hours a day and the made less than $40k. His practice actually operates at a loss, he only makes anything because he spends a month in South Africa training doctors there.

      Willie Nelson was wrong. You can do better as a Cowboy than you can Doctor these days.

    91. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "the US, with its state of the art, best of breed health care..." Oh My Gawd!, what country do you live in. When we run to the hospital with a fever of 102 and you are prescribed antibiotics "just to be safe" and suffer for months after from the destruction of all the living micro-organisms that you live in symbiosis with when he should have just told you " look you go some bug, take a laxative, drink lots of water and stay in bed for 3 days, you will be fine"; or tell the lady she has to have a Cesarean to get the baby now, because my shift ends at 6 pm. Or drug her to induce labor for the same reason, but constricting the blood to the fetus so she has an autistic child, just so the doc can get to his cocktail party on time. Or tell the lady to have her womb removed (hysterectomy) because they simply have no clue that the word "healing" actually means at...and then 1 out of 7 people die in the hospital from post op infection, a country that has turned cancer to a chronic disease, when in fact very few really have to die from cancer... "best of breed." give me a break, get real. We still think root canal, treated teeth are safe duh. In Europe if you have cancer the first thing they will do is remove the horrible things and clean up your jaw. I had one nurse from France working in the US say that she could not believe how many people entered the US system and did not get better. When she or her children fell ill she ordered her prescription drugs from France because "they actually make you get better." --From one who cured his own cancer with high-dose; Vitamin C and a chemo therapy protocol from France that is used in the US on children, dogs and cats, but for which the patents have run out on the drugs used, so doctors don't use them anymore. One of America's bright most successful brain surgeons left the biz tells everyone: "Go into a US hospital like you are going to war, it is one of the most dangerous places on earth." I told my doc: "look, you are just an employee here, I'm running my case and you are going to do what I tell you I want you to do." He was a bit offended that I did not treat him like God Incarnate, but had no choice. For all our science and widgetry, the US health care system is far, far removed from the process we call healing. Sad, too, because practitioner in the industry are very well intentioned, especially nurses. But even they are getting fed up, The doc swings by, asks 10 questions, makes a note on the chart, (2 minutes with the patient) and then the nurses do all the dirty work and too many people they see never get better... that's not what they signed up for. State of the art health care? Bu!! Sh!!

    92. Re:Here I come. by LinuxLuver · · Score: 1

      100% care that is crappy is most definitely an improvement for the people who had access to nothing. The United States has wasted US$1.3 TRILLION dollars in Iraq and Afghanistan since 2001. Half that amount could have run a nation-wide, public health system providing access to every man, woman and child. If countries like Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Britain, Ireland, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece, The Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Hungary, Austria, Estonia, Lithu-freaking-ania......can provide good universal health care......then sure it is possible for the richest, most powerful nation on the planet to do it, too. But apparently not. The problem clearly isn't money....it's too many ignorant-stupids in one place.

      --
      Only boring people are ever bored.
    93. Re:Here I come. by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      Hi, welcome to the US where we have massive unemployment and employer-based health insurance. Most people have zero choice in their healthcare provider.

      You identify another problem, caused by government. Perhaps tying healthcare to employment wasn't the brightest idea. So we do we continue it?

      I looked at your cite, which says nothing about wasting money to keep people alive.

      Except the line I quoted that specifically stated "about 27% of Medicare's annual $327 billion budget goes to care for patients in their final year of life."? Would you like more cites?

      http://www.cbsnews.com/2100-18560_162-6747002.html
      "Last year, Medicare paid $55 billion just for doctor and hospital bills during the last two months of patients' lives. That's more than the budget for the Department of Homeland Security, or the Department of Education. And it has been estimated that 20 to 30 percent of these medical expenses may have had no meaningful impact. Most of the bills are paid for by the federal government with few or no questions asked. "

      http://www.mercurynews.com/opinion/ci_19905093
      The federal government estimates that 70 percent of health-care expenditures are spent on the elderly, 80 percent of that in the last month of life -- and often for aggressive, life-sustaining care that is futile. Think what America could do if it invested that $140 billion a year in other arenas. By comparison, the 2012 budget request for the National Institutes of Health, the largest supporter of biomedical research in the world, is $31 billion.

      The United States spends nearly twice as much per capita on health care costs compared with most Western nations, yet it leaves millions of people with no health insurance at all. The bubble of end-of-life care is one reason.

      How much are a few extra months worth? A few extra months with my family? A few extra months with my wife? A few extra months to say good-bye? Sometimes even just a few extra minutes are everything... Of course, that argument just bounced right off of you.

      No, in fact it did not -- because I measured it against all the good that money could have done (say, for all the people without healthcare, or all the diseases we can't cure because we have no room in the healthcare budget to spend on research). YOU apparently live in a bubble where whenever you need more money you just stroll over to the wall safe and pull it out. I, on the other hand, live in reality where we're forced to prioritize . And yes it sucks, and is a hard and painful decision, but spending millions and millions of dollars giving terminal patients an extra month is not worth the sacrifices our society must endure to provide it. Ever wonder why the European systems have healthcare costs that are far cheaper than ours? And why everyone throughout the system is healthier as a result. It's because they let terminal patients die rather than spending every last penny to give them just a few hours more. I would gladly give up 2 months at the end of my life to provide healthcare for so many: babies, children, poor working single mothers, etc, etc -- if my death 2 months early saved even one young life, it would be worth it.

      Wow. Just wow. I'm sorry. I'm so sorry. The kind of mental pain and anguish necessary to build such solitary callousness... I'm sorry.

      And I'm sorry you're so far offbase that you apparently like in a world of naivety, where nothing has a cost and we can give everyone everything with a snap of our fingers. You must be young.

    94. Re:Here I come. by LinuxLuver · · Score: 1

      Very true. One of the key advantages of the publicly-run health system is having direct control of the costs. In the American system the health corporations charge like wounded bulls and you either pay or you don't get care. Large insurance companies are able to bargain prices down.....but they, in turn "ration" the care they pay for in order to protect their profit margins. The end result is similar to a public system where certain treatments might be rationed because of the (occasional or perpetual) limited capacity to supply treatment. In the public system, obvious bottlenecks can be met by adding more money...and profit isn't a concern. In the private system, the provider doesn't care have any direct incentive to provide additional capacity unless there is clear demand which will pay for it...and the insurors are willing to fund that many addtional treatments for their varying number of paying clients. In a system of universal entitlement, demand is much LESS variable....as the measurement of it shifts from one company's book of clients to actuarial tables covering the entire population. This makes understanding what needs to be provided - and where - MUCH easier....which is one of the reasons universal health care systems are cheaper and more efficient then private ones. But market-forces ideologues have been reluctant to accept the 40 years of clear, unambigious evidence that public health care systems provide more and better care for less money than a fragmented, poorly-integrated private system capable of only partial coverage. Ideologues are into faith....not reality. So the rich in the US get good care...and everyone else gets whatever level of care their insurance company is will to provide.....or even les than that for the 20% of Americans who can't afford even the most basic insurance. I do wish Americans did reality. Not being able to do it is their biggest weakness....and it is now beginning to really hurt them.

      --
      Only boring people are ever bored.
    95. Re:Here I come. by MrResistor · · Score: 1

      Actually, according to paper I read recently from the New England Journal of Medicine, health insurance company "administrative costs" represent 10-25% of medical costs in the US, plus up to another 10% administrative overhead on the part of the providers to deal with all the paperwork, negotiations, and other nonsense the insurance carriers introduce into the system to try and avoid paying anything out. On average, over 30% of US medical bills goes to administrative paper-shuffling.

      That's pre-"Obamacare" though, so we'll have to see if/how things change. I agree with your points regarding the pharmaceutical companies and manufacturers, but let's not go around spreading the misinformation that the insurance companies are honest businessmen just trying to make a living by providing quality service.

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    96. Re:Here I come. by company+suckup · · Score: 0

      So will I have to go to Mexico for my low price drugs now? Sorry Canada

      .

      Lots of snowbirds and retirees in the Az/Nm area have done this for years. No news there.

    97. Re:Here I come. by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1

      Not quite.

      For profit institutions have a big issue with maintaining their profit margins. However, non-profit and not-for-profit instituations shouldn't have such an issue. We could maintain the current system but require that all insurance companies be non-profit or not-for-profit. In which case it should boil down to costs+overhead.

      However, that still doesn't resolve the issue of care, or expenses. In most of the world, if you want a procedure (e.g. vasectomy, plastic surgury, liposuction, etc.) you have to wait on a list to get it unless it's an emergency situation (e.g. heart failure makes you go to the to for a heart transplant very quickly). In this respect, the US system is much better except at cost control - which is primarily out of hand due to (i) malpractice insurance costs to doctors - only resolvable by changing how malpractice is handled in its entirety - and (ii) insurance companies refusing to pay, or trying to game doctors by denying in hopes they'll eventually give up trying to get paid (which does happen).

      Now, Medicare and Medicaid also have major problems with costs - primarily because they don't "shop around" enough for prices, so you end up paying $19 for an aspirin to be administered (never mind that the same nurse administered 10 other drugs at the same time, and they charged similarly for each of them - thus all the overhead was charged multiple times and the difference is the cost of the medication - I'm sure it happens to insurance companies too).

      Both have problems, and neither is really controlled. Nor will it be controlled until a third party intervenes. If I were to write a health care reform law, it would do the following to address the costs:
      1. All insurers are required to pay out what is charged. No denying allowed.
      2. All charges must be under the guidance of a third party regulation body - for the US this would be a joint body primarily administered by the AMA (representing doctors) and FDA (representing government). They could also allow adjustments for different areas for based on cost-of-living (e.g. NY, NY vs Erie, PA vs Billings, MT)
      3. All charges are the same whether to insured or uninsured. (As it is now, many will discount the uninsured since they are more likely to get paid.)

      No mandatory insurance, etc. Doctor's would do well to abide by #2, and if either they or the insurance companies didn't like the rates they could appeal to the regulation body, but it would affect everyone (not that one individual). If someone was suspected of malpractice, over testing, etc. then the AMA could step in to review, repremand, etc. (That is within their purview as the Medical License administrators.)

      In the end, keep-it-simple-stupid.

      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
    98. Re:Here I come. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Back in the 80s, he worked 10 hours a day, saw 40-50 patents a day and made more than $250k a year. Now, he works 10-12 hours a day and the made less than $40k."

      I very strongly suspect that "Obamacare", if not repealed or nullified (some states have already done that), will not make that situation any better.

    99. Re:Here I come. by Jmollema · · Score: 1

      The real issue is that for everyone person that's paying their bill either personally or by insurance, there are five that are not paying it at all. That is the real problem.

    100. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this comment is beautiful. should be a 5.

    101. Re:Here I come. by theNAM666 · · Score: 1

      > The BIGGEST contributor to the outrageous health care costs in the US is, by far, a lack of pricing regulations over pharmaceutical companies and manufacturers (which every other developed country in the world has)

      Yes... BUT... without these price/profit incentives (the US assuming costs), how many entities around the world would be spending *anything* on R&D, that is, what actually makes innovation and progress *happen*?

      Evidence, not mere assertion, please?

    102. Re:Here I come. by theNAM666 · · Score: 1

      >I very strongly suspect that "Obamacare", if not repealed or nullified (some states have already done that), will not make that situation any better.

      You're the same kind of person who supported Jim Crow, aren't you?

      Is there anything that can stop people such as you, short of a bayonet blade in the gullet?

    103. Re:Here I come. by theNAM666 · · Score: 1

      >Back in the 80s, he worked 10 hours a day, saw 40-50 patents a day and made more than $250k a year. Now, he works 10-12 hours a day and the made less than $40k.

      Yeah right.

      Inflation adjusted, the average GP made $1M in the 80s. Today they make $300k, work *less* hours, and complain about it. YMMV for your particular doctor; whatever, outliers don't count, and you're lying to make a point, so fuck you, asswipe.

    104. Re:Here I come. by theNAM666 · · Score: 1

      >Until the Mexican government builds a massive electrified fence all the way across the northern border to stop impoverished US immigrants from stealing their health care.

      FTFY.

    105. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So I guess drug costs and not malpractice insurance costs are why it takes six months to get an appointment with a GP or an internist in areas of Illinois where the doctors have moved to other states.

    106. Re:Here I come. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have friends in the insurance business and Medicare.

      From the data I've been able to obtain, the medical insurance industry has margins above 30%. Medicare has a 5% overhead.

      Before you go to vote, attempt to find out just who has paid for all of that TV and radio advertising (difficult, but possible), then draw your own inferences.

    107. Re:Here I come. by RevDisk · · Score: 1

      Not sure about for the doctors, but most financial folks are already trying to figure out the costs. I admit, since I got out of regulations (I specialized in aerospace industry ITAR and EAR regs), I try to avoid the subject. I got the "expensive" message. Apparently, some of the laws are conflicting. Something about requiring collection of household income under Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which is apparently also illegal to ask employees under other laws. Regulations are funny things. EAR, run by Commerce Department, is a "book" that weighs about 20 ish pounds. ITAR regs are about the size of a paperback book. EAR is simple, straightforward and pretty cheap to implement. ITAR on the other hand probably costs the US several billion in lost sales every year and billions more in compliance, while meeting few of its goals on restricting technology to foreign countries. A real world example was I could not allow Canadians to see, examine or install Canadian L-3 Wescam FLIR cameras, that we were selling to Canadian customers. We had a license from the USG to import the cameras for install, and to export to the end users in Canada, but it would take a 6+ month process to allow our Canadian employees here in the States to be exposed to those FLIR units. One of the best ways we could probably help the US economy, and this very much involves healthcare in America, would be make regulations EASIER to actually understand and implement. But it's easier to sprout off "You're obviously a racist if you disagree with my political position." Reality tends to be a bit more nuanced. But if you want to become a rapid anti-government libertarian, simply move into Regulatory Compliance as a career option.

    108. Re:Here I come. by theNAM666 · · Score: 1

      LOL to your reply.

      You're not the poster I was taking issue with; my beef, was mostly with the gross misrepresentation of salaries and realities. I did not mean at all, to imply these matters are simple; rather, that those who spout off misleading information and opinion, are a blight on the social body :) that will not be resolved in the terms of our current political maliase.

      Thanks for you comment, regardless.

    109. Re:Here I come. by DedTV · · Score: 1
      Thank you so much for brightening my day. It's much appreciated!
      A nice demonstration that others are so much more ignorant and mentally unbalanced than myself has made a marked improvement to my self esteem.

      Hopefully one day you get the same. Perhaps you may consider volunteering to assist the mentally disabled to facilitate that. It's truly uplifting!

    110. Re:Here I come. by theNAM666 · · Score: 1

      Seriously, if your GP / family doctor is ony making $40K/yr, and spending 3-5hrs a day filling out paperwork, you're either in a very odd place, or your GP is stupid. He could pay someone to fill out that paperwork and serve more clients; like my GP, he could install software that automates a lot of it.

      But regardless: outlier, outlier, outlier!!!

    111. Re:Here I come. by DedTV · · Score: 1
      Seriously, you're an ignorant tool.
      As I stated before, Insurance companies require doctors to fill out some paperwork personally by the treating physician. It can't be filled out by software and he can't hire someone else to do it. That's what "personally" means you colossal fuckwit.

      And you can't scream outlier when your argument includes the words "like my GP" and the only basis of your argument is "because I believe it to be so" with no quantifying dataset.

      And finally, I never stated that my GP's experience is shared by every doctor in America or is even typical. I only related some of the personal testimony I've been listening to at dinner gatherings for years from a family friend. So you are arguing with a flawed assumption you yourself made, and losing that argument.

      In short: fuckwit, fuckwit, fuckwit!!!

    112. Re:Here I come. by theNAM666 · · Score: 1

      Thank you for clarifying that for me. Does your dad know you're online?

  2. Kevorkian Panels. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Admittedly, the former health minister Julio Frenk, now dean of the Harvard School of Public Health, is a co-author on the paper."

    Will there be any death panels?

    1. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Funny

      They prefer to call it Carousel.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    2. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by JackieBrown · · Score: 2

      The Mexican drug cartel wipes out the poorer villages. Does that count?

    3. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by Seriman · · Score: 5, Funny

      Recognizing this reference probably means you're already flashing.

    4. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by houstonbofh · · Score: 1

      Recognizing this reference probably means you're already flashing.

      Funniest thing all day! OK, the day is young, but I think it still has a chance.

    5. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by harvey+the+nerd · · Score: 1

      Means you're probably done for, Runner.

    6. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by bigtone78 · · Score: 1

      Only for the people who show interest and keep asking about them!

    7. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by crazyjj · · Score: 1

      If you're recognizing that reference, your gem probably went blank and fell off over a decade ago.

      --
      What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
    8. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by GameboyRMH · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There are death panels in both socialized medicine and private medicine with health insurance, the question is whether they're manned by government-employed medical professionals on a salary, or corporate-employed statisticians with a vested interest in your death.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    9. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by slew · · Score: 1

      They prefer to call it Carousel.

      or Sleepshop, however, some believe there is Sanctuary on mars, if you can get there...

    10. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by cayenne8 · · Score: 2

      or Sleepshop, however, some believe there is Sanctuary on mars, if you can get there...

      THANK YOU for a reference to the excellent BOOK....rather than the lame movie of Logan's Run.

      I loved the book, but can hardly watch the movie for how they butchered the story.....

      No 'homer' in the movie....they totally messed up how cool the 'gun' was....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    11. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Under private insurance they will usually treat you until you run out of money and even a little more.

      And who makes the decision to cut you off, and why do they do it? That's your private death panel and their incentive. Like the government death panel it's not called a "death panel," but that's what it is.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    12. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by Earache65 · · Score: 1

      Really... state your source.

      This jumps to mind (see Controversy): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unum

      Under private insurance they will usually treat you until you run out of money and even a little more. Not saying it's fair but it completely contradicts your odd statement.

      I don`t think this contradicts the parent post at all. In the US, the hospital will provide treatment up to and beyond your insured limits but the (very expensive) liability is yours if the insurance company can weasel out of it.

    13. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      Or clear...

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    14. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      In the case of Private Insurance, you can legally challenge them because they're not supposed to be making medical decisions off of financial ones by law.

      With Socialized Medicine, you can't at-all challenge the decisions of that "Death Board"- they're sanctioned by law to make medical decisions based off of financial ones.

      You can stuff the latter, thank you very much.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    15. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      In the case of Private Insurance, you can legally challenge them because they're not supposed to be making medical decisions off of financial ones by law.

      Yeah sue them while you're dying and financially at the end of your rope. Capitalism saves the day with "choice" once more.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    16. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you could go above +5 Insightful, I think you would for this one. But I think you assume too easily that the "government-employed medical professional on a salary" may have a boss, or boss' boss, who may also have a vested interest in your death.

    17. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by Chrontius · · Score: 1

      /me glances at his palm

      Aw, crap.

    18. Re:Kevorkian Panels. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are death panels in both socialized medicine and private medicine with health insurance, the question is whether they're manned by government-employed medical "professionals" unable to get a real job, swamped in claims, immune from prosecution and who have a vested interested in saving bureau money so it can be spent on Congressional junkets, or corporate-employed statisticians with a vested interest in keeping his company profitable by keeping its customers alive and happy.

      Fixed that for you.

      Because, you know, the IRS does such a fine job of taking care of our economic health.

  3. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Mirvnillith · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What is this "it" you're referring to here? There are plenty of non-tanking countries with very good healthcare coverage.

  4. Scientific assessment of effectiveness? by Zuriel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Translation: "We did some things we thought would work, and then later we stopped doing the things that weren't working and did more of the things that were."

    In an ideal world, governments behaving sensibly wouldn't make headlines.

    1. Re:Scientific assessment of effectiveness? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So simple, yet So hard for The USA to do.

    2. Re:Scientific assessment of effectiveness? by Kjella · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Translation: "We did some things we thought would work, and then later we stopped doing the things that weren't working and did more of the things that were." In an ideal world, governments behaving sensibly wouldn't make headlines.

      You'd be surprised to know how much of the real world operates on things they believe to work rather than having any proof that it's effective. For example I remember one person telling me about this new program they created to work with young criminals. He had suggested they give it to 50% of them, using the other as a control group. That was shot down in flames, of course this worked and no juvenile should go without such a program from now on. Did it work? Is this well spent money or a waste of resources? Who the fuck knows, since society changes so you can't say shit comparing old statistics to new statistics. The irony was they said this was "too important" to not provide help, while health care that deal with real life and death situations would never use medication they had no clue if worked or not.

      It's a little better on the private side but there's a helluva lot of things that are done on pure belief, you may have had some very persuasive business cases and PowerPoint presentations at the start of the project but very rarely is it properly followed up at the end of the project if the goals were actually achieved - if they were even properly defined, quantifiable and measurable to begin with. Of course sometimes projects go wrong for reasons that were impossible to predict when the project was started, but most often not. Most companies just want to bury the failed project and not try deconstructing why they started a project with such flawed plans, requirements and goals. Usually because it'll reflect poorly on some executive who authorized it.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    3. Re:Scientific assessment of effectiveness? by doconnor · · Score: 1

      Governments behaving sensibly all the time. The problem is it never makes headlines, so no one knows about it. When they behave badly it make headlines, so people assume government always behave badly because that's all they hear about.

    4. Re:Scientific assessment of effectiveness? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      But change and experimentation, oh noes! Better to stick with the status quo than run any risk of making things worse, right? What if the river next to your radical "mud hut" dries up and a bear moves into the cave? WHAT THEN!?

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    5. Re:Scientific assessment of effectiveness? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly! And that is not science. Just because they did a statistical table and chose numbers they thought were "better" does not mean that they were following a scientific process (or a good scientific process). Especially when the second variable cited in the article is going out and handing money to people to add them to the health system. So now there's a major second variable. Did they test for both variables independently? Did they have control groups? How large were their sample sizes? Did they ensure that it was actually causation and not just correlation? This is more of a politically-motivated P.R. puff piece than a scientific study. Nature has been doing a lot of this stuff lately of calling a "study" "science" and it just doesn't sit well.

      The fact that it got promoted on slashdot where we're supposed to think more logically than politicians and supermarket checkout browsers is pretty sad. I have a rule of thumb, if a "study" is primarily statistical then it's almost certainly not "science" and it shouldn't be given the same credence. Especially if the article starts with the words, "In a new study scientists say...." Yeah, right. Must be funding time again. >:-(

    6. Re:Scientific assessment of effectiveness? by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      For example I remember one person telling me about this new program they created to work with young criminals. He had suggested they give it to 50% of them, using the other as a control group. That was shot down in flames, of course this worked and no juvenile should go without such a program from now on. Did it work? Is this well spent money or a waste of resources? Who the fuck knows[....]

      From what I've seen, the US educational system is terrible about doing that kind of shit.

      Schools and school districts chase fads like crazy, often haphazardly ("that part makes me uncomfortable, so we'll just do the other stuff, never mind that bit's the piece that holds it all together and makes it work" or "it says do a little of this, so a lot must be better") and sweepingly ("deploy a radically different math curriculum from k-12 in two years? Sure, what could possibly go wrong?") and then they wonder why it didn't work, and move on to the next fad two or three years later.

      Bonus fail: every time that happens they drop a pile of cash on training seminars and materials.

      I wonder if other countries have that problem? I suspect most have more centralized control over those matters and tend not to flop around so much, saving money and saving their students from intellectual whiplash in the process.

    7. Re:Scientific assessment of effectiveness? by Luyseyal · · Score: 1

      I think most other educational systems recognize that not all students are university-bound and attempt to focus those students elsewhere. The American system forces all students into college prep. This does make a little sense because earnings with a degree far, far outpace earnings without.

      However, the reality is that many of those kids will end up in positions not really requiring a degree (admin asst, service staff, low-level medical service, etc.). If they did go to college, it will take a very, very long time to pay off the debt (to creditors and/or to society).

      It would make more sense to target those students early. E.g., you don't really need 4 years of high school English, social studies, etc. to draw blood, give pills, and move patients at a nursing home. Put interested 15/16-year olds into a low-level medical service track. Or hospitality. Or mechanic school. Or electrician school. Or whatever.

      Our local school district does this with electives, but they are all career tracks that require university education. I think that's short-sighted and short-changes the bottom quintile.

      -l

      --
      Help cure AIDS, cancer, and more. Donate your unused computer time to worldcommunitygrid.org. Join Team Slashdot!
    8. Re:Scientific assessment of effectiveness? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      In an ideal world, governments behaving sensibly wouldn't make headlines.

      Alas, ANY sizable group of people tends to act in sub-rational way. It's not like corporations, on average, did much better than governments. Or armies, or HOAs, or bridge clubs.

  5. NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by MagusSlurpy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    . . . about a year and a half ago, and while it's not all bad, it's not quite as glowing as TFA.

    “You have people signed up on paper, but there are no doctors, no medicine, no hospital beds,” said Miguel Pulido, the executive director of Fundar, a Mexican watchdog group that has studied the poor southern states of Guerrero and Chiapas.

    The result is that how Mexicans are treated is very much a function of where they live. Lucila Rivera Díaz, 36, comes from one of the poorest regions in Guerrero. She said doctors there told her to take her mother, who they suspected had liver cancer, for tests in the neighboring state of Morelos.

    Sounds like the problems the opponents to universal health care in the States are always worried about.

    --
    My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells by the seashore.
    1. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by 1u3hr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sounds like the problems the opponents to universal health care in the States are always worried about.

      The problem of making health care cheaper so there isn't so much profit in it?

      told her to take her mother, who they suspected had liver cancer, for tests in the neighboring state of Morelos.

      Given the choice of travelling for a few hours to have (free) tests, or the American alternative of selling your house to pay for them, I wonder which is the worst?

      Hey, you forgot to call; it "Obamacare". Don't worry, I'm sure that will be in half the posts anyway.

    2. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The worry is adequate amount of people that can give care. Those doctor people that society tells you not to trust because their education means nothing.

    3. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Getting your infrastructure up to date is way more of an expensive and time consuming problem than getting your systems up to date. It is a lot simpler, but its costlier. Sounds to me like they have the more difficult part of the equation solved, there are plenty of countries with great infrastructure and crap systems who face industrial action if they try to modernise, so all thats left for Mexico now is the slow grind to build out.

    4. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by ananyo · · Score: 2

      Check out how much the Mexicans spend on healthcare at the moment, compare it to the US, compensate for numbers. Then despair American slashdotters.
      Of-course there's still problems - but as the NYT piece says: "A decade ago, half of all Mexicans had no health insurance at all." ie in many cases, they were not able to afford treatment.
      Critics sometimes seem to overlook that a public healthcare system does not mean that people who wish to get treatment privately cannot do so...

    5. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by jrumney · · Score: 2

      The result is that how Mexicans are treated is very much a function of where they live. Lucila Rivera Díaz, 36, comes from one of the poorest regions in Guerrero. She said doctors there told her to take her mother, who they suspected had liver cancer, for tests in the neighboring state of Morelos.

      Sounds like the problems the opponents to universal health care in the States are always worried about.

      So these opponents of universal health care have an alternate system where people from the poorest areas get top class care without needing to travel to better equipped areas?

    6. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      Of-course there's still problems - but as the NYT piece says: "A decade ago, half of all Mexicans had no health insurance at all." ie in many cases, they were not able to afford treatment.

      Right, and now they can afford it, but there's no treatment to get, which is what is fast-approaching here in the states. Last time I had health insurance there was literally no one in my county on that insurer (first blue cross, then blue shield) accepting new patients. Why will this be any different?

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    7. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by 1u3hr · · Score: 0

      Personal sneers I Fuck off with that .

      The Mexican system is imperfect. It's still a lot better than the US system, which is a disgrace and serves the medical business sector ahead of the people.

    8. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by funkylovemonkey · · Score: 5, Informative

      I suppose it's easy to believe this doesn't happen in the US if you've lived somewhere urban your whole life. But out here in rural America, it's not uncommon to have to travel two or three hours to get treatment. There's a local clinic in the town that I live in, but if you need anything more complicated than having a broken bone set or some penicillin, you're going to have to travel to the nearest town an hour and a half away. If you have something serious like cancer then it might be time to look into relocating. Rural areas always have a more difficult time getting to medical care, especially with a country as spread out as the United States. It has nothing to do with universal health care or our privatized system and wouldn't necessarily become better or worse if we changed.

    9. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by BlearyTruth · · Score: 0, Troll

      Health insurance is meaningless if you cannot get healthcare, they are different things.

      Is the US doctors are not just refusing new patients, they are retiring, leaving the practice, declining to enter the field.

      When the state dictates the minimum level of care and the cost this does two things; This enslaves the provider by interfering with his ability to negotiate the terms of his product or service himself, and eventually this minimum level of care will be the only level of care available to anyone, save for the elites of course.

      "Free government health insurance" sounds great doesn't it. But one cannot ignore reality, nothing is free and the government fails at nearly everything it does.

      The Soviet Union had a constitution in 1936 provided it's citizens with an impressive sounding list of rights:

      http://www.departments.bucknell.edu/russian/const/36cons04.html#chap10

      This included the right to work, to leisure time, to healthcare, to retirement etc. etc. etc.

      Didn't work out too well did it?

      But no, all these socialist systems that have come before Obama were just not tried *properly* now were they? They didn't have a leader as *smart* as Obama to implement them, *this* time they will get it right I'm sure.

      Yes that was sarcasm.

    10. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personal sneers I Fuck off with that .

      The Mexican system is imperfect. It's still a lot better than the US system, which is a disgrace and serves the medical business sector ahead of the people.

      Sorry, that's bullshit. In most regions of Mexico you'll be lucky to find a doctor, let alone a hospital. You're going to have to travel a good distance for any kind of serious treatment or care. When you arrive you're going to quickly learn that although you're supposed to be treated free of charge, the person actually giving treatment will require payment "under the table". In other words, a bribe.
      Sure, things are pretty good within the major cities and population centers, at least relatively speaking, but even so the quality of care is vastly inferior to the US system. And much of the training, supplies, equipment, and a lot of funding for things like advanced cancer treatment centers is only in place because of US-based donations and aid programs. It also doesn't hurt that most of their prescription drugs are produced by sub-standard facilities which don't actually have a license to make them, which lets them sell expensive drugs for pennies on the dollar.

    11. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by paiute · · Score: 4, Funny

      But no, all these socialist systems that have come before Obama were just not tried *properly* now were they? They didn't have a leader as *smart* as Obama to implement them, *this* time they will get it right I'm sure.

      It is better to not post and be thought a troll than to post and prove it.

      --
      If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    12. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by BlearyTruth · · Score: 0

      It is noted that you ignore all the facts in my post. Thanks for playing.

    13. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Black+Parrot · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sounds like the problems the opponents to universal health care in the States are always worried about.

      No, the only problem that the opponents of universal health care in the USA are always worried about is that it wouldn't let the rich get richer by letting you die.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    14. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by dave420 · · Score: 1

      But real universal healthcare prevents that in a heart-beat.

    15. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you make over $24k/yr in my state you don't qualify for Medicaid. If you think a person making $25k/yr with health insurance that requires they pay 20% of their care (mine does) could possibly afford cancer treatment, HIV drugs, hell even insulin shots you're sadly mistaken. And yes it does come down to deciding whether to live or make the rent/mortgage payment.

    16. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Healthcare is not a product. You're sick in the head if you consider it as such. You clearly don't know what you're talking about.

    17. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Personal sneers I Fuck off with that .

      The Mexican system is imperfect. It's still a lot better than the US system, which is a disgrace and serves the medical business sector ahead of the people.

      Sorry, that's bullshit. In most regions of Mexico you'll be lucky to find a doctor, let alone a hospital. You're going to have to travel a good distance for any kind of serious treatment or care. When you arrive you're going to quickly learn that although you're supposed to be treated free of charge, the person actually giving treatment will require payment "under the table". In other words, a bribe.
      Sure, things are pretty good within the major cities and population centers, at least relatively speaking, but even so the quality of care is vastly inferior to the US system. And much of the training, supplies, equipment, and a lot of funding for things like advanced cancer treatment centers is only in place because of US-based donations and aid programs. It also doesn't hurt that most of their prescription drugs are produced by sub-standard facilities which don't actually have a license to make them, which lets them sell expensive drugs for pennies on the dollar.

      Yeah, you do realize that even with all this, you're defending the healthcare system of the wealthiest country on the planet by contrasting it to one of the poorest (that's also wracked by drug wars largely due to the policies of the wealthiest)?

    18. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must have different media coverage in the US than the rest of the world gets.

    19. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 2

      Notable too that you ignore the experience of the entirety of the rest of the first-world. And had to invoke the Soviet Union to try and find someone who's doing it worse.

    20. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Now would be a good time to point out that there are charities who provide healthcare to US citizens using funds collected internationally. Dont kid yourself that the US is the big giver of healthcare and simultaneously self-sufficient

    21. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They don't get better treatment but at least they don't need to travel to better equipped areas since they can't afford getting treated there anyway.

    22. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then what is it? Medical care comes at a cost no matter who pays for it. the difference generally being discussed is the bad system where an insurer manages the costs for you vs the worse system where the government manages them for you. In either case it's going to cost a lot more that it should.

      I really get tired of this drivel about some third world country has to be trotted out as being a much better place to live than the US. Then move there!

      Why do you think Cubans, Mexicans, and others from Central America risk their lives to come to the US? Do you think there just here to slum?

    23. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The problem of making health care cheaper so there isn't so much profit in it?"

      But there *has* to be profit in it, otherwise there's no business incentive to provide better service, just like for the police, fire, and military services. They *have* to turn a tidy profit, otherwise nobody would bother to invest in them or work in those jobs.

      Oh, wait.

    24. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Good argument. Problem is, it's the propaganda one that opponents of public health care use, and it isn't supported by evidence. In fact, the evidence is to the contrary. Public health care systems, around the world, are cheaper than the US privatized one, yet almost all provide better care under almost any objective measure you care to use.

    25. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Healthcare is not a product.

      Then what is it?

      Health care includes services, but its gestalt is that it is a special relationship between practitioner and patient, qualitatively different from any other in the economy.

      Practicing medicine is a noble pursuit that goes beyond just selling services, or at least it used to be before the modern capitalist West commoditized it. In some cultures around the world, and ours in the past, it was considered a sacred duty, not just another job.

    26. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please look up the statistics on medical bankruptcies. Please look up the stories people have of their experiences paying for their medical debts.

      I suppose you might argue on a hair-splitting technicality that they got the treatment and tests before the bills came due, but that would seem to be missing the point of the bankruptcies, mortgages and foreclosures that do happen in this country to pay off those bills.

      I suppose loss of income is a big problem, AFLAC certainly advertises covering it for a reason, but I'm more concerned that people can lose all of their assets due to medical bills than I am over loss of income. I can accept that consequence, because most of the time that's because a person just can't work while getting the care they need, or helping the family member who needs it.

      The other is the problem.

    27. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      I wish, but Fox News is now available internationally.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    28. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      . . . about a year and a half ago, and while it's not all bad, it's not quite as glowing as TFA.

      “You have people signed up on paper, but there are no doctors, no medicine, no hospital beds,” said Miguel Pulido, the executive director of Fundar, a Mexican watchdog group that has studied the poor southern states of Guerrero and Chiapas.

      The result is that how Mexicans are treated is very much a function of where they live. Lucila Rivera Díaz, 36, comes from one of the poorest regions in Guerrero. She said doctors there told her to take her mother, who they suspected had liver cancer, for tests in the neighboring state of Morelos.

      Sounds like the problems the opponents to universal health care in the States are always worried about.

      As opposed to people living in the US 2 hours away from any major city? Guess what, those people need to travel to get important or complicated procedures done too. Or do you think that every hospital and clinic can perform every medical procedure possible.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    29. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn guys! none of this is true. First in there are doctors in the most of Mexico, In a few, shrinking rural areas there ore none; but even there people is covered and they have make a to make a trip to the neares hospital (there is at least one in each municipality). Second: We are not one of the poorest nations, we are members of the OCDE.

    30. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How exactly is yet another person who makes the egregiously incorrect assumption that profit = more expensive modded insightful? Whatever you think of the healthcare debate, this is a simple minded assumption. If it were true, than non-profit institutions or government could provide everything more efficiently and cheaply than for-profit organizations - which of course isn't true. If it were, why not let the government control all the farms - think of the cheaper food! (Citizens of the USSR and China who starved to death due to government-owned, nonprofit farms would weigh in if, you know, they weren't dead due to this assumption)

      Asserting that taking profit out of a product or service would make it cheaper is like saying that a car with no gas tank would get better mileage because it weighs less - you're saying a generally true statement (less weight = better mileage) but missing an important relationship (cars need fuel to move). Competition, driven by the profit motive, drives efficiencies that government enterprises are not incentivized to find. While this doesn't guarantee that any privatization will always be better than a government-run alternative - citing profit as an added expense to a product is over-simplistic and misleading.

    31. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $10 this douche made this post on an iPad while at a Starbucks....Prius parked out front...Obama 2012 sticker on the bumper.

      Another brainwashed libtard with Obama's nuts deep in his throat

    32. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, you do realize that even with all this, you're defending the healthcare system of the wealthiest country on the planet by contrasting it to one of the poorest (that's also wracked by drug wars largely due to the policies of the wealthiest)?

      Nit: Mexico is hardly "one of the poorest". Certainly the US isn't great at all in regards to health care systems, but by exaggerating, you really don't make your point at all, but instead look like an ignoramus that never gets out of the basement...

    33. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by currently_awake · · Score: 1

      What does a right wing conservative like Obama have to do with socialism? Obama-care is not universal healthcare. Not even close.

    34. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's just trolling.. Insightful my ass

    35. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by DavidTC · · Score: 3, Informative

      No one in the US has had to sell their house to get medical tests or treatment unless they were purposely trying to manipulate their income and assets to sneak into a government program and have the state pay for their health care.

      Medical expenses are the majority cause of bankruptcy. And while you do not have to 'sell your [primary] house' to declare bankruptcy, the idea that _no one_ has sold their house for medical treatment is insane.

      As is the idea that 'selling your house' is the problem. The problem is _losing_ it, and plenty of people do not own their home and miss mortgage payments or rent due to medical expenses. But I will take the premise at face value.

      So, taking it at face value, let's google 'sell house for medical treatment'. And let's see what do we find...a bunch of home medical stuff...hey, look, the second damn page: http://www.prlog.org/11847260-selling-house-to-pay-for-medical-bills-leads-to-pillow-talk.html

      Please note this story is from 2001, when medical expenses were much lower. Also note that reason that story was reported was a weird human interest fact it turned out for the best...presumably, the ones that do not are not reported.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    36. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      most of their prescription drugs are produced by sub-standard facilities which don't actually have a license to make them, which lets them sell expensive drugs for pennies on the dollar.

