Healthcare in the US

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I haven't read this thread yet (I will), but go here: http://www.grahamazon.com/sp/

giboyeux (skowly), Friday, 28 October 2005 20:04 (eighteen years ago) link

yeah, thats just the way to convince me I'm wrong, gypsy mothra.

clouded vision, Friday, 28 October 2005 20:20 (eighteen years ago) link

I'll eat 8 of my 10 toes if private insurance is ever fixed. It's one of the most profitable industries, and they aren't going to be too eager to change that.

Jeff-PTTL (Jeff), Friday, 28 October 2005 20:40 (eighteen years ago) link

yeah, thats just the way to convince me I'm wrong, gypsy mothra.

Dude, if the boondoggle of the American private health care system doesn't convince you, nothing I say is going to. Who here do you think you're going to convince by moaning about the "loss of freedom" that would come with universal health care?

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Friday, 28 October 2005 21:16 (eighteen years ago) link

Your use of "freedom" is little more than a bastardization of the original meaning as it was known up until the Great Depression and FDR's social experimentations. Freedoms (liberties) do not come at the expense of others. Freedom (liberty) is not a means, but an end. And the means to accomplishing what would be a national socialist healthcare program would be destructive to those ends, as the "freedom" from personal responsibility for one's own health that would be achieved by such a program would come at the economic expense of others. Specifically those who had the ability and the foresight to competently handle their own medical affairs. The end result is a system whereby the incompetent and unable achieve their "freedom" from their own personal medical responsibility by forcing that burden onto others who are more capable without any basis on principles of justice whatsoever.

clouded vision, Saturday, 29 October 2005 01:14 (eighteen years ago) link

clouded vision

walter kranz (walterkranz), Saturday, 29 October 2005 01:17 (eighteen years ago) link

that was too predictable

clouded vision, Saturday, 29 October 2005 01:19 (eighteen years ago) link

Because we all know that medical needs are a result of personal responsibility and competence...

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Saturday, 29 October 2005 01:31 (eighteen years ago) link

Private and Public Health care coverage produces the same result in treatment.

Disadvantage
-Higher cost in health care coverage
- -consequence: 45 million uninsured
- - -consequence: lower then average rates concerning health

Advantages
-Greater patient comfort
-Different tiers of health care coverage.
-Greater innovation in medical technology
- - advantages are felt globally (even to those nations which dont spend squat on medical innovation and testing)

That last one is very important. I highly doubt you're going to find cures for cancer, aids, or other disease plaguing our world from a public health care system. And though the US will find them, you can sure bet that everyone else is going to take advantage of it.

clouded vision, Monday, 7 November 2005 05:40 (eighteen years ago) link

None of your advantages sound that great to me and your last two are just plain wrong. Public universities and public hospitals do a great deal of medical research, as do private drug companies of course. Innovation is neithe rthe exclusive preserve of the private healthcare system nor of the US and it is misguided arrogance to think so.

What is even more sickening is the fact that you seem to begruge the rest of the world access to American healthcare innovations. Perhaps we should paint stars and stipes on these wonderful new cancer pills you've got so everyone knows their are munching on the 'freedom' cancer cure.

before you open your mouth, why not go and find out ecxactly what medical advnaces do come out of the inferioir public health systems that us poor disadvantaged folks suffer in the rest of the world.

Ed (dali), Monday, 7 November 2005 06:26 (eighteen years ago) link

And besides, isn a great deal of healthcare research in the US funded from the public pursem through the auspices of the NIH.

Ed (dali), Monday, 7 November 2005 06:27 (eighteen years ago) link

Uhm, where does "Different tiers of health care coverage" come into any of it, much less as a drawback? Seriously, if you have the dosh and you want your own doc, have at it. Just as long as everybody has access to preventive services, we should all live better, and not have to pony up as much.

Greater innovation in medical technology

you do know that NIH research gets just a lil' public funding, right? and that a publicly funded health system would not detract from private investing in health tech, right?

xpost

So, yeah, wot Ed said.

kingfish orange creamsicle (kingfish 2.0), Monday, 7 November 2005 06:35 (eighteen years ago) link

this is somethng i found on another site:

"A major difference between the Canadian and American health spending is on investment in technology. This is a long-standing difference noted long before government polices on health diverged in the 1960s. American doctors and hospitals are far more likely than their Canadian counterparts to purchase new and expensive devices and technologies. Canadian doctors have a tendency to be far more skeptical and thus wait until technologies are proven and have fallen in price. The United States has far more specialists for each general practitioner than in Canada. Canada has more hospital beds per capita and Canadian patients spend more time in hospitals than Americans. An American patient is more likely to be rapidly treated by a specialist with the most up to date equipment. A Canadian one more likely to be treated by their GP and cared for over a period of time in hospital. Comparisons have found little difference between the effectiveness of the two styles, but the Canadian one is cheaper. The lack of the most recent technology is one of the most common causes of Canadians crossing the border to seek treatment in the United States. To a certain extent sending some patients south is cost effective for Canada. The most expensive medical equipment is also often some of the most specialized. In much of Canada it makes financial sense to occasionally pay to rent a piece of American equipment than to buy it outright and have it sit unused much of the time."

"None of your advantages sound that great to me and your last two are just plain wrong"

Ha, Id like to see what proof you can produce that public funded system produces the same amount of innovation as our private system. And the different tiers of health care is also known as increased freedom, probably the greatest advantage of the three. Leave it to a European to not value it.

"Public universities and public hospitals do a great deal of medical research, as do private drug companies of course"

Which is part of the reason why US medical schools and hospitals are much more popular and generally better, as well as draw the best doctors from around the world. They might do research themselves, but it's nothing compared to what the US does. We dont have the best schools and best doctors because we decided to cut investment to lower insurance prices. Oh yeah, and we didnt get the funds to support the NIH because we support socialist programs. Even with the NIH, Id rather have them and a long list of other research centers aside from just the NIH specializing in different areas of health research. When it comes to R&D, countries with public health care systems just cant step up, because a publicly funded health system does detract from private investing. The proof is in a simple comparison of the quality of medical centers in the US versus the rest of the world.
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/health/best-hospitals/tophosp.htm
I challenge you to find any nation that remotely compares with what the US produces.

"What is even more sickening is the fact that you seem to begruge the rest of the world access to American healthcare innovations. Perhaps we should paint stars and stipes on these wonderful new cancer pills you've got so everyone knows their are munching on the 'freedom' cancer cure."

We pay for it, why should we hand it out to such ingrates? Dont worry though, for now we'll consider it charity to those in need. As big as our economy is thanks largely to the fact that we dont support such socialist policies, we can afford it.

clouded vision, Monday, 7 November 2005 15:05 (eighteen years ago) link

So what you are saying is that the poor (countries or people) do not have the right to health and life

'"You're taking the short, and very incorrent, financial view of the situation, friend. It's already your responsibility to pay for these people. Universal healthcare would make it cheaper for you."

I want to believe this, and I will if you explain how. How does the numbers add up? Show actual numbