Hoofbite
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You’re making it sound as if we’re functioning like a banana republic. If the high quality/High Tech capabilities we have weren’t being used to good effect, the costs would not be high. Laparoscopic procedures, nuclear medicine, PET Scans, etc, these things are being put to good use very day and you’re painting a picture of some bombed out third world clinic.
Not at all. We have great resources, but the outcomes don't match. That's all I am saying. We overpay for what we get. Infant mortality rate is embarrassing for the amount of resources the US has. It's worse than Cuba and the entirety of the European Union. You simply cannot look at what the US pays for healthcare relative to the rest of the world and ignore the lack of results.
If I’m not mistaken, you work in a hospital, correct? Is this hospital withholding the use of it’s resources while people suffer? You don’t witness the success of years of research and development?
No hospital would because they are legally bound to treat in some cases. That's part of the point I was trying to make earlier. Hospitals cannot turn down someone with a life-threatening emergency. They treat regardless of the prospect of reimbursement. The consequence of that is everyone else has to get billed more because hospitals cannot operate at a loss. What the hell would any industry do if 10% of the customers they were forced to serve couldn't afford to pay? They'd recover the costs from the 90% who can.
I think you’re confusing immediate need with urgency. The average persons immediate needs are food and shelter; it’s why we work and generally what our lives center around: these basic necessities. Urgent care is something different and not in every body’s line of sight, moment by moment. We have Medical Centers, with Call Centers who can respond to almost any health catastrophe as it happens. As you’ve already stated, it’s provided for. What exactly is the discussion in terms of forcing us to pay more for routine medical coverage?
This is going a bit off topic more than I intended. I was simply pointing out that people can survive without eating for a period of time that far exceeds someone's ability to survive without medical care for a number of conditions.
I wouldn’t dream of denigrating our great success in terms of healthcare by making it another inept government agency. Unfortunately I’m not in control and no amount if sound reason will convince the people in control to keep their hands off of it. If I have any complaint, it’s with the almost total rejection of some alternative medicines and therapies and the insurance companies refusal to participate in them.
It doesn't have to be a government agency. People who's healthcare is currently funded through tax dollars aren't relegated to hospitals run by a government agency. Nobody is promoting a single provider healthcare system. It wouldn't be the end of private healthcare systems and probably wouldn't even be the end of private insurance.
We’re having this discussion because these very same people are interested in greater and greater in-roads into our very day lives and making excuses to raise taxes. There’s no altruism in these attempts to drag down our health care system.
But you can't say that's what would happen because it's not supported by what happens elsewhere.
The tax issue side is undeniable. Taxes would increase to cover it, but you already pay taxes for other people's healthcare and after that you then have to go out and buy your own healthcare. If people could avoid paying premiums, they would undoubtedly take home more money. If it were called anything other than a tax people wouldn't even give a shit because the bottom line is more money taken home.
The key findings from the survey, conducted from January through June 2015, include a modest increase (4%) in the average premiums for both single and family coverage in the past year. The average annual single coverage premium is $6,251 and the average family coverage premium is $17,545.
EHBS 2015 – Summary Of Findings – 8775 | The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation
Any person who makes $62K/year, and any family that brings in $170K/year has a cost equal to 10% of their income in just premiums. Now, this cost is split between employer and employee in most cases, but even with a very generous split in favor of the employee Americans are still paying a good percentage of their income for premiums.
Taxes. Premiums. Both get deducted before you ever see a fucking dime.
The argument can basically be boiled down to:
I'll take a greater cost in premiums over a lesser cost in taxes for reasons that aren't supported by data gathered across the world, and because taxes are evil.