      That is bullshit, spread by the pharma companies who live in the drug-induced hallucination of thinking they are entitled to license money for doing nothing. It has nothing to do with production quality, as that is at best a small fraction of the US price, and can never even remotely make up such a price difference.

      Those drugs never were expensive, and never will be. They only cost that much in the US, because of a state-protected monopoly called "patents". Free market my ass! Those companies are literally letting people die and suffer just so they can prevent it from being a free market and make a quick buck.
      Which is a level of cruelty and heartlessness that surpasses even what I can imagine without getting a gag reflex of disgust.

    37. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is called a "thought-terminating clichee". Instead of having to work offer actual arguments, one simply resorts to a personal attack, and compares the opponent to a Hitler-eating-babies equivalent. Everybody laughs. Done. No need to even read, let alone understand the opponent.

      The thing is: We see what you did there.
      Your opponent didn't look very smart, even without anyone commenting (go figure...).
      But now YOU don't look very smart either. ^^

      Lesson of the day: There's no need to reply to an obvious idiot. Everybody knows he's an idiot. All you can achieve, in end up in the idiot pit with him. The only winning move, is not to play.

      I sacrificed myself... making myself look stupid too...so you could prevent it the next time...
      Make it count.

    38. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But no, all these socialist systems that have come before Obama were just not tried *properly* now were they? They didn't have a leader as *smart* as Obama to implement them, *this* time they will get it right I'm sure.

      It is better to not post and be thought a troll than to post and prove it.

      Nice troll.

    39. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      Sounds like the problems the opponents to universal health care in the States are always worried about.

      And like most of the other 'problems' that these opponents choose to pick nits with, it's a problem that was already present before the Affordable Care Act.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    40. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Way to sensationalize. I'm an opponent of the government involvement in healthcare because I don't want to pay for your healthcare. There are plenty of ways to improve healthcare. However forcing others to pay for your healthcare isn't the solution.

    41. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the only problem that the opponents of universal health care in the USA are always worried about is that it wouldn't let the rich get richer by letting you die.

      Wealth is relative. The rich get richer by having you live, but taking all of your money in the process.

    42. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by kenh · · Score: 1

      The poor in America can get charity treatment at many hospitals if they truly have no money, but if they own a house nd get ick without healthcare coverage, they will be expected to pay the bill for their care.

      When a poor Mexican citizen needs treatment he has coverage (in theory), but he has no access to healthcare.

      Quick, which system serves the poor better?

      --
      Ken
    43. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      The problem of making health care cheaper so there isn't so much profit in it?

      There's barely any profit in it now -- mission accomplished.

    44. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by sjames · · Score: 1

      Have you ever seen Kansas other than on a map? There's not a lot of medical centers out in the moddle of nowhere Kansas, they're a good long drive away.

      Most of the drugs come off of the same production lines as the ones at your corner pharmacy.

    45. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by sjames · · Score: 1

      The problem is that health insurance puts caps on what the provider can charge but does nothing to force suppliers to match. So you have the provider paying a fortune for insurance and a fortune for even the most basic equipment, but only able to charge most of a fortune to insurance providers.

      Force the cost of the equipment down to appropriate levels, get th insurance reasonable, and it will be OK again.

    46. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize that dialysis costs $40,000 a month? And Cancer treatments can be higher?

    47. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I ignore nothing, I note that you provide no argument in support of socialism or socialized healthcare.

      The fact remains, socialism is an abysmal failure wherever it is tried, and always will be. Fact. Soviet Union, defeated. Red China - a police state but moving towards capitalism. Why don't you go and try your luck in the Nort Korean medical system or in Cuba, then report back. You speak of your European healthcare as so wonderful. I seem to remember something about some financial problems in the EU, ring any bells? US: SSI bankrupt, Medicare/Medicaid bankrupt. Obama - unemployment above 8% for the longest stretch EVER YET RECORDED.

      Socialism is and always will be a failed economic system.

      The Free Market is the most transformative of economic systems. It fosters creativity and inventiveness. It produces new industries, products, and services, as it improves upon existing ones. With millions of individuals freely engaged in an infinite number and variety of transactions each day, it is impossible to even conceive all the changes and plans for changes occurring in our economy at any given time. The free market creates more wealth and opportunities for more people than any other economic model. History proves this, the fact that you are unable or unwilling to understand this is not my fault.

    48. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      I'm living in Australia. We have socialized healthcare. Our dollar is also fluctuating around parity with the USD at the moment, and despite global recession we have low unemployment.

      Look it up.

    49. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Socialism is and always will be a failed economic system.

      Indeed. Let's take a moment to remember some of the failed socialist states and mourn for their destroyed economies:

      Sweden

      Norway

      Denmark

      Finland

      Netherlands

      Germany

      Australia

      New Zealand

      Singapore

      Switzerland

      Canada

    50. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by heefeneet · · Score: 1

      I'm an opponent of the government involvement in healthcare because I don't want to pay for your healthcare.

      I've never understood this viewpoint. Do you also oppose government involvement in road building because you dont want to pay for someone elses travel?

    51. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's see: A: Sell my house to pay for treatment.
      B: Die. And coincidentally not have a house because I'll be, you know, DEAD.
      C: Have the government extort money from someone else so I can avoid A.

      Hmmmm....

    52. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but it's FREE man!

      FREE!

      They don't have any antibiotics, or a hospital, or surgical tools, or MRI machines, but it's FREE!!!!!!

      In the US you have to pay for it.

    53. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Medical expenses are the majority cause of bankruptcy. And while you do not have to 'sell your [primary] house' to declare bankruptcy, the idea that _no one_ has sold their house for medical treatment is insane.

      Bankruptcy needs an excuse other then I went on a spending spree. Medical expenses usually entails loss of employment to why they cannot pay it back. When people file bankruptcy because of medical expenses, it is because of their loss of income. This is something that government health simply does not fix.

      So, taking it at face value, let's google 'sell house for medical treatment'. And let's see what do we find...a bunch of home medical stuff...hey, look, the second damn page: http://www.prlog.org/11847260-selling-house-to-pay-for-medical-bills-leads-to-pillow-talk.html

      That doesn't say they lost their home to medical expenses. It says they lost their income and eventually their home to a medical condition. The main character "gary" lost all employment and they decided to move to another state. Even if their insurance covered 100% of their medical costs, they would be in the same boat because "mary" had to work less to take care of Gary's medical needs which also meant loss of income. Something else government medical didn't won't cover.

      Now the devil is in the detail. It says the house didn't sell in time so they filed bankruptcy. But it also said that Gary was blackballed from employment because of his condition so they had no intention of staying in the home. Had Gary remained working and had Mary taken time off to tender Gary and eventually moved to start over, they likely would have been in an entirely different situation. But loss of income isn't covered by Obamacare so the outcome would have been the same- perhaps a little longer to happen had the insurance covered everything.

      I understand it is a human interest story. And what better self promotion and human interest is there then someone rising from the ashes when everything was going wrong for them. They were selling the house anyways because they had to move out of state to allow Gary to find employment. This story doesn't say what you think it does.

      Also, judgment law, at least in my state, will only allow a creditor to attach a lien to a home if the debt judgment is medical related. So even if you owed 10 million dollars in medical bills, they can't take your home. They can stop you from selling it or transferring ownership to anyone else (except a surviving spouse or surviving child) but they cannot take it.

    54. Re:NYT had an interesting write-up. . . by robsku · · Score: 1

      Try comparing your health system with Finland or other Scandinavian countries instead of Soviet Union and Mexico sometime...

      --
      In capitalist USA corporations control the government.
  6. Shocking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    You mean, using someone who actually understands the field he's working in instead of a politician with little or no qualifications, actually gives better results? OMFG this is revolutionary!

  7. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alicat1194 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Done: Australia (to name one, there are plenty of others)

    --
    You can learn a lot about a person if you just take the time to inject them with sodium pentathol
  8. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by repapetilto · · Score: 1

    Australia, I've been thinking about moving there anyway.

  9. Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Balthisar · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes, the claim that Mexico has near universal coverage is accurate, but Mexico's health care is not a US or Canadian (-provincial) style. This Wikipedia article is pretty accurate: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_care_in_Mexico about how it works.

    Ex-President Fox's Seguro Popular is mostly what the article talks about, and that's what (properly) gives Mexico the right to say that it has nearly 100% coverage. And it's a good program -- my mother-in-law's maid's kid received a kidney transplant under the program.

    It's important to distinguish, though, that you're not forced into this system. You can still buy private insurance, or pay cash. (Last time I had to go to a hospital in Mexico, they simply wanted my credit card).

    tl;dr: the Mexican government hasn't taken away choice.

    --
    --Jim (me)
    1. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Alkonaut · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Would people really feel "forced" if there was a tax financed single payer system financed by taxes? Does someone feel "forced" to pay for police and other services with taxes? Would anyone rather have a private company to call in case of fire, than pay tax money for that service? Am I making a weird extrapolation between police and healthcare?

    2. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Gordonjcp · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's the same in any country with socialised healthcare though - if there are private facilities available, there's nothing to stop you paying to use them.

      Here in the UK, you can use the NHS, or if you'd prefer to have dirty hospitals, bad food, the bare minimum of treatment and staff who cannot speak English and a view over the executive staff car park full of new Jaguars and Mercs, you could go private.

      Making a profit is fundamentally incompatible with good healthcare. Something has to give.

    3. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sumdumass · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, you are making a weird extrapolation between police and healthcare. And yes, a lot of people think they are being forced to pay for police they do not call or schools they have no children in. And yes, some areas do call a private company for fire and emergency medical services.

      The difference is that most people can agree that the police and fire are necessary but requiring a 22 year old in good health to spend money in case his health goes bad is not automagicly seen as a necessity. I have gone 15 years without seeing a doctor outside of a DOT physical and a couple of blood test required after a hazmat cleanup.

      Here is the problem, when in good health, all people need is catastrophic insurance with a high deductible and a health savings account that can cover the deductible. Most of what they do that can be considered dangerous is already covered by workers comp when working or by car insurance when traveling somewhere and sometimes even by homeowners or renters insurance depending what policy you have and almost always when at another person's residence. That leaves a very narrow window where someone isn't already covered by some already existing entity if you are in good health. So most people do not see paying for the police in the same light as being forced to pay for something that is mostly redundant and probably not needed.

    4. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Does someone feel "forced" to pay for police and other services with taxes?

      Yes, many libertarians.

      Would anyone rather have a private company to call in case of fire, than pay tax money for that service?

      Yes, many libertarians.

      Am I making a weird extrapolation between police and healthcare?

      Yes, many people don't see the connection between public safety and public health. And most of them are libertarians.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    5. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      >> Making a profit is fundamentally incompatible with good healthcare.

      Why? It might cost more, but the USA is mostly profit driven, and it has some of the best healthcare available in the world. There's no universal coverage (hospitals can't refuse you, though), but as an individual "good healthcare" means that I get good services, not my neighbor.

    6. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Alkonaut · · Score: 1
      I made that question inflammatory on purpose. But I think there is a big divide between the reasoning in the US, and in what I like to call "the rest of the modern world".

      Having other (private) insurances such as car-, or home insurance cover medical expenses just means those are more expensive. If the US ever had a single payer tax financed system, of course employers would NOT pay for healthcare, and car insurance would NOT pay for healtcare in that system. What does your car insurance cost? How much of that premium is there to cover lawsuits and/or medical treatments for whoever is hit by your car? How much of that premium is there because there may be a legal procedure first?

      What if the person you ran over just got the best treatment possible, straight away, no questions asked? What would that do to your car insurance premium?

      Saying that "there is a narrow window left between other insurances" just points out that its scary as hell to have a system where healtcare is provided by a patchwork of different insurances where some may even be bound to your employment and so on (That would scare the hell out of me). The fact that a doctor would have to check with some insurance company before giving me a medical treatment to see if it is covered also scares the hell out of me.

    7. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Having other (private) insurances such as car-, or home insurance cover medical expenses just means those are more expensive. If the US ever had a single payer tax financed system, of course employers would NOT pay for healthcare, and car insurance would NOT pay for healtcare in that system. What does your car insurance cost? How much of that premium is there to cover lawsuits and/or medical treatments for whoever is hit by your car? How much of that premium is there because there may be a legal procedure first?

      They will not be any cheaper if they didn't cover the medical costs and you are required to have them if you drive a car or are buying a home. If i remember right, car insurance in Canada is still more expensive then in the US. So shifting the medical cost doesn't seem to lower the expense automatically. A good friend moved to the US from Canada and was surprised that her rates in the US were about $100 per month less for equal coverage.

      What if the person you ran over just got the best treatment possible, straight away, no questions asked? What would that do to your car insurance premium?

      I'm not really sure why you are so worried about it when i am the one who would have to pay the premium. However, the insurance will only pay for reasonable treatment costs and the law will only make me liable for that too. If the person decides to go to some $500 a hour private doctor, they would be paying the difference themselves. And that point is insignificant with universal coverage because the option to get luxury health care wouldn't exist either.

      Saying that "there is a narrow window left between other insurances" just points out that its scary as hell to have a system where healtcare is provided by a patchwork of different insurances where some may even be bound to your employment and so on (That would scare the hell out of me).

      then pay for health insurance. You must be confused about something here, I said a lot of healthy people use that to not spend money on health insurance, not that anyone had to do that. Hell, for a healthy person, a catastrophic policy is more then enough.

      The fact that a doctor would have to check with some insurance company before giving me a medical treatment to see if it is covered also scares the hell out of me.

      Do you know what the difference is in a universal coverage state is? The government had already dictated what could be done and the more risky procedures that might have a better outcome would not be considered at all. You see, there are medical standards already in place pertaining to the treatment of about anything. Existing government care like medicare/medicaid will only pay for that type of care. When the doc calls the insurance company to get approval for something, it is something that will likely be beneficial to the patient but not already a standard treatment. You can be scared all you want, but it would be because of your own ignorance not anything in practice. Your government healthcare wouldn't even provide the opportunity for that kind of treatment in the first place.

    8. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Am I making a weird extrapolation between police and healthcare?

      No you're not. But for some reason a lot of people think you are and universal healthcare goes against their god given right to visit a doctor and part with copious amounts of money in the process.

      As someone who has lived with national healthcare in 5 different countries, and as someone who sees US expats here do all sorts of strange things like not visiting a doctor when they sound like they are attempting a world record for distance coughing up a liver, I frankly don't get it.

    9. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Alkonaut · · Score: 1
      I partly agree with both: in a single payer system, having private companies make profits from public funds has proven problematic in some areas, while not in others. Emergency care can be handled well by a private company funded by the single payer. Having small clinics being bayed by the single payer for "number of patients treated" essentially, has meant that clinics compete for the "cheap" or "quick" patients, leaving the expensive and slow treated for the clinics run by the public system. Sweden is slowly learning where there is a place for private business in publicly funded healthcare, and where it doesn't work. It is a big issue in next years elections.

      Private healthcare (as in both privately paid for and privately delivered) is a non-issue. You can always get what you want to pay for. Providing healthcare for those that can pay for it has never been a problem anywhere or any time. It isn't even a political issue. What confuses me isn't that a large part of americans still favour a private insurance based system. The confusing bit is that there is a majority that supports a single-payer system, but that it is STILL difficult politically.

    10. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      Right, but you pay a *fortune* for it. Most people in the US simply cannot afford healthcare, and if they have something happen to them they will be in debt for the rest of their lives.

    11. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      when in good health, all people need is catastrophic insurance with a high deductible and a health savings account that can cover the deductible

      [citation needed]

      Health savings account? Most young people (the ones in the best health) can't afford to save money, they're living paycheck to paycheck, and they deserve a little leisure too so they don't go insane. Also, many health problems are caught with routine physicals and treated, or they become more expensive and/or impossible to treat satisfactorily. You're advocating for a system with more illness, not less.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    12. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      As someone who has lived with national healthcare in 5 different countries, and as someone who sees US expats here do all sorts of strange things like not visiting a doctor when they sound like they are attempting a world record for distance coughing up a liver, I frankly don't get it.

      It's because Americans have conflated quality with quantity. You can see this at work at every levels and in every aspect of society. More square footage. More horsepower. More food. MORE, MORE, MORE.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    13. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Well, that's okay then; there aren't many libertarians, and we don't have to cater to them.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    14. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      They will not be any cheaper if they didn't cover the medical costs and you are required to have them if you drive a car or are buying a home. If i remember right, car insurance in Canada is still more expensive then in the US. So shifting the medical cost doesn't seem to lower the expense automatically. A good friend moved to the US from Canada and was surprised that her rates in the US were about $100 per month less for equal coverage.

      This might end up being a bit of a regional issue, but I just checked my policy and the premium for bodily injury liability, personal injury protection, and other nominal health coverages is $285 a year so about 32% of my bill each year goes towards medical. On top of that there is also coverage associated with renters and homeowners policies that covers injury to guests which is significantly less, but once you factor it in what you are paying for medical with regards to automotive coverage then I can see it easily saving several hundred dollars over a year. So if there was universal coverage then most likely people would see various forms of savings across the board even though their tax liability would go up.

    15. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      >> Making a profit is fundamentally incompatible with good healthcare.

      Why? It might cost more, but the USA is mostly profit driven, and it has some of the best healthcare available in the world. There's no universal coverage (hospitals can't refuse you, though), but as an individual "good healthcare" means that I get good services, not my neighbor.

      Well, you think you get good service. Part of the drive for healthcare reform is the enormous number of Americans who pay for healthcare that doesn't actually cover anything, or with which they will be retroactively dropped from as soon as they make a claim.

      That's without getting into what happens once you do make a claim - the classic example being that if you contract something serious like cancer, your employers insurer tacks a $1 million dollar extra charge onto the bill for the new risk balance, and then strongly hints that if "certain risks" weren't present then this cost would disappear.

      But don't worry - I'm sure this will never happen to you or anyone you care about. And in final analysis, apparently that's all American society is about.

    16. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'd expect that in a more busy health system, you'd have doctors with more experience...
      At least that's what videogames told me :p

    17. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by d3ac0n · · Score: 1

      What confuses me isn't that a large part of americans still favour a private insurance based system. The confusing bit is that there is a majority that supports a single-payer system, but that it is STILL difficult politically.

      Then please allow me to clear it up for you;

      The truth is that a majority of Americans do not support a single-payer system. Indeed, when the Affordable Care Act was being debated in Congress poll after poll after poll showed sentiment running around 70% against it or any single payer system. There have been a few polls since then that have shown a thin margin of support, but they have all been found to be flawed in one way or another (sampling only in cities, large oversample of Democrats, faulty sample weighting, etc.) In most polls "Obamacare" is still highly unpopular.

      --
      Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
    18. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Capt+James+McCarthy · · Score: 1

      Would people really feel "forced" if there was a tax financed single payer system financed by taxes? Does someone feel "forced" to pay for police and other services with taxes? Would anyone rather have a private company to call in case of fire, than pay tax money for that service? Am I making a weird extrapolation between police and healthcare?

      I think part of it is that it's a federal system, not state driven like it should be. Federal taxes should be much lower, since they should only be required to provide fewer services (Print money, Declare War, maintain an army/navy, international treaties, interstate and international trade, post office, and laws to enforce the Constitution). Now based on that list, Federal taxes should be way lower. You want better medical services, or better welfare, move to a different state. Or just go to where you can get a job. Like North Dakota (they are hiring from what I hear). Don't like the weather there? Well, then keep living in squalor and leeching of the tax dollars of those who earn a living for both of you.

      But then again, there was this vague agreement between the States and Federal Governments: "Spending money for the betterment of the general welfare." That is where the wheels begin to go off the tracks when politicians and lawyers get involved.

      --
      There are no loopholes. It's either legal or it's not.
    19. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by hackertourist · · Score: 2

      Define "many". I'm not an American, but the only place I ever come across libertarians is Slashdot.
      Over here in Europe, the Libertarian movement is so small it goes completely unnoticed.

    20. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Why yes, i do remember when I would drop my boat in the lake for an evening water skiing, all the other boaters bitching about not having health insurance. They said with gas being as expensive as it was, and their 25K cars they were paying for, they could barely afford their Iphones, deluxe cable packages, plasma TVs, and Xboxes, let alone paying for some sort of insurance or setting money aside for emergencies.

      You're advocating for a system with more illness, not less.

      not really and it really doesn't matter because it is the person's choice in what to do or it should be. It is not like these people are all the sudden going to start getting checkups if they feel they are healthy enough to only need catastrophic insurance. Well unless you are planning on forcing them to go to the doctors too. But you do have a point, they will just spend their money on other things anyways and not be able to put money aside because everything else is so much more important.

    21. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by xtracto · · Score: 1

      You are the only person with a more or less infomed post related to the article; I take that you are from Mexico too.

      What they do not show in the article is that Mexican hospitals IMSS and ISSSTE are a disgrace. Terrible waiting times for emergency rooms (yes, there even is a seating area were people with a *go-to-the-hospital* emergency have to sit down to wait until they are attended... *if* they are attended), amazingly tiring bureucracy (it is a governmental institution after all) and 'you-dont-wanna-know' hospitalisation infrastructure.

      But yeah, the advantage is that anyone can opt for private health care, and that even the poorest can have *some* healthcare. Of course the "simi" type doctors (now available in almost every pharmacy including Farmacias Guadalajara) provide a very cheap (sometimes free!) doctor for most people.

      In my opinion, the Mexican government should increase taxes (and remove corruption... but that is impossible in Mexico) to improve the social health system (IMSS and ISSSTE). But I think this because I lived 7 years in Germany and the UK, two countries with socialized medicine which is really REALLY good.

      En fin...

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    22. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Do you know what the difference is in a universal coverage state is?

      Yes. The difference is everyone has some cover, vs a large chunk of people having none at all.

      The government had already dictated what could be done and the more risky procedures that might have a better outcome would not be considered at all. You see, there are medical standards already in place pertaining to the treatment of about anything. Existing government care like medicare/medicaid will only pay for that type of care. When the doc calls the insurance company to get approval for something, it is something that will likely be beneficial to the patient but not already a standard treatment. You can be scared all you want, but it would be because of your own ignorance not anything in practice. Your government healthcare wouldn't even provide the opportunity for that kind of treatment in the first place.

      You are presenting a false dilemma.

    23. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by LurkerXXX · · Score: 5, Informative

      And that point is insignificant with universal coverage because the option to get luxury health care wouldn't exist either.

      The far right keeps saying this, but it's simply not true. In England, everyone is covered by universal coverage. But many people buy supplemental health insurance because they want more of a premium plan with extra coverage/benefits. You can still have all the luxury health care you want. You are just going to have to pay extra for the luxury bits. Which all sounds quite reasonable. Stop spreading FUD.

    24. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by silentcoder · · Score: 5, Interesting

      >of course employers would NOT pay for healthcare

      Just a minor correction, although I agree with your post. I live in a country where there is such a system, and employers DO pay for healthcare if there are on-the-job injuries, indeed it's illegal to claim those from private insurance - it MUST be paid by the employer (who is free to take out insurance against such events but not forced to - they can cover accidents out of pocket if they prefer - at least for smaller companies this is often viable).

      The reason has nothing to do with healthcare cost however, it's one of the more efficient and effective ways to regulate work-place safety. If the employer is automatically liable for the cost of on-the-job injuries (however minor or major) without litigation or such ever entering into it - a guilty-by-default status, then they have every possible incentive to make the workplace as safe as possible.
      Frankly if you pay for every skull fracture caused by slippery floors, it's no longer economic to save money on slip-proof mats now is it ? Ultimately this may increase the cost of doing business but I would argue it only increases it to what it OUGHT to be in the first place. Skimping on worker-safety is not a saving, it's basically murder-for-money.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    25. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by khallow · · Score: 1

      Am I making a weird extrapolation between police and healthcare?

      Sure, one is about prevent acts of harm by people on people and enforcing regulations. The other is about society paying for individual wants. No one has ever gotten around the inevitability. People will for the most part come down with health problems that could be made better for a period of time by lots of money. That can easily scale to more than the person could earn in a lifetime.

      There's a lot of value in law enforcement for a society. It enforces the rules that make the society go. There's not much societal value in health care, unless it's for a preventable or treatable condition that has good cost/benefit (such as immunizations or prenatal care).

    26. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by darjen · · Score: 0

      The question libertarians have is does the government do an adequate job in public safety and health? It's entirely possible that the answer is no.

    27. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by CubicleZombie · · Score: 2

      Health savings account? Most young people (the ones in the best health) can't afford to save money, they're living paycheck to paycheck, and they deserve a little leisure too so they don't go insane. Also, many health problems are caught with routine physicals and treated, or they become more expensive and/or impossible to treat satisfactorily. You're advocating for a system with more illness, not less.

      1. Nothing's free. What you're saying is, young people should have free health coverage. That means *I* have to pay for it. I already work two weeks out of every month to pay for government programs.

      2. Routine care is cheap to pay out of pocket. It's about $125 for a family doctor visit, or less if you shop around (go capitalism!). So it's always a better deal to buy catastrophic illness insurance and then pay out-of-pocket for regular care - unless you go to the doctor more than twice a month.

      --
      :wq
    28. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by nschubach · · Score: 1

      I consider myself libertarian, but I would not consider someone who upholds the law of the land to be a waste of land taxes.

      Maybe you are thinking of the edge case libertarian... I mean anarchist?

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    29. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by CubicleZombie · · Score: 2

      You and every liberal is missing the point. .Nobody wants people going without healthcare. We (crazy rightwingers) don't want the Federal Government running healthcare.

      Back to the fire and police analogy, would you want your State Police dissolved and your neighborhood patrolled by the FBI? Your local Fire Department replaced by FEMA? You probably don't.

      Oregon has a fine public healthcare system. Romneycare is supposedly pretty good. I wouldn't mind if my state enacted some kind of public health system. But I do not want the U.S. federal government running my healthcare!

      --
      :wq
    30. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by buglista · · Score: 1

      Now, I've only presented with mainstream, acute conditions where everyone knows what to do - like a broken arm for example - but I've always found the NHS pretty good. The bare minimum of treatment is the right treatment; re-set it, put a cast on and then send me home. You are re right about the food though.

    31. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by roman_mir · · Score: 0

      Absolutely.

      I do everything I can to avoid being forced (no quotes around that word) to pay income taxes. Unfortunately it's impossible not to pay property taxes, but income taxes can be mitigated.

      I absolutely get private fire brigade, private health care, unfortunately I have no choice but to pay for government police though.

    32. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Does someone feel "forced" to pay for police and other services with taxes?

      As a cannabis smoker, I am forced to fund my own persecution.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    33. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Actually, US health care is generally ranked as moderate overall and below average for a western nation. WAY below average for one of the richest nations in the world. But if you're okay with maybe one day catching up with Cuba....

    34. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by QuantumRiff · · Score: 2

      I went on COBRA a year or two ago when I switched jobs. I was pretty shocked at how much my insurance cost ($1,440 a month for a family of 3). I was used to paying about $600/month for it. Until I had to pay my employers share, I had no idea how much the insurance actually cost, and I can now see where raises went the few years before.

      I know firmly think all employers should have to show the employer paid part of insurance coming into your check, and then going out, pre-tax dollars, just like 401k and stuff. If people looked at their Year to Date totals on their pay stubs, and saw that they paid more in insurance than they did in state taxes, maybe, just maybe we could finally have a real conversation about health care. Its scary how many people think their insurance is free, or a few hundred dollars, when its often several times more than what they pay out of pocket.

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    35. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you sure you mean libertarians and not sociopaths?

    36. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, many people ("libertarian" and otherwise) don't see the point of confusing public health (inoculations for herd immunity, public sanitation, water fluoridation, etc.) with private health.

    37. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, would you be amenable to something like this (this is actually based upon a Heritage Foundation proposal from the 1980s):

      We could have a Federal mandate that all states need to provide universal coverage of a certain standard. There could be a default that's as free market as possible: perhaps a system that requires (1) everyone buy insurance of a minimum standard but everyone would be able to buy it, no pre-existing conditions etc, (2) Federal subsidies for the poor (it's not going to be universal if people can't afford it), (3) states could provide stores where standardized plans can be bought to avoid receiving a "personal rate" that undermines the entire notion of it being insurance to begin with. and (4) the existing system of private insurers and a mix of private/public hospitals remains intact.

      But states could also opt out (perhaps after a grace period to ensure the basic universal coverage system is in force) and create their own system, as long as it too provides universal coverage and ensures that this provides adequate healthcare.

      This way, all states have at least a minimum standard of universal coverage, and states that want to provide better universal coverage systems than the Federal minimum would be able to without having to worry that, for example, all the expensive cancer patients living in the state with the least coverage in the US would suddenly move in for the six months it takes to get decent treatment, without paying a penny towards it. States continue to have the right to manage healthcare, but with the proviso that they do, actually, ensure their citizens have it.

      How would something like that sound? If you think it's awful, how would you modify it in a way that makes it workable (eg ensures the "cancer patients from post-Rick Scott's Florida don't move to Oregon and leech off the Oregon taxpayer's dime" thing doesn't happen?)

    38. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately because catering is now farmed out to external suppliers, the food in NHS hospitals is now just about as bad as it is in private hospitals.

      The *real* problem here is that these companies cannot grasp the idea that diet is *extremely important* to a patient's recovery, and quite often someone needs to eat very specific things at very specific times that don't line up with the almighty schedule. Once again, profit is put before patient care.

    39. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then fucking leave the country you twat.

      Set up a libertarian, free-market paradise somewhere and get back to us on how that goes.

    40. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      when the Affordable Care Act was being debated in Congress poll after poll after poll showed sentiment running around 70% against it or any single payer system.

      And when I conducted a poll in my house, 70% of the people there were against being forced to eat poop, or being allowed to eat any type of cake.

      See what I did there? Same thing you did. And you have the gal to criticize surveys that don't reach the conclusion you'd prefer as flawed!

    41. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They needed a new bogeyman when they realised that Democrats and Republicans are pretty much the same. I wouldn't take much notice anyway since most of the people bleating about Libertarianism here have just as much of an idea what it actually is as many of those people who claim to be Libertarians.

      If it helps, try to think of it as proposing ultra-small governments, which is an idea we're not really used to here in Europe where there's a lot more state involvement in day-to-day life (e.g. medical care).

    42. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah you're right, the majority taking away the rights (or product of labor) of the minority is no big deal......
      oh wait, yes it is.

    43. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you sure you mean libertarians and not sociopaths?

      Same thing.

    44. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by DetriusXii · · Score: 1

      There's some areas where the government is simply more efficient because the data shows that the government is more efficient. Health care and fire fighting services are two areas where the public sectors is more efficient than the private sector.

    45. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      But I think there is a big divide between the reasoning in the US, and in what I like to call "the rest of the modern world".

      Yes, it's because the US has a lot of libertarians in it (one of the country's founding principles was the distrust of government, after all) and politics far to the right of any other country out there.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    46. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      There are many in the US, luckily the rest of the world is mostly free of them. I first ran into them on Slashdot too.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    47. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Here in the USA too. The only place you find libertarians is on the internet.

      This is because those who are active in local/state/federal politics and voting are generally older and have property. They see the importance of a nice neighborhood, good fire, police and schools. This is because of the impact of losing those things would have on property values.

    48. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You and every liberal is missing the point. .Nobody wants people going without healthcare. We (crazy rightwingers) don't want the Federal Government running healthcare.

      Back to the fire and police analogy, would you want your State Police dissolved and your neighborhood patrolled by the FBI? Your local Fire Department replaced by FEMA? You probably don't.

      Oregon has a fine public healthcare system. Romneycare is supposedly pretty good. I wouldn't mind if my state enacted some kind of public health system. But I do not want the U.S. federal government running my healthcare!

      No, people do want people to go without healthcare, because they think that if they're in a situation where they aren't afforded healthcare, then they must have done something wrong with their life and don't deserve it.

      So I'd have organizations that have higher recruitment standards providing safety services? Sign me up. I don't want the good ol' boys that picked on everyone else in high school being the ones responsible for public safety.

    49. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      Oh, you crafty bastard, you're not going to fool me. You're trying to trick people into saying Obamacare sounds good by describing it accurately.

    50. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by dr2chase · · Score: 2

      By what objective metric is our healthcare "some of the best". For life expectancy, we're well behind most of the OECD. Sure, we kick ass compared to Somalia and North Korea, but who doesn't?

    51. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Alkonaut · · Score: 1
      I think what would scare me the most is even having to pay attention to what kind of treatment I'm getting, or research if there are better alternatives that I'm being denied. I'm happy as long as I can be sure my treatment is as good as my neighbors, and my country has a healthcare ranked as among the best in the world. As soon as a public health care system is no longer top rated, it all falls apart. You'd start to worry about whether you need private coverage in order to get the advanced treatments etc. Then it doesn't work.

      I can pay to get more luxury (my own room), or to get a procedure done in private (thereby bypassing queues for non-emergency treatment). If I had to start paying to get a treatment that would be more effective, it would already be a useless system. This is the reason why you can't (and shouldn't) half-do a single payer system. You have to all out do it. And it has to be top notch, meaning you will have, like Sweden, a tax pressure of around 60% in order to pull that off (that said, 60% goes a long way in e.g. ensuring 1.5years of parental leave too for example).

    52. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but those libertarians are wrong about police and fire, so that doesn't mean they're right about heath either.

      You heard me right, I said they are wrong. No, not everybody's opinion is equally valid. Some are morons.

    53. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You and every liberal...

      Go away troll

      UID# 2590497

      Oh... a spam/shill account...

    54. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you believe universal healthcare would reduce lawsuits due to car accidents, you are living in the land of Ponies and Unicorns.

      1. You cannot assume there will be no rationing when every universal system, even France does.
      2. The limit of what will get paid will still incentivise lawyers to go after damages not covered by universal health.

      Personal Injury Law is an industry in and of itself It has created a "get rich quick" in the American populous and rigged the law in their favor. Couple that with the fact that Personal Injury Lawyers donate heavily to the Democratic Party. This is an area of the law that will NEVER get reformed.

    55. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by radtea · · Score: 2

      The far right keeps saying this, but it's simply not true. In England, everyone is covered by universal coverage. But many people buy supplemental health insurance because they want more of a premium plan with extra coverage/benefits. You can still have all the luxury health care you want. You are just going to have to pay extra for the luxury bits. Which all sounds quite reasonable. Stop spreading FUD.

      Except in Canada, where the Canada Health Act effectively prohibits most Canadians from having supplementary health insurance for a wide range of procedures that are covered by their provincial health insurance. So if you need a knee replacement, say, you have three options: 1) wait for a year or more to get it via the universal system; 2) be well-connected in the health-care system and jump the queue (I've worked in the system and been assured this happens); 3) be one of the ultra-rich, like Belinda Stronach or Robert Bourassa, and skive off to the US to get it done, all the while smugly lecturing your social, political and economic inferiors on the virtues of the Canada Health Act.

      Unfortunately, the reason why we have this crazy restriction is that we're living next to a nation with an entirely predatory health-care system, and there are quite legitimate concerns as to what the effect of a more open insurance market would be, despite most Canadians being in favour of it and most socialized systems being far more open to private insurance than ours is.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    56. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *sigh*... such libertarian hate. I just feel the need to voice something for all those like me out there... I am what you might call a 'small L' libertarian. That is, I am libertarian in general principles, but consider the 'big L' Libertarian party and their ilk to be as nutty as any other political party, if not worse in ways.

      They give us a bad name by doing all the same crap that the R's and D's do to their supporters. Rediculously over-focus on pointless inflammatory issues, and to hell with the un-sexy general principles that they claim to follow. I know a good number of folk who fall into this boat.

      Point being, be careful not to conflate "many libertarians" with "most" or "all". There are lots of (especially 'small L') libertarians out there who are reasonable folks that have no issue with government doing what is necessary for the greater goods of public safety, health, and other such things that are clearly best addressed at the (local/national/whatever) community level. All their libertarian stance really says is that they don't favor government being able to take arbitrary actions in arbitrary areas of life, purely because they can and it suits the agenda of the party in power at the time. The government should ultimately be a provider of (physical, administrative, legal) infrastructure, and a defender of that infrastructure. Not some sort of ambitious executive organization.

      Obviously even such a simple definition is rife with minefield gray areas, but it's not like that's any different from every platform ever offered up by other parties or movements.

    57. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by jandersen · · Score: 1

      But many people buy supplemental health insurance because they want more of a premium plan with extra coverage/benefits

      Actually the NHS is very good - I used to have private healthcare through my workplace, but I stopped because I can't see the point of receiving a taxable benefit that gives me so little extra.

    58. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by OoSync · · Score: 1

      And many libertarians also don't connect all the past experience this country has with not having public police or fire services. Take a tour of Philadelphia; they'll gladly show you the remaining emblems for the various private fire services that existed long ago.

      Then you'll gradually learn how those services were incompatible within the city or between cities. This lead to a lot more property damage and lives lost.

      It's not an accident that such things became public over the course of time.

      --

      I always get the shakes before a drop.
    59. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does someone feel "forced" to pay for police and other services with taxes?

      Yes, many tea-baggers.

      Would anyone rather have a private company to call in case of fire, than pay tax money for that service?

      Yes, many tea-baggers.

      Am I making a weird extrapolation between police and healthcare?

      Yes, many people don't see the connection between public safety and public health. And most of them are tea-baggers.

      Fixed that for you... see, the "many" people in the US who are most vehemently against Obama care and taxes for public services seem to be this new Tea Bagger Group which is also quite against gay relationships and marriage while a true libertarian would have no problem with a relationship of voluntary association between two consenting adults.

    60. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's "some of the best" in the sense that if you have a truckwad of cash you can get really good, top notch medical care here. It's pretty shitty if you're poor, but so what, you're poor, do you really think you're "entitled" to live a long life?

    61. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Immerman · · Score: 1

      That's probably because you have multiple political parties and anyone can find a party they mostly agree with on any given issue. In the US we've only got two parties with a realistic chance of getting any power, and public theatrics aside they're looking more similar all the time. That results in anyone with a "realistic" position grumbling along with the status quo, while the extremists are the only ones loudly voicing any opposition.

      Plus it's probably exacerbated by the whole "stand free and proud" frontiersman thing enshrined in our national self-image, since unlike most places that threw off the yoke of abusive colonial governments we completely subjugated the natives and didn't have any sort of pre-existing national identity to fall back on.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    62. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      Yes, I think the poor are entitled to live a long life.
      Consider Matthew 25:31-46. Not a good argument for an atheist necessarily, but it works for a lot of people.

    63. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by tomhath · · Score: 1

      All that irrelevant nonsense aside, the idea of a "single payer" is silly. If healthcare is provided by the government it should be provided by government employees, just as public education, police, and fire protection is provided today. There are major issues regarding salaries and union representation that would have to be worked out. And the roughly 85% of US citizens who have health care coverage today would have to accept the fact that their coverage will be the same as the wino on the street and there's nothing they could do to change that.

    64. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      Don't worry, if the EU gets the power that the Federal Government in the US has you'll see more and more libertarians come out of the wood work. It's not so much a problem for many libertarians when the government is close to them city/state level. It gets worse when people on the other side of the continent are deciding what you do. The US used to be the United States of America, now it's just the US, one state with minor districts that answer to the central government. Be wary of the EU or you to will be in the same situation.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    65. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by DavidTC · · Score: 2

      No shit.

      This is especially fun for me. I don't have insurance, I'm actually uninsurable in that no one will offer me insurance. And as I'm repeatedly forced to explain that such a thing exists, and there is no magical place I can buy it. (There is, thanks to Obamacare, a stopgap measure...that my state has completely misimplemented and doesn't actually let people into. So I wait for the actual mandate and 'Cannot refused based on pre-existing conditions' stuff to come into effect.)

      Hilariously, they then rant about how I could buy it if the gubberment would let me buy it from another state...and I'm forced to point out that I live in Georgia, where the government _does_ allow that (One of the few states that does)...and no insurance company has bothered to take them up on that offer. (Because no insurance companies besides the ones currently here have any _doctors_ here. The entire point of such a law is to allow the insurance company to move their HQ to a different, laxer state, not actually provide competition.)

      But, frankly, half the problem is that literally none of them seems to know how much insurance costs, and appear to think it costs about a fifth of what it actually does.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    66. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then again, libertarians are people who want the law of the jungle (aka "free market") back, because they know they have the biggest stick.

      It's good for them, no argument there.

      But listening to them, when you're not one of them, is like listening to the wolf suggesting "free range" chicken.

    67. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      You do realize that, under the ACA, that states can essentially opt-out if they have a system that will provide the same level of care? It's called an innovation waiver. Vermont already planning on opting out into their own single-payer, and is trying it done _now_ instead of waiting until the entire ACA kicks in.

      The problem with saying 'Let the states do it' is...the states have had a goddamn two decades to do it at this point, pretending the problems with health care first became an issue in 1992. (Of course, that was an issue before that, but let's pretend.)

      Some of the states did...and most of them didn't.

      If a state wants to come up with their own plan, or even _has_ their own plan currently, and this plan _actually works_ in providing affordable health care to, I dunno, 95% of the residents, and the Federal government makes them do something else, feel free to complain at that point.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    68. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by HungWeiLo · · Score: 1

      I know a few in person. They are usually in the bottom quartile income-wise and education-wise, and genuinely believe the only thing standing in the way of their ambition to migrate from their $12/hr job to multimillionaire status is the government (while they buy houses using government FHA loans, send all their kids to public school, and check out Ayn Rand books from the public library).

      --
      There are a huge number of yeast infections in this county. Probably because we're downriver from the bread factory.
    69. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by darjen · · Score: 1

      I feel that is certainly debatable. Just because the government currently provides health care and fire fighting services now does not mean it is the most efficient way of doing things. Many people are simply used to how things are done now so they just reject the idea outright. But it doesn't HAVE to be that way.

    70. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're also borderline mentally disabled.

    71. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      Point to some of these polls. I think you're full of shit.

      In fact, sources in Wikipedia seem to agree with me. It's only since the Republican smear campaign against "Obamacare" and the misinformation repeated from easily-led blindly partisan people like yourself who, apparently, are incapable of looking at data from around the globe and seeing just how bad our healthcare system is that support has plummeted.

      Hooray. Negative advertising wins again. Repeat a lie often enough and it becomes the truth, because nobody can be bothered to fact check.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    72. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      (yes, there even is a seating area were people with a *go-to-the-hospital* emergency have to sit down to wait until they are attended... *if* they are attended

      The precious thing is that you seem to think there are no waiting areas in emergency rooms in the US.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    73. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I do not think the case of a savings can be made at all. As I said, same person, same car, same driving record, different address (US address verses Canada Address) and paying for the same amount of coverage in automobile insurance was $1200 a year cheaper in the area that has medical coverage in it (the US). That is a pretty large sum of money if you think about it and the less amount was actually where there is no universal coverage and the policy had to provide some medical coverage.

      I guess a study could be done to determine this. However it would get more complicated with homeowners as flood risks and crime rates would heavily influence the costs of insurance. But simply looking at your coverage and saying X amount of for medical coverage so I will automatically save that amount is a bit naive and unreal. I just checked Massachusetts' minimum liability requirements, after all, they have universal coverage in the state, and the medical coverage isn't removed from their car insurance coverage.

    74. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      It's no where near a false dilemma. The concept of calling for approval came up and the reason why approval needed to be made was specifically because the treatment was non-standard for the condition or the billing code needed to be changed to include a condition the treatment would be standard for. With Medicaid and Medicare, we already see what happens in real life, the standard medical treatment is applied. Part of the Obamacare package that is being called a death panel is where advisory boards are set up to determine the best standard treatment for something and balance the costs according to the age and likely results of the patient, This is fact and it is designed to modernize a standard of procedure system that is supposed to drive costs down specifically by limiting the treatment to a standard for the condition.

      You need to either start paying attention or bow out of discussions about this stuff.

    75. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mexican here, I use private doctors because you can't trust goverment healthcare. Most of us who can afford it do it. I also have private insurance for when the treatment costs more than $2,000 US. I've used it a couple of time's with the wife so I've aved about $30,000 US now with the best care possible in my city.

      Private healthcare and goverment one have real different odds of living.

      We have different types of insurance:
      -Goverment one that your employeer is supposed to have pay.
      -The other goverment one (seguro popular) for the people who don't have tax paying jobs, like maids, old people who had or have informal jobs or kids. Kids aren't supposed to work here, but it's a gray area with some jobs.
      -Employeer clinics, very few companies have this.
      -Private insurance for major injuries, sometimes offered by the employeer as a perk or paid by us on our dime.
      -Private insurance for minor injuries not related to work, sometimes offered by the employeer as a perk or paid by us on our dime.

      When you're over 60 it's next to impossible to be able to buy private insurance. If you worked and payed taxes for 30 years and are over 65 you should be covered with the goverment system but it's not ery good.

    76. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by ItsJustAPseudonym · · Score: 1

      ...we're living next to a nation with an entirely predatory health-care system...

      Those darn Greenlanders!

    77. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Why yes, i do remember when I would drop my boat in the lake for an evening water skiing, all the other boaters bitching about not having health insurance. They said with gas being as expensive as it was, and their 25K cars they were paying for, they could barely afford their Iphones, deluxe cable packages, plasma TVs, and Xboxes, let alone paying for some sort of insurance or setting money aside for emergencies.

      Are you seriously claiming that this is representative of the majority of young people in US (as opposed to, say, the majority of kids in white collar families)?

    78. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was a libertarian when I studied in the uni.

      Then I grew up and got a job.

    79. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      It's no where near a false dilemma.

      Yes, it is. You are arguing the only two options are a list of pre-approved public healthcare treatments or a free-for-all of private-health-insurance-funded treatments.

      You need to either start paying attention or bow out of discussions about this stuff.

      You need to start looking at the situation with more than one eye half open.

    80. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you start quoting that pinko-commie Jesus with his "No bankers in the temple" and "Easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a job creator to pass into the kingdom of Heaven" BS.

    81. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Oregon has a fine public healthcare system. Romneycare is supposedly pretty good. I wouldn't mind if my state enacted some kind of public health system.

      So, like Canada, then?

      But that would make you a "crazy right-winger" only in a sense that you're crazy to them. Most right-wingers I've seen, other than libertarians (who are a minority), oppose any public social programs on principle, whether on federal or state level.

    82. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      Yes, many people don't see the connection between public safety and public health.

      There are way more differences in those two than similarities. Hell, the fact they happen at different levels alone is a huge deal, but I wouldn't expect you to understand that. Continue with your libertarian bashing. I know it gets you through the day.

    83. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      But for some reason a lot of people think you are and universal healthcare goes against their god given right to visit a doctor and part with copious amounts of money in the process.

      Very much on the other hand, we don't want to be parted with copious amounts of our money. A good chunk of US healthcare costs come from end-of-life care. I should have the option of choosing to die 3-6 months earlier (instead of clinging to agonizing life) and use that money now when I'm young and healthy to better enjoy the time I have. It's carpe diem, and I doubt you could possibly understand what that means. Because you think people live forever, medical care is infinite, and money grows on trees.

    84. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      It's the same in any country with socialised healthcare though - if there are private facilities available, there's nothing to stop you paying to use them.

      Except that you still have to absorb the costs associated with the socialised healthcare...and if that program is run poorly, ineffectively, or inefficiently, the sizable bill racked up by said socialized healthcare could very easily cut into the funds you have available for private healthcare. This is especially true in a country that never lets people die -- the US would spend millions just to give a person a few extra days to live. Noble? Sure. Financially sound? Not even remotely.

    85. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      "The US" isn't spending a bent penny to keep anyone alive. The patient - or if they're lucky, their insurance company - is paying to keep them alive, and they're only doing it because the doctors are required to so the hospital can squeeze a few more dollars out.

    86. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      The US spends twice as much as a percentage of GDP on healthcare as the UK, but Americans have on average a two year shorter lifespan than people from the UK.

      How's all that spending working out for you guys?

    87. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sjames · · Score: 1

      Universal has never meant forced except in the rhetoric of Republicans who think poor and middle class people should just crawl into a hole and die if they get sick..

    88. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sjames · · Score: 1

      Most people are not victimized by crime in a gioven year either. Most people will be one day if there are no police. Most people will eventually need some sort of health care and, in fact, over a lifetime there's a fair chance that it will be a matter of life and death.

      At the same time, there is plenty of reason to resent having to pay so much for even necessary health care. It really shouldn't be as expensive as it is. There's no good reason a middle class family should need help affording health care at all, but the costs have gone out of control because the market does not work here.

      All in all, we might be better off with universal health care provided at a reasonable price. People in other countries pay less taxes towards their universal care than people in the U.S. spend on insurance and they get more for their money. One reason I support a true single payer universal health care is that then Congress is forced to face the issue of excessive cost head on.

    89. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sjames · · Score: 1

      In the U.S. the most common way to get medical insurance is as a work benefit. That's because individual and family policies are unaffordable. When an American talks about an employer paying for health care, they mean employers providing group insurance coverage to full time employees and their families as an employment benefit instead of paying a higher salary.

      That is in addition to workman's compensation that must be paid when employees are hurt on the job.

    90. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sjames · · Score: 1

      Sounds like FUD to me. Private insurance is notorious for refusing non-standard treatments. They hacve death panela as well, they just pay theirs a bonus when they find a way to give you the thumbs down.

    91. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How much of that premium is there to cover lawsuits and/or medical treatments for whoever is hit by your car? How much of that premium is there because there may be a legal procedure first?

      Lawyers do not approve.

    92. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Not really true.

      Most Americans have some sort of private insurance through their employers.

      The level of care you can get through these plans is quite good.

      The problem is what happens if you don't have an employer or some other life event causes you to lose insurance or you work for an employer that doesn't provide insurance.

      Then it's quit dicey.

    93. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Health care doesn't fix bad lifestyles nor population income heterogeneity.

      Pick another metric, like cancer survival and you will find US care is very good.

    94. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      I understand the historical basis for feeling that states should take care of most services.

      However that means 50 yes 50 redundant organizations with different sets of laws doing the same thing.

      How can that be efficient at all. The idea that this is the best way just doesn't pass the sniff test.

    95. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      So then we get 50 separate parallel redundant organizations doing the same thing because of some archaic organizational concepts from a era where transport was by horseback and sending a letter across country took a month or more?

      This isn't the 18th century any more. You can administer a national scale organization efficiently. The US Federal programs like Medicare and Social Security have EXTREMELY low overheads.

      It just doesn't make sense to partition this sort of thing at the state level any more.

      People need to realize progress has been for the past 5000 years about increasing the size of political administrative units. From a band of hunter - gatherers to nations of more than a billion population.

    96. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      If we don't do well enough on "cancer survival" to raise our longevity up to the standards of the rest of the OECD, I'm not sure that is an adequate metric by itself. After all, I don't have cancer; perhaps it will be heart disease that gets me, or diabetes, or something else. Maybe the other countries do a better job of preventing cancer, or perhaps we do an exceptionally good job of detecting cancers early (e.g., prostate cancer, with overuse of the PSA test) that allow us to boost our survival score, when that cancer isn't necessarily what's going to kill us anyway.

      That's why I like expected lifespan as a metric; there's dead, and there's not-dead. These other metrics are more ambiguous.

    97. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      You do know just because we have universal healthcare there's no magical healthcare police which force you to go to a doctor right? You're more than welcome to kill yourself any time you want.

      I also like this talk about money, given my country was one of the very few which didn't have a recessions in the last few years. This despite Australia coming in the top 2 in all metrics out of a study of the largest western countries' health systems (US and Canada included) in terms of overall quality of care, and we also provide the best end of life care (40 countries in this study).

      Yes it costs money, I pay for it with my taxes and you know what? I do it happily because it's worth it.
      By the way my last MRI left me $27 out of pocket and I don't have private health insurance.

    98. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      No problem: there's no civil right to not be taxed at all, in a general way, so no rights are lost, no labor is being compelled from anyone, and there's no inherent right to property that is likely to be infringed upon by the sorts of taxes that are usually instituted.

      So all we really have are greedy people who want their cake and to eat it too, but disguise themselves in nobler sounding language.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    99. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Just because the government currently provides health care and fire fighting services now does not mean it is the most efficient way of doing things

      You have correlation and causation reversed. It doesn't mean that, it's a result of that. The government provides those services now because private industry was doing a poor job.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    100. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Yes, many people don't see the connection between public safety and public health.

      There are way more differences in those two than similarities.

      We could play the enumeration game, but my point which you seem to have missed entirely is that public health has ramifications for public safety, and the other way around as well. If you hadn't got defensive you might have read it correctly.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    101. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      The problem with lifespan as a metric is that it is dependent on a lot of factors outside the quality of medical care.

      It's easy to measure, but highly confounded.

    102. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Yes, it is. You are arguing the only two options are a list of pre-approved public healthcare treatments or a free-for-all of private-health-insurance-funded treatments.

      No I am not. I am arguing that the point about calling for approval is pointless, meaningless, and not connected in bringing up government mandated healthcare verses the way it exists now because the reality is that all treatments that do not require an approval will continue to be made, the only difference is that there will not be the non-standard treatments without getting approval.

      This isn't a two options, There might very well be an option where something can be called in and approved with government health care either by privately funding it or from within the system, But then we are at the same place no matter what. If the op claims there will be no call in needed, then it will only be for standard care that doesn't need approval right now.

      You need to start looking at the situation with more than one eye half open.

      You need to look at it without your preconceived notions. This part of the thread was a specific reply to a specific statement. If the statement was you need to call for approval now (which you do for non-standard treatment) and do not under obamacare or other government health care, it will be because you are getting the standard treatment. The entire idea of government health care is to control costs, this is claimed to be done by a panel that dictates the standard treatment so everyone goes to the doc and gets the same effective treatment instead of me getting a deluxe package and costing 5 times as much outside of you only getting the accepted norm for the same condition and the same outcome.

    103. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      No, I'm claiming that the majority of people who do not think they need health insurance and would take the catastrophic coverage would spend the money saved on other things.

      And yes, that is a true story about being on the lake in my 20K boat talking to others in 15K-40k boats who expressed those exact same sentiments while anchored at the boat swimming area and drinking a few beers, This was before the Obamacare law came into play and there was still a raging debate. They actually wanted to keep their luxuries while having the government provide health coverage that they were forgoing in order to provide for their luxuries. I did the exact same thing (spent my insurance premiums on a boat, 4 wheelers, guns and hunting equipment, electronics, and had the $120 per month cable package that jumped to $200 a month when I got high speed cable internet, but I did not expect the government to provide my health care coverage that I could otherwise afford..

    104. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Please don't get me wrong, I didn't say it isn't happening right now with private insurance, I'm saying it won't change except for the point of having the ability to get non-standard treatment in some cases. The op's point of how scary it is to get approval for something is was negated by that. Bringing up the death panels was only to point to the inner workings setting that up within the Obamacare package.

    105. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by darjen · · Score: 1

      It was rent seekers in the political class who claimed private industry was doing a poor job, with no proof whatsoever, then used the power of their government positions to take over or consolidate said industries because they wanted more control over people.

    106. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      It surely is, but it appears that we are uniquely bad at a large number of these factors, whatever they may be, and lacking a definitive accounting on what the weights are, it would be good to move on all fronts. I have absolutely no problem with also taking steps to reduce income inequality and to nudge people towards better lifestyles. One advantage of putting things into a universal cost/care framework erases some of the silo boundaries and buck-passing that we get in the current system. As things stand, even under Obama-universal care, insurance companies only have an incentive to keep your care affordable until they can hand you off to medicare, and then not-their-problem. They also have no control over things that are seemingly unrelated to healthcare, yet turn out to matter (for example, the design of transit systems and (sub-)urban planning that help pry people's butts out of their automobiles -- a particularly unhealthy lifestyle choice). Under the current system, these sorts of things are "good" because "they are good for people's health". Under a proper single-payer/provider system, these sorts of things are "good" because they save money down the road on health care.

    107. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sjames · · Score: 1

      So universal health care is a disaster in the making because it might be almost as bad as what we have now?

    108. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Definition of many: Loud signal to noise filibustering minority flaunting peacock feathers to look bigger than they appear, usually outnumbered by less popular communists, socialists, and anarcho-syndicalists who don't go around huffing and puffing that they are "many".

    109. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Most people are not victimized by crime in a gioven year either. Most people will be one day if there are no police. Most people will eventually need some sort of health care and, in fact, over a lifetime there's a fair chance that it will be a matter of life and death.

      lol.. You're dreaming. Most people will not need health care in a life threatening way unless it's at their old age and they are trying to prolong dieing already. The entire insurance industry banks on this fact that most people will not draw from the system. They sign them up as a just in case scenario in order to pay for the minority of people who will need coverage. Obamacare works on this principle and attempts to lower the costs of insurance by forcing the healthy people who will not need insurance into buying it to spread the costs of who do need it out more. There is even a provision in there which dictates that if the insurance company takes in a % more then it pays out, it needs to return the % of intake back to the policy holders which they timed to be right before this years election for the first payout.

      At the same time, there is plenty of reason to resent having to pay so much for even necessary health care. It really shouldn't be as expensive as it is. There's no good reason a middle class family should need help affording health care at all, but the costs have gone out of control because the market does not work here.

      I agree. The medical industry is raping the wallets of many people. Some of it is due to the extremely large costs of getting medical procedures, devices, and medications approved for general use. Some of this is for the costs of maintenance that is really more rigorous then anything else to avoid liability issues should something malfunction. But for the most part, the reason everything is so expensive is because the government got involved in healthcare in the first place.

      Medicare and medicaid only pay a percentage of a regional average for the health care provided. If the treatment costs the medical provider $100 in actual costs to perform, government reimbursement will be $80-$95 without considering the average. The cure for that is to ensure you are charging enough so that after the discounted payment, you cover costs. The nation is divided into 5 sections (based on the cost of living index) and costs statistics.are gathered then averaged. If your real costs to provide a treatment is $100, and the average is $80, the reimbursement can actually be $50-70 because they will work the percentage off the average and if the provider doesn't accept it as payment in full (with the exception of certain co pay obligations in some of the medicare programs), they cannot accept any government provided health care patient including government employees with regular insurance provided by their employment contract or receive certain tax benefits given to medical providers. So right off the bat there is incentive to inflate the costs of treatment just to recover actual costs due to someone covered in an existing program.

      This gets compounded with the 1968 HMO act which was Ted Kennedy's first attempt at health care reform. It allows insurance companies to negotiate lower rates for insurance patients on their plans. The way to give these discounts and cover costs including profit is to inflate the costs so the discount covers the real costs. Again, an incentive to make things more expensive base solely on how most medical services are paid for. This HMO act also set the standard for insurance companies to determine standard treatments and negotiate the effectiveness of the non-standard treatments before allowing or denying them. This is implemented in Obamacare also and commonly refereed to as the death panels but in private insurance is usually called a Resource-based relative value scale.

      All in all, we might be better off with universal health care provided at a reasonable price. People in other countries pay

    110. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I should have reviewed this better. obvious mistakes are that in other countries, private health has to compete with public not the other way around and it should read county not country in hat statement about nonprofit hospitals in every county of every state.

    111. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by bhiestand · · Score: 1

      What confuses me isn't that a large part of americans still favour a private insurance based system. The confusing bit is that there is a majority that supports a single-payer system, but that it is STILL difficult politically.

      Then please allow me to clear it up for you;

      The truth is that a majority of Americans do not support a single-payer system. Indeed, when the Affordable Care Act was being debated in Congress poll after poll after poll showed sentiment running around 70% against it or any single payer system. There have been a few polls since then that have shown a thin margin of support, but they have all been found to be flawed in one way or another (sampling only in cities, large oversample of Democrats, faulty sample weighting, etc.) In most polls "Obamacare" is still highly unpopular.

      You actually just muddied the waters rather than "clearing it up". I'm assuming you understand polling well, so the truth is that you are lying.

      Polling to expand medicare ("medicare for all") has consistently been ~60%. I've seen it higher, but I have rarely seen it lower.

      Polling for "single-payer" is lower, but usually still a majority. Americans don't like that term. They also don't like anything that says "social". This does not mean they don't favor a single-payer system. It just means they don't like systems that are called single-payer.

      Your 70% claim sounds like a fabrication to me, but I have not, in the last decade, seen expansion of medicare polling anywhere near as low as 30%. The ACA is despised by the left (who want single-payer/medicare/nationalized healthcare) and by the right (who are mad Obama stole their idea), hence combined opposition is much higher than the number of people who oppose all universal coverage schemes.

      A quick write-up on "single-payer" versus "medicare" can be found here: http://pnhp.org/blog/2009/12/09/two-thirds-support-3/

      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    112. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by metaforest · · Score: 1

      Would anyone rather have a private company to call in case of fire, than pay tax money for that service? Am I making a weird extrapolation between police and healthcare?

      This is a good match. In NYC and other large cities during the mid-1800's it was not unusual to have several private fire battalions serving a district. They were notorious gangsters and thugs who happened to do some firefighting on the side.

      And while the Pinkerton Detective Agency was not really a police force it was often used as one. During the unionization riots that grew out of the early industrial revolution, they did indeed take on that role for large corporations. For quite some time were afforded the legal color of a legitimate police force. As you might expect they abused their role rather efficiently.

      I think the main comparison in the profit motivated healthcare system we have today is hard to observe. It seldom gets reported on. Eventually, just like the privatized NYC-FDs and Pinkertons the abuses become so obvious that the majority will not tolerate it. However it might take another generation before it happens. Assuming the whole country doesn't get flushed down the toilet in the mean time.

    113. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It's the same in any country with socialised healthcare though - if there are private facilities available, there's nothing to stop you paying to use them.

      Here in the UK, you can pay for a real doctor, or if you'd prefer to have dirty hospitals, bad food, the bare minimum of treatment and staff who cannot speak English and a view over the executive staff car park full of cheap Fords, you could go NHS."

      Fixed that for you.

      "Making a profit is fundamentally incompatible with_____. Something has to give."

      There is NOTHING a socialist believes should involve a profit. Everything should be given to him for "free." That millions of dollars worth of training, equipment and facilities is involved, with constant research, development, upgrades and adjustment is irrelevant. He waaaaaants it! It should be freeeeeee!

      The NHS is a third world system, and almost killed me, and my mother. Taking a cue, my father paid out of pocket for his spine surgery. He's walked fine since.

      But hey, it's FREEEEEEE!

      Looked at your tax bill lately?

    114. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sjames · · Score: 1

      lol.. You're dreaming. Most people will not need health care in a life threatening way unless it's at their old age and they are trying to prolong dieing already. The entire insurance industry banks on this fact that most people will not draw from the system. They sign them up as a just in case scenario in order to pay for the minority of people who will need coverage. Obamacare works on this principle and attempts to lower the costs of insurance by forcing the healthy people who will not need insurance into buying it to spread the costs of who do need it out more. There is even a provision in there which dictates that if the insurance company takes in a % more then it pays out, it needs to return the % of intake back to the policy holders which they timed to be right before this years election for the first payout.

      Wow, do they have unicorns where you live too, or does it just rain candy at night so you can have sunshine all day? :-) I'll agree that less things require professional health care than people think, but eventually most people will need medical intervention of some sort, and I do not mean crazy heroic medicine to scratch out an extra week at the end. Health insurance depends on people not needing as much as they pay for on average. They do not depend on nobody ever needing any.

      A few misconceptions for you, only the Republicans have ever claimed (lied) that universal health care excludes the possibility of supplemental private health care. The systems in the UK and and Australia are considered universal health care. It is so-named because it is universally available. Nobody in the U.S. has even suggested excluding a parallel or supplemental private health care. No other country excludes that. Not one.

      Real health care cost in other countries is only 1/3 as much as it costs in the U.S. That includes all tax money, insurance premiums, co-pays, and etc. All of it. That cannot be explained by medicare 'underpaying'. Every extra dollar charged somewhere else would be balanced by that dollar not being spent by medicare (unless, of course, that was just an excuse to gouge). It cannot be explained by a reasonable profit. Nobody is entitled to 66 points net profit.

      Opening VA hospitals to the public would be a good step. Simply extending medicare to all citizens would eventually move us in the right direction as well. Allowing (even encouraging) the re-import of drugs and medical equipment from other countries. would help. Non-profit hospitals would help, particularly if they are assisted in re-importing supplies so they can get out from under the outrageous gouging in the U.S. market so they can charge close to the REAL cost of providing care. Medical billing is a HUGE cost and benefits nobody. A single payer system would greatly reduce that cost. There would still be other insurance, but since it would be non-essential, they wouldn't have the clout needed to force yet another crazy and arbitrarily different billing system off on healthcare providers.

    115. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Magius_AR · · Score: 1
      Your own doctors disagree with you on it being worth it:

      https://www.mja.com.au/journal/2011/194/11/time-rethink-end-life-care

    116. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      "The US" isn't spending a bent penny to keep anyone alive. The patient - or if they're lucky, their insurance company - is paying to keep them alive, and they're only doing it because the doctors are required to so the hospital can squeeze a few more dollars out.

      That's not true. The elderly, of whom I was referring to, are all on Medicare -- and Medicare fully funds any and all end-of-life care. Hell, even if they weren't on Medicare, EMTALA would still cover the care and someone in the system is getting stuck with the bill. (assuming the patient is tapped out)

    117. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Are you capable of following a simple line of thought? Or is there some other voice in your head making you assume things were said that aren't even close to reality. His point is a non sequitur because it will be the same as now- period.

      IF anyone is calling it a disaster it would be the people calling the current situation a disaster and that tell us more about you then you have bothered to gain from the posts discussing it.

    118. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sjames · · Score: 1

      Is there some reason you suddenly became a flaming fuck-tard? Were you raised by wolves or do you just have intermittent explosive disorder? Are you recieving treatment for it or did your insurance throw you to the wolves (that raised you)?

    119. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Wow, do they have unicorns where you live too, or does it just rain candy at night so you can have sunshine all day? :-) I'll agree that less things require professional health care than people think, but eventually most people will need medical intervention of some sort, and I do not mean crazy heroic medicine to scratch out an extra week at the end. Health insurance depends on people not needing as much as they pay for on average. They do not depend on nobody ever needing any.

      You have already demonstrated that you are confused little troll in many of our other posts and replies but you really illustrate it quite well here. Just because people will one day need health care coverage does not in any way mean they will need it right now or that they believe they need it right now. It is not my fault that someone's business model depends on me buying something I do not need at the moment in order to function properly. I have no obligation to support some company's attempt to profit until I desire the services or products. Plenty of people who will never need them already join in and purchase them.

      A few misconceptions for you, only the Republicans have ever claimed (lied) that universal health care excludes the possibility of supplemental private health care. The systems in the UK and and Australia are considered universal health care. It is so-named because it is universally available. Nobody in the U.S. has even suggested excluding a parallel or supplemental private health care. No other country excludes that. Not one.

      Lets stick with reality. No one ever said there was no possibility of supplemental insurance. I certainly haven't. The republicans I have heard speak about it say that it will be taxed and extremely costly making it impractical to get anything other then the government mandated policies. I do not know what you are smoking but you should put the glass dick down long enough to pay attention. I know damn well what England and Australia have and even suggested something similar but without costing a fortune and decades to implement. And for the record, I suggested implementing the parallel health care system as a way to control costs (which obamacare doesn't) and provide greater access to it. That is me, as in myself, as in someone sitting in the US.

      Real health care cost in other countries is only 1/3 as much as it costs in the U.S. That includes all tax money, insurance premiums, co-pays, and etc. All of it. That cannot be explained by medicare 'underpaying'. Every extra dollar charged somewhere else would be balanced by that dollar not being spent by medicare (unless, of course, that was just an excuse to gouge). It cannot be explained by a reasonable profit. Nobody is entitled to 66 points net profit.

      Actually, underpayment and HMO discounting does explain a good portion of it. And yes, think gouging. I never said it explained all of it so do not be ridiculous and claim I did. I said it created a environment where overpricing is highly encouraged in order to pretend to be offering a discount. It was born from the Medicare partial payments and is further encouraged by the HMO's trying to get deals to allow their patients to be covered at the health care facilities.

      Opening VA hospitals to the public would be a good step. Simply extending medicare to all citizens would eventually move us in the right direction as well. Allowing (even encouraging) the re-import of drugs and medical equipment from other countries. would help. Non-profit hospitals would help, particularly if they are assisted in re-importing supplies so they can get out from under the outrageous gouging in the U.S. market so they can charge close to the REAL cost of providing care. Medical billing is a HUGE cost and benefits nobody. A single payer system would greatly reduce that cost. There would still be other insurance, but since it would be non-essential, they w

    120. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you can read your own posts- consult the idiots in your mind, and tell me.

      I've spent several posts now explaining the comment and right when I think there is no way you can get it wrong, you pretend something else completely was said or would be said.

    121. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sjames · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you were explaining to the voices in your head....

      I''m already picturing you sitting in the corner wearing a dunce cap, picking your belly button lint and tasting it and loudly farting huge green clouds of stinky gas, don't make it worse by replying again until you're ready to cut the insult crap and post like a real live grown-up!

    122. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Did someone catch you doing that and tell you it was gross or something? Maybe you can shit unicorns and rainbows or something instead.

    123. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would be because the cult of Ayn Rand does not have a firm foothold outside of the US.

    124. Re:Seguro Popular -- it's not universal by xtracto · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I can only compare with Germany and the UK (England) as those are the only places where I have used the health system. Indeed in Germany there seem not to be a waiting area for patients with an emergency.

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
  10. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alkonaut · · Score: 1

    ...let's watch the mexican economy tank in 3...2...1...

    Whats been tried? Universal healthcare?

  11. Shock News! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doctors write paper claiming that the key to health is for a government to give doctors taxpayers money.......

    1. Re:Shock News! by The+Slashdot+8Ball · · Score: 2
      from TFS:

      Julio Frenk dean of the Harvard School of Public Health, is a co-author on the paper.

      He's an academic, not a medic.

      Oddly enough there are people in the world who are not motivated solely by profit.

    2. Re:Shock News! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was also the health minister of Mexico when this system was being implemented. You are right, he probably wasn't solely motivated by profit, I'm betting it was getting hard to pat himself on the back and needed others to do it for him.

    3. Re:Shock News! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Oddly enough there are people in the world who are not motivated solely by profit."

      Indeed there are. But NONE of them are in positions of power, for obvious reasons.....

    4. Re:Shock News! by dumky2 · · Score: 1

      Right... Academics are angels who are immune to greed and other human cravings (fame, power, security). They join the small ranks of angels of politicians and government bureaucrats ;-)
      I find it curious how you identify people's motives by their title. There are lots of people not motivated solely by pecuniary profits, from random joes to company owners.

      --
      These comments are mine; I do not speak for my employer.
  12. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by 1u3hr · · Score: 2

    Hong Kong. Universal coverage for nominal charge. (Hospitals about $12/day for any kind of treatment, waived if you really can't afford that.)

  13. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alkonaut · · Score: 1

    Name one. Real economists make money off it.

    Name one what? One country with universal healthcare, that has had a decent economy for at least the last few decades?

  14. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    lol.. isn't Australia a duel health care country consisting of private and public system like England? I'm pretty sure I was going to have to buy insurance when I was thinking of moving there.

  15. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by repapetilto · · Score: 1

    What metrics do you use to assess a country's economy?

  16. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Sasayaki · · Score: 5, Informative

    Australia (where I am)
    Canada
    The United Kingdom
    Most of Europe, for that matter
    South Africa
    New Zealand
    Singapore
    Japan

    And that's just off the top of my head, with a bit of googling to back it up. You know, basically every single first world country except the United States, who recently were in a massive recession and are looking to head that way again.

    --
    Check out my sci-fi book "Lacuna" at http://goo.gl/MVxX8
  17. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by repapetilto · · Score: 1

    Which means nothing on its own. How should we account for the quality of care, taxes paid by each person recieving care, etc?

  18. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Nordic states are doing pretty well, and they all have universal socialised healthcare. The Netherlands claims it has privatised healthcare, and the best service in the world, but in fact 75%+ of the cost is transparently covered by the taxpayer, and poor people do get free healthcare.

  19. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alkonaut · · Score: 1

    What metrics do you use to assess a country's economy?

    Which ever you like. I'd probably go for standard of living, life expectancy, poverty level, unemployment, number of people in higher education, literacy etc., as well as national parameters like deficit, debt.

    I'd guess there is actually a strong correlation between public universal healthcare and healthy economies. But not because public universal healthcare gives a better or worse economy, but because public universal healthcare as a good economy as a prerequisite.

  20. Society by coastwalker · · Score: 0

    Without universal healthcare people live in ghettos and a country is full of factions at war. Apparently Mexico is a more civilized country than the rich antisocial faction of Americans would like it to be. Sometimes you wonder if the rabid religious nut-jobs who declare America to be the great Satan might have a point.

    --
    Facts are history now plebs have politics for religion on social media.
    1. Re:Society by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The hilarious irony is America itself is full of factions at war with each other.
      They are just more discrete about it whereas in Mexico the police system is more broken so the need to be overly-careful isn't required.

      Whether it is race wars or standard gang wars, it happens all over the place.
      It is pretty universal in any large country, and 100% in any continent, even Antarctica.

    2. Re:Society by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Without universal healthcare people live in ghettos and a country is full of factions at war. Apparently Mexico is a more civilized country than the rich antisocial faction of Americans would like it to be.

      Mexico is a country full of factions at war.

      Sometimes you wonder if the rabid religious nut-jobs who declare America to be the great Satan might have a point.

      They do, but not just because we don't have universal health. Mexico is a country which continues to exist as an independent entity in spite of our best efforts.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  21. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alkonaut · · Score: 4, Interesting

    We were only discussing whether a public universal healthcare system automatically tanks the economy. Whether this system provides better or worse care, or does it for ore tax money than would otherwise be spent in private insurance is a completely separate discussion.

    (but as a clue, I have seen lots of studies saying that for example the US healthcare system provides about half as much "care per dollar" than most single payer systems. A lot of this is of course due to legal and bureaucratic overhead).

  22. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by repapetilto · · Score: 0

    So..based on the metrics you provided, if the ponzi scheme collapses you will admit that the free healthcare was basically paid for by subtle enslavement of the third world?

    If you disagree, then we and our children really could sustain our lifestyle forever without ripping off poor people?

    I am kind of trolling, but really?

  23. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by coastwalker · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You display the ignorance that indicates that you are a drone repeating the mantra instilled in you by propaganda. There are plenty of countries doing very well with universal healthcare. The majority of them also offer private health care for the rich who think they can buy their way to better health with additional insurance.

    --
    Facts are history now plebs have politics for religion on social media.
  24. Cost? by jamesl · · Score: 1

    Interesting that they don't mention what this is costing the taxpayers. Maybe it's in the body of the paper which I can read for just $31.50.

    Probably not.

    1. Re:Cost? by minio · · Score: 3, Interesting

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_total_health_expenditure_(PPP)_per_capita Simply put it is way cheaper than US system which is impressively ineffective.

    2. Re:Cost? by Hentes · · Score: 1

      Exactly, it's easy to provide better healthcare by throwing more money at it.

    3. Re:Cost? by jamesl · · Score: 1

      The under five mortality rate (deaths per 1,000 live births) in Mexico (2010) was 17. In the US ... eight.
      http://www.unicef.org/media/files/Child_Mortality_Report_2011_Final.pdf

      Comparing quality of care between countries is difficult but I know where I'd prefer to start a family.

    4. Re:Cost? by Nemyst · · Score: 1

      So the US has half the childhood mortality rate but fourteen times the GDP of Mexico. I'm sorry but that doesn't really reflect nicely on the US.

    5. Re:Cost? by dr2chase · · Score: 2

      Perhaps in a country where the under-five mortality rate is four? E.g., Belgium, Austria, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, or Portugal? Some countries manage three (Sweden, Norway, Finland, Japan). Even Cuba manages six. Eight's not exactly something to be proud of with our level of spending.

    6. Re:Cost? by currently_awake · · Score: 2

      It's easy to provide better healthcare by throwing -LESS- money at it. The secret is cost control. You have to limit the profit margins for the public good.

    7. Re:Cost? by robsku · · Score: 1

      B... b... b... but is it not the American Way to only compare yourself to those inferior to you??

      --
      In capitalist USA corporations control the government.
  25. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    In AU everybody is covered by public health care, if you earn more than $72K Aus (current ~$75k US) you pay an extra 1% tax.

    This equates to about $700 a year which (I am sure not by coincidence) is about the starting point for a single non-smoker private health cover. If you do take out private cover and earn > $72k you don't pay the extra tax.

    All up I feel its a fair system

  26. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alkonaut · · Score: 3, Informative

    lol.. isn't Australia a duel health care country consisting of private and public system like England? I'm pretty sure I was going to have to buy insurance when I was thinking of moving there.

    Is the NHS in the UK inadequate these days? I don't live there but I'm quite sure I'd be happy with "just" the NHS if I lived there. Having other insurances to cover e.g. loss of income from illness is one thing. I wouldn't have to have private insurance to cover transplants or cancer treatment, nor would be in a better situation to get such treatment than my poorer neighbor, and thats the important bit.

  27. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by repapetilto · · Score: 1

    A healthcare system coudln't tank an economy unless people were forced to pay into it. People wouldnt be forced to pay into it unless it had already gotten TBTF.

  28. Supply and demand doesn't apply here by erroneus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't know why people don't get it. The "free market" people out there love to say "government shouldn't mess with it" and usually, I agree except when government has no choice.

    Any time there is an unlimited supply, the government needs to help. Such cases include matters like "copyright" and "patent protection." The supply is unlimited and therefore must be enforced by government to use other means to get people to pay for something with an unlimited supply.

    Any time there is an unlimited demandm the government needs to help. Such cases include matters like healthcare, water and electrical service. People need what they need and it has little to do with market conditions. Often is is "use or die." Government needs to ensure that needs of the people are met before suppliers are allowed to exploit the need to gain unlimited profits.

    It's interesting and amusing to me that many such free market proponents are great with government enforced or assisted items like copyright but not with health and power regulation. "Only when it serves their interests." So it's selfish humanity as usual... and in the end, that's why we have law in the first place -- to help us to act against our own nature.

    1. Re:Supply and demand doesn't apply here by minio · · Score: 2

      Why should goverment force anyone to pay for something with unlimited supply??? By this logic a goverment should force people to pay for oxygen they are breathing.

    2. Re:Supply and demand doesn't apply here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you confess to be selfish by nature. That's a good step forward. You also admit that you need help to act against your selfish feelings. If you ask government to help you by enacting laws which prescribe punishment, will you ever be able to tell whether your new "good" behavior is fear of punishment or genuine selflessness?

    3. Re:Supply and demand doesn't apply here by erroneus · · Score: 1

      Well, there's a carbon tax or something like that right?

      But without forcing people to pay for copyrighted and patented things, creativity and innovation would... hehehe... I can't even finish the sentence. People will create and innovate regardless of whether or not there is law in place to help make it a more profitable business. It's what humans do. And without intellectual property law, there would be no profitable business model. And in the end, that's what's being created/enabled by government "interference" here.

      Just once, I would like someone ask the Romney side (I'm not for Obama either, but it's an easy target) "Okay, we get that you're against regulation of the medical industry, but why are you for regulation of the copyright industry? I guess it's all about the parties being regulated isn't it? It's okay when it's the 99% being regulated and not okay when it's the 1% being regulated.

    4. Re:Supply and demand doesn't apply here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      And that logic is correct!

      Governments do pay for the oxygen you breathe, they put in more trees and parks and make sure the air isn't toxic. I personally love my healthcare in Australia, I still have private health care at a cost of $10/week that covers all my dental needs with a 50% return on costs (two checkups a year almost covers what I pay alone!). I've been bankrupt and still had the luxury to get help with my depression at that time too with one-on-one sessions.

      I do really feel sorry for the USA when it comes to health, it's amazing how badly brainwashed you all are! But hey, we still have our own issues too, progress...

    5. Re:Supply and demand doesn't apply here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have asked them.

      The real problem is not asking the question, but getting an answer.

      There are a few of the "libertarians" with the courage of their principles, but most are just frauds adopting it as a convenient rhetorical cover for their real beliefs. They prefer the hyperbole and exaggeration that comes from chanting "Freedom" and "Taxation is Theft" because it resonates better.

    6. Re:Supply and demand doesn't apply here by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Any time there is an unlimited supply, the government needs to help. Such cases include matters like "copyright" and "patent protection." The supply is unlimited and therefore must be enforced by government to use other means to get people to pay for something with an unlimited supply.

      Any time there is an unlimited demandm the government needs to help. Such cases include matters like healthcare, water and electrical service. People need what they need and it has little to do with market conditions. Often is is "use or die." Government needs to ensure that needs of the people are met before suppliers are allowed to exploit the need to gain unlimited profits.

      Or we could upgrade our ancient, primitive economic system to one that can handle limitless supplies and demands instead of trying to add more hackish fixes to our tarted-up barter system to struggle by with them...just something to think about.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    7. Re:Supply and demand doesn't apply here by dumky2 · · Score: 1

      I have to admire your creativity. You came up with a brand new theory of government and economics. Nevermind that it is so logically flawed.
      There is no more unlimited demand of healthcare as there is for food, housing, clothing, entertainment. Let me know of any one broad field where demand is limited or we are close to fulfilling all the demand. I could certainly use a few houses, some nice cars and yachts, more leisure, and so on. Maybe government ought to pay for those too.
      And for government to try and impose artificial scarcity (IP) is the ultimate foolishness. Not only is the notion of IP incompatible with basic (physical) property rights, but it has not achieved its claimed goals. It does not increase innovation, it only creates rents for big media and a minefield for inventors.
      Finally, note that law making, policing, defense and other traditional government services fit nowhere in your worldview.

      --
      These comments are mine; I do not speak for my employer.
    8. Re:Supply and demand doesn't apply here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and how much resources should the government allocate to enforcement activities relating to this unlimited supply? unlimited resources?

      you've delved into an area where you are going to deny the fact that corporations have invented property which defies the law of nature, because normally, when an entity has property, it's under it's control, and the burden of caring for that property falls under the owner.

      if it's going to take the entire might of the world's largest super power to enforce that owner/property relationship then it's not an authentic owner/property relationship.

      s/natural-law/unnatural-law/g = resources expended that are not in line with productivity = bankruptcy

      I hope you die.

      good day sir.

    9. Re:Supply and demand doesn't apply here by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      People need what they need and it has little to do with market conditions. Often is is "use or die." Government needs to ensure that needs of the people are met before suppliers are allowed to exploit the need to gain unlimited profits.

      By what strange view of the world do you believe healthcare providers or insurance companies are raking in massive profits?

    10. Re:Supply and demand doesn't apply here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you for clearly expressing the less-clear thoughts in my head.

  29. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alkonaut · · Score: 0
    I don't know what you are getting at here. The high standard of living in for example western europe and the US can of course be said to at least in part be due to the exploitation of third world countries.

    You were arguing that public health care leads to a collapse of a countrys economy, and now you are arguing that when a countrys economy collapses for whatever reason, that country will no longer afford its public healthcare? That is not the same thing?

  30. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

    Yes they say the words that make you happy... do they actually deliver?

    Weak sauce dude, weak sauce.

    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  31. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alkonaut · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yes they say the words that make you happy... do they actually deliver?

    Still trolling? Let me repeat his statements for you, in a new wording

    - All of the "first world" economies, except the US, pretty much have universal socialized health care.

    - The systems are popular in these countries (they are all democracies, so they would have to be quite popular to remain).

    - All of these economies are of course facing more or less rough times at the moment, but their economies would still be regarded as "healthy" on a global scale or seen over a few decades.

  32. Better healthcare and they still come to the US by Quakeulf · · Score: 0

    I guess healthcare doesn't mean that much to them...

  33. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by madsdyd · · Score: 2

    Danmark, Sweden, Finland, Norway at least are non-tanking. Plenty more in the rest of Europe, I would reckon.

    The US is unique in beeing a "western world" country without universal healthcare, btw, and while we do have a financial crisis in Europe right now, I am not sure there are any relations to the health sector.

  34. Ironically... by Karmashock · · Score: 0

    millions of Americans are not flocking to mexico for free medical care... rather millions of mexicans come north.

    These stupid studies are all trying to prove the moon is brighter then the sun. It doesn't matter how many graphs, pie charts, or studies you do on the subject. The evident facts of the matter don't support the premise.

    This isn't to say mexico can't one day have a great medical system. It's just that today... where do you honestly want to be treated? Exactly. End of argument.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    1. Re:Ironically... by ledow · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Only an American could ask that with a straight face.

      "It's just that today... where do you honestly want to be treated?"

      Any country that won't bankrupt me to do so. Because there's no point in being treated if you then have nowhere to live, recuperate, no life to enjoy after and have to work (while in ill health) for the next 20 years to pay it off. I would love to be treated in a perfect hospital with every medicine and treatment available and have it all done while people bring me cocktails and rub my feet. Of course. But the truth is that it's a choice being PAYING LOTS OF MONEY and being treated okay, or PAYING NOTHING and being treated when necessary.

      If I cut my finger, I'll do it myself.
      If I sprain my leg, I'll do it myself or walk into a hospital if it really develops complications.
      If I break my leg, I have to go to hospital.
      If I break my spine, I have to go to hospital.
      If I get cancer, I have to go to hospital.

      At no point would I ever *PAY* for those services. Think about that. I get cancer, I probably have 10-20 years at most if it's serious and will never truly rid myself of it, and I get ALL my treatment paid for me. How much would that cost on insurance, and how much would that cost if you had no insurance and had to pay cash? Now what if I'm diagnosed with, say, cerebral palsy at birth? How much is my insurance going to be then? Have you even SEEN the cost of quite basic medical treatment?

      My country, the UK, is shit and wonderful at the same time but wouldn't expect a dying man to pay for his own care (maybe his car parking at the hospital, but that's a minor issue in comparison). The hospital might be crap. It might have worse care rates than private wards. The staff might be belligerent. But I'm not running up debts that I will never be able to pay while I'm laying there unconscious and can't do anything about it.

      In the UK, the healthy pay for the sick.
      In the US, the healthy pay (next to) nothing and the sick are left to fend for themselves.

      Nice attitude to humanity, there.

      I never to sit there, adding to the stress of my illness, with what might happen to my insurance payments, or my house, or my family, or anything else.

      Sorry, given the choice, I'd go to a hospital where the treatment is "free" and the only cost is the queue and the waiting time. Because the simple, economic fact is that *I* cannot afford to pay for anything serious (and wouldn't go to hospital for anything that wasn't) and I already pay as-much, if-not-more tax than the US and we do just fine on "free" healthcare.

      Literally - if I went on holiday to the US I have to buy a travel medical insurance that I *NEVER* have to purchase in the EU. Because if I break my leg in Spain, the treatment will be paid for by the UK. If I break my leg in the US, they won't pay (because of your ridiculous healthcare arrangements) and I have to BUDGET THAT INTO MY HOLIDAY. If I fall into a coma in the US, whether my fault or not, that's me bankrupt back in my own country trying to pay off the US medical bills. Or I can pay a fortune for insurance that NOBODY in the EU requires me to have. (And, yes, US residents are charged for the cost of their healthcare in the EU but they are used to it!). I actually have to take it into account just holidaying in the US.

      Either pay for everyone's healthcare out of my taxes, or ask me to pay towards everyone's healthcare as a separate payment. Don't pay for some of it out of my taxes, then make me pay for anything above a slight cold, and then make insurances compulsory, and then let insurers set the prices how they like (the point of insurance should be to cover EVERYONE for an equal price - i.e. if you all pay $100 a month, then the guy who needs a $10 operation gets it as does the guy who needs 100 $10,000 operations - otherwise you are just paying for your own healthcare).

      And, in the UK, I have the option. I have complete, free, blanket NHS protection on anything I ever do. I can also pay fo

    2. Re:Ironically... by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      millions of Americans are not flocking to mexico for free medical care... rather millions of mexicans come north.

      But many Americans do flock south to Mexico for reduced-cost medical care. For example, my dental work will be about 10% down there what it would be up here... or 20% of what it would be if I still had dental coverage.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:Ironically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is due to cost, not the lack of quality care here in the US. In point of fact the quality here is still better but you can get comparable care in other countries - for cash - at lower cost so yes many people do take advantage of this.

      But the underlying question is what has caused the cost of health care to increase so dramatically in the US?

    4. Re:Ironically... by Dan667 · · Score: 1

      actually, I know lots and lots of people that go to Mexico to get their prescriptions filled. And Mexicans are coming to the US for work, not health care.

    5. Re:Ironically... by Karmashock · · Score: 0

      go to a US emergency room and you'll see a line of illegals showing up for free treatment.

      You want to know why care is so expensive in the US? This is part of the reason. You're paying for someone else.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    6. Re:Ironically... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      This is due to cost, not the lack of quality care here in the US. In point of fact the quality here is still better

      Citation needed.

      But the underlying question is what has caused the cost of health care to increase so dramatically in the US?

      The answer is mercantilism.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  35. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by repapetilto · · Score: 1

    I don't know where I said that paying for public healthcare leads to a collapse. The current method of providing healthcare is basically stealing from future generations (which will eventually lead to collapse), if you think about how it works (at least in the US) it is a big ponzi scheme. Every generation needs to convince the ones after them to buy in to the insurance/Social Security scam. Please explain how else it could work.

  36. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alkonaut · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A healthcare system coudln't tank an economy unless people were forced to pay into it.

    Single payer universal health care means healthcare is a figure in the budget, just like infrastructure, defense etc. If there is a budget deficit you have to cut down on something (infrastructure, defence, healthcare, whatever). People are "forced to pay into it" no more or less they are forced to pay into defense or infrastructure. Having too large expenses for healthcare is entirely possible, reasons can be for example if you have a shift in demographics where fewer young people pays for the healthcare of a large aging population (Japan has this problem whereas the US does not). This can cause economic issues, but the same can be true if you have an aging airforce.

  37. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    no, healthcare tanks the economy when hospitals are forced to provide healthcare to the uninsured. if some freeloading hick with no healthcare gets hit by a bus the local hospital will be forced to treat him even though it will cost hundreds of thousands of dollars that he will obviously never pay. the only option is either force people to contribute to healthcare through taxes or let hospitals refuse treatments...forcing hospitals to treat people who are too irresponsible to get insurance is a moral hazard and raises the cost for everyone else.

  38. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by 1u3hr · · Score: 1

    Which means nothing on its own. How should we account for the quality of care, taxes paid by each person recieving care, etc? The question was "name one". That's what I did. You can look up the economic detail as easily as I can.

    Anecdote: I know an American in Hong Kong getting treatment for cancer, treatment he would be denied back in his home country despite paying taxes for the last 40 years since he lost his job there and thus his insurance. His chance of survival is still low, in America it's zero.

  39. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by repapetilto · · Score: 0

    If the government promised to people they better pay it. That will come out of someones paycheck.

  40. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alkonaut · · Score: 4, Informative

    I don't know where I said that paying for public healthcare leads to a collapse.

    I was thinking of this: "Like everywhere else it's been tried...let's watch the mexican economy tank in 3...2...1..."

    The current method of providing healthcare is basically stealing from future generations (which will eventually lead to collapse), if you think about how it works (at least in the US) it is a big ponzi scheme. Every generation needs to convince the ones after them to buy in to the insurance/Social Security scam. Please explain how else it could work.

    I don't know what you mean by "stealing from future generations". If you have a budget neutral (i.e. not deficit spending) based, tax financed, public healthcare system, how will that be problematic? Look at Sweden for example. There is a single payer universal healthcare system paid for by taxes, at the same time there is a budget surplus and the national debt has been quite rapidly reduced in the last decade. Are the current generation of swedes "stealing" from the next generation of swedes?

  41. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jrumney · · Score: 4, Informative

    In UK, NZ, and I presume Australia too, the reason people pay for private health insurance is to get a bed in a private room when/if they require hospitilization, and to get on a shorter waiting list for tests and treatments for non-life-threatening conditions. If you're prepared to slum it in a shared ward with other patients and wait a few months to get surgery on that low level knee pain that's been annoying you for years, then the NHS is perfectly adequate, and will kick into action quickly and efficiently when you really need it.

  42. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    That's about how it was described to me when I was about to be going there. Job fell apart and didn't go though. Most people I spoke with about it like it too.

  43. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    and to get on a shorter waiting list for tests and treatments for non-life-threatening conditions.

    You don't even get that in Australia, unless we are talking fake breasts or something equally frivolous.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  44. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alkonaut · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the government promised to people they better pay it. That will come out of someones paycheck.

    Still the same as defense. Also comes out of someones paycheck. And what the government promises, they better deliver if they want to be reelected. You are still not making a point I feel.

  45. And the US has ... by damn_registrars · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... nothing. President Lawnchair signed the massive bailout for the health insurance companies (which was conveniently disguised as "health care reform") which ultimately left us with the same broken system, but with people now forced to buy into it. We still have no standard of care, and nothing that actually resembled universal coverage.

    And now to further accentuate how ridiculous that is, the Mexican government just beat us to health care reform as well. A significant portion of their country is embattled in violent conflict in the drug war, yet they can pass health care reform. Up here, we can't pass it because of a collection of idiots who are afraid of (their own lack of understanding of) "socialism".

    Yeah, go ahead. Mod me down. I can take it. At least I said my piece.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:And the US has ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um. The US did pass HealthCare. If it's not the plan you want, blame the Democrats. They had YEARS to plan it and a full 2 years to pass it, but managed pass a heaping pile of crap. Secondly, you are assuming the Mexican plan works as advertised. There was a time when many American intellectuals and reporters wrote of the "success" of the Russian Soviet experiment back in the day. See how well that work out? If you think the Mexican system is so great, move there. Let us know that works out for you.

    2. Re:And the US has ... by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

      The US did pass HealthCare. If it's not the plan you want, blame the Democrats

      I don't know if you're blind, stupid, or just trolling. Being as you are an AC the third is very likely and of course we'll never know for sure.

      Nonetheless, anyone who was awake for the past four years would know that this is the way the health insurance bailout act came to be:

      • Obama was elected president and wanted health care reform
      • The democratic majority in both houses worked to write a bill
      • The GOP bitched and moaned that their input was not considered and that the democrats were playing politics in the same way the GOP was when they had majorities in both houses and GWB in the white house
      • The democrats caved and allowed the republicans to rewrite the bill
      • The GOP realized that if their bill passed with Obama in the white house, he would get credit for fixing the health care system - even if the passed bill fixed nothing
      • Realizing what they did, the GOP turned the noise machine up to 11
      • Realizing they were stuck, the democrats voted for the bill and Obama signed it - their only other option was to scrap it and accept being labelled as doing nothing.

      In other words blaming the democrats for this pathetic bailout-disguised-as-reform makes as much sense as blaming Neil Armstrong for NASA cancelling the space shuttle program.

      If you think the Mexican system is so great, move there.

      Here, you failed to read. I didn't say it was great, I just said they at least managed to do something, which is more than we can say. Furthermore, your assertion of "move there" shows that you have no idea of how difficult it is for a US citizen to just up and leave this country to live somewhere else, even if they want to.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    3. Re:And the US has ... by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      The democrats caved and allowed the republicans to rewrite the bill The GOP realized that if their bill passed with Obama in the white house, he would get credit for fixing the health care system - even if the passed bill fixed nothing Realizing what they did, the GOP turned the noise machine up to 11 Realizing they were stuck, the democrats voted for the bill and Obama signed it -

      You believe the Republicans wrote PPACA??? My god are you deluded. Obama couldn't even get his own party in line behind what he proposed. 34 Dems in the House voted against it! And no serious Republican idea was incorporated into it. It was nearly a thousand partisan pages written behind closed doors followed by an attempt to buy Republican votes with some bullshit riders/amendments. They never had any intention of working with the Republicans -- don't you remember the "sit in the back" commentary? Remember these concessions? (hint, they aren't republican concessions) http://articles.cnn.com/2009-07-10/politics/house.health.care_1_blue-dogs-public-option-medicare-rates?_s=PM:POLITICS

      Stop trying to rewrite history you troll.

      I just said they at least managed to do something, which is more than we can say.

      What they "did" was become healthier without their government's involvement. That should be obvious by the chart included in the same damn article that clearly shows a declining use of healthcare from 1998 through 2004: http://www.nature.com/news/mexioc-health-policy-graph-jpg-7.5922?article=1.11222

      Seeing as how the Mexican "universal healthcare" bill wasn't even enacted until 2002-2003, it's tough to chalk up the reduced medical bills to government intervention.

    4. Re:And the US has ... by sjames · · Score: 1

      What's really sad is how much 'Obamacare' resembles Massachusetts' Romneycare.

      Once again, the Democratic party finds itself unable to stand up against the underwhelming Republican minority.

    5. Re:And the US has ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe calling idiots is a bit simplistic of an analysis, you idiot!!!

    6. Re:And the US has ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love how you're able to spin a compromise to placate fuckwit conservatives as Obama's fault. The dems wanted a public option all along. Universal health care. Always have. (Remember Bill Cliton's big fight wit the republican congress? Yeah. You can thank the R's for your crippling medical debt)

      It's the republicans that want to prop up the broken system. "Obamacare" is a copy of a program created by the the current /Republican/ candidate.

    7. Re:And the US has ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... nothing. President Lawnchair signed the massive bailout for the health insurance companies (which was conveniently disguised as "health care reform") which ultimately left us with the same broken system, but with people now forced to buy into it. We still have no standard of care, and nothing that actually resembled universal coverage.

      And now to further accentuate how ridiculous that is, the Mexican government just beat us to health care reform as well. A significant portion of their country is embattled in violent conflict in the drug war, yet they can pass health care reform. Up here, we can't pass it because of a collection of idiots who are afraid of (their own lack of understanding of) "socialism".

      Yeah, go ahead. Mod me down. I can take it. At least I said my piece.

      You conveniently seem to have left out the fact that President Lawnchair was castrated mid term. Right wing bush leaguers and their huge money machine skewed the mid term election and in doing so the Right wing has effectively blocked any possibility of real health care reform and almost deliberately allowed the Country to default. The scare tactics are the most disgusting show of rich bitch moaning and groaning I have ever witnessed in the history of American politics. Almost as bad as the crap that FDR had to put up with... even then the republicans were by and large controlled a bunch of belly aching rich bitch anti everything government control freaks.

      Suddenly the bush leaguers have a new saviour from Utah in the land of SCO. He might or might not become President but you can bet that the castration of President Lawnchair will make him roar even in defeat. American politics have become almost pathetic given that an elected sitting President can be suddenly stripped of power mid term and a new election is always needed to correct what is essentially a mid term screw over of a government by the rich.

      Obama could not get support for what was first envisioned and the amount of drug and medico company money that was suddenly thrown out to the Republicans mid term to kill the Obama reforms is disgusting. I think that the truth of this fact will be a huge part of the Democratic campaign in the coming weeks and will become the Republicans Achilles heal in the debates. The closer we come to the election the more to the point Obama will become. I think he is being very smart sitting back and letting the Republicans hang themselves over the fact that their party only represents the rich minority.

  46. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by repapetilto · · Score: 1

    defense.... you mean the war department?

    Just forget it then.

  47. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by SpzToid · · Score: 4, Informative

    When I select HEALTH index (only) the United States ranks #38. The United States is trailing the industrial powerhouses of Cuba and Costa Rica.

    Build your own index using UN data:
    http://hdr.undp.org/en/data/build/

    --
    You can't be ahead of the curve, if you're stuck in a loop.
  48. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by sumdumass · · Score: 2

    The NHS probably isn't inadequate but you do hear horror stories about it from time to time. Medical tourism in former colony states seems to be a popular thing for people who have government insurance coverage that is supposed to cover everyone. The NHS has a rule or law that states they can avoid treating any illness if you attempt to get treatment outside their system and it isn't an emergency situation. So if there is rumor of some miracle treatment for your liver cancer or whatever and you fly to whatever country who is allowing it to be practiced and the treatment fails, you can be stuck flipping the bill yourself for the rest of your liver cancer treatment life.

    I think there are problems with most health care systems and they all have horror stories.

  49. Singapore by chrb · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Singapore is routinely ranked as having one of the best healthcare system in the world (WHO 2000 study Singapore ranked 6th, U.S. was ranked 37th). It's universal healthcare that people pay for out of their own pocket. The cost of providing world best medical care for everyone in Singapore, costs per person what Americans spend on administration alone - not doctors, drugs, surgeries or real health care - just what Americans spend on managers and secretaries. And yet, for this price, they get one of the best healthcare systems in the world in return. Amazing. Economists love it, here's some excerpts from The Undercover Economist - Lemons, health care, and the United States

    The United States relies upon private health insurance to provide much of the financing for medical costs. This is unusual: in Britain, Canada, and Spain, for example, health-care costs are largely paid for by the government. In Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, and the Netherlands, medical costs are paid for by a system of "social insurance": it is compulsory for most people to buy insurance, but insurance premiums are tied by law to income rather than to the risk of a claim.

    The United States system makes it voluntary to buy insurance, and premiums are linked to risk, not to income. But these market-based premiums, beloved of many Americans, do not seem to be delivering health care that makes them happy. A recent survey revealed that only 17 percent of respondents in the United States were content with the health-care system and thought no substantial reforms were necessary. Why the discontent?

    The superficial reasons are simple enough to describe: the system is hugely expensive, very bureaucratic, and extremely patchy. The expense first: US health cares costs a third more, per person, than that of the closest rival, super-rich Switzerland, and twice what many European countries spend. The United States government alone spends more per person than the combination of public and private expenditure in Britain, despite the fact that the British government provides free health care for all residents, while the American government spending program covers only the elderly (Medicare) and some of the marginalized (Medicaid). Most Americans worry about health-care costs and would be stunned to discovered that the British government spends less per person than the American government but still manages to provide free health care for everyone. In fact, if you figure in the costs of providing health insurance to government employees and providing tax breaks to encourage private health care, the US government spending on health care, per person, is the highest in the world.

    Bureaucracy next. Researchers at the Harvard Medical School found that the administrative costs of the US system, public and private, exceed $1,000 per persons. In other words, when you count all the taxes, premiums, and out-of-pocket expenses, the typical American spends as much on doctor's receptionists and the like as citizens of Singapore and the Czech Republic spend on their entire medical care. Both places are countries with health outcomes very similar to those in the United States: life expectancy and “healthy life” expectancy (a statistic that distinguishes a long healthy life and a long life plagued by years of severe disability) are a shade lower in the Czech Republic than in the United States; and in Singapore they are a little higher than in the United States. The costs of US bureaucracy is also more than three times the $307 cost per person for the administration of the Canadian health system, whic

    1. Re:Singapore by Dripdry · · Score: 1

      I have a girlfriend at Duke in their Physician Assistant program, and they require their students to read up on other healthcare systems.

      One of the glaring differences in cost is how much the doctors and assistants make, pure and simple. In our system they have to make a TON of money to pay off exorbitant medical school debt. In other countries this is all paid for or is relatively cheap.

      There are other factors, as mentioned elsewhere here, but salary is one that I have not seen put forth

      --
      -
    2. Re:Singapore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Singapore is routinely ranked as having one of the best healthcare system in the world (WHO 2000 study Singapore ranked 6th, U.S. was ranked 37th). It's universal healthcare that people pay for out of their own pocket.

      The linky says they have "universal health savings accounts" NOT "universal healthcare".

      It would seem, when the illiberals mean "universal healthcare", they mean "not the US system". Granted, this system sucks ass. HSA are a huge improvement that Bush and Obama have helped to kill. Bigger problems are supply restrictions by the AMA. We ought not be limited in the number of trained doctors just as we are not limited in the number of trained lawyers. Many lawyers seek better opportunities in unrelated fields. There are fewer barriers to becoming a lawyer (though there should be near zero, no degree requirements, just pass the state tests, e.g.). The AMA limits med schools and regulates them to keep the wash-out rate high. People here who have a shit fit over working 8 hours, 1 minute, seem deaf to a system that keeps people on working and on call for 24 hrs as part of med residential training. Is this really ideal?

      Anyway, I like your Singapore link! What I don't like is this notion that "we need to do X because of country Y". Rarely do we discuss the specifics such as what makes healthcare so expensive (patents, FDA, e.g.). Rarely is it discussed - although your link alludes - that HMO and insurance is the last thing we want mandated between us and care. If our catastrophic care provider wants us to do routine stuff and meet health goals, they could offer financial incentives (as one example/alternative to nanny/HMO care).

      Later.

  50. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by repapetilto · · Score: 0

    Look up monetary policy. It has more influence on your life that 95% of what your government votes on.

  51. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    By looking at basic economic figures, such as Gross National Product, National debt, poverty percentages, unemployment rates, education levels etc. And yes, get over it: almost all of the countries in question are doing much better in those areas than the USA.

  52. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Canada. None of our major banks failed (in large part because of mortgage regulations that prevented banks from doing insane things like selling no-interest, no-job, no-asset loans), our unemployment rate is currently lower than the US, and our dollar is currently worth more than $1 US and has been at about that level (close to parity) for quite a few years now.

    Granted, a lot of that is more a commentary on just how much worse the US economy has been since 2008, but in an economic sense we're definitely better off at the moment. As for the healthcare system, it is of course not perfect. But I have no particular complaints when I've needed it for either emergency or regular medical attention.

    The US is a great country, and it has a fine healthcare system, if you can afford it. And affording it is a problem for a lot of people, especially if it is something serious and chronic. I think half the problem with the US attitude towards taxpayer-funded healthcare is that you guys don't realize just how bad you've got it, or how much you're being ripped off for incomplete service. It's really good healthcare, but average costs are much higher for partial coverage.

    Then there's the overall financial management. In Canada, there's a broad public understanding that regardless of what government is in power, balanced budgets are expected. While you guys talked for decades about balanced budgets and paying down debt, we were actually doing it, all through the 1990s. We were running a budget surplus in the 1990s like the US was. Every year when there was a surplus, some of the surplus funds were put to paying down debt, and some of it was put into reducing taxes. It wasn't all carved away as large tax cuts so that the government ran into the red again. It was a balanced, incremental approach. That's come in very handy as the 2008 financial crisis unfolded, and given a lot more room to maneuver. It's still going to be a few years until balanced budgets are back again, but if we do run a surplus, I'm sure the government of the day will follow a similar strategy: some debt payment, some tax cuts. It's a prudent way to do things. You guys got fleeced by a bunch of con men who told you "deficits don't matter" and whose stated goal was to remove regulations and starve the government of funds by giving a huge tax break, preferably to the very rich, because they are the major drivers of the economic system. An interesting economic experiment. How's that working out?

  53. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Mushdot · · Score: 1

    Yep, they do liver, kidneys and all other major organs :-)

  54. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Lumpy · · Score: 2

    But they dont have any doctors there. they all left because of the low wages.

    What, you mean the Tea Party people are lying about that?

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  55. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by DarkTempes · · Score: 2

    Just look at this pretty list of countries by health expenditure and note the percentage of GDP health care cost for countries that use universal health care.

    For further shaming of the US system (and to the benefit of other systems) you can compare with the WHO ranking of health systems though that might be a less objective metric.

  56. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by luis_a_espinal · · Score: 2

    Which means nothing on its own. How should we account for the quality of care, taxes paid by each person recieving care, etc?

    That's a different argument/question from the one you originally posted. As Voltaire used to say, define your terms in the discussion. Other countries whose economies are not tanking due to their health care systems: Singapore, Israel, Switzerland, Japan, Brazil, Rwanda, Chile to name a few.

    These countries are either doing well as developed nations or on the verge of becoming ones. As for Japan's economic woes, they have everything to do with an aging population, lack of women's participation in the workforce, and little economic expansion due to the 90's economic crisis. But even with all that, the average Japanese's purchasing power and lifestyle have not deteriorated (compare that to us.)

    So if you are going to argue that any significant woes (or even tanking) on any of these countries are predominantly a function of their health care systems, you better come up with some citations. Hand waving does not count.

  57. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by drsmithy · · Score: 2

    Regarded as healthy by who?

    Since you're the one making the argument publicly funded healthcare and a healthy economy are impossible, why don't you define "healthy" for us.

  58. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    Mexican, and world health , would benefit immeasurably more from Mexico getting rid of its kleptocracy where government jobs are the place to be for kickback wealth.

    Then their economy wouldn't be so bad and they could contribute better to worldwide invention rates, whch are what saves the most lives in the long run.

    Government-provided health care relies on the idea of handing out what already exists. As such it is a static analysis that is pennywise, pound foolish in ignoring the real lifesaving force: new treatments.

    It is the exact same power as continuously-compounded interest. Socialized medicine is giving a man a few thousand dollars.

    Freeing business from predation is the millions you have in thebank by socking a little away every week. I'd rather have 2055-level medical tech in 2050 thanks to industrious, free Mexico, than 2050-level tech and not free, kleptocracy-wise, Mexico.

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    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  59. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In South Africa, if you earn anything above a minimum wage or have assets, you pay almost private rate for state healthcare. Of course outside of several specialised units in top academic hospitals which are incredibly difficult to get into, few who can afford medical insurance would go that route. State healthcare is free for those who earn below a minimum level except that it is deficient and overloaded by patients. Some Academic specialists also have their private rooms in private hospitals adjoining the academic state hospital. The fees there are also private rate.

    For example I pay as much as 35% of my income in income tax, 14% VAT, customs duties on any thing you receive in a parcel (including gifts) over $45* per year, $50 per month in security fees because the cops can't protect me, fuel surcharge, car registration, TV license fees even if I don't watch state television, $200 per month in property tax and $250 in medical insurance which does not even fully cover outpatient procedures but offers unlimited in hospital cover. I don't use the State health care system at all and I access private health care. If I were to use a State hospital and lose my job and insurance, I would have to sell my house to repay the bills. Only once I was below a certain level would health care be "free".

    (* In South Africa, if one buys more than 3 items per year from abroad for personal use (Amazon, Ebay, etc) , one has to register with the Revenue Service as an "Importer". The procedure is tedious and requires a ton of documentation. )

  60. You Mean, "Death Panels"? by Greyfox · · Score: 1, Funny

    Because that's what it sounds like to me! Death Panels! Because I want the right to have a homeopathic doctor (Excuse me, I mean "doctor" -- you can call them that if you use the quotes!) to treat my prostate cancer and if you don't let me, it's because of Death Panels!

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    1. Re:You Mean, "Death Panels"? by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

      I really don't want to know how homoeopaths prepare a weak cure for diarrhoea ...

    2. Re:You Mean, "Death Panels"? by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Hey, it works for dogs and many other animals with intestinal imbalances, and early reports on medical trials on humans with debilitating problems look extremely promising, though we typically infuse the treatment from the other end where it's more effective at lower doses since the well-balanced bacterial colonies from the healthy donor animal don't need to survive the initial acid bath.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    3. Re:You Mean, "Death Panels"? by currently_awake · · Score: 1

      The USA already has death panels. They work in accounting and have little or no medical training. Or did you think your insurance will cover everything without limit?

    4. Re:You Mean, "Death Panels"? by Greyfox · · Score: 1
      You mean "Cover anything?" Because pretty much every time I've had a medical bill in my adult life, the insurance company found some way to weasel out of paying for it. Whether through high deductible (HSA's still MY money, even if it is pre-tax,) or I didn't notify them within 24 hours of emergency care or a couple of times when I just wasn't covered at all. So far I haven't required that much medical care and most of the times I did I had insurance and I can not think of a time when they actually paid it.

      I'm sure if I found the sweet spot between the high deductable and really massive damage, they might pay a few thousands or perhaps even a few tens of thousands of dollars for my care. Almost certainly less than I have ever put into it. There are several life-saving and really-expensive medical procedures that I would refuse if they were required. Pretty much any organ transplant should go to a younger recipient. Having watched a couple friends go through chemo, I'd have a really hard time having that done to me. At this point the cost/benefit analysis on my mortality is leaning heavily toward just letting whatever happens, happen. Beats rotting in a Wal-Mart greeter job in 30 years with Social Security bankrupt and my retirement accounts decimated by the next several bubbles.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  61. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously? You're seriously asking that question?

    In the civilised world, we view people who refuse to help the sick and injured as evil scum. In your country you may be happy with people dying, untreated, on the streets. YMMV.

  62. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 4, Funny

    Because Reagan signed that law into being in the 80's.

  63. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    If Mexico got rid of their kickback-oriented kleptocracy so the path to wealth was no longer being a government official, and their economy became closer to the US's, they would save a hell of a lot more lives and extend longevity a hell of a lot more than free health care in an ongoing broken, almost-failed state will.

    Stated brutally, Mexico, as-is, plus UHC evil US in terms of actual saving of lives. They focus on a lifesaving triviality when the biggest factor by far remains unchanged -- third world kleptocracy.

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    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  64. So will all the Mexicans go back home now? by gelfling · · Score: 2

    Sounds like a better deal for them there than here.

    1. Re:So will all the Mexicans go back home now? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1
      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  65. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Give you a clue shit for brains, one of them was one of only a handful of economies to avoid a recession.
    One of them was listed as the strongest economy of the past 3 years by the IMF.
    One of them had their treasurer win the best treasurer in the world award in the middle of the the financial shitstorm.

    Look I'm sorry that you're wonderful little economy is in the shit and your banks tried to fuck the world, but if you came to live here you could at least afford some anti-depressants, which will have to do since they don't make a drug that helps you get a fucking clue.

  66. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Richard_at_work · · Score: 5, Informative

    I posted this elsewhere, but its entirely relevant to most discussions on here -

    In 2010 (year picked because figures are unlikely to be revised), the UK spent £118.2Billion on the NHS, for a population of about 63Million persons.

    Thats a per population head equivalent of £1906 or $2954.

    In that same year, the US spent about $381Billion on Medicaid and about $509Billion on Medicare - both of which highly intersect with what the NHS provides, for a population of about 311.5Million persons.

    Thats a per population head equivalent of $2858.

    Except the US Medicare and Medicaid programmes don't cover 311.5Million persons - Medicaid covers roughly 50Million persons, and Medicare covers roughly the same number - theres about a 6Million person intersection between the two (persons that are enrolled in both), so, again roughly, the total number of beneficiaries for these federal and state programmes is around 94Million.

    That makes it a per eligible head equivilent of $9469.

    And you know which system I would rather have? The one I currently use - the NHS at $2954.

    The US system is just very very badly run.

    Sources:

    http://www.gao.gov/highrisk/risks/insurance/medicaid_program.php
    http://www.gao.gov/highrisk/agency/hhs/reforming-medicare-payments.php
    http://www.kff.org/medicare/upload/7305-05.pdf
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicaid
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicare_(United_States)

  67. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    Mexico + UHC (double-less than) evil US, tx Slashdot autoformatter.

    I't put a smiley face but I'm afraid of crashing their servers.

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    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  68. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and your definition of tanking is when the tv tells you they are?

    a new strategy is needed, now anon...

  69. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by ciderbrew · · Score: 1

    It's like any place, some departments better than others. Country wide, some places better than others.
    I've had great treatment each time. The NHS is worth it.

  70. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by cyber-vandal · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Germany.

  71. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alkonaut · · Score: 1

    Yep, they do liver, kidneys and all other major organs :-)

    So once you have been de-livered they do bother to put in a new one?

  72. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Stormthirst · · Score: 1

    Why are hospitals forced to provide healthcare services to people that cannot pay - this is one of the main drivers behind escalating costs of healthcare, but why is this the case?

    This is the biggest crock I've ever heard. The main driver behind escalating costs is a lack of regulation over pricing. If the government says to big pharma "provide us with pill X for $Y" then big pharma will find a way, or not make any money.

    Let me ask you a question - since when did a Q tip cost $12 - like it does in American hospitals?

    You Americans make me laugh with your joke of a health"care" sytem

  73. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by james_van · · Score: 1

    theres nothing frivolous about bigger breasts! even if they are fake

  74. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alkonaut · · Score: 2

    Its the first time I have a "troll" score on a post I've made. Funny how it isn't even on a troll post.

  75. I hope care has gotten better since 1990 by swillden · · Score: 1

    The article discusses primarily the ways that coverage has gotten better/more complete since they instituted this program, but in my experience with the Mexican health care system in the early 90s, the biggest problem was the quality of the care. It was horrible. The doctors and nurses in the big public hospitals were overworked, underpaid, and by and large didn't care. Sanitary conditions weren't very good. As a result, the general populace viewed the public hospital not as a place you went to get better, but a place you went to die, and it was also generally expected that you had better take several family members with you to help keep you comfortable because the nursing staff, such as it was, would ignore you. Anyone who could afford it, or could get friends and family to help scrape up the cash, went to a private hospital.

    I imagine the care has improved somewhat, along with the coverage, especially at the larger hospitals. But I'll bet it's still quite different from what many of us would consider the term "health care" to mean.

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    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  76. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by realityimpaired · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There are other reasons that health care is so much more expensive in the US, though... because they never instituted proper tort laws (in part because of the privatized medical system), doctors' malpractice and other insurance is a lot higher. This, in turn, gets passed on to the users of the system, and it becomes a vicious circle... people sue for larger and larger amounts of money because they won't be able to get insurance in the private system, and need to be able to pay the increased medical fees, but the stupidly large amounts of money they sue for (and their propensity to sue for things that they'd never get away with in the UK or Canada) are the reason that the medical fees are going up.

    You are absolutely right that things are much cheaper per capita in the UK. They are in Canada and Australia, too, and pretty much everywhere else where universal health care exists, not to mention the other economic benefits of having a population with access to preventative health care. But in the absence of sane tort laws, introducing public health care in the US won't fix the problem, either.

  77. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Indeed, passed in 1986 as part of the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act produced by a Democrat congress.

    The point is this, the state created this problem.

    Do you seriously believe the state will solve this problem by taxing us yet again? Learn your history.

  78. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by realityimpaired · · Score: 1

    Then their economy wouldn't be so bad and they could contribute better to worldwide invention rates, whch are what saves the most lives in the long run

    Government-provided health care relies on the idea of handing out what already exists. As such it is a static analysis that is pennywise, pound foolish in ignoring the real lifesaving force: new treatments.

    Would you say that the economy of Canada, with its lower unemployment rate and higher per-capita income than the US is doing badly?

  79. Define Down 'universal' coverage by kenh · · Score: 0

    "Some 50 million Mexicans — nearly half the country's population — who previously were not covered by health insurance are now enrolled, leading the scheme's architects to claim that the country has near-universal health-care coverage."

    So healthcare for one half of the population is considered 'near-universal'? Here in America we have over 275 million people covered, with by some estimates around 40 million left without healthcare coverage (about 80-85% of population covered) and we are told we have a crisis by our politicians.

    Maybe we just need to adopt the Mexican definition, then we could easily consider ourselves to have 'near-universal coverage' with 85% of population covered, since they consider themselves to have 'near-universal coverage' at around 50%...

    --
    Ken
    1. Re:Define Down 'universal' coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You're misreading the statement, which made no claim about the total enrollment, just that the 50 million Mexicans previously not covered, are now covered.

      There is no implication in it that they have only 50% of the population covered, you're just reading something into it that wasn't intended. I suppose they should have stated their new total coverage amount in order to avoid confusion, perhaps they did in the actual article, but it was left out of the summary.

    2. Re:Define Down 'universal' coverage by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Re-read that sentence - it sounds to me like the nearly half the population WERE NOT previously covered by health insurance, but NOW ARE. Add that to the number who were previously covered (probably most of the remaining half), and the number who still aren't covered to get the complete picture. Oh yeah, for completeness we should throw in those who were covered but no longer are, but that's probably a very tiny minority.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  80. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please try and keep up. Hospitals are going broke and closing. Assuming your argument is correct they would be swimming in money by charging $12 for a Q-tip, yet the opposite is the case. You cannot ignore facts.

    Homework; explain why the Q-tip is priced at $12.

  81. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 5, Informative

    Every generation needs to convince the ones after them to buy in to the insurance/Social Security scam. Please explain how else it could work.

    Simple: the population of people requiring healthcare treatment at any given moment, even at 0 population growth, is always going to be much smaller then the population who are able-bodied and working. Across the volume of that total population, if everyone kicks in a small amount of money, then we can ensure that there's cash available for all of them when they themselves need medical treatment.

    Also, since insurance gets more efficient as you dilute the risk pool, expanding it up to the size of the entire country's population has enormous benefits - as well we follow on ones such as providing for government collective bargaining on the cost and purchase volumes of pharmaceuticals (the government is the largest possible purchaser, ordering the largest possible volumes, which means it'll always be able to negotiate a good deal).

    Social Security (in the US) is not a scam, incidentally. It only becomes a scam if the American populace let that happen, which will be if they allow the government (screw it - allow the current batch of GOP politicians) to reduce SS benefits to future generations. The scheme has been enormously well-funded, and is owed billions by the US government, which has avoided raising taxes by "borrowing" against SS savings. It's alleged bankruptcy is due to the fact that that money was never paid back, because it was never used for anything profit earning in the long-run: it was wasted away as tax cuts to the rich, and still is.

  82. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by kenh · · Score: 1

    'rich' people in countries with 'universal healthcare coverage' who buy private insurance don't necessarily buy it because they think they will be healthier, they buy it to see better doctors, vist less crowded offices than public clinics, and to avoid the inevitable waiting list for 'their turn' when a procedure or test is needed.

    In England, for example, I suspect the average income for someone with private health insurance is not really that high - private insurance isn't THAT uncommon that only millionaires have it.

    --
    Ken
  83. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by dkleinsc · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The evidence is that the amount of money that can be saved by various tort reform laws is approximately 2%:
    http://www.nber.org/bah/2009no3/w15371.html

    Now, that's not nothing, but it's not even close to explaining why US health care costs 3.5 times that of the UK. Some things that are more likely to make a difference:
    1. Most health care in the US is fee-for-service, so doctors get paid more if they do more procedures, no matter how useful those procedures are. Solution: put doctors on salary.
    2. The US spends a lot of money keeping people alive as basically a vegetable in a hospital during the last year of their life. Solution: end-of-life counseling and legalizing euthanasia.
    3. A significant portion of health care costs are insurance companies, hospitals, individuals, and government each haggling to try to make the other parties pay for the cost of care. Solution: Single payer and single provider, so there's nobody else to haggle with.
    4. Another significant problem is that people without insurance and money to pay for care tend to seek care at emergency rooms, which both makes it harder for ERs to handle real emergencies and means we spend easily 5 times what we would have spent to treat the same condition in a doctor's office. Solution: Cover everybody.

    In other words, you get pretty close to what every other country in the world is doing, and it gets a lot cheaper to provide health care.

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  84. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Let me put it this way, 10 years ago a little over half of the costs in my dad's practice were billing insurance. Its now over 75%. That right there should tell you a lot about how a single payer system could save money.

    The next largest cost is malpractice insurance; when about half the doctor's lost their malpractice insurance so they closed up shop, the state stepped in, but its still a big problem.

    Finally a single payer system consolidates information about what a doctor does. In other systems, like the VA, they're using that to shape doctor's practices. Basically they get the leaders in the field together to try and figure out an ideal process (e.g. weighing the risks and costs of a test to see when you should jump to the most accurate test vs using less accurate but less costly or more safe screening). Any doctor can go outside the reccomendation; all they need to do is basically check a box. If more than a certain percent of a doctors patients go outside the expected range, they then review the cases. There may be other mitigating circumstances, so they are reviewed by doctors and that feedback is used to refine the reccomendations or to consult with the doctor about how to be more cost-effective. This system shapes doctors behaviors toward providing proper medical care at a minimal cost, without ever preventing a patient from receiving the care their doctors feels is appropriate.

    Keep in mind, for many people the government already provides care. If you don't have insurance and its life-threatening, the poor, veterans, etc. Before we were married, my wife worked as a pharmacy teach and she would see all these people getting pills on the government's dime and then selling them in the parking lot, yet the government wouldn't cover her and private insurance was more than she made, so she couldn't afford her bi-polar medicine. If she quit, the government would cover her, but she's the type of person who likes to pull her own weight so she went without. How much sense does that make?

  85. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by drsmithy · · Score: 2

    Why are hospitals forced to provide healthcare services to people that cannot pay - this is one of the main drivers behind escalating costs of healthcare, but why is this the case?

    For the same reason the police investigate crimes for people who cannot pay private investigators.

  86. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is if your a man - remember this is slashdot!

  87. When things go wrong by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    I think that is the biggest difference between the US and the rest of the 1st / 2nd world: USians want an ironclad guarantee of a perfect health outcome or they will sue, sue, sue. OB-Gyns in the US have to pay an incredibly massive amount of malpractice insurance and many still end up quitting due to the helicopter parents in waiting. Nothing is guaranteed, but USians refuse to accept reality.

  88. I prefer the idea of Medicare buy in for the US by Ruedii · · Score: 2

    I prefer the idea of Medicare Buy in for all in the US. It's been proposed several times, and never passed. The fact is, that if Government health care is so incredibly awful, why are the for-profit insurance companies afraid of a system in which they would have to compete for it? This is the question that they avoid.

    1. Re:I prefer the idea of Medicare buy in for the US by HungWeiLo · · Score: 1

      Someone here was joking around that making Medicare into the single-payer system would be just a one line code change in their computers.

      if (age >= 65) to

      if (age >= 0)

      (Yes, you could remove the conditional, but then it wouldn't be strictly a "one-line change").

      --
      There are a huge number of yeast infections in this county. Probably because we're downriver from the bread factory.
  89. Just got back from Mexico dentist... to Canada! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Well, I'm here in Edmonton, Canada and I just recently got back from visiting a dentist in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. Sure glad I went! Gotta do your research though!

    Alberta dentist's have raised their prices in many cases to more than triple what they were 6 years ago. I even would've saved money by going to the States!

    I feel bad for families who can't fly to Mexico on short notice... or me if I get stuck timewise next incident.

    1. Re:Just got back from Mexico dentist... to Canada! by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      I had heard that dental work in mexico was 1/10th the price for in the U.S. How did you find a good dentist?

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    2. Re:Just got back from Mexico dentist... to Canada! by fustakrakich · · Score: 5, Funny

      Word of mouth?

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    3. Re:Just got back from Mexico dentist... to Canada! by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      The same way you find one in the States.

      Puerto Vallarta is a great tourist destination, I have been there and will go again, and as such has very good medical care. I have not however ever had medical treatment there, but would consider it if need be.

    4. Re:Just got back from Mexico dentist... to Canada! by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 2

      Puerto Vallarta is a great tourist destination

      Really? I've heard from others that going there is like getting your teeth pulled out.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    5. Re:Just got back from Mexico dentist... to Canada! by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Go to a top shelf resort in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico and ask the concierge. Sure there it's probable you'll be sent to the Dentist that gives the biggest kick-back, but he still has to be fairly competent to maintain the gig. Now if you have a Problem in the future with the work, your regular dentist will either refuse to touch it, (the touch it, own it principal), or rip it completely out and start over.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    6. Re:Just got back from Mexico dentist... to Canada! by gwolf · · Score: 1

      And I am a Mexican. I simply cannot understand how dental care is not part of the health coverage system everywhere in the world - It's part of your body, tooth problems can easily lead to lost productivity, lots of pain, and... well, I don't think I have to explain to you how important dental care given you are willing to fly ~3000Km to get it!

      FWIW, I always get my dental care as part of the state healthcare, with no fees to add to it (and including the needed drugs, if it's the case). People who prefer private medicine usually get it at ~US$40-80 per regular session (of course, more for surgeries). I have to repeat i'm amazed it's not like that in "advanced" countries.

    7. Re:Just got back from Mexico dentist... to Canada! by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Gum disease has a number of medical effects, including a significant impact on cardiovascular health.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
  90. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by luis_a_espinal · · Score: 1

    and your definition of tanking is when the tv tells you they are?

    What are you babbling about?

    a new strategy is needed, now anon...

    That has silence of the lambs written all over it.

  91. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You forget that Medicare is not universal. It is serves people over 65, meaning that all Medicare recipients are sick by definition. NHS serves the entire population, hence the lower per capita costs. There are other issues too, like people who due to high cost have avoided preventative health care until the age of 65 when they finaly can afford to get treatment; or the way dug prices are set by the US "free" market.

  92. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by CubicleZombie · · Score: 1

    I suppose you consider fertility treatments to be frivolous.

    I have private health care to thank for my 6 week old baby. I'd still be on a waiting list in England. And probably elsewhere.

    --
    :wq
  93. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jythie · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Lawsuits only make up about 1-2% of the health care costs. They have made a wonderful scapegoat but that is about all they are. They play well into the 'US is such a litigious' nation trip people have been fed.. which is little more then a recast of the old American 'victims should know their place' attitude... which is always amusing since our laws were specifically written so that many laws are not enforced by the DoJ and thus a lawsuit is the only way to activate them.. thus if someone tries to actually get protection under the law they can be branded 'sue happy' and slurred for it. The handicapped are a common victim of this.

  94. Fixing the USA = unemployment for some by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the American system was fixed and the bureaucracy was reduced or eliminated then private health funds would either need to change or lots of people would lose their jobs. So it won't happen. America is just screwed.

  95. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by fche · · Score: 1

    In the US, the federal medicare* programs are for the poor and old, who by nature require more elaborate services than the normal population. In the UK, 100,000 old per year are put on the "liverpool care pathway" (death panel), which saves even more.

  96. According to the Chart... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    From National Geographic Magazine:

    http://blogs.ngm.com/.a/6a00e0098226918833012876a6070f970c-800wi

    Guess who gets the least bang for their buck in Healthcare?

    1. Re:According to the Chart... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, that is an amazing graphical representation. Thanks for sharing the link.

    2. Re:According to the Chart... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hands down the worst infographic I have seen in a long time. (not disputing the data mind you, just no reason to display it like that)

    3. Re:According to the Chart... by zlives · · Score: 1

      if you look at the graph... seems like the trend is more money you spend the worse the return is on life expectancy!!!
      Switzerland, Luxemburg...

    4. Re:According to the Chart... by ClickOnThis · · Score: 1

      if you look at the graph... seems like the trend is more money you spend the worse the return is on life expectancy!!!
      Switzerland, Luxemburg...

      The slopes of the lines confuse interpretation significantly. It's best not to attribute anything quantitative to them. Nevertheless, the USA outlier is striking.

      This information is better represented by putting dollars spent on the X axis, not on a parallel Y axis, and plotting the data as points. Point-size (instead of line-thickness) could indicate number of doctor visits. Point-color could still be used to indicate presence/absence of a national healthcare plan.

      --
      If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
    5. Re:According to the Chart... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but Americans can easily afford it. Health care is dirt cheap in Zimbabwe--some guy comes over, feeds you a bowl of monkey brains, bangs your head with a healing stick, and takes 3 of your 4 chickens. So their care being cheap in actual dollars isn't relevant to the adjusted GDP cost.

      In the US, you write a check.

      The fact is, the really rich who can afford to frequently fly to the US for treatment. I wonder why?

  97. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by domatic · · Score: 4, Informative

    The evidence is that the amount of money that can be saved by various tort reform laws is approximately 2%:
    http://www.nber.org/bah/2009no3/w15371.html

    Even that article doesn't quantify the costs caused by what it calls "defensive medicine". These are tests and procedures done a doctor covering his ass rather than trying to diagnose and treat evident conditions.

  98. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Carewolf · · Score: 1

    Name one. Real economists make money off it.

    Just one?

    Sorry can't do that, but here are six: Denmark, Germany, Sweden, Norway, Switzerland and Netherlands.

  99. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

    The amount the US spends on health care in total, Medicare, Medicaid and all the private health insurance, is about twice, per capita, what Canada, the UK, or Australia spend on their public systems. And that STILL doesn't adequately cover everybody.

  100. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jpapon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I suppose you consider fertility treatments to be frivolous.

    I hate to say this, but they ARE frivolous, at least when compared to other things such as cancer treatment.

    Not to mention, you COULD just adopt... or do as you did, and pay for private care.

    --
    -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
  101. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Carewolf · · Score: 5, Informative

    Regarded as healthy by who?

    Investors. The country with the highest tax burden in the world right now, Denmark, is at the moment loaning money at an interest of -0.25%..

    YES, that means rich people, very rich people, and investors in general, believe the Danish economy is so healthy they are willing to loan them money at negative interest, just so that Denmark can protect they money for them.

  102. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

    With a three trillion dollar deficit and record personal debt, pretty much everything the US does is "stealing from future generations."

    On the other hand, non-deficit funded public health care systems in other countries are not.

  103. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "how a single payer system could save money."

    You fail to explain how this will reduce the cost of insurance.

    "getting pills on the government's dime and then selling them in the parking lot"

    Um, it's not the governments dime thank you very much, it's the taxpayers. And here again, you fail to explain how this will reduce the level of waste and fraud.

  104. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You have no right to food, housing, [...] or healthcare.

    Most civilised societies disagree with you.

  105. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

    Congratulations. You have probably expressed a reasonable opinion on Slashdot. Reasonable opinions are almost guaranteed to annoy a slashtar... I mean, Slashdotter with mod points, and "troll" is how emotionally immature persons crouching in their parents' basement see people who disagree with them.

  106. Norway? Sweden? by fantomas · · Score: 1

    How about Norway or Sweden?

  107. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 4, Informative

    Popular? In Canada any hint of weakening the public health care system is met with outrage. It's one of the few things you can guarantee will upset Canadians, and get your government booted. I suspect the same is probably true in other countries that have them.

  108. Supply and demand always apply by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    There is no such case where supply and demand do not apply. The only question is - is there enough supply available to meet your price point?

    55% of health care in Mexico is done privately.

    1. Re:Supply and demand always apply by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're looking at this backwards. health insurance companies are consumers, not producers. similarly the patients are actually the producers and not the consumers. hence obamacare just created an effectively unlimited supply for the consumers, which is intended to drive costs down. this is, of course, exactly what the insurance companies asked for - unlimited supply.

      i'm sorry that your understanding of economics is so poor that you couldn't grasp this. hopefully i spelled it out simply enough that even you can understand it this time.

  109. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by dr2chase · · Score: 3, Informative

    I thought that there were states in which various flavors of tort reform were instituted, and the reform was NOT followed by interesting savings. I think Texas is one example. (I'm doing this all from memory; yeah, Wikipedia says insurance companies saved money, not sure any else did, or that it was big money. Shaving 2% off costs and dumping it entirely into the lap of the insurance companies would be a big win for them, that's for sure. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tort_reform )

  110. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by rmdpgh · · Score: 1

    That paper really only addresses "direct tort reform", or the limiting of malpractice liability suits. In practice, though, malpractice suits are an evil twin of the VAT - you sue the doctor, the hospital, the company that built the gurney, the company that built the IV titration machine, the company that manufactured the IV solution, the nurse(s) who started the IV, the mfgr of the lighting in the room, the ambulance service that got you there, the 2 medics on board, the manufacturer of the ambulance, the schools involved in educating all of the humans involved, and if you're in a particularly nasty mood, you also sue several visitors who pissed you off along the way. I wish that I was kidding, but that's a big reason for high medical costs. A Ferno-Washington ambulance litter will run you >$6000, even though it's effectively no more than an aluminum tube frame with a vinyl- wrapped foam mattress. They *know* that they *will* be sued. A lot.

  111. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is not a matter of opinion. Food, housing, MTV, healthcare are all products or services produced by the labor of other men.

    No right can derive from the product of another free mans labor, this is called enslavement.

    You do however have the right to go out into the world and earn money with your own labor with which you can purchase any of these things that you like.

    I am so sick and damn tired of you leftists telling me that I need to pay for your healthcare. I do not. You pay for your healthcare and I will pay for mine.

    You nerds don't use your brains much do you?

  112. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 4, Informative

    Who's giving anything out for free? Public health care systems simply involve one not for profit entity, the government, paying.

    Speaking as someone who actually does medical research, in Canada, drug companies do and fund plenty of research here. We have excellent, unified records for epidemiological studies and a comparatively simple, consistent system with little risk of frivolous lawsuits.

  113. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's a statement I read that will get me downmodded because it burns your ears because it's true: You can't give out things for free until other, better nations invent them for you.

    Hint: The US isn't the only country doing medical research.

  114. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by dr2chase · · Score: 1

    Almost all the other OECD states solve this problem, usually with taxes, so yes, I think the state will solve this problem. "Learn your history", my ass. Go look at stats on expected lifespan, infant mortality, and health care cost (either per capita or as percentage of GDP). I'm not asking for unicorns and fairies -- I'm asking for what other people in other countries already have. What's ignorant (implied by your "learn your history") is pretending that this is not the case.

  115. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jpapon · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Ugh. Go away Ayn Rand. Someone working a minimum wage job deserves health-care just as much as a millionaire CEO. I don't give a damn which one you think is a better "producer". They're both human beings, and they both deserve food, housing, health-care, equal protection under the law, etc...

    I think we do have a right to healthcare, as well as food and housing, at least as long as the country can afford it. The wealthy already get to have luxuries because they're rich, why do they also get to have the necessities, like shelter, healthcare and food as well?

    I also think we should cut our military budget by at least 90% before we start saying we can't afford to provide everyone with healthcare.

    --
    -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
  116. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by fche · · Score: 1

    "if you have a shift in demographics where fewer young people pays for the healthcare of a large aging population" ... or if the tax base is just not large enough for the young folks to continue subsidizing health care for the old/sick. Remember, that's the only way government "insurance" works - by forcing one group to subsidize another.

  117. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jpapon · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Explain why medicine is so cheap in countries with socialized health-care, and so expensive in the US.

    Homework: Discuss how this contradicts your belief that the free market is always the best solution.

    --
    -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
  118. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ugh. Go away Karl Marx. I don't give a damn what you think either, how do you like that?

  119. So Mexico gets their act together on health care by HangingChad · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Leaving the United States as the largest third world country without universal health care.

    We're getting beat by Mexico while Congress is fighting over funding for Planned Parenthood by people who want to turn Medicare into a discount coupon program.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  120. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by glueball · · Score: 1

    Direct costs of malpractice, which include premiums, damage awards in excess of premiums, and associated litigation costs, represent no more than two percent of health care costs. Thus, tort reforms can have a substantial effect on health care costs only if they affect the amount of healthcare services provided.

    Sorry, you must not work in health care.

    This is just the malpractice part. What's not in the "1-2%" is what I'll call defensive medicine.
    I have a colleague who is an orthopedic surgeon. He will not perform surgery on you unless you had an MRI or CT performed the day before. Many, many surgeons do this. And blood work. Update a complete panel. CBC, SMA, drug panel--the whole smash.

    It does not matter if you had an MRI last week or your blood tests are two days old.

    Why?

    He does not want to get sued. You are paying for his defensive medicine.

    You might ask "what does having an MRI prevent being sued?" There is a type of patient and a type of lawyer who look for clerical errors and then sue over them--not a negligence outcome. Not having an MRI the day before could be argued as not being the best care.

    So what does it really mean? My colleague makes good money being a surgeon and would make less if he had a mark on his insurance record--just or unjust. With the surge in amateur ranking systems this means a lot to a practice.

    Do I have a solution? Yes. Make it easier to become a physician or primary provider in the US. An ortho makes between $320K and $550K. That's in large part because of the amount of schooling (4 + 4 years after high school) , residency (4-5 years), fellowship (2 years), working for nearly free (a couple of years).

    Make the PA an attractive choice in patients seeking care. Make a Family practice hospitalist specialty that requires 2 years grad school and 2 of residency.

    Here's the last one: Make a non-profit hospital standards higher to keep non profit. Non-profit does not mean minimal bureaucratic excess.

  121. Nothing new for Mexico by wganz · · Score: 1

    So, what are they going to do? Just ship everyone to el norte to sit in our ER's to get 'free healthcare' since they cannot be turned away or asked their immigration status like they've been doing for the past 20 years?

  122. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by silentcoder · · Score: 1

    But making it legal for students (who are not employed- they are investing time in future employment) to remain on the insurance of their employed parents (who can actually pay for it) is a national disaster ?

    If you get fired (seems to be happening to rather a lot of Americans lately) and it takes a few months to get a new job and your savings run out and your insurance gets cancelled, you should be allowed to die on a pavement if you have an accident instead of being treated, getting better, finding a job and once more being able to contribute to the economy ?

    I daresay sir, that you are not only a heartless psychopath, but a headless idiot as well.

    --
    Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
  123. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by dr2chase · · Score: 4, Informative

    You seem to be confusing taxes to fund universal health care with social security, which is a large confusion. Health care insurance is pretty much pay as you go, and though there is a skew in costs to the elderly, young people are somewhat aware of reasons they might need it (pregnancy and delivery, usually routine, sometimes not; random medical horribleness, that sort of thing).

    Social security is mostly a young-to-old transfer, but it is hardly a Ponzi scheme; there are projections for costs and projections for benefits, and it does not have Ponzi characteristics; people get their money out regularly (unlike a Ponzi scheme). If we accept the usually conservative projections of future SS budgets, then the money set aside in the SSTF will not be adequate starting sometime around 2035 -- but that is not an inherent Ponzi problem, that is something instituted in the 80s to help manage the retirement of the baby boom. Benefits won't stop; they'll just be smaller. We can fix that with relatively minor tweaks to funding or retirement age, and these fixes do not have the "then-another-fix, and another, and another" nature, at least not according to the usually conservative projections; you have to bring the system into demographic balance, and then you're done. The baby boom is one heck of a pig in the snake, and that's what causes a lot of the "problems" of SS.

    A second important part of SS that you are ignoring is Survivor's Disability Insurance. When we went out to buy healthy insurance on our own (one of the joys of working for a startup), the initial estimates of the policy size were enormous. The sales-ish person we talked to helpfully pointing out that SDI takes care of a huge chunk of that. If it were not for the SDI part of SS, I would have been sending larger checks to the life insurance company for the last 15 years.

  124. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So expected lifespan, infant mortality, and health care cost are the meters with which you measure the success of a society? You cannot generalize like this, what are you even talking about?

    The fact remains, socialism is an abysmal failure wherever it is tried, and always will be. Fact. Soviet Union, defeated. Red China - a police state but moving towards capitalism. Why don't you go and try your luck in the Nort Korean medical system or in Cuba, then report back. You speak of your European healthcare as so wonderful. I seem to remember something about some financial problems in the EU, ring any bells? US: SSI bankrupt, Medicare/Medicaid bankrupt. Obama - unemployment above 8% for the longest stretch EVER YET RECORDED.

    Socialism is and always will be a failed economic system.

    The Free Market is the most transformative of economic systems. It fosters creativity and inventiveness. It produces new industries, products, and services, as it improves upon existing ones. With millions of individuals freely engaged in an infinite number and variety of transactions each day, it is impossible to even conceive all the changes and plans for changes occurring in our economy at any given time. The free market creates more wealth and opportunities for more people than any other economic model. History proves this, the fact that you are unable or unwilling to understand this is not my fault.

  125. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by geminidomino · · Score: 1

    Before we were married, my wife worked as a pharmacy teach and she would see all these people getting pills on the government's dime and then selling them in the parking lot, yet the government wouldn't cover her and private insurance was more than she made, so she couldn't afford her bi-polar medicine. If she quit, the government would cover her, but she's the type of person who likes to pull her own weight so she went without. How much sense does that make?

    As someone in a similar situation to your wife's (other than not being married), I'd say that it makes a lot of sense. Her work ethic, I mean, not the fucked up system.
     

  126. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Single payer universal health care means healthcare is a figure in the budget, just like infrastructure, defense etc

    Perhaps, but getting universal health care doesn't necessarilly mean single-payer. Look at Germany and Switzerland: private insurance and unversal coverage that's not tied to your employer.

    The difference is that the insurance companies are not allowed to make a profit.

  127. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe the direct savings to currently practicing doctors is 2% but what is unseen? What about the indirect effects of reduced supply of doctors because of early retiring/not practicing/not taking new patients due to increased tort costs and decreased medicare/medicaid reimbursements?

  128. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Emergency spending is only about 5% of medical spending. It has been blown out of proportion for political reasons. Also, torts are a bigger problem than you think. Many unnecessary tests are ordered as cya to avoid malpractice liability. Tort reform isn't a huge problem, but I suspect it is bigger than uninsured people showing up at the we for minor problems.

    We need real competition across state lines, and we need consumers choosing their own health plans, not employers choosing for them. Would you want your employer buying your groceries? Your car insurance?

  129. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by dr2chase · · Score: 1

    They deliver lower infant mortality and longer expected lifespan. Those are nice, hard-to-fudge metrics. There is some possibility of fudging "infant mortality" by classifying some "infants" as "miscarriages", but I looked there, and the corresponding stats don't show evidence of such fudging. There are other metrics (for example, hip replacement wait time) where we apparently do better, but I think you have a hard argument if you want to claim that wait time for a hip replacement is a better proxy for medical care overall than life expectancy or infant mortality.

    One possibility that is consistent with both our reputation for having wonderful hi-tech interventions, and with the expectation that universal health care leads to less buck-passing, less fragmented information about a person's care, and improved standard practices, is that we excel at (expensive) firefighting, but that other countries excel at (cheap) fire prevention. If this is true, it means that a shift to universal care will take some time to save money, because the benefits kick in more slowly. To relate this to (repeat example) hip replacements, it's better if the hip never needs to be replaced (presumably because of a better job at managing some of the causes, e.g., arthritis, or obesity).

    Hip replacement is also not the great example it used to be, not since we had that mess with the metal-on-metal implants going bad (I have a sig-O-in-law who is having her hips RE-done. Ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch.)

  130. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

    These are tests and procedures done a doctor covering his ass rather than trying to diagnose and treat evident conditions.

    ... and increase his income (see my first point). This is especially true for specialists.

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  131. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by geminidomino · · Score: 1

    forcing hospitals to treat people who are too irresponsible to get insurance is a moral hazard and raises the cost for everyone else.

    I was going to mod you down, but I decided, instead to point out WHY you're a fucking idiot. As of today, Aug 21, 2012, health insurance companies can and do refuse coverage to anyone that they deem "not sufficiently profitable." To refer to those unprofitable people with the blanket statement of "irresponsible" is pretty irresponsible in itself.

    And to say that they should die when hit by a bus because they weren't good for Aetna's bottom-line makes you an evil corporatist fuck.

  132. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by what2123 · · Score: 1

    You generalize Americans as though we don't see the problem ourselves. We damn well know what a lot of the problems are, we just aren't allowed to talk about them. Talking about *important* matters only makes those that are dumb-voted in the office angry. When they get angry, they start to make laws that are only in place to make feel like they have accomplished something. It is 100% rubbish, all around, left or right.

  133. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by wganz · · Score: 1

    1. Solution: put doctors on salary. You seem to forget that doctors are Free people and are not serfs owned by the Crown.
    2. Solution: end-of-life counseling and legalizing euthanasia Well, duh. Just how do you figure when a person is going to die? I've worked with hospice patient for the past 15 years and cannot tell you when a patient is going to die. A better option would be to add all the 3rd generation entitlement citizens and sterilize them after their first child. If you're going to go that road, might as well get some mileage out of it.
    3. Solution: Single payer and single provider, so there's nobody else to haggle with. And you don't shop around for a better price on your commodity items and just go to the local monopoly store to buy your food? Haggling brings down prices. And you believe that some bureaucratic drone that cannot make it in real job can make better decisions than anyone else. Ahh.... The hubris of the socialists.
    4. Solution: Cover everybody. They tend to seek care in ER's since they know that they cannot be turned away due to the laws. Change the laws back and make them goto a clinic for the sniffles. That way we don't have to cover their ER visits and don't have to pay for their healthcare.

    I've taken care of foreigners that came to the US to get medical care here since they didn't want to be treated by the cattle call system in their homelands. I've been in the European hospitals and seen the 'ward' nurse system. Thank you very much but I'll keep what we got in the US. Warts and all, it is still the healthcare system in the world and only 0bama jizz drinkers like Michael Moore go offshore then that isn't for anything serious.

  134. Not really by Roadmaster · · Score: 2

    These neoliberal politicians seem to live in an entirely different country, and Frenk is no exception; no wonder he's now run as far away from Mexico as possible and is now teaching elsewhere, standing, no doubt, on his alleged achievements while being the secretary of public health in Mexico.

    As any mexican will tell you, his boasting is far from the truth; while he may have instituted a program that supposedly provides coverage for people not otherwise under any sort of health care plan (i.e. those who are not, as workers, covered by the mexican institute of social security (IMSS), or as government workers, covered by ISSSTE), he did so without increasing health spending significantly (from 2003 to 2005 it only increased 0.2 percent and it has remained constant ever since: http://corta.me/7mz). So how can you cover 50 million more people without increasing spending? very poorly, that's how. Understaffed and underequipped hospitals, lack of medication, soul-sucking bureaucracy and hoops to jump through, I don't think that's anything to boast about; as befits his neoliberal lineage, Frenk instituted these policies for the macroeconomic "bottom line".

    IMSS is supposed to provide coverage for workers and their families. However this entails people working on a stable, formally constituted company which has the obligation to cover fees for employee coverage. It's not a privilege, it's a right that companies must provide to their employees. However, since Mexico has had near zero growth in the past two decades or so (and more so since 2000, when the disastrous, conservative PAN party arrived in power), job creation has stagnated, and even receded in some cases. Millions of people have to resort to the "informal economy", since there's no company through which they can have access to IMSS, this popular insurance thing was created to give some semblance of health care coverage to the 50 million poor and underemployed in Mexico. But make no mistake; this is not the glowing achievement that Frenk would have the world believe. It's really the government hastily trying to fulfill, in a half-assed way, their constitutionally mandated obligation for health care (Mexican Constitution, 4th Article). This has been there since 1983, so actually Frenk's implementation means a 20-year lag for the government to fulfill its obligations.

    1. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but it's FREEEEEEEEEEE!

  135. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by dr2chase · · Score: 2

    If we're talking about health care, the longevity and infant mortalty are good metrics. They're not that bad as part of an overall metric for scoring a nature, either.

    Socialism has been tried in many places, failed in some where it was tried to excess, but works fine in others where it has been used appropriately. The dose makes the poison. Socialized health care works well everywhere it has been tried. Most countries, including the US, have socialized transport systems (in our case, highways -- arguably, we have built too many and encourage their overuse, but they work, and are hardly bringing the country down). The trashing of various economies has not one damn thing to do with health care; we took a hit, too, with our more-private system, and some countries with UHC did quite well indeed. What did us in was excess risk-taking by under-regulated banks, combined with amnesia about what it took to get us out of the Great Depression (dropping the Gold Standard, and War-scale government spending).

    Germany is an interesting example -- they've had a form of UHC pretty much like Obamacare, and they have managed to continue it through boom and bust, where "bust" includes the two World Wars that they lost.

  136. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by FatAlb3rt · · Score: 1

    I'd be curious to know how much of the prices are because of tort (wouldn't that just be a sum of the malpractice insurance fees) and how much is due to inability to collect. I'm sure someone who works in medical billing could give some figures on billed vs collected.

    I think that a significant portion of the high fees are to cover the people who don't (won't) pay.

  137. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Aquitaine · · Score: 3, Informative

    Lawsuits only make up about 1-2% of the health care costs.

    It's not the lawsuits. It's the insurance doctors (and now some nurses and PAs) are required to get to insure you against those lawsuits. This can be north of $100k/yr and in some cases (depending on the state) close to a quarter million a year for a surgeon.

  138. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heartless psychopath, but a headless idiot, is that your esteemed opinion?

    Let's work through this shall we.

    You say the state should dictate the terms of a hospital and mandate that care for people with no insurance is provided - this is done because you are indeed a "good person and want to do good for society" no doubt.

    Health care costs money, money to pay doctors, to purchase medicine and build buildings and run computer systems and on and on. So when a patient is cared for that cannot pay where do you think these costs go? The state pays nothing. The hospital cannot pay these costs. Hence the costs are passed on to those patients that do have insurance.

    The citizens now know that they do not need insurance to receive care, if you have no ability to pay and don't care about your credit rating you can now go to the emergency room when their child get's a case of the sniffles. Those of us who do work and care about our credit rating of course have two choices, get insured or pay the bill, because the hospital will seek reimbursement from those that are able to pay, so we all get insurance. And as the poster above notes, get to pay $12 for a Q-tip.

    What's more, now we also see that businesses like Walmart and McDonalds find it easier to get by not offering their employees health insurance - they (the employees) know they can work for low wages and still receive "free" healthcare at the emergency room. So in this we see effective state subsidization of low wage employers - thus reducing the wages and benefits of this part of the labor force while enriching the businesses as a result of state/corporate collusion - crony capitalism at work.

    So the result is that the producers in society - those with insurance, pay for those without, this is theft. Those without insurance receive less preventative care, and you could argue, substandard care at emergency rooms. Insurance companies eventually go bankrupt.

    So now you, the do-gooder, have now ruined a system that has worked for millions of people over decades, with the end goal to be that of handing over all control and healthcare resources over to state.

    You have no understanding of the unintended consequences of your socialist policies, you completely ignore the economic realities of the situation. You sir are the heartless psychopath and headless idiot.

  139. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by FatAlb3rt · · Score: 1

    Quality of care has to figure into the discussion as it's directly related to the average cost per person.

  140. who cares about free healthcare in a civil war? by SuperBanana · · Score: 1

    In an ideal world, governments behaving sensibly wouldn't make headlines.

    Universal healthcare is useless if you live in a country with absolutely no rule of law (they have a murder rate three times the US) and in the midst of a bloody civil war the government won't admit to that kills about 10,000 people a year.

    Any time anyone says the words "civil war" they freak out, yet the cartels are blowing up police stations and military installations like it's going out of style. Judges, police, prosecutors live in constant fear of the kidnappings, bombings, beheadings the cartels are using to brutally suppress the justice system.

    1. Re:who cares about free healthcare in a civil war? by fustakrakich · · Score: 4, Interesting

      All financed by American prohibition. When you see all the cash they find in a drug lord's mansion, do you see pesos, or dollars?

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    2. Re:who cares about free healthcare in a civil war? by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      That just means that the dollar is a much more stable currency that is much more useful for transactions internationally. That's why dollars are used for oil payments, as opposed to dinars or some such.

      Having said that, prohibition does increase the demand for their "goods", but there's always something that is going to be prohibited. The fact that it can be turned into a black market is not a reason for removing prohibition of an unsafe substance. We wouldn't remove prohibitions on fissile materials just because there is a black market for them, would we?

      I'm all in favor of decriminalizing things like pot and even some others, but let's not use the wrong arguments here. Pot and some of the others are harmless and certainly the few benefits of keeping them illegal are vastly outweighed by the drawbacks. That is not going to be the case for certain other drugs which are quickly addictive, and possibly even generate violent behavior either directly or indirectly (via addiction fueled poverty that leads to violent crime). When we have legalized all the easy targets, it's not going to be as easy to justify legalizing others with a straight face, black market or not.

    3. Re:who cares about free healthcare in a civil war? by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      *sigh*
      From the wiki on the Merida Initiative:
      U.S. law enforcement officials estimate that US$12 to 15 billion per year flows from the United States to the Mexican traffickers, and that is just in cash, i.e., not including the money sent by wire transfers. Other government agencies, including the Government Accountability Office and the National Drug Intelligence Center, have estimated that Mexico's cartels earn upwards of $23 billion per year in illicit drug revenue from the United States.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    4. Re:who cares about free healthcare in a civil war? by sjames · · Score: 1

      And in spite of all of the problems, the Mexican government has found a way to take care of it's citizens rather than pleading poverty and building more bombs.

  141. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    Yeah, that's not actually true. There is no such rule, there is no such law, and the NHS will continue to pay for your treatment in their system. (Although obviously not the specific treatment they didn't approve of.)

    Now, if you do something unapproved and have complications from that, they might balk at solving that.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  142. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by what2123 · · Score: 1

    Keep adding a million migrants or so each year that scrape bottom barrel to live but use the same exact healthcare system. What little money they "save" usually goes back to their home country for their even poorer families. The problem is compound in America as we want to help others out but many of those people can't come close to helping themselves out. They ignore the rules that we have to protect our nation from these sort of issues but we also have rules that say, "You're here, let us help you." It's good humanitarianly speaking but you can't have the huge disparity in what is being paid and how much they are paying into. Canada is very stable when it comes to this and the disparity between the rich and poor is much smaller. Canada will most like remain good in most aspects as they don't seem to have any real change in population growth. The U.S simply cannot handle the type influx it has been seeing over the past 15-20 years.

  143. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by glueball · · Score: 3, Informative

    The hospital I work at would probably not charge for the Q-tip itself, but add the fully burdened cost to the service provided.

    Follow through, though. I'll try to make it easy for you.

    The Q-tip was purchased and probably has an acquisition cost of $.01.
    It was stocked by a nurse who needed to track inventory to maintain a non-profit status ($35/hr). 30 seconds to place it in the correct position and check off that it is now in inventory. ($0.50)
    It was housed in a rolling cabinet that cost $2K. (assume cost is amortized over several years) The cart is cleaned once a week. The Q-tip bucket's share of this cleaning is 30 seconds @ $20/hr. let's say it's $0.01
    It was requested by a care provider and took 60 seconds to log the care request into the government mandated electronic medical records used for tracking and assuring proper follow up to care. Cost of 60 seconds of care from a family practice physician (assuming $120K/year) is $1.
    The request was printed out at a nurse station and picked up by charge nurse. Evaluation: 15 seconds. Delegation of the service 10 second. For a nurse making $70K/year, that is approximately $0.24.
    The CNA ($25/hr) will open up the cabinet, get the Q-tip, walk the Q-tip to the patient. (2 minutes) Cost: Approximately $0.25
    CNA logs the patient ID band and confirms the service will be performed: 30 seconds. (approximately $.10)
    Actual use of Q-tip by CNA: 1 minute, including disposal in approved container. (approximately $0.20)
    Disposal of Q-tip by janatorial staff: $0.01.

    If procedure is properly performed and there are no adverse issue, you have an OCOGS of over $2. And you think it should be free?

  144. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

    You never pay into SS or Medicare, because there is no fund with any assets there, it's all IOUs, gov't bonds.

    Just so we're clear here, what you're arguing here is that a US Treasury bond is not an asset. This would come as a big surprise to anyone who's ever bought one, including everyone working in financial markets anywhere in the world. The only way those IOUs aren't assets is if the US Treasury decides to default on its loan obligations, which means that we've also just seriously pissed off the Chinese and everyone else who was holding them, triggered a global financial collapse and quite possibly a serious war.

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  145. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by aicrules · · Score: 1

    It is tough to find a good response for this point of view on slashdot. Most of the brains appear to be stuck in the proverbial parent's basement even if the body isn't.

  146. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    In other words: it is not adequate.

    A lot of that "non life threatening" stuff will turn chronic or become untreatable if you ignore it. It sounds a bit like the US system really, where you are only guaranteed timely treatment if you are at death's door.

    Otherwise, your condition is left to fester until it becomes more painful and more expensive to adequately deal with.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  147. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ALL HAIL THE GLORIOUS PRODUCERS!

    Praise be to the ones that lower themselves from their mighty pedestals to provide us jobs!

    YOUR LIFE ONLY MATTERS IF YOU ARE A PRODUCER!

    ALL HAIL THE GLORIOUS PRODUCERS!

  148. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by RicktheBrick · · Score: 1

    I do not know about other hospital but I do know about my local hospital. It is now in the midst of a major construction program. They are spending around 10 million dollars so that they can move the entrance from the south side to the north side. Just a couple of years ago they had a major addition to it. So I can not see that it is anywhere close to being closed or broke.

  149. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jedidiah · · Score: 0

    Fertility treatments are extremely frivolous.

    If you can't have children naturally, you should really stop to contemplate why it is that God or Mother Nature has made things difficult for you. Perhaps consider the idea that there may be a reason you should not force the issue.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  150. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When your dialog devolves to "you're a fucking idiot" you understand that you have lost.

    You cannot defeat my arguments.

  151. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jedidiah · · Score: 0

    Doctors being afraid of punishment is a GOOD thing. That's what Torts are for. Ideally, doctors would focus on successfully treating the patient. However, that seems to be an outdated idea.

    In some places, Doctors have to worry about doing hard time for making mistakes. Unless something like that replaces Tort, all you are doing is giving Doctors (but mainly hospitals) a free pass and zero accountability.

    Also, we don't need "The Delaware" effect for medical insurance like we had it for consumer credit. Although decoupling health insurance from the state and your employer is a good thing.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  152. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    A lot of medical bills are pretty bogus. So if you are going by what the "MSRP" of a treatment is you are going to get a grossly inflated number versus what's actually paid. It's not clear that the usual statistics actually reflect what is spent versus what is charged.

    Also, all of this whining about how Medicare and Medicaid cost is interesting considering the fact that most doctors avoid it because the reimbursement rates for either quite frankly suck. It sounds like it sucks to be a doctor in the UK if you are effectively stuck doing nothing but "medicare/medicaid".

    Perhaps the US needs to start with free med school so the doctors can afford to work for peanuts.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  153. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    So then sum that up.

    It's not an unknown number. So don't treat it as such. Don't make believe it is some shadowy "bogey man" you can point to as scary but never really spell out.

    It's a wonderful argument you've got there. You can basically make up any argument you like based on numbers that don't really exist.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  154. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 1

    LCP is a codification of care practices from the hospice movement. A hospice is arguably one of the more dignified and comfortable places to die, but they are heavily oversubscribed (which puts the lie to the notion that they are something that people want to avoid). So LCP provides a training manual for normal hospital wards to attempt to approach this level of service.

    Whereas in the States, the patient would approach the end of their life not because they or their relatives have accepted it, but because their insurance can't cover the heroic measures being deployed to prolong their suffering^W life any more. The minds of the patient and their families will not just be full of grief, but also the anxiety of how they are going to pay the hospital bills, and what kind of hardship that will mean going forward.

    Would you rather that decisions about your healthcare were made by a single individual? Or didn't benefit from the advice of experts in the field? "Death Panel" is just trolling by the people who'd rather keep healthcare in private hands ; and as a multi-billion dollar industry with a 15% profit margin on peoples suffering, who can blame them?

  155. Re:So Mexico gets their act together on health car by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you're going to use a phrase, learn what it means.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_world

    By deffinition, the US can not be 3rd world. Neither could the soviet union while it was around.

  156. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tell that to the woman who develops a deep depression from knowing that she cannot conceive without a doctor's help.

    Would you rather treat lifelong depression or help out with some fertility treatments?

  157. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by CubicleZombie · · Score: 0

    You're an asshole. Go fuck a blender.

    --
    :wq
  158. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    I am highly suspicious of these ratings of health systems by country. I have lived in various states and been subjected to their healthcare systems and have had first hand experiences that directly contradict some of these published studies.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  159. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by DavidTC · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Medicare and SS spend more money than they take in, so to finance these pyramid schemes the gov't sells bonds.

    SS takes in more than they make, you fucking moron. Which is where as these IOUs come from...the rest of the government borrows from them.

    Jesus Christ on pogo stick, it's completely astonishing how many people are complete and total idiots.

    Here, let me explain to you: You know how you don't have a job because you're too goddamn stupid to work a cash register? (And I also think it's unfair they fired you! Does it really matter if customers pay you or you pay them? Isn't it enough that money moves?) You know how you have to keep borrowing from your parents to pay off your credit cards? You know how they don't charge you interest?

    They are, this analogy, social security, and you are the rest of the budget. And you are standing there arguing that they are borrowing too much and spending too much and will collapse, because look at all those IOUs they have from you! (IOUs are bad, right? So having IOUs must be bad, right?)

    Hey, dumbass, it's you who have the problem, they're the people fucking bailing you out. The government has borrowed 2.7 trillion dollars from social security.

    You get rid of social security, (even if we _don't_ pay it back, aka, we steal the 2.7 trillion dollars we've already borrowed, aka we default on US government securities), and in the future the rest of the budget is in a lot more trouble and has to borrow more, resulting in more interest. We borrowed $805 billion in 2011, so basically you're saying 'I wish we had to pay interest on an extra $805 billion each year!'.

    And having stole 2.7 trillion dollars from our security holders (Even if said holders were ourselves), I can only imagine at what interest rate we'd have to offer on those added bonds. And our existing ones.

    TL;DR: Conservatives think a place the government can, and has, borrowed money without interest (Instead of issuing bonds which do cost interest), is somehow causing the budget issues, and the fact that it has so much money is obvious proof that it is bankrupt.

    (Medicare, OTOH, hovers on the line of taking in too much and too little, but is not separated out like social security and doesn't have a trust fund, so extra money just disappears into the general budget, and comes out another year, so it's harder to see that it's revenue neutral in general. People gasp and point out that it costs X billion dollars one year, and don't notice it made X billion dollars another. Right now, in a recession, yes, it's costing us.)

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  160. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then don't you dare drive on any fucking roads or use any other public service, since those were made by forcing someone to give up their sweet sweet production rewards at gunpoint.

    You fucking cunt.

  161. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 2

    You fail to explain how this will reduce the cost of insurance.

    If 75% of your costs are dicking around with the insurance company arguing about whether illness X or medication Y are covered on a particular plan, for a particular patient, during a particular phase of the moon, etc., then you could spend 3 times more on everything else, and still come out of it spending less, if you had a single payer system where you just send them the bill (the charges being determined by the payer), and they pay it.

  162. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try and learn the facts people before you go off spouting your leftist nonsense.

    http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504763_162-20063964-10391704.html

    "A new study shows that from 1990 to 2009, the number of emergency rooms in the U.S. plummeted from 2,446 to 1,779 - a 27-percent decline. That number includes only ERs in non-rural areas, since rural ERs typically receive federal funding that keeps them open.

    What's killing off America's emergency rooms? Tight money and a changing marketplace.

    For-profit hospitals that aren't making enough cash and serve patients below the poverty line - with less generous forms of insurance like Medicaid - were the ones most likely to shut their doors, the study showed.

    But the poor aren't the only ones at risk. When emergency rooms close, experts say, it's a problem for everyone."

    Note that this represents a time period entirely prior to Obamacare. Things have just started to go to shit. Wait a few years and report back.

    Now I am done with this discussion. This crappy slashdot interface makes tracking posts nearly impossible and I cannot even tell who is responding to who.

    Plus with all the libs calling me names tells me you are out of arguments.

  163. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by DavidTC · · Score: 2

    Government healthcare is, economically speaking, only about killing people before they cost the system (starting with anyone over 60 years, continuing with long-term disability patients, ...). Do you really want your insurance provider to have that principle as it's sole guidance ? Do you really want an organization not bound by contracts and with it's sole incentive to kill you the moment you become unproductive be the sole administrator of your healthcare ?

    HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.

    Oh, wow, thanks I needed that laugh.

    You should be comic or something: Hey, folks, would you rather have a private corporation run entirely for profit decide whether or not you get care, or would you rather have the government decide that, which has people in it who have to get elected to office?

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  164. And the country is overrun by gangs. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Coincidence? I don't think so.

  165. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by aicrules · · Score: 1

    What does it mean "at least as long ast he country can afford it"? You do NOT have the right to the use of a multi-million dollar facility/equipment. I would love to know what part of someone paying for med school, paying for dr. salaries, etc...is YOUR right to make use of for free.

  166. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by OoSync · · Score: 1

    But how much of the insurance is to protect against tort, and how much is actual malpractice.

    In the annals of data about tort reform you can find some specialties (e.g. anestheticians) who changed their operational practices. As a specialty, their insurance rates went from the highest to among the lowest by simply adding things like check lists and adopting better practices.

    These types of studies among the specialists would likely make a larger impact than tort reform, which only really impacts the outcomes of patients with legitimate medical malpractice claims. It's difficult to win such cases, which require a lot of proof. Tort reform only caps the results of the winners (very few), not the losers (most).

    --

    I always get the shakes before a drop.
  167. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alkonaut · · Score: 2

    I think they are one of few treatments that actually have a negative cost in the system. You create a taxpayer for a few thousand bucks, remember?

  168. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by moeinvt · · Score: 2

    Thanks. Very relevant and interesting information.

    The REAL costs of government run healthcare in the USA are even higher. Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement rates are mandated by government. Everyone else then gets stuck paying higher prices so that the providers can make up for the losses they take by treating Medicare/Medicaid patients.

    Then we have the ban on re-importation of drugs and medical devices so that US citizens are forced to subsidize the rest of the world's medication and medical device usage.

    We've also got another wonderful Federal mandate called EMTALA so that hospitals are forced to treat everyone that shows up at the door, regardless of their willingness or ability to pay. Who eats that cost? Not the government.

    IMO, our government has totally screwed up the healthcare system in the US, so there's no way I'm going to let them take over the whole thing.

  169. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by OoSync · · Score: 1

    Remember, that's the only way all insurance works - by forcing one group to subsidize another.

    FTFY.

    Also, with all for profit insurance, you're subsidizing the losses of the insurance company when they make bad investments with your premiums (i.e. American insurance companies after 1999). If they make good investments, they don't see a reason to lower the premiums and just keep the profits.

    I think you can see that growth in health care costs to the the individual have direct relationships to the lack of profits to the insurance company. If they don't hit a target, they raise the premium ever higher or reduce the payout or reject more claims. There is not direct relationship between premiums and quality of service, especially if you live in a captive market like Alabama.

    There's hope the Obamacare changes to cap profits at 18% of premiums received will remove some of these issues. Also the gradual change into a system that monitors the actual effectiveness of outcomes will increase the effectiveness of treatment for the same dollar.

    --

    I always get the shakes before a drop.
  170. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    If you actually think 'letting people who cannot pay for health care die in the street' is the solution, you need to say so, loudly, so no one can accidentally elect you to office^W^W^W^W^Wmisunderstand you, because you're taking a position that is wildly at odds with the _entire_ US population. _No one_ wants sick people dying in the street.

    What people (At least, the left) have done is now require everyone to have insurance, so no freeloaders like the one you describe exist. (And in case they do not have insurance, they are fined, and any collected fines are used as part of the money the government reimburses hospitals with for covering uninsured people.)

    Actually, wait, no, that's not really the left's doing either. It's the right that has been talking about such freeloaders for years, and repeatedly proposed that people _should_ have to get insurance. The left wanted to do other things, taking the profit out of insurance entirely or even have the government run a competing plan or even all of it, or just have it run the hospitals. But, unable to get any traction with that, the left eventually said, 'Fine, the right's idea is better than nothing.'...at which point the right decided it was the worst idea they'd ever heard.

    But, regardless, it's nice to see someone correctly say 'The solution is _either_ to let people die on the street _or_ to have more government regulation than we used to have. Not letting people not get insurance and freeload wasn't working. Either more government regulation, or dead poor people'. You keep repeating that. (I do not think it will have the result you intend, but don't let that stop you.)

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  171. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by OoSync · · Score: 1

    This is correct, however I ask a follow up. Why are hospitals forced to provide healthcare services to people that cannot pay - this is one of the main drivers behind escalating costs of healthcare, but why is this the case?

    Because.

    You can rationalize several reasons depending on your bent.

    • Public health is a national priority. Having destitute sick people hanging around is worse for all citizens.
    • Public health is a matter of national security. To fight wars you need a healthy population. Look at the British experience in WWI. They lost nearly their entire upper class because the lower classes were too sick to fight. They lost a generation of the fittest young men.
    • Public health has greater utility to society than letting the slob die. If he dies or is permanently disabled, we lose the value of his labor and other contributions to society. The gambit is that on average, these contributions are far greater than saving his life today.
    • Public health is a religious duty. All of the Abrahamic religions (Jews, Christians, and Muslims) see assisting the poor as a mandated act of charity.
    • Because we have a society that values individual life and holds it to be something worth saving.
    --

    I always get the shakes before a drop.
  172. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by moeinvt · · Score: 2

    REAL Solution: Get the damned government and their stupid laws and stupid mandates out of the system entirely.

    1. Consumers aren't stupid. If the person buying medical services had a direct relationship with the provider and complete price transparency in a competitive market, they are capable of making their own decisions. Auto mechanics and many other service providers operate on a fee per service basis

    2. Good idea.

    3. Get the government out of the equation. Make prices transparent and use health insurance more like auto collision insurance. Get rid of government mandates on what MUST be covered by a policy so that people can negotiate contracts for their unique situation.

    4. Repeal EMTALA. Negotiate payment terms with the provider or go to a charity hospital.

    In other words **** the government!

    Private, for-profit businesses deliver millions of goods and services to people with high quality and at affordable prices. Competition and innovation decrease costs and increase quality. Governments never do.

  173. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by OoSync · · Score: 1

    Wait it gets worse.

    Since there is no cap on the profits of insurance companies, they are free to simply raise premiums to pass on the cost of bad investment of past premiums.
    For instance, all their internet stocks become worthless, then raise premiums to meet profit expectations. Or deny more claims, or pay doctors less for procedures.

    The $12 Q-tip (uncited) is just a symptom of the inequties in the system. Doctors and hospitals need to be paid (not always what they want, but fairly). When the payers (insurance companies) refuse to pay for some services, then others have to priced higher to recoup the costs. And on and on...

    --

    I always get the shakes before a drop.
  174. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by wganz · · Score: 1

    You falsely assume that .gov regulation lowers pricing. If the .gov orders big pharma "provide us with pill X for $Y", you falsely assume that big pharma won't tell the .gov bureaucratic weasel to stuff it where the sun doesn't shine and stop making pill X at a loss. You're somehow blinded that the .gov can make an edict and majically all ills are corrected. It is hard for me to understand how you can believe that these bureaucrats are somehow gods are all knowing and wise.

    Your rhetorical question about the 'Q tip' is a 'Michael Mooresque diversion' to accuse and isn't looking for a real answer so I won't take the bait to respond.

    You and your country men are free to stay out of the US healthcare system. We see the financial crisis du jour that this 'free healthcare' has brought to the EU and want no part of that madness.

  175. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by OoSync · · Score: 1

    which will be if they allow the government (screw it - allow the current batch of GOP politicians) to reduce SS benefits to future generations

    And even if we do not a thing to change the current issues, the most pessimistic projections by the SS Board suggests:

    • projected benefits will be 75% of the full promise to future beneficiaries
    • In inflation adjusted dollars, this amount is significantly higher than today's payouts
      • The less pessimistic projections, which followed America's growth until the current recession, showed the program remaining able to fund to 100% for at least 75 years (the outer horizon of projections).

        Further, if we rebalance the growth in inequality our society has allowed to occur for the last 30 years, then everyone in those time horizons is better off financially.

    --

    I always get the shakes before a drop.
  176. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Sounds like you pay twice for HealthCare. First through high taxes for an inferior system. And again through supplemental insurance. Why not have a free market where you pay-out-of-pocket in the first place and perhaps buy insurance for catastrophic health only. How is a free-market less efficient?

  177. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Typical libtard...thinks we're entitled to everything...yet doesn't expect anyone to work for it. News flash moron...somebody actually has to work to pay for all the things you think we're entitled to.

    What a fucking idiot

  178. Paid for by taxes by CodeInspired · · Score: 1

    The conservative argument against universal health care is pretty simple. If it's paid for by taxes, the middle to upper class pay significantly more than everyone else for the same service. And those people don't like doing that.

    Personally, i'm on the fence about the issue. I definitely see the benefits of a simple, efficient, single payer system. And I also feel it's important that everyone has access to affordable health care. However, I do find it annoying that a huge percentage of the population pays little to no taxes but expect more and more free services from the government. I think health care is a personal responsibility that everyone needs to budget for. Similar to buying groceries or paying rent (extreme poverty cases aside), everyone has to pay. I see far too many poor people buying iPhones and $100 data plans, yet claim they cannot afford health insurance.

  179. Lifestyle differences between US and elsewhere by dtjohnson · · Score: 1

    If we are going to compare the health care of other countries with the United States, we should also compare the lifestyle differences between the US and other countries that affect our health and, therefore, the health care that we require. Generally, people in the US eat more crap, get less exercise, indulge in more promiscuous sex, and use more dangerous drugs than people in most other countries. Those things all cause serious disease that takes a lot of expensive medical care to manage before the patient ultimately succumbs. If a hypothetical Joe Blow wants to use meth, inject himself with heroin, eat steak for dinner every night, sit on the couch playing xbox till 1am while drinking diet pop, and then go of to the bars to drink and pickup a new sex partner for the night, he's going to be a high-roller at the local hospital as well.

  180. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by moeinvt · · Score: 1

    What "enormous benefits" are there to a 20-something with a healthy lifestyle that gets put into the same risk pool as a morbidly obese chain smoker?

    If the US government would repeal the ban on re-importation of prescription drugs, they would already be much cheaper. Government doesn't need to "negotiate" they just need to stop artificially propping up prices.

    Is 'SS' a retirement program or a welfare program for old people? If it's a "retirement program" (as it's often described) it's a total scam. I say that because if new contributions stopped, the SS fund would not have enough assets to pay off the liabilities. Classic Ponzi scheme. If we admit that it's just another welfare program, the comparison is meaningless.

  181. Re:I'm confused... by tnk1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I thought the Mexican healthcare system, was to come to the US illegally across the border, and get onto our welfare system...help drain Medicare, and clog up our Hospitals' Emergency Rooms....?

    No, that's just a side result of the Mexican Jobs Program. The health care in Mexico is all covered, but they'd have to go home to use it.

  182. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    You fail to explain how this will reduce the cost of insurance.

    The poster didn't say it would reduce the cost of insurance. They said it would reduce the cost of billing insurance, which is a huge medical expense that people are unaware of.

    75% of the costs are billing. I assume by 'costs' that doesn't include the doctors salary (Often that's structured as profit, not salary..the doctor owns the place, works 'for free', and just keeps any money left over), but still..that means filling out paperwork to get payment from insurance companies is three times more than the heating and air, the rent, the equipment, receptionist, etc. Three times all that put together.

    Basically, imagine the hassles you went through when you returned something you bought online. Even if it went okay and you were only on the phone ten minutes, and the paperwork all worked out. Now imagine having to do one of those for every single patient...and the process blows up on one out of five of them, requiring waiting on hold for two hours.

    You know that time that your insurance was supposed to cover something, but apparently didn't realize it, and billed you for it, and you had to call them up and straighten it out? That was because someone at the doctor's office fell down on their job....and the corollary to that is every time insurance was correctly billed, it took a significant amount of time from someone at that office.

    In fact, there are almost no medical practices without a full-time employee solely to deal with getting money from insurance companies. (And the ones without are mostly the ones that don't take insurance at all.)

    With a single insurance company and a single plan, the costs of billing them would be greatly reduced. Also, presumably, a government-run service would not be quite as weasely when to comes to payment. But even it was, a single set of rules and single contact point would greatly reduce costs.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  183. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those are nice, hard-to-fudge metrics

    Like you say yourself Infant mortality is calculated differently in different countries. I would like to see which corresponding stats you considered to rule out any fudging there. I am also really wary about life expectancy as a health indicator (or having the highest number actually being desirable). It is a good proxy but it carries a lot of possible confounding factors (wide-spread cultural life-style choices for example. If a alcohol consumption is more wide-spread in country A then B it will decrease life expectancy. But that doesn't necessarily mean that country B has a better health system; unless you consider alcohol intake prevention as a function of a universal health care system to which I would certainly object).

  184. Under the table by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do they mention that single-payer, under the table, is the most popular method of health care access?

  185. Confusing Health Care with Health Insurance by trout007 · · Score: 1

    The US does have universal healthcare. If you walk into a hospital you get treated.

    Health Insurance is like every other insurance. You only need it if you have assets you want protected. It is a financial product. I have car insurance in case I get into an accident. It will buy me a new car or keep my house from being taken in a lawsuit.

    I have life insurance not to keep me alive but to protect my family from income they would lose if I died.

    I have homeowners insurance because if my house burns down I'd like a new one.

    A poor person doesn't need health insurance because they don't have assets that need protecting.

    This whole universal health insurance debate is an attack on the poor. They already get healthcare. It's just the non-poor don't want to pay for them. Well too bad.

    --
    I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
  186. Very interesting by kilodelta · · Score: 1

    That Mexico can figure out universal care but the U.S. is predominated by the insurance industry. That insurance industry is the one primarily responsible for the run up in health care costs in the U.S. And of course in the U.S. we have the billing companies too. We need to neutralize both.

  187. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

    Hospital bills for the uninsured are entirely made-up bullshit. They've got to be some kind of tax scam or similar asshattery.

    My wife had a minor-ish surgery a couple months ago, and the amount insurance paid versus what they would have charged us without insurance was a bit under 25% (!!!!!!), and obviously the hospital's not losing money on that—in fact, judging from New Jersey's experience with simply saying "no" to annual insurance premium increases and all the magical savings that appeared out of nowhere at every level of their health care system, I'd guess even the 25% is an inflated, rents-seeking rate.

  188. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by brusewitz · · Score: 1

    Let's do some basic math: Our military budget is about $800 billion so cutting 90% would leave us with $88.9 billion.
    We have about 1.5 million active people on duty for a cost of $154.2 billion + $3.1 billion for family housing which leaves -$68.4 billion dollars.

    Already in the hole with your plan and we can't afford to provide them with bullets, let alone transportation, armor, food, medical care, etc.!

    If we reduce our force down to 100K then the other 1.4 million ex-military and their families would end up needing unemployment, medicaid, food stamps, etc. I don't think that is a very fair thing to to to people who have served our country so bravely.

    Your plan also ignores the approx 2.5 million people (and their families) in defense related jobs that would become unemployed and end up needing unemployment, medicaid, food stamps, etc.

    Would we be able to provide healthcare from the savings? Of the $2.2 Trillion spent on healthcare in the U.S. each year, $800 billion is from medicare/medicaid so that leaves $1.4 Trillion. If we subtract the $711.1 billion dollar savings from defense we still have to come up with $688.9 billion (almost as much as we saved on defense), so no we don't make it.

    I don't think you will be getting my vote in November!

  189. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by fche · · Score: 1

    "FTFY".

    Cute but wrong. Normal insurance policies cannot systematically force one group of clients to subsidize another, because the former would simply leave and get their insurance at a lower rate elsewhere.

  190. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by FatAlb3rt · · Score: 1

    Ah - maybe there's the next opportunity in the free education offerings. khanacademy, codeacademy, udacity, mitx,.... How about free med school? At least the lecture portion could be commoditized.

  191. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PROTIP: Having no children is the same thing as death. Death of your line. Which is the exact same reason for why adoption is not a choice either.

    ONLY on /. would somebody consider the requirement of sexual reproduction frivolous. What the hell is wrong with you? Do you hate your genes that much?

    If you want your line to die out, go ahead. For humanity in general, that's a positive skew in natural selection.
    But maybe we don't hate ourselves and would like to keep existing beyond the deaths of our individual bodies.

  192. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by abigor · · Score: 1

    You are an incredibly stupid person. So many Americans live in a weird bubble of ignorance. It's just embarrassing.

  193. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jpapon · · Score: 1

    Who said anything about not working?

    --
    -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
  194. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by budgenator · · Score: 1

    Australia's economy is tanking, but more from the Voldermort Tax than from health care.

    --
    Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  195. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jpapon · · Score: 1
    I'm a scientist, and I publish my research for others to use for free. I don't expect to make massive amounts of money off of my research.

    Why is necessary that doctors, insurance companies, pharma companies, etc... make so much money?

    Scientists don't get paid a whole lot, and yet they're still inventing things. Why couldn't doctors do the same thing?

    --
    -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
  196. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jpapon · · Score: 1

    How is anything I said Marxist?

    --
    -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
  197. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by glueball · · Score: 1

    The oil/mining economy in Canada is running well. The rest, benefiting from the oil economy, will continue run well as long as the oil/mining economy is running well.

    Canada made some hard decisions in the 1980's and early 1990's. It was hard. Brutal, even. These are some of the same choices the US needs to make today.

    Bill

  198. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jpapon · · Score: 1
    It's just an example. How can we spend $800 billion on the military and yet think that a NHS is just too expensive? The English NHS costs about 100 billion pounds a year. That means for the US a similar system would cost ~600 billion pounds, or 950 billion dollars. That's about 100 billion more than medicare/medicaid. Seems doable to me.

    The cost of health-care in the US is out of control. Reform needs to happen across the board, the price of medical school, the price of drugs, the cost of procedures. Just about everything is broken, and we need radical reform to fix it.

    --
    -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
  199. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by AmazingRuss · · Score: 1

    Agreed. Like we NEED more people....

  200. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why doesn't the USA just adopt the same system of Heath Insurance system that your Founding Fathers set up for the US Merchant Marine?

     

  201. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But then the US doesn't like to talk about the fact that before the big Wall Street swindle, err transfer of wealth, that 50% of US personal bankruptcies were caused by health issues.

         

  202. Supply and demand on life-determining services by gwolf · · Score: 1

    If I need a surgery and have no money to pay for it, a macroeconomist will say that I'm out of the "supply and demand" cycle. However, I might just die. Is that fair?
    I am a Mexican. I have treated almost all of my medical needs over the past many (10?) years. Many of my friends prefer private healthcare - just for the reasons you mention. Of course, I have not had to wait for months for an urgent surgery (that happens here, of course), and would most likely do it privately.
    Thankfully, I am in the social strata where I can choose. Most of the time, I can perfectly live with some waiting and hurrying. Many people won't even consider it. Up to them. But I know many, many people that were it not for the socialized medicine would get no alternatives at all.
    Of course... this does not sadly cover the whole country. The countryside lives in a dramatically different situation, and the supposed universal coverage... does not exist.

  203. Science! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Science proves that stopping feeding patients greatly reduces the cost and time of treatment until the patients reach a stable condition.

    P.S.: Something in Slashdot causes me to only be able to post as AC, although I have logged in. Oh well.

  204. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by codepunk · · Score: 1

    I just had some dental work done a few days ago, I had no dental insurance. I was able to negotiate a killer price for a cash deal. The office was extremely happy to provide me with deep discounts they said billing is generally a majority of the overhead. My actual cost was probably barely more than any deductable I would have paid.

    --


    Got Code?
  205. Re:Ironically... (more than you know...) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    50% of all personal bankruptcies in the US used to be caused by health issues.

    What about the Health Care model set up by the Founding Fathers of the US?

    Congress Passes Socialized Medicine and Mandates Health Insurance -In 1798

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/rickungar/2011/01/17/congress-passes-socialized-medicine-and-mandates-health-insurance-in-1798/

    http://www.scribd.com/doc/29099806/Act-for-the-Relief-of-Sick-DisabledSeamen-July-1798

  206. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    It's an asset. But it is issued by a government that owns printing presses.

    Thinking it's value is guaranteed is foolish. Granted paying off the bonds will reduce the value of all dollar denominated assets. Not just the bonds.

    It is a Ponzi scheme. If Ponzi had left Ponzi bonds in the account it wouldn't have changed anything.

    Finally. Only fools are buying T bonds these days. The fed is buying any leftovers at the end of the auctions. There is no market rate for bonds. There is no market for bonds. It's just left hand selling to the right hand, which prints the money.

    That said it's better then the euro. At least the fed is only buying 0% bonds from _one_ insolvent government. Better then the ECB.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  207. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    You start your rant with a false statement and call the GP a fucking moron?

    SS used to take more in then it spent. That money was taken by the general fund and spent. It now spends more then it takes in. Have you heard of the baby boom?

    The trust fund is a lie. Nobody would allow a company to maintain a trust full of its own bonds. It's an even worse idea to let the government do it. All that money will ether come out of the general fund or it will be printed.

    There is no market rate to T-bonds. The leftovers at the end of each auction are bought by the fed. It's only slightly better then Europe, where the ECB is buying bonds from multiple insolvent governments.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  208. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Rolgar · · Score: 1

    Maybe medicare pays less than market rates and the doctors raise prices on other patients to make up the difference?

    My reforms? All patients pay the same price, minus any amount payed by their insurance (no network discounts for insurance companies, etc). Instead of prices of 30,000 for an overnight stay and appendectomy (my real bill 8 years ago) which then gets reduced by the insurance company, partially paid with the rest passed on to me, the bill would have the real price paid by every customer. No reducing the bill for insured folks and passing the cost on to other people and hiding the real billed amount.

    Add on getting rid of malpractice reform which can easily run to 20-30% of a doctor's income for the year. Replace it with doctors having to cover for free the fixing of errors by their peers will encourage them to weed out bad doctors.

    Turn medicare over to the county government. The local government can raise taxes similar to medicare, hire doctors and run a clinics that will compete with free market doctors and provide inexpensive or free care to those who need it.

  209. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    I want the one that is bound by its contract. So yes, I want the private corporation.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  210. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by HungWeiLo · · Score: 1

    Point of reference - I have 2 uncles who are doctors in Hong Kong (and they work in a public hospital) and both drive E-class Mercedes (keep in mind cars cost 2x-3x in Hong Kong what they cost in the States).

    --
    There are a huge number of yeast infections in this county. Probably because we're downriver from the bread factory.
  211. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Svartalf · · Score: 1

    Most real conservatives know it's not Social Security that's the problem, but rather things like Medicaid, and similar programs, that're the source of the problem.

    It doesn't take a financial genius or a rocket scientist to go look at the budget dashboard figures from the GAO, etc. and see that we're spending less on Social Security/Medicare and Defense (Which includes all the spending done on the recent wars we've been involved in...remind yourself of that...) than on other idiot social programs (that's where the bulk of the actual spending has been for a long while.)- and know where to contremplate cutting things. You have issues with it, though, because everyone doesn't want their freebies cut off- and the Liberals have been using them for buying votes for YEARS now.

    Want to fix things? It sure as hell doesn't start with cutting Defense spending or Social Security. It begins with culling things like those bailouts and things like Solyndra. It begins with curtailing what gets spent on Medicaid (Those here illegally get better medical care than the REST of us, including those on Medicare... Meds, glasses, etc. All paid for off of each and everyone's backs...)- and cutting off those that are not really legally entitled to it.

    Want to fix the healthcare "problem"?

    Get Medicare to QUIT arbitrarily paying out only 30% max of the billed and Medicaid to QUIT paying out 80%.
    Get the Insurance companies to QUIT paying out only 30% over Medicare's payouts.
    Change the Insurance story to be more like the HSA/High-deductible story where you're saving up money for healthcare and they only insure against catastrophic incidents.

    While that won't fix things, the first item addresses one of the major causes of the "problem". The second forces a re-assessment of things. Might raise your insurance rates, might not. Obamacare will. The third's based on the premise that the "insurance" scheme we're doing here in the country's more of a scam inflicted on the patients and the doctors. You don't typically get "insurance" on piddly things for your car, right? Why should you do the same thing with health or other insurance? If you're able to save up money against regular visits, preferably untaxed or deducted from tax profile, you're going to be inclined to do it. Right now, because of "pre-existing" conditions, I was forced to do that with my new employer. Upshot is that it's cheaper with the same ultimate result for the next year because if I had to get anything under most of the cases, it was going to be excluded from the picture, uncovered, for the next 12 months. So...if I'm "eating" that, I'd rather it be untaxed.

    Reality is...you can typically get health insurance in most States at a higher rate through a "risk pool" the State insists upon. I know about it- checked into it because for a long time I was doing contract software engineering and I'm a Type II Diabetic... It's typically 2-3 times more expensive than the regular insurance. Want to have it cheaper? Fine... Problem is, they're going to raise everyone else's rates up and not proportionate to my risks. They have to make a profit you know. So...instead of spending 200-300 per month for insurance, you'll spend $500-700. Enjoy your "universal" healthcare.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  212. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jpapon · · Score: 1
    One could use your own argument against you.

    Aren't we messing with natural selection when we enable people who aren't fertile to reproduce? If their infertility is genetic, won't that mean we'll be carrying the infertility phenotype forward?

    Anyway, I'd rather have a kid with "better" genotypes than my own. Also, a person is largely a product of their environment. Genetics only play so much of a role. Why not adopt a child?

    I think having the taxpayer pay for expensive fertility treatments should be an option of last resort. It would make more sense to empty out all the orphanages first.

    --
    -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
  213. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by budgenator · · Score: 1

    The difference is that the insurance companies are not allowed to make a profit.

    Great Ideal, the Record and Movie companies don't make a profit either! Most insurance companies we deal with (volume-wise) are non-profit anyways. Being non-profit means your expenses has to match your revenues, it's non some flying unicorn, pink ponies with sparkles measure of social goodness.

    --
    Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  214. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by nbauman · · Score: 1

    UK National Health Service pays for fertility treatment.

    In the US, it's expensive, so they implant several ova at the time, to make sure at least one of them will be fertilized. Result: When they overshoot, many high-risk twins, and higher-risk triplets, higher infant mortality, higher hospital expenses, worse care.

    In the UK they don't worry that much about costs, so they implant one ovum at a time.

    Fertility treatments aren't frivolous, because they restore a natural function which most people consider to be important.

    Breast implants aren't restoring a natural function.

  215. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by UAchump · · Score: 1

    I think everyone deserves clothing too. And a small entertainment budget. And a gym membership to stay healthy. And I will vote for whomever will ensure that the people of the country pay their fair share. And if they don't pay, we'll throw them in jail.

  216. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by vakuona · · Score: 1

    How about people not leaving it too late to see the doctor?

    Having idle capacity is expensive. One way to cut down on costs is to have a waiting list. Then you can ensure all those doctors who are paid a fortune are always occupied. It's a trade off, like with most things in life.

    And the doctors aren't incompetent. They know if a condition will get more serious and will bump you up the list if they determine that your need is more critical.

  217. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    SS used to take more in then it spent. That money was taken by the general fund and spent. It now spends more then it takes in. Have you heard of the baby boom?

    That wasn't because of the baby boom, you idiot. That's because we have a recession going on here and unemployed people don't pay payroll taxes, and people retired early. So, until the economy turns around, payouts will exceed revenue for about 5% each year. (And it's not helped by payroll tax holidays.)

    Extrapolating revenues and payouts based on our current financial situation is idiotic.

    The _actual_ baby-boomer problems hits in 2017, and over the next 20 years, will eventually run out the trust fund.

    The trust fund is a lie. Nobody would allow a company to maintain a trust full of its own bonds. It's an even worse idea to let the government do it. All that money will ether come out of the general fund or it will be printed.

    Companies maintain separate areas of money all the time, you idiot, and move money around between them all the time. One part of the company doesn't need some of its yearly budget yet, but another part needs it earlier.

    And what the fuck does 'out of the general fund' mean? Yes, it's coming 'out of the general fund'. The goddamn general fund borrowed from social security, and social security is taking back the amount it loaned them. ('I can't can't pay back your loan, that money would come straight of out my bank account!' 'Uh, yeah, that's generally where money comes from.')

    'The trust fund is a lie' is complete and utter nonsense, spewed by total buffoons who have no idea what words actually mean. The Federal government has two goddamn bank accounts, and has for years been moving stuff from the SS account to the general one, to keep from paying interest on loans to the general ones, and now, when SS runs low, is moving it back. Yes, _of course_ this is going to be a problem, because the government can't balance its budget and SS had been making things better for it, and will no longer do so.

    While, indeed, you can choose to steal all the money that people have put in social security by changing the laws, you cannot also complain there is a problem with social security, which is 'People want to steal from it'.

    You are people who are running around threatening to rob banks because, in your own words 'It's not safe to put money in banks, because people will steal it'. And hence you have to get all the money _out_ of the banks by stealing it. Problem solved!

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  218. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you seriously asking this question? You just posted above "Scientists don't get paid a whole lot, and yet they're still inventing things. Why couldn't doctors do the same thing?"

    Have you ever read Marx?

    How much money is "a whole lot"? How much is too much? So you think everyone should make the same amount of money?

  219. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by fche · · Score: 1

    "would you rather have a private corporation run entirely for profit decide"

    I have nothing against "profit" per se. If you do, you're not thinking hard enough about your own life and what it would be like without the profit motive of people around you.

    Remember too, that these private corporations don't get to "decide" at their whims. There is an actual contract, actual consideration changing hands, and actual case law to help settle differences. With a government program, rules barely exist, and the policies change as your betters see fit.

  220. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by nbauman · · Score: 1

    Direct costs of malpractice, which include premiums, damage awards in excess of premiums, and associated litigation costs, represent no more than two percent of health care costs. Thus, tort reforms can have a substantial effect on health care costs only if they affect the amount of healthcare services provided.

    Sorry, you must not work in health care.

    This is just the malpractice part. What's not in the "1-2%" is what I'll call defensive medicine.
    I have a colleague who is an orthopedic surgeon. He will not perform surgery on you unless you had an MRI or CT performed the day before. Many, many surgeons do this. And blood work. Update a complete panel. CBC, SMA, drug panel--the whole smash.

    It does not matter if you had an MRI last week or your blood tests are two days old.

    Why?

    He does not want to get sued. You are paying for his defensive medicine.

    You might ask "what does having an MRI prevent being sued?" There is a type of patient and a type of lawyer who look for clerical errors and then sue over them--not a negligence outcome. Not having an MRI the day before could be argued as not being the best care.

    So what does it really mean? My colleague makes good money being a surgeon and would make less if he had a mark on his insurance record--just or unjust. With the surge in amateur ranking systems this means a lot to a practice.

    I call bullshit on this. I just challenged a doctor friend of mine to give me an example of defensive medicine for malpractice purposes that wasn't also good medicine according to the guidelines. He said MRIs. Then he admitted that the hospital is also giving MRIs because they have an MRI machine sitting there that they want to get billing from.

    I can't prove it now, but I think hospitals and radiology centers are giving needless MRIs in order to make money out of their MRI machines, and when somebody calls them on it, they say, "We have to do it or we're liable to get sued" as an excuse.

    There are guidelines for MRIs. Doctors should follow the guidelines because that's the standard of medicine. If you follow the guidelines, you can go into court, and get a dozen prestigious experts testifying in your defense that you did the right thing, and if the jury believes them, you'll get off. (If you have a stupid jury, you can lose whatever the law says, but following the guidelines is the best you can do.)

    If the guidelines say you should have an MRI the day before surgery, then you should have it. If the guidelines say it's not necessary, you shouldn't have it. Same thing with the blood tests, although automated tests are cheap and can pick trends a surgeon should know about.

    There is one exception, the Daniel Merenstein PSA case (look it up), where the doctor lost a malpractice case for following the national standard rather than the local standard, but that was because of a law specific to just a few states, and that should be changed, if it hasn't been already.

  221. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll go along with your extensive breakdown. What is missing in all these figures though is that the hospital ALSO wants to charge some ridiculous amount for care each day in the room BESIDES the $2 for the qtip... it's DOUBLE charging in my book.

  222. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by budgenator · · Score: 1

    Let me ask you a question - since when did a Q tip cost $12 - like it does in American hospitals? You Americans make me laugh with your joke of a health"care" sytem

    That's not just a Q tip, it's a FDA regulated medical device, everything has to be documented down to how the janitor sweeps the floor in the factory. Lot number of all the materials used in manufacture, tracked from start, through distribution to the patient's final use. Besides "Cotton Swabs Sterile 6 Inch 100 Pkgs Of 2, 2382 Your Price: $4.04"

    --
    Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  223. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jpapon · · Score: 1

    How much money is "a whole lot"? How much is too much? So you think everyone should make the same amount of money?

    No, but I have no problem with government regulating the salaries of doctors. That's not Marxist at all... the government already does it with the military, police/fire department, etc...

    One doesn't have to be Marxist to believe that government regulation, oversight, and yes, even control, of something could be better than the free-market solution.

    --
    -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
  224. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jpapon · · Score: 1
    I don't want to pay for the military (at least not the massive military we have), and yet I have to. If I don't pay, I get thrown in jail.

    Why is paying for guns more acceptable than paying for health-care? We have a massive nuclear arsenal for deterrence, we don't need much of a regular military; no country is going to attack us.

    --
    -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
  225. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jpapon · · Score: 1

    Turn medicare over to the county government. The local government can raise taxes similar to medicare, hire doctors and run a clinics that will compete with free market doctors and provide inexpensive or free care to those who need it.

    This wouldn't really work, it would just segregate the rich from the poor even more. The rich would all move to counties where they don't have to pay medical taxes, and the poor counties would be stuck trying to pay for their own medical services, which they simply can't afford.

    The whole point of having the federal government do it is that it makes it so you can force the rich to help pay for the health-care of the poor. Once you get too local the rich can simply dodge their civic responsibilities by moving.

    And yes, I said force the rich to help pay for the health-care of the poor. This is how it should be, the rich greatly benefit from the labor of the poor and middle-class. It's only logical that they should help keep them in good health.

    --
    -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
  226. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But why do they need to regulate these workers, you believe they make too much correct?

    Marxism calls for the elimination of private property and nationalization of all industry.

    You are calling for the nationalization of the healthcare industry - fully 10 to 20% of the GDP.

    You understand all these are all Marxist policies?

  227. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Burning1 · · Score: 1

    Not to mention, you COULD just adopt... or do as you did, and pay for private care.

    Not sure about other countries, but there is no such thing as 'just adopting' in the united states. Demand for healthy babies far out-weighs availability, so there are huge waiting lists and difficult interviews that need to be passed. From what I've heard, it's somewhat comparable to going through the process of obtaining a US green card.

    The situation is easier if you want to raise a special needs child or one that euphemistically 'doesn't look like mommy and daddy.' It's much harder to find parents willing to adopt a drug addicted baby or one that has been in foster care for a while, so the requirements for raising a special needs kid are much more relaxed. Unfortunately, raising such a special needs kid isn't really what parents hoping to have their own children want.

  228. Ideal world has no headlines by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    In an ideal world, governments behaving sensibly wouldn't make headlines.

    In an ideal world, there wouldn't be headlines. Good things wouldn't make headlines, because they'd be routine and expected. Bad things wouldn't make headlines, because they wouldn't happen.

    However, we live in the real world, where positive progress -- such as governments behaving sensibly -- does make headlines, and rightly so.

  229. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by jpapon · · Score: 1
    I don't really think it is Marxism, since nobody is saying that private systems can't exist alongside a public one, and nobody is saying that we need to nationalize the pharmaceutical industry. We just need to regulate costs, and provide a government option that ensures everyone and anyone can get health-care.

    I'm not saying that the workers should own the means of production, or that the proletariat should rise up and demand control of the government. That would be Marxism.

    Anyway, Marxism and Socialism aren't dirty words or insults... so if you want to call modern liberal socialism "Marxism", be my guest.

    --
    -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
  230. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Damn you're stupid.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  231. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    Want to fix things? It sure as hell doesn't start with cutting Defense spending or Social Security. It begins with culling things like those bailouts and things like Solyndra.

    You can't actually claim to be serious and then whine about Solyndra. Solyndra is a nonsensical issue brought up mainly in the attempt to make some sort of Obama scandal out of it, although that fell apart when it was pointed out that 99% of that happened under Bush and someone in the DOE authorizing the loan a few days after Obama got in office does not mean Obama had anything to do with it. That's the only reason anyone knows anything about it, the attempt to make it a scandal. That was a $26 billion dollar program to give out loans to energy companies, and a possible loss of $529 million dollars is not particularly important.

    And while you can complain about the entire loan program, the fact is, the rest of them are on track to make their loan payments, and hence the program made money even with the Solyndra loss, so that's not a good example either.

    And excluding defense spending is crazy. There is absolutely no reason we need to spend anywhere near as much as we spend on defense. We have no actual threats that could be deterred via most defense spending, and no reason to have military bases in 90% of the places we do.

    It begins with curtailing what gets spent on Medicaid (Those here illegally get better medical care than the REST of us, including those on Medicare... Meds, glasses, etc. All paid for off of each and everyone's backs...)- and cutting off those that are not really legally entitled to it.

    While we _are_ paying for the medical care of those here illegally (Because they go to hospitals and then do not pay, which means we do), I have no idea why you think they get meds and glasses for free.

    While that won't fix things, the first item addresses one of the major causes of the "problem". The second forces a re-assessment of things. Might raise your insurance rates, might not. Obamacare will.

    Obamacare's _already_ lowered insurance rates, because of the requirement that 80% of premiums go towards care.

    The third's based on the premise that the "insurance" scheme we're doing here in the country's more of a scam inflicted on the patients and the doctors. You don't typically get "insurance" on piddly things for your car, right? Why should you do the same thing with health or other insurance?

    Erm, while insurance _is_ a scam, it is not a scam for the reason you think it is.

    Your health is not 'piddly', and _anyone_ can be hit, _at any time_, by health care costs they can never, in their entire life, pay off.

    Treating it as 'insurance' is indeed stupid. But saying 'People could just pay for it themselves' is not very reasonable either, as people clearly _can't_.

    This is why health insurance is a scam. Because things that everyone needs, and everyone (except the super-rich) have the possibility of not being able to pay for, is not something that should be left to the private sector at all. It should be right up there with 'police protection', as it's something that individuals who use it cannot actually afford., but something that, society-wide, is something we want.

    Insurance is a reasonable idea when it's some sort of custom thing per person. It is entirely reasonable for a museum to insure against loses, and the insurance company comes out and says 'You have to do X, Y, and Z and we'll insure you for this much.'.

    It is not any sort of reasonable model when there's an entire segment of society that needs it, and it's even less of a reasonable model everyone needs it, and it's even less of one when failure to have it means everyone else has to pay.If everyone needs it, and the lack of it hurts everyone, then the solution is to just tax people more and _provide_ it, not via any 'insurance' model.

    I am suddenly reminded of the 'fire insurance' that some places have started offering, and how

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  232. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Come on, we all understand Obamacare is designed to bankrupt the insurance companies forcing all individuals onto the government plan. It's been said in plain language.

    You neglected to answer question 1; you believe the doctors make too much correct? Hence the state must regulate. This is Marxist.

    Marx also understood that the move to communism was transitional and would occur in phases. This incrementalism is also Marxism.

    Socialism aims to steal my money that I earn and need to care for my family, and redistribute this money to people who have not earned it. Do you understand me? Yes, it is a dirty word, it's theft.

    http://blog.heritage.org/2009/07/31/barney-frank-public-option-is-best-way-to-single-payer/

    "Because we don’t have the votes for it. I wish we did. I think that if we get a good public option it could lead to single payer and that is the best way to reach single payer. Saying you’ll do nothing till you get single payer is a sure way never to get it. I think the best way we’re going to get single payer, the only way, is to have a public option and demonstrate the strength of its power." --Barney Frank

  233. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by budgenator · · Score: 1

    Explain this:
    Barbara Ann Karmanos, Total Provider Charges $863.00,
    (-) Less BCBSM Paid $0.00,
    (-) Less Participating Provider Savings $703.30,
    (-) Less Other Insurance Paid $0.00
    (=) Equals Your Balance* $159.70;
    Karmanos got paid 9 cents on the dollar charged. Now when people talk Expensive American Healthcare are they talking about the dollars they ask for or the 9 cents they'll settle for?

    --
    Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  234. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    If you do, you're not thinking hard enough about your own life and what it would be like without the profit motive of people around you.

    Yes, I often wish that people have some sort of profit motive to deny me good and services.

    Wait, no I don't.

    You realize that the insurance industry has a backwards profit motive of other corporations, right? The _less_ health care I get, the _more_ money they keep.

    I can imagine how this would work in a grocery store. Instead of shopping, I give a $200 a week to a third party, a 'food insurer', and in return he promises to feed me enough for a week. (In this universe, sometimes people get supernaturally hungry and start eating $200,000 a year, so this insurance makes sense.)

    What sort of food do you think people would end up eating?

    I love people who have become so attached to the free market they do not actually understand where different corporations profits comes from, which is a rather important part of actually having a free market. (As most of the problems that need regulation come from where companies start making money on the _wrong things_.)

    Insurance companies make money by reducing claims. This is all well and good when they're an art insurance company and they reduce claims by security audits and theft recovery people. It's not good when they're a health insurance company and they reduce claims by...not providing health care and dropping sick people.

    There is an actual contract, actual consideration changing hands, and actual case law to help settle differences.

    Are you serious?

    Have you actually ever used health insurance for anything outside of routine stuff?

    You realize we just had to pass a law saying they couldn't drop people from insurance because they got sick, and couldn't make up bogus pre-existing conditions. You realize that, right? You're not just some alien who showed up yesterday on this planet and thinks that health insurance companies actually provide any sort of useful services to people who are seriously ill?

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  235. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by theArtificial · · Score: 1
    I'm not defending the actions taken here but does every country in the world have 1,000,000+ people immigrating to it annually for the past 40 years? This figure doesn't include illegal "immigration". America lets in more people annually and legally than the entire world combined. The second runner up is France, how are they doing?

    In the civilised world, we view people who refuse to help the sick and injured as evil scum. In your country you may be happy with people dying, untreated, on the streets. YMMV.

    The same civilized world which in many places don't have the right to free speech? You might not be aware of the fact that people here DO get treatment. If you look at any of the border states especially you'll see the Hospitals filled with people. At one point in Los Angeles 60% of the patients aren't even citizens. How about Hospitals faltering because of massive influx of non citizens.

    --
    Man blir trött av att gå och göra ingenting.
  236. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    I'll make sure these people know that
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1016262/Grandmother-dies-NHS-cancer-treatment-withdrawn-paid-privately-life-extending-drug.html

    I'm sure they will be happy to know their grandmother didn't die, was able to get the drugs kept from her by the NHS and that the NHS is continuing to treat her.

    Actually, she would have died by now anyways because the drug would have kept her alive about 6 months longer on average. But it is exactly what i said, they wanted a treatment not allowed, had to pay privately for it, and the NHS refused to continue covering that illness if they got the private treatment.

  237. Been there, seen it for myself, you're wrong. by jeko · · Score: 1

    You understand you're talking into a mic conneted to the whole world, right? As in, the "World Wide Web"?

    I call bull.
    Many of the surveys of “outcomes” that show other countries spend less for similar or better healthcare than the United States are just intentionally disingenuous (i.e., they lie).

    I've had babies delivered both in and out of the US, been treated for routine issues inside and outside the US, and right now I'd prefer treatment abroad.

    Any of my non-citizen colleagues who have had experience both in and out of the US care to chime in about how wonderful our healthcare system is for people who make less than $170K/year, and where you're from?

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
  238. Oh, How quickly we forget our principles... by jeko · · Score: 1

    "Give me your tired, your poor,
      Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
      The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
      Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
      I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"

    Emma Lazarus, 1883

    I feel sorry for the younger people growing now and to be born, they are getting saddled with a giant debt that will lower this countries standard of living for all but the very wealthy.

    Hmm, either we can pay Halliburton and Blackwater (Xe) obscene abomination-before-God amounts of money to build us a fence, or we can return taxation levels to where Republican-War-Hero/Man-Who-Stopped-Hitler-and-Saved-the-World President Eisenhower set them and pay our debts and honor our "City on a Hill" principles at the same time.

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
    1. Re:Oh, How quickly we forget our principles... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think that there is no difference between people who came here to become an American and make the country great and a bunch of shitheads that hate the country andonly want the money to send back?

  239. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Rockoon · · Score: 1

    Simple: the population of people requiring healthcare treatment at any given moment, even at 0 population growth, is always going to be much smaller then the population who are able-bodied and working.

    This is true until a historic population boom just happens to begin hitting retirement age.

    Social Security (in the US) is not a scam, incidentally

    When your population "pyramid" looks like a snake that swallowed a large animal recently, assumptions like yours become invalid. The oldest boomers are just now hitting retirement age. Thats assuming that you arent considering folks over the retirement age "able-bodied." If you decide that people must work until they die, well thats another matter entirely. Is that what you have decided?

    In 20 years, there will be only 2 tax payers for every 1 social security recipient. If that were true with todays benefits ($1000+/mo for $50K/year wage earner retiring at 62) on todays dollars, it would require taking in $500+ per tax payer per month just to cover social security outlays.

    Now you can say that there is money in the social security fund to offset this, but that money isnt actually there is it? That money was spent by the boomer generation, and in its place is an unpaid IOU, an IOU that will need to be repaid by those same 2 tax payers that are not of the boomer generation.

    Thats $6000 per year per tax payer just to maintain social security. That doesnt even cover medicare, the education system, roads, military, etc.. etc.. We are talking about a serious burden here, but you seem to think that its not a problem.

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  240. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Leafheart · · Score: 1

    Regarded as healthy by who?

    Investors. The country with the highest tax burden in the world right now, Denmark, is at the moment loaning money at an interest of -0.25%..

    YES, that means rich people, very rich people, and investors in general, believe the Danish economy is so healthy they are willing to loan them money at negative interest, just so that Denmark can protect they money for them.

    Got a link to that? I would love to read it.

    --
    --- "When you gotta do something wrong. You gotta do it right. (Fighter)"
  241. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by budgenator · · Score: 1

    No silly you get treated, afterwards you send them what you can each month and if they get too pissy about it, you file for bankruptcy. Bankruptcy Lawyers are so busy they wear roller-skates to get to the different hearing rooms, so nobody even blinks at a medical bankruptcy.

    --
    Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  242. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Specter · · Score: 1

    Let's take your numbers at face value: you've just made a very convincing case to NOT let the US government have anything to do with health care.

  243. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think it would be instructive for you to look at the the percentage of the Federal budget dedicated to defense versus that dedicated to Federal health care programs and then do a little bit of looking at trending.

    But don't take my word for it, just ask the horse: http://www.ssa.gov/oact/trsum/index.html

  244. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really? So if we have single payer, fewer things are covered and what is covered is at a lower rate, but yes you will get paid faster.

    Well then we are talking about the government, and 'faster' may or may not apply.

    And to boot all this will cost the end user 10x what it costs now. That's how governments work.

    Ask yourself why all this "dicking around with the insurance company arguing about whether illness X or medication Y are covered on a particular plan, for a particular patient, during a particular phase of the moon, etc." got there in the first place. Any answers?

  245. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, I'm sure he'll get right on that as soon as you can demonstrate even a primary school understanding of the concept of marginal cost.

  246. Re:I'm confused... by cayenne8 · · Score: 0

    I thought the Mexican healthcare system, was to come to the US illegally across the border, and get onto our welfare system...help drain Medicare, and clog up our Hospitals' Emergency Rooms....?

    Troll?

    What....truth hurts?

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  247. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Stormthirst · · Score: 1

    Except the EU healthcare system is cheaper because it's run by the governments - not the free market. You seem to think that the healthcare systems in the EU changed over three years ago. Canada started it's move in 1948. The UK around the same time. The financial crisis du jour is nothing to do with taxpayer funded healthcare and everything to do with greedy bankers - especially greedy American bankers.

  248. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Stormthirst · · Score: 1

    I've never said such things are or should be free. I'm just questioning why there's a $10 profit.

  249. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Stormthirst · · Score: 1

    You're also assuming that government regulations requires big pharma to produce things at a loss - which is obviously ridiculous. It merely makes making huge profits on such things impossible, but EU governments still recognise that private companies need to make money in order to survive.

  250. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Carewolf · · Score: 1

    Got a link to that? I would love to read it.

    My sources are in Danish, but just google negative interest, and you will find several sources. Note there is a small handful of countries that has this situation now, Switzerland, Denmark and Germany I know of, and some links mentions Finland and Netherlands.

    It is already mentioned on Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interest_rate#Negative_interest_rates,

    Wall-Street Journal: http://blogs.wsj.com/eurocrisis/2012/07/06/the-dangers-of-negative-interest-rates/

    The Telegraph: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/jeremy-warner/9456634/Negative-interest-rates-spell-final-defeat-for-beleaguered-savers.html

  251. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by aicrules · · Score: 1

    So you're not getting paid by some company to do that research? If not, great for you, that is your choice. You get to decide whether you require payment/trade for your work. Do you really think we'd have anywhere near the technology we have today to even be having this discussion how we're having it if only supposedly altruistic societal needs were the driver? Nope. You wouldn't see someone in frontier-land in the 1700s complaining that they don't have universal health care. "Scientists don't get paid a whole lot" is such a red herring. Scientists get paid what someone will pay them. If they feel that's worth their time, they'll do it. If the entity that is paying them feels they are worth that money, they'll pay them. What goes into a doctor's pay scale is based on many things. What goes into the bill that you get from the hospital includes at some level all the cost that went into building the facility and equipment in addition to the labor. Doctors COULD donate their time, but that would only be part of it. In fact, MANY doctors do donate their time. Some do that at the cost of worse living conditions than a minimum wage worker can afford. But that is just that person donating their time, not the medicine, not any other thing associated with that care. Why can't I pull up to a gas pump and fill up for free? Why can't I go the the premier of Anchorman 2 in Los Angelas by hopping on a free plane and going in the theather grab some free popcorn and soda and avoid the ticket line all together? Sure, you may argue that entertainment isn't a vital human need. But I sure as heck need gas to get to my job. Otherwise...what would I do????? Oh I would have to get a job within my means for doing that job? Maybe take a bus? Work closer to home at a job I don't like as much?

  252. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by currently_awake · · Score: 1

    The evidence clearly shows that less government = higher prices and lower quality. Trying to negotiate with medical providers isn't an equal fight. If you don't have someone big in your corner you will always lose.

  253. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So your 'solution' includes destroys freedoms of doctors to do business as they see fit (put them on salary, whatever).

    Yes. And you may suck my pinko prole dick, libertard.

  254. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Speaking as a parent of a child adopted out of foster care at age 10, every child over 2 is basically "special needs" (and many under 2, as well!). They all have various problems and often not ones familiar to people raised in stable homes. That's why you get a big tax break and often a monthly, tax-free stipend to adopt one. You're saving the government money by raising a productive, tax-paying citizen rather than yet another foster-to-prison kid, sad as it is.

    You are right it is a difficult process. The only way to avoid an extensive background and review process is to have a surrogate mother or adopt a friend's or friend-of-a-friend's baby. This is extremely rare. Even private adoption agencies interrogate every area of your background (usually called a "home study").

    I already had a bio-kid when my now-wife and I agreed to adopt a kid when we found out it would be hard for her to get pregnant. She is adopted and my mom was adopted so it seemed a familal thing to do, anyhow. Still, even she will admit it's very different between her stepson (my firstborn), our adopted son, and our surprise bio-daughter. She has said to me, privately, that if she'd known how hard raising our adopted son was going to be, she would never have done it.

    So, don't go into it lightly. Adoption is awesome, but not everyone is cut out for it. I definitely don't think fertility treatments are elective but they're not medically necessary either. Still, for countries with declining populations, it may make more sense to pay for a future taxpayer.

  255. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    Just so we're clear here, what you're arguing here is that a US Treasury bond is not an asset.

    Let's see, do you have a billion dollars in a bank account?

    What changes in your financial situation if you write yourself a check for a billion dollars from a bank account where you do not have a billion dollars? It goes on both sides of your accounting statement, it's both an asset and a liability, it negates itself, it means nothing, it's 0 net.

    Now put your thinking hat on (really, do), I am going to hit you with a little bit of thinking type of material.

    When government taxes people and says those taxes are for SS or for Medicare but instead of using that money to make some type of an investment into a business or a property or even just into some commodity (maybe a few tons of gold, silver or platinum, whatever), then what happens is that the money that was taxed for is now gone.

    So understand this: the money that was taxed is gone. What is in that so called 'fund' when the money is gone? It's that check that one would write to himself or herself saying: billion dollars. But they don't have a billion dollars in a bank, it goes on both sides of the accounting statement, it is both, a liability and an asset, it's 0.

    It is 0.

    What does government need to do to pay to people who THINK that they have an asset stored in some form by the government? The government must sell bonds or raise more taxes, which is the same thing.

    Selling bonds is not a substitute for raising taxes, it's just a way to push raising of the taxes into the future, and then more taxes have to be raised to pay back the value of the bond but also the interest.

    So understand what just happened. The money that is taken in taxes is spent. Now the government must either raise more taxes or sell some debt instruments.

    In order to repay for the debt instrument, the government must raise taxes. Why? Because the government doesn't have anything, its only source of income (except for license and permit fees and such) is taxes.

    Government raises taxes first, tells you that it is storing your money as SS or Medicare fund, supposedly so that you will have a better chance of having your future medical and retirement expenses financed, because supposedly you are an idiot, and you can't save for your own retirement with that same money and you can't for some reason save for your own medical expenses.

    But that money is spent and then government MUST collect taxes AGAIN to pay for what is spent.

    So how is that an asset? Did you put your thinking hat on? Understood?

    --

    Oh, and by the way, I made it clear in all my other comments that US debt cannot be repaid, it will be defaulted upon. US dollar was defaulted upon back in 1971, now it's the rest of it, the bonds, the paper dollar, all of it, it's coming to a head. The way it's going to be done will be by inflation most likely, because neither the politicians nor the voters are capable of understanding the truth.

    Look at the moderation and replies I get for my comments? You think anybody wants to hear the truth? I haven't lied yet and all I get is ridicule. This will come to pass that US dollar and bonds will be defaulted upon and I consider money printing (inflation) to be a default, but a worse kind of default, the kind that destroys the economy with it, not just credit, the actual economy.

  256. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by aicrules · · Score: 1

    Also, you're right, someone working a minimum wage job does deserve health care just as much as a millionaire. However, that's because both of them deserve to pay for it just like any other service. You have a right to housing in just the same way. You get what you pay for. Food same thing. If you want free food and housing, there are some LIMITED options, but they're not going to be very nice. Likewise with free healthcare.

  257. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by fche · · Score: 1

    "You realize that the insurance industry has a backwards profit motive of other corporations, right?"

    No, they don't. In the long term, insurance companies make money from the "float", or slight actuarial or timing differences between premiums and payments. An insurance company that fails to fulfill its contracts (fails to make payments) will chase away clients, if there is a healthy competitive market. To the extent that there is no competitive market, this might be one area for government intervention, perhaps. But to hold that insurance companies are by definition fraudulent is delusional.

  258. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by PickyH3D · · Score: 1

    I think having the taxpayer pay for expensive fertility treatments should be an option of last resort. It would make more sense to empty out all the orphanages first.

    Aren't we messing with natural selection when we enable people to beat cancer when their body cannot do so on their own? If their risk of cancer is genetic, won't that mean we'll be carrying that risk forward?

    Anyway, I'd rather have people that don't get cancer. Also, cancer can be largely a product of the host body's environment. Genetics only play so much of a role. Why not kill the person?

    I think having the taxpayer pay for expensive cancer treatments should be an option of last resort. It would make more sense to empty out all of the hospital beds first.

    Funny how suddenly you will be against this idea.

    More seriously, infertility may be the only genetic limitation in a couple, and you cannot pick "better" genotypes from the litter when adopting anyway. What if the two brilliant people, who happen to be Olympic athletes, decide to breed, but then they run into these issues?

    In your world view, their "inferior" genes should be cut off before they can continue simply because they have a single, very obvious issue. In my world view, both the cancer plagued person, and the infertile person should be able to seek medical help. And, most importantly, it's this slanted view that is the basis for rejecting the notion that government's should decide what qualifies as acceptable treatment.

    That does not mean that people like me believe that the status quo is acceptable, nor do we believe that the current system in the United States was acceptable. We believe that the the government should actually break the monopolistic holds that certain insurance agencies have on certain states, thus opening up the market to a significant level of competition. At the exact same time, tort reform needs to occur to limit the cost of litigation due to things that are not even remotely reasonable--the always-relevant Hot Coffee incident comes to mind. Unlike the measures that have currently been taken, those would actually cause an immediate decrease in the cost of health care, and doctors could work toward getting out of the CYA business and move toward total care, such as the care provided by DO's.

  259. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by PickyH3D · · Score: 1

    http://www.nber.org/bah/2009no3/w15371.html

    The authors acknowledge funding from the Searle Center on Law, Regulation, and Economic Growth at the Northwestern University School of Law.

    The source of the problem has proclaimed that it is not a problem at all.

    In a nation where lawyers advertise on television to increase the cost of such lawsuits while they regularly recoup hugely significant double digit percentages from such malpractice cases, as well as donate heavily to fund the politicians that refuse to pass, or even consider tort reform, I find it a bit unconvincing when they choose to fund anti-tort reform research.

  260. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by tachin1 · · Score: 0

    So healthcare and insurance are two different things then?

    --
    I'm always right, except when i'm not.
  261. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by tachin1 · · Score: 0

    But don't you think that these are separate issues?
    Universal coverage
    Quality of care
    Cost

    It seems to me that right now that most discussions on this topic are about cost, perceived quality of care and note letting just anybody have health care.

    --
    I'm always right, except when i'm not.
  262. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by tachin1 · · Score: 0

    The groups you are describing here are imaginary, think of it more like "States". You will be in different states throughout you life, young then old, sometimes healthy and sometimes sick. So if you deny treatment for old people you are cutting off your nose to spite your face. If you deny treatment for sick people well then you are clearly just trolling.

    --
    I'm always right, except when i'm not.
  263. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Moron: EVERYTHING is more expensive in the US.

  264. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I will add, we may disagree but I am perfectly willing to engage with you in an honest and forthright discussion as long as we can remain civil and polite. I will do so on my part.

    I take you to be an intelligent person and it is worth stating that I am not interested in attacking you personally. I believe honest dialog among those who disagree is productive.

    Take that as you may.

  265. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by tachin1 · · Score: 0

    Only if healthcare is a luxury item. It really needs to become a commodity.

    --
    I'm always right, except when i'm not.
  266. Realty VS your brain on Ron Paul by damn_registrars · · Score: 1
    I found your last lines amusing:

    Look at the moderation and replies I get for my comments?

    You frequently get moderated up, in spite of the fact that you are an arrogant and misinformed twot.

    You think anybody wants to hear the truth?

    The frequency with which you are moderated up suggests that no, people here do not want to hear the truth. If they wanted to hear the truth they would moderate you down to encourage you to actually read into what you are saying here. Your strange insistence that somehow you are the sole arbiter of what is - or is not - true is amusing.

    I haven't lied yet and all I get is ridicule.

    You have lied repeatedly. Many people have shown where you have lied (I am one of those people). I could show you where you have lied but then you would just lie about lying or link back to yourself to try to support your argument in spite of being clearly demonstrated to be a liar.

    More impressive than your campaign of trying to bludgeon truth to death with ron paul mantras though is your new task of trying to use your sock puppets to drown out anyone who disagrees with you. How many do you have now? Do they get moderator points too?

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  267. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by sjames · · Score: 1

    Certainly fertility treatment is an elective procedure. Nobody ever died of infertility.

    I'm happy for you that you were able to get the treatment through private insurance (which you would still have been able to have in any existing universal health care system) but as for actual NEED, the guy having a heart attack has you beat by a mile.

  268. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by sjames · · Score: 1

    It is a perfectly vicious circle. People also sue for big heaps of money because it's their one shot to pay for a lifetime of extra care and for a lifetime of inability to work. Food stamps and welfare are sufficiently bad ways to live that nobody wants to get stuck there, and of course with a 'pre-existing condition' they will be a health insurance pariah.

  269. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by sjames · · Score: 1

    They don't actually take a loss, they just don't rake in a profit.

    If the medicare/medicaid rate was THE rate, they might apply some downward pressure on their outrageously expensive suppliers and realize some efficiencies.

  270. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by sjames · · Score: 1

    A lot of the crazy expensive things we do to the elderly and terminal ultimately reduce the quality of life and shorten that life. We do them because it's profitable.

    The fact is, there comes a point where there's just not anything useful medicine can do for you at any cost. At that point palliative care is entirely appropriate.

  271. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Abreu · · Score: 1

    Typical priviledge rich kid. You're a PAN voter, right?

    --
    No sig for the moment.
  272. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And I will add this again.

    Unfortunately I have just about had it with this place. As it turns out my account has now been moderated down to "terrible" meaning that I am only allowed 2 posts per day. Isn't that interesting.

    This is a leftist oriented blog - of course focused on tech but you cannot deny that most contributors are leftist and the conservative is tormented and attacked at every opportunity, often accompanied by name calling and outright threats.

    As a result of the moderation system then the dissenting viewpoint is effectively silenced. What you have here is an echo chamber.

    You state that you are a scientist am I wrong?

    Where is your intellectual integrity? As a scientist you must understand the value of peer review and that of honest debate and dissent. How do you like the fact that this forum is created and maintained to silence anyone who does not agree with the majority opinion? Does that not trouble you?

    The leftist speaks constantly of the need for transparency and openness, Obama is a case study of this. It seems that they put up a good talk but don't deliver on the promises. You cannot deny this!

    It seems you will be left to enjoy your echo chamber along with all your other kool aid drinkers.

    Comment? Where is your intellectual integrity?

  273. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by sjames · · Score: 1

    And as a result, today he's doing cartwheels around the house and...Oh, no, wait, he's still unconscious and not really expected to improve. It's only human to pull out all the stops against all logic and rationality when it's your own child, but sadly the result is almost universally bad when that happens.

    Meanwhile, people in the U.K. outlive people in the U.S. how do you account for that with all the Kevorkian vans going around executing everyone over 60?

    Speaking of the U.S. what ACTUALLY happens is that private insurance costs more for every year older you get until you are forced to let it lapse. At that point they don't really care if you live or die anymore, you're Medicare's problem.

  274. Let me see if I know the correct syntax... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    /moderate #41065987 +5

  275. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by sjames · · Score: 1

    That' a pretty silly example. If the bus company would man up and pay for their mistake, the 'freeloading hick' wouldn't have any hospital bills.

  276. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why are hospitals forced to provide healthcare services to people that cannot pay - this is one of the main drivers behind escalating costs of healthcare, but why is this the case?

    Why do we have law enforcement?

    Why do we have welfare?

    Why do we have education?

    Why do we have society?

  277. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by sjames · · Score: 1

    I hope you're kidding!

    If the hospital is actually so chintzy that it's tracking Q-tips at the individual unit level, then it deserves to fail.

    How about fill a bucket in each exam room with a thousand or so, cost $10. When the physician needs one, he takes one, cost: too small to count. When the bucket gets low, dump in another thousand or so: Let's be generous and say the getting and dumping costs $25/bucket (that is, if the CNA is so inefficient that the procedure takes an hour) or $0.025/q-tip.

    Now, cost of Q-tip (rounding up): $0.04. Savings: 98% There would have to be a truly tremendous amount of waste to even begin to cost as much as preventing it does.

  278. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Currently Australia has on of the worlds best performing economies, and the exchange rate to the US peso is up 35%, its the US economy that is tanking!

  279. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by geminidomino · · Score: 1

    Holy shit, it's Michael Kristopeit! He's back!

  280. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You havent made any arguments just spouting randite lies is not making an argument.

  281. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Alicat1194 · · Score: 1

    As the poster below mentioned, Australia currently has one of the strongest economies in the world (in part due to having a lot of expensive dirt, and not letting our banks get away with US-style shenanigans).

    Meanwhile the 'Voldemort Tax' you mention isn't to stop complaints about the Carbon Tax, but rather to stop business jacking up prices unfairly, and then falsely blaming it on the Carbon Tax. If their prices do need to increase due to the tax, then they are allowed to state this: http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/1039037

    --
    You can learn a lot about a person if you just take the time to inject them with sodium pentathol
  282. They said the exact same thing... by jeko · · Score: 1

    ...about the Italians, and the Irish, and the Poles, and every other group that ever came here...

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
  283. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Australia is a dual system, in that you can pay for extra benefits if you like.

    "I'm pretty sure I was going to have to buy insurance when I was thinking of moving there."

    Medicare applies to Australian citizens and permanent residents only. It can also apply to visiting citizens from other countries for which Australia has a reciprocal agreement in place (eg NZ, Finland, etc). That is, Australia will cover medical costs for visiting NZ citizens, as long as NZ covers costs for visiting AU citizens.

    If you were coming across on a temporary, student or business visa, then you likely weren't covered by Medicare and therefore had to pay for private insurance.

    NZ extends this, they have a universal accident insurance scheme covered by taxes, any person from any country is covered for accidents in NZ. This encourages tourism.

  284. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Sounds like you pay twice for HealthCare."

    No, you pay once. You pay for basic care via taxes, and you pay for extra care via optional private insurance. The private insurance that you pay for here doesn't cover basic cover in public hospitals, they pay for extra perks in public hospitals (private rooms, etc) or treatment in private hospitals.

    "How is a free-market less efficient?"

    Free market implies a profit layer. In theory, a well managed not-for profit will always be cheaper than a well managed for profit.

    It should also be noted that health costs are significantly lower in Australia compared to the closer to free market in the US. So reality seems to match theory.

  285. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I try not to wish ill on anyone but a diatribe like that almost makes me want you to get so ill that it exceeds your ability to pay for it.

  286. The report is self serving bullshit. by Kyusaku+Natsume · · Score: 1

    Normally drugs are cheap here. But I would say that the report is extremely self serving by Julio Frenk, it is akin to a report by Dick Cheney saying that waterboarding works and WMD had been found in Iraq, or the large banks reporting that deregulation is good in 2008. The reality is that both programs, "Seguro Popular" and "Oportunidades" became the mexican conservative's party attempt at building a vote-buying scheme for their own in the same way that the old single party dictatorship of PRI used the "Desarrollo Integral de la Familia", "Integral Development for Families" DIF goverment program to buy votes from the poor and put a mask of democracy over their de facto dictatorship in the second half of XX century.

    The "Seguro Popular" increased the coverage, mostly on paper only, since the sudden increase in demand was not matched by a increase in the availability of healthcare services. The already stretched public health system now have to deal with 2 times more customers than what it used to do, and the coverage of "Seguro Popular" only covered a handful of diseases initially versus full coverage from the normal social security services, just to not make a full lie their claims of increased coverage.

    --
    Mexico: 100% conservative's America now!
  287. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Japan has the lowest healthcare costs of any unqualifiedly "First World" country -- around 9% of GDP compared to our 18% -- and some of the best average outcomes. Like every other First World country except us, they use monopsonistic bargaining to arrive at a mandatory uniform price schedule for all medical products and services, but their Ministry of Health drives a particularly hard bargain. (For example, MRIs in Japan are priced at around an eighth of what they are typically billed out at here in the States.) Japan does have an aging population, and negative overall population growth, but they have some leeway before they reach the ranks of the really big healthcare spenders like Switzerland (12% of GDP) and France (11.8% of GDP)...

  288. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    Australia's economy is tanking, but more from the Voldermort Tax than from health care.

    Even ignoring that the current Government is the lowest taxing in a couple of decades, that entire blog post is simply a collection of lies.

  289. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    Cute but wrong. Normal insurance policies cannot systematically force one group of clients to subsidize another, because the former would simply leave and get their insurance at a lower rate elsewhere.

    So something like emigrating then ?

    (Of course, people trying this would find that moving somewhere with cheaper healthcare that wasn't publicly funded rather difficult.)

  290. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by realityimpaired · · Score: 1

    Whereas in a country with a decent social security net and single-pay healthcare system, they don't need to worry about being denied for future insurance/coverage, nor living on food stamps (disability pay can be reasonably good depending on the career you're leaving... my work plan gives full pay for 20 weeks, and 2/3 pay until I reach retirement age and can start collecting pension, and I would be eligible to collect public money from the disability program as well, so I'd actually be getting a small pay raise).

    Vicious circle indeed, but it'll take some *major* reform to get out from under it in the US. I don't think the political will is there right now but I do hope that by introducing a single-pay healthcare system, things will gradually start to improve.

  291. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by heefeneet · · Score: 1

    It sounds like it sucks to be a doctor in the UK if you are effectively stuck doing nothing but "medicare/medicaid".

    Doctors working on the NHS get paid the same - doesnt matter if the patient came in for a checkup or for a triple-bypass. If your doctor is driven by making money rather than healing people, get another doctor.

  292. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by heefeneet · · Score: 1

    Hey, folks, would you rather have a private corporation run entirely for profit decide whether or not you get care, or would you rather have the government decide that, which has people in it who have to get elected to office?

    Easy! Id rather have a private corporation. After all, if they do kill me off I can use the Free Market(TM) to get another provider, thus keeping the market competitive and free from corruption.

  293. And now the CONSERVATIVE POV by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    [Sticks fingers in ears]
    La la la la la la la
    I CAN'T HEAR YOU!
    La la la

  294. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by fche · · Score: 1

    "So something like emigrating then ?"

    With government medicine, that's basically the choice - no choice at all. OTOH, with a healthy market, there ought to exist local competitors.

  295. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    With government medicine, that's basically the choice - no choice at all. OTOH, with a healthy market, there ought to exist local competitors.

    With "government medicine" you generally have at least as much choice in who treats you and what treatments you get as you would with "private medicine".

  296. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by fche · · Score: 1

    "you generally have at least as much choice"

    Seriously? With government medicine, you get what the bureaucrats allow. With private medicine, you can also get what you pay for.

  297. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    Seriously?

    Yes. Since you obviously have neither knowledge nor experience of publicly funded healthcare in the real world, only the paranoiac right-wing caricature of it, you're just going to have to trust me when I tell you how it actually works.

    With government medicine, you get what the bureaucrats allow.

    So just like only getting the care the bureaucrats in your insurance company allow, then ?

    (That's assuming you have health insurance in the first place, of course, which in America is not a reasonable assumption.)

    With private medicine, you can also get what you pay for.

    Ah, I see, you're talking about the rich. Well, since there's nothing stopping you going out and getting your own private care in countries with public care, when you're rich, your choice is identical in either location - whatever you can afford (which is usually going to be more in the publicly-funded country, anyway, since their healthcare systems are typically more efficient).

  298. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by fche · · Score: 1

    "Since you obviously have neither knowledge nor experience..."

    If that is an obvious truth to you, how would you reevaluate your other obvious truths, considering the farcical falsity of this one?

    "Ah, I see, you're talking about the rich." ... or those who decide to self-insure: i.e., the young and healthy, who may carry no or only catastrophic coverage.

    "there's nothing stopping you going out and getting your own private care in countries with public care"

    You obviously have neither knowledge nor experience of places where competing private care is outlawed.

  299. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

    In UK, NZ, and I presume Australia too, the reason people pay for private health insurance is to get a bed in a private room when/if they require hospitilization, and to get on a shorter waiting list for tests and treatments for non-life-threatening conditions. If you're prepared to slum it in a shared ward with other patients and wait a few months to get surgery on that low level knee pain that's been annoying you for years, then the NHS is perfectly adequate, and will kick into action quickly and efficiently when you really need it.

    Same story for Quebec and most of Canada. By the way, our health insurance, via taxes, also includes some of not most ambulance services. That includes heliocopter rides from remote locations to local hospitals. (We have a few hospitals with landing pads). In other cases, if it is scheduled surgery, it may include return plane fare if the resident is living in a remote region.

    Where we fail badly is in the far north with Aboriginal Indians who live on reserves. They often have no resident doctor.
     

    --
    Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
  300. Re:I'm confused... by RockDoctor · · Score: 1
    It might be credible for the people living within a few hours travel of the border to hop the border as you suggest. But it may have escaped your attention that Mexico is a fairly large and elongated country. simply getting from one end of the country to the American end is a major investment.

    Someone else, probably many "someone else"s, have described it as a supply and demand problem. Providing reasonable quality health care across most of the country is going to actually reduce the demand to cross the border and thus reduce the number of maids, gardeners and prostitutes that you get to cheat, abuse and humiliate. It must suck to be you.

    --
    Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  301. Oh, I have no doubt... by jeko · · Score: 1

    YOU apparently live in a bubble where whenever you need more money you just stroll over to the wall safe and pull it out. I, on the other hand, live in reality where we're forced to prioritize

    Oh, I'm quite certain I live in a vastly different reality than yours, and I have no doubt I've built up far more financial resources than you have. I believe this is because you and I have fundamentally different approaches to life.

    I look at my responsibilities -- old people to care for, children to raise -- and where the resources don't meet the responsibilities, I INCREASE THE RESOURCES. This requires hard work, courage, investment and foresight.

    You look at your responsibilities, and you feel afraid, You look at old people to care for and children to raise and immediately begin deciding where you can shirk your duties, claiming "we're forced to prioritize." "Gotta feed the baby, so Grandma's gotta go." People like you used to shove old people out into the woods to die. I believe we can both take care of the kids AND the old people.

    Yeah, I do have a wall safe. I started out homeless at 17, and I have performed tasks to make Heracles wince to put that safe there. You're right, I'm not buying the nonsense that there's not enough to go around when we pay the CEO of United Healthcare 1.1 Billion just to QUIT THE COMPANY. At one point, one out of every 700 dollars spent on healthcare in this country was going directly into his pocket. One pocket of one CEO of one company. You want to recapture resources? How about we begin there? Maybe, just maybe, we can cover Grandma's pain meds for just a little longer if we quit giving billions to felons.

    In the meantime, how about you reach down deep, find what little of your manhood is left, and find the courage to say "We can take care of the baby AND we can take care of grandma. We can provide compassion and care at both birth AND death." Let go of all that fear and man up, sack up and take care of business without whining about how it's all too much for you.

    You must be young.

    I've got some gray in my hair, and I'm just about old enough to join AARP but if I ever become such a sad, defeated broken-down old man such as yourself, please, just take me out in the woods and shoot me. I intend to leave it all on the field before I go, and if you ever hear me start to whine that the ball is too heavy to carry, please, just take me out of the game.
     

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
    1. Re:Oh, I have no doubt... by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      here the resources don't meet the responsibilities, I INCREASE THE RESOURCES.

      Yup, run over to the wall-safe. Got it. Your money tree is a fantastic invention. You should patent that.

      I'm not buying the nonsense that there's not enough to go around when we pay the CEO of United Healthcare 1.1 Billion just to QUIT THE COMPANY. At one point, one out of every 700 dollars spent on healthcare in this country was going directly into his pocket. One pocket of one CEO of one company. You want to recapture resources? How about we begin there?

      And this is the problem with you people. McGuire was with that company for 15 years (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_W._McGuire). "When McGuire joined United, it was an unprofitable regional health maintenance organization with annual revenues around $400 million.[3] When he left, United was one of the largest, most profitable, and most diversified healthcare companies in the world, with more than $70 billion in annual revenues".

      In that time the stock value increased about 8500% (which is particularly relevant since the "1 billion" came from stock options): Yet, you seem to think "1 billion" is inappropriate compensation for such a feat? Why do you hate success so much?

      We can provide compassion and care at both birth AND death."

      Your ideal utopia there is quite the vision, except that it has about as much of a tie to reality as unicorns and leprechauns. Sorry, I'm a realist facing real problems, not a bleeding heart looking to "stick it" to rich people.

  302. Considered a '2nd' world country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The jump from very poor healthcare to fairly good healthcare is a large leap.

    But the same change won't make a country that has excellent healthcare opportunities progress to perfect.

  303. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    or those who decide to self-insure: i.e., the young and healthy, who may carry no or only catastrophic coverage.

    In which case you're getting at least equivalent - better in the case of no insurance - coverage from a public system.

    You obviously have neither knowledge nor experience of places where competing private care is outlawed.

    No, I'm not aware of any country that prevents its citizens from seeking private care.

  304. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by nbauman · · Score: 1

    Interesting link. The AAOS study was a podium session, not a peer-reviewed study. They merely asked the physicians whether they were performing the procedure as defensive medicine, but didn't confirm it. I'd like to know why a procedure would be useful as defensive medicine if it isn't useful for clinical management.

    Of course these doctors or their practices are also getting paid for these MRIs. My hypothesis is that they're actually giving unnecessary MRIs just to make money out of it, and when challenged, they justify it by saying it's defensive medicine.

    When somebody challenges a doctor on a useless procedure, it sounds a lot better if he says, "defensive medicine," than it does if he says, "I just do a lot of useless procedures because I make a lot of money out of them."

    I'd like to see a study designed to tell the difference -- perhaps including a hospital where orthopedists and radiologists are on salary, and not paid by the procedure.

    As KevinMD himself said, the costs of defensive medicine are probably overstated http://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2010/09/defensive-medicine-saves-money-physicians.html
    Especially the claims made by Newt Gingrich's organization.

  305. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    SS takes in more than they make, you fucking moron. Which is where as these IOUs come from...the rest of the government borrows from them.

    - hey, fucking moron, that's how it used to be, not anymore, dumb fucking piece of human excrement.

    Jesus Christ on pogo stick, it's completely astonishing how many people are complete and total idiots.

    - my thoughts exactly. That is YOU - total and unyielding idiot.

  306. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by fche · · Score: 1

    "In which case you're getting at least equivalent - better in the case of no insurance - coverage"

    Not really, as such people would be paying more into the system than they should: they are subsidizing the old/sick.

    "No, I'm not aware of any country that prevents its citizens from seeking private care."

    That is the situation here in the great white up, a travesty, I tell you.

  307. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    Not really, as such people would be paying more into the system than they should: they are subsidizing the old/sick.

    Individual contributions to public healthcare are proportionally quite low. It is highly unlikely someone would contribute more than their otherwise "private" healthcare costs (or insurance) would be, particularly when averaged over a reasonable timeframe (decades). However, I will concede it's probably possible to find a corner case or two where someone lives a charmed life from birth to death never suffering more than a cough, and thus paid more into the system than they derived in benefits.

    That is the situation here in the great white up, a travesty, I tell you.

    A quick Google search suggests there are private providers in Canada (eg: TMA).

    Even that aside, are you suggesting that if you were to travel to the US (or some other country) for medical treatment, you would be stripped of your citizenship or not allowed to re-enter the country ?

  308. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by fche · · Score: 1

    "It is highly unlikely someone would contribute more than their otherwise "private" healthcare costs ... averaged over a reasonable timeframe (decades)"

    What makes you think so? Government health care systems have barely existed for longer than a lifetime, over which demographics and costs have been on a constantly worsening trend. Averaging doesn't make sense like that. With real insurance, one's not left dreaming about the cost/benefits of "decades" of coverage, only a few plausibly forseeable years at a time.

    "there are private providers in Canada"

    Not *competing* ones.

    "if you were to travel"

    Right, there's an endorsal of the system.

  309. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    What makes you think so?

    Uh, evidence ? Publicly funded healthcare systems _consistently_ have better outcomes at lower costs.

    Government health care systems have barely existed for longer than a lifetime, over which demographics and costs have been on a constantly worsening trend.

    Publicly funded healthcare dates back to the late 1800s (in Germany).

    Averaging doesn't make sense like that. With real insurance, one's not left dreaming about the cost/benefits of "decades" of coverage, only a few plausibly forseeable years at a time.

    You can foresee when you'll need expensive medical care a few years in advance ?

    Not *competing* ones.

    So... You can't get care from TMA ?

    Right, there's an endorsal of the system.

    How is an "endorsal of the system" relevant ? Your assertion was that it was not possible to get care outside of "the system", not whether or not "the system" provided adequate care.

  310. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by fche · · Score: 1

    "Publicly funded healthcare systems _consistently_ have better outcomes at lower costs."

    That's not responsive. You claimed "... highly unlikely someone would contribute more ....", as a comparison of someone being able to choose a public or a private system in situ. Whatever studies may show about differences between different places and times does not inform this, even if they were taken at face value.

    "Publicly funded healthcare dates back to the late 1800s (in Germany)."

    As they say, the exception that "proves" the rule. In reality, we're talking about the 1930s or later in the modern world.

    "You can foresee when you'll need expensive medical care a few years in advance?"

    You misunderstand "insurance": it is not necessary or useful if you can predict specific events a few years in advance. I was talking about the connection of premiums (costs to the insured) to the changes of insured risk, as a function of time. Actuaries can speculate plausibly over a few years of the status quo; over decades, too many confounding factors exist to write a contract.

    "So... You can't get care from TMA ?"

    Did you read their web site at all? It's mostly a lament about how the public system is rationed etc.. They are basically a broker to get most things done by traveling to the US.

    "Your assertion was that it was not possible to get care outside of "the system""

    No, it was that the system outlawed competition. Beyond national boundaries, those laws don't apply. This does not mean the system is fine.

  311. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

    1. Solution: put doctors on salary. You seem to forget that doctors are Free people and are not serfs owned by the Crown.

    Actually, a lot of doctors would prefer salary. The Mayo Clinic has done this for a really long time, and still gets lots of applicants.

    2. Solution: end-of-life counseling and legalizing euthanasia

    The goal here is to prevent us from spending lots of money taking care of, say, Alzheimers patients who have deteriorated so much they can't remember that they have a son, much less what his name is or what he looks like. A sane health care policy would work with the patient, their family, any advisors they want involved (e.g. a pastor or trusted friend), decide when the patient's life is not worth living, get everyone together for one last goodbye, and then administer a lethal level of painkillers to minimize the suffering.

    3. Solution: Single payer and single provider, so there's nobody else to haggle with. And you don't shop around for a better price on your commodity items and just go to the local monopoly store to buy your food?

    If you're lying in a bed in an ER with a broken leg, you don't want to shop around for the cheapest and best deal, you want to get your leg set and get the heck out of there. If you're sitting in a doctors' office and the doc tells you you have a serious disease and will die unless you take this particular pill, you'll likely take the pill no matter how much it costs you. It's not like broccoli at all, where I can relatively easily tell what's good and what's not, and can decide to buy carrots or cauliflower instead, and can easily shop around if I want to do so.

    4. Solution: Cover everybody. They tend to seek care in ER's since they know that they cannot be turned away due to the laws. Change the laws back and make them goto a clinic for the sniffles.

    They can't afford the clinic, otherwise they would go there. What do you want them to do to get health care? Or would you rather they just lived with their illness?

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  312. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by glueball · · Score: 1

    Actually, they are not really getting paid for the MRI directly, they simply have an expectation of a certain level of testing to occur. An Ortho I know is supposed to bring in $8-10MM in revenue for the hospital.

    But to "why is it defensive"

    There are attorneys (I get them frequently asking me questions) asking if a read I was doing was clear, was it performed correctly, was there patient movement--all pretty boring questions. Patients hire these attorneys to look into their case--maybe because it was a slip and fall, a car accident, work-comp, etc. The bad side of that is *if* there was a problem, the attorney becomes aggressive and then insinuates that the best was not provided for a patient. Now I'm liable because I may have read an image series and not commented that the patient moved or one of a hundred other possible compromises.

    So for the surgeon--if the outcome is not 100% (patients have a very high expectation of what their outcome will be) the attorney will not only dig into standard of care, but ultimate care. So if a knee is repaired and the surgeon did not have the latest MRI performed the same day (or day before), the attorney will start a suit that indicates his client did not receive the ultimate care.

    Really. This happens all the time. I read 60 cases a day. I get standard letters on maybe 10% of them. So 6 cases per day are going to be analyzed. Which is fine and I'm confident of my work. But I do 5 days a week. That's 30 cases reviewed per week, with the review being performed by an attorney who only paid if he can find something wrong--usually in process--and the definition of "wrong" is subjective. That should answer your question on being defensive.

    On guidelines--it would be wonderful if a judge would be able to say "the physician followed the guidelines and therefore a judgement cannot be made based on him not following procedure" but it does not happen. I can follow every rule, recommendation, paper, and I still get questioned for the process I follow (and not even the correctness of the case) and merely the suspicion of a poor outcome is enough to mark my public profile.

    Gingrich has some very interesting ideas that might work (he was working with Hillary Clinton on the issue several years ago--quite a pair.) I saw him speak at a AAFP session in Washington DC a few years ago.

  313. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by nbauman · · Score: 1

    I used to write articles for trade magazines about medical malpractice and product liability. I used to go to legal conferences on medical malpractice and interview lawyers, although I don't have the latest information and I'm recalling some of this from memory. I followed malpractice in JAMA and NEJM. I read the Case Records of the Massachusetts General Hospital, which usually includes a radiology report. So I realize the ambiguity, difficulty and subjectivity of reading a radiology image.

    But the malpractice standard isn't the ultimate care. It's a reasonable standard of care. The standard isn't a good outcome. A bad outcome isn't malpractice. If a procedure has a 5% mortality, and the patient knows it and the doctor documented that informed consent in the chart, then death by itself isn't malpractice.

    Let's assume an MRI is the standard of care and gives a better outcome for knee surgery. I can understand that a surgeon may have an MRI that he's not satisfied with, and orders a second MRI. But if he has a good recent MRI, I can't understand why he would need a second MRI the day before surgery. You should be able to get lots of experts to testify that a second MRI doesn't improve outcomes, doesn't make the surgery any safer, and isn't necessary. The bad outcome would still have occurred with an MRI.

    There were a few articles recently in the NEJM about the overuse of imaging in the context of cancer risk, and I got the impression that a lot of it was unnecessary.

    On guidelines -- actually, the defense expert witness says, "the physician followed the guidelines and therefore he was not committing malpractice." The plaintiff expert witness says he was committing malpractice. The judge tells the jury to decide who's right.

    Guidelines have many limitations. You don't have guidelines for every procedure. You don't have Grade A evidence for every gudieline. They don't reflect the latest procedure. But they cover the most common procedures.

    The court system, and the jury system, is fairly inefficient. A study in the NEJM recently reviewed malpractice judgments and reported the "good news" that 60% of them were decided consistent with the medical record, favoring defense and plaintiff equally. Unfortunately, there were also studies in the NEJM that suggested that the fear of malpractice doesn't lead to better care, as the plaintiffs' lawyers claim.

    OTOH, those are the same jurors who are deciding criminal cases, often on the basis of similar medical evidence. The Seventh Amendment guarantees a right to a jury trial, so we can't just take malpractice suits away from jurors.

    I don't think there's much room for improvement. Most of the "tort reforms" are efforts to tilt the playing field in favor of the defendant. They want to lower lawyers' fees, eliminate contingency fees, cap pain and suffering, shorten statutes of limitations.

    That's nice for doctors, but it's not fair for the patient. Some babies are born with cereberal palsy, and it's not far for an obstetrician to be held liable for his luck of the draw. OTOH, patients are killed or injured because of egregious mistakes or overtreatment, and the cost of compensation gets pretty high. If a doctor does do unnecessary spinal surgery on a 50-year-old man and leaves him paralyzed from the waste down, what's the appropriate compensation for that? 24-hour-a-day attendants for life are pretty expensive.

    All developed countries have medical malpratice liability. They seem to spend 2-3% on the liability system, so that seems about right. Estimates of defensive medicine vary, but I think that if you put aside the politically-based estimates and look at the evidence-based estimates, it's under 10%. And I think a lot of that doesn't really protect against malpractice.

    My thinking is that the only justified reforms are reforms that bring medical and legal practice into greater conformity with the scientific evidence. That means getting doctors to follow evidence-based medicine and guidelines, and making that a legal s

  314. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by glueball · · Score: 1

    Interesting, but...

    If a physician is in the hot seat being deposed, he's already lost. Period. Full stop. Perhaps not to the legal community, but to his ego, his confidence, and the confidence from others, he's lost. The proliferation of online grading systems (which I support) don't help the trap.
    I'm not saying that a poor outcome should not be investigated and perhaps tried, but there is enormous profit in making the letter from an attorney to a physician and a quick settlement. Why do you think an attorney advertises on TV? "Get your money"

    I'm cynical because I hate the bottom feeders. It's free to send a request for information. I'm relatively insulated from surgery or medicine poor outcomes, but let me tell you--when reading breast films we always err on the side of defense. If a tumor is found/palpated and a DX-mammo or MR was read in the last year, I'm getting hauled in whether or not there was a finding I missed. You can always find someone "an expert" who can find something that you missed, whether the image signature is really there or not.

    So while I agree with you, and can still argue "Of course unnecessary medicine can be very profitable" so is unnecessary lawyer action.

    That and the Medicare fraud.

  315. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    That's not responsive. You claimed "... highly unlikely someone would contribute more ....", as a comparison of someone being able to choose a public or a private system in situ.

    No I didn't. I said over a reasonable timeframe publicly funded care is going to cost all but the most unusual corner cases, at worst, no more than private care would and _most_ will end up better off (ie: spending less overall) in a publicly funded system than they would with a private system.

    As they say, the exception that "proves" the rule. In reality, we're talking about the 1930s or later in the modern world.

    So "only" 80-odd years (3-4 generations) then ? What was the life expectancy back in the 1930s, do you think ? Perhaps more importantly, what was it for the century before that ?

    You misunderstand "insurance": it is not necessary or useful if you can predict specific events a few years in advance. I was talking about the connection of premiums (costs to the insured) to the changes of insured risk, as a function of time. Actuaries can speculate plausibly over a few years of the status quo; over decades, too many confounding factors exist to write a contract.

    You misunderstand the point of (well run) healthcare, which is not to be reactive to emergencies and unpredictable events at an individual level, but to improve health and quality of life across an entire lifetime and society.

    No, it was that the system outlawed competition. Beyond national boundaries, those laws don't apply. This does not mean the system is fine.

    Which remains irrelevant. Your assertion was that it was not possible to get care outside the public system, which is false. You can get care outside of the public system, you just can't get it in exactly the form you want.

    Further, your underlying implication is that most (or even a significant fraction of) people would be better off with for-profit private care, which is not supported by the evidence.

    If you are an average[0] person in a publicly-funded system, your costs, options and outcomes in a typical situation are going to be basically identical to a private system: accept the care the public system/your insurer provides, or pay for it out of your own pocket.

    The big advantage with a public system comes in worse-case scenarios - the poor and/or higher-cost care - and particularly preventative care. In a private system, significant proportions of society either aren't insured, or can't afford to address anything but serious problems even with insurance.

    While I don't agree with Canada's rules about private care facilities on principle (though I can understand the rasoning behind them), I doubt the outcomes are any worse - outside of unusual corner cases - in practice. Certainly I've never seen any evidence to support a claim they are.

    [0] I actually suspect you need to be above average - over 1.5x median income level at least - before private care becomes competitive.

  316. Universal Health care - Made In Mexico c/o America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love it when another country reports that have solved something that America seemingly has not. Just so you know, Mexico will soon take over the Southwest America and Asia will take over the Pacific Northwest America, and the Midwest will fall to no one, and the southeast will fall to the Cuban, Spaniards, and Puerto Ricans, and the Northeast America will fall to Congress and politicians and be bought out by China. The New China will possess the property of the US District of Columbia in about 5 years, because they currently hold all that piece of property owners debt. Oh don't forget about native Americans, they will remain the same.

    Please USA, stop all foreign aid for 1 year and see if we can get some help in return. Please USA stop being so prideful and pompous, and arrogant.

    Get back to Born in the USA --

  317. Feats that might be worthy of a Billion dollars... by jeko · · Score: 1

    Yet, you seem to think "1 billion" is inappropriate compensation for such a feat?

    Doing the math, 1 Billion dollars is roughly the value of 13,000 life careers. We're literally saying this man did more -- and I'll be unbelievably generous and use your yardstick of 15 years -- that he did more in 15 years than 13,000 other men did in their entire lives.

    OK, it's within the realm of theoretical possibility. Here is a list of feats -- performed single-handedly, mind you -- that might merit a One Billion Dollar payout:

    1. Formulating the Grand Unification Theory.
    2. Providing the root treatment to cure all forms of cancer.
    3. Finding a way to keep telomeres from degrading during replication.
    4. Inventing an efficient machine to keep the central nervous system oxygenated and provided with nutrients after a traumatic event.
    5. A root treatment to keep viruses from replicating.
    6. A solar cell with 99 percent efficiency.
    7. The initiation of peaceful relations with a species from outside our solar system.

    Feats in that range would be worth a billion dollars. What did your boy do?

    Oh that's right. He committed multiple felonies. From your own cite:

    Settlement

    On December 6, 2007, the Securities and Exchange Commission announced a settlement, under which McGuire was to repay $468 million as a partial settlement of the backdating prosecution. McGuire agreed to not serve as an officer or director of a public company for ten years.

    Again, how about we not give billions of dollars to thieves and find a way to keep giving grandma her meds? Why do you people always want to reward criminals?

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
  318. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by nbauman · · Score: 1

    Perhaps we could compensate the doctor for that humiliation by having him make a lot of money.

    There was a physicians' mutual insurance company several years ago that used a law firm made up of doctors with law degrees. They never settled. They reviewed the case. If the doctor was wrong, they pay up. If the doctor was right, they fight it all the way through a jury trial. That's the way it should be. I wonder if it's an economically viable strategy.

    I would like to give one of those "experts" a set of 10 breast films, 5 of which went on to become cancer, 5 of which did not, and ask him to tell which is which. I don't know if you can do that in court, but if the expert witness screws up once, you can refer to it every time he testifies afterwards.

  319. BTW... by jeko · · Score: 1

    BTW...

    Yup, run over to the wall-safe. Got it. Your money tree is a fantastic invention. You should patent that.

    It's called work and sacrifice. You should try it some time. You'd be amazed what can happen when you're not afraid to get your hands a little dirty.

    Sorry, I'm a realist facing real problems, not a bleeding heart ...

    Stop it, you're embarrassing me. Do you have any idea who the original "bleeding heart" is? Do you imagine you're insulting me by grouping me together with Him?! When you and I stand on Judgement Day, whose ideas do you think He'll have more sympathy for? That we should just cut the old people loose, or that we should declare that we are our brother's keeper and follow the example of the Samaritan?

    You call me a "Bleeding Heart" for declaring we can save them all. I find myself in ridiculously good company. Please, by all means, insult me some more. I don't think I blushed quite all the way out to my ears yet...

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
    1. Re:BTW... by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      It's called work and sacrifice. You should try it some time.

      lol, the socialist calling for work and sacrifice -- that's funny.

  320. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 1

    Ask yourself why all this "dicking around with the insurance company arguing about whether illness X or medication Y are covered on a particular plan, for a particular patient, during a particular phase of the moon, etc." got there in the first place. Any answers?

    TLDR : Nixon approves the creation of HMOs

    Because insurance companies make more money when they fail to provide the service that they offer. Therefore they have an incentive to make it as hard as possible to make a successful claim. They employ personnel who are specifically tasked with denying claims, both before payout, and after. They make their systems as byzantine and difficult as possible to this end. They "dilute the risk pool" as much as possible by excluding people for pre-existing conditions.

    Some might suspect that the incredible proliferation of codes in systems like ICD-10 is not to provide a more accurate way to classify illnesses, but instead to make it easier to misfile the paperwork. - "Oh, I'm sorry, you used the code for *burrito* induced flatulence when it was a chimichenga, your claim is denied".

    All of this produces a system where a vast amount of effort is diverted into wrangling with insurance companies. Labour is one of the big two costs of healthcare (the other being drugs). Anything that introduces more labour makes things disproportionately more expensive.

    Contrast this to the situation in the UK, where we have a National Health Service - because there is a single payer, practitioners all pretty much know what is and what is not "covered" in their field, rather than there being different rules for each patient depending on their policy. No-one has to contact the insurer to see whether a drug is covered - there is a single reference manual for drug prescription in the UK, which covers the availability, usage, dosage, and even lists the cost price for reference. Because everyone is covered, you don't have to check their policy. Instead of the payer having an incentive to deny people care for whatever reason they can think of, practitioners have incentives to improve their patients health - they get paid per vaccination, they get paid for lowering the blood pressure of their patients, getting them to give up smoking, etc.

    And we all get taxed right up the ass for this, right? We spend less than half, per capita, what America does on publicly funded healthcare. We only pay for our "National Insurance" when we are working. And we have universal coverage, with very similar healthcare outcomes to the US. The US spending covers less than a third of your population.

    Our current incumbent Conservative government are doing their best to destroy this state of affairs because their corporate cronies obviously weep into their pillows at night at the wasted profit opportunity. As a nation, most of us have forgotten what it was like to wonder whether you could afford the doctor this month. Concepts like being bankrupted and forced to live in your daughters basement eating Ramen because your husband died and the medical bills were really expensive, are alien to us.

    Yes, as a "commons" there are tragedies in the NHS. There are waiting lists for non-essential care. A hospital stay in the UK is probably not the comfortable hotel experience it is in the US. But none of us (apart from very rich people distanced far from the madding crowd) would be without it.

  321. Re:Feats that might be worthy of a Billion dollars by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

    Doing the math, 1 Billion dollars is roughly the value of 13,000 life careers. We're literally saying this man did more -- and I'll be unbelievably generous and use your yardstick of 15 years -- that he did more in 15 years than 13,000 other men did in their entire lives

    The man created 69.5 billion in annual revenues. So if I divide that by 13,000...yup, I don't know many people that have generated 5.35 million in wealth over their lifetimes, certainly not in 15 years. Even without the options backdating (which is not illegal: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Options_backdating), he's probably still worth a billion.

    You seem to measure people by what they should have, based on terms of what you believe are "more than enough for any one person".. You don't use fair measurements -- in your world, a man could claw out of the gutter and build a trillion dollar empire singlehandedly, but personally he should only get maybe 300 or 400 thousand dollars out of it, because that's more than enough for any one man. Right?

  322. We seem to differ on the meaning of "create" by jeko · · Score: 1

    The man created 69.5 billion in annual revenues.

    Yeah, no, he didn't. Kids with a garage band create more than he did. Little old ladies with Victory Gardens produce more. Grad students in English departments contribute more to Man's knowledge.

    He sat on a chokepoint between doctors and patients and exacted a rent on the healthcare industry. He denied care to patients who were in desperate need and pcoketed the money that should have went to alleviate suffering.

    The BEST you can say he did was he caused more suffering to patients, killed some people who didn't need to die and contributed to the general misery in the world. He's a foul, filthy man and when he stands before God one day, I don't want to be anywhere near him and his Billions in blood money.

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
  323. Yes, a socialist... by jeko · · Score: 1

    Because people like you always seem more than willing to call for more work and sacrifice from other people. My and my kin are the ones that fight the wars you start, clean up the messes you and your little Wall Street buddies create and generally try to care for the victims your "Screw You, I Got Mine" mentality strews about the countryside.

    Tell you what. You stay on your side of the fence with Carnegie, Rockefeller and Rand, and I'll stay on mine with all the other famous Lefties like Bishop Romero, William Faulkner, Mark Twain, Charles Dickens, Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, William Wallace, Sir Thomas More and all the rest stretching all the way back to the original Bleeding Heart, whom, BTW, I would never dare to try to use as an epithet.

    I'm very comfortable letting God and history judge between us.

     

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
    1. Re:Yes, a socialist... by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      Because people like you always seem more than willing to call for more work and sacrifice from other people. My and my kin are the ones that fight the wars you start, clean up the messes you and your little Wall Street buddies create and generally try to care for the victims your "Screw You, I Got Mine" mentality strews about the countryside.

      And my kin are the ones that pay for all of it, including all your social programs you're so fond of. Because if there's anything Dems are great it, it's spending almost nothing in charitable spending and then using everyone else's money to sate their own self-centered sense of moral smugness. Bit of an ironic twist on "Give, and it shall be given unto you", eh? Hint, "Give" does not mean "your neighbor's wealth", and "shall be given unto you" does not mean "your neighbor's wealth". There was a specific line in there about coveting and stealing from your neighbor...some famous religious document...I'm sure you know it.

  324. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by robsku · · Score: 1

    Finland.

    --
    In capitalist USA corporations control the government.
  325. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    She should just go fuck more guys

  326. Logan's Run movie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Watching Jenny Agutter wrestling with Farrah Fawcett couldn't save the movie but it did make for a memorable scene

  327. Hey, I'll make you a deal by jeko · · Score: 1

    I'll lay off trying to get you and yours to pay your fair share of taxes if you'll do me one favor. Make good on the blood debt you owe me and mine. The next time the call goes out, how about you girls stop hiding behind your Mommy's skirts and your Daddy's money and actually enlist to fight the war you got us into? I'm pretty sure our disagreements will disappear with the first shot you hear.

    Looking forward to having you on the team,
    And I promise not to razz you about all this too much later...

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
    1. Re:Hey, I'll make you a deal by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      Looking forward to having you on the team,

      Hooah.

  328. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

    The doctors get paid for defensive medicine. They would do it regardless of the potential for lawsuits. They do unnecessary tests and procedures even if they open themselves up for a lawsuit.

    --
    Man, you really need that seminar!
  329. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

    You are wrong. SS still takes in more than it spends and is projected to do so for a while longer. It is projected to outlay more than it spends eventually, as would be expected given demographics.

    --
    Man, you really need that seminar!
  330. Re:Like everywhere else it's been tried... by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

    Dental insurance is strange. Most of what is available lately has been very high premium, stingy coverage of routine procedures, and a brazen 50% copay on anything serious such as gum work, crowns or fillings. Braces etc. are often not covered whatsoever.

    I guess it is an effective way to force people to ration their own care, but I know a lot of people who can't afford to fix their mouth, and likely never will.

    --
    Man, you really need that seminar!
  331. Subsidized meds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Technically the "absurd" prices in the US subsidize the money for sales overseas. You will find this in many products...text books for example. In some cases this is "legitimate" profit taking because we can "afford" it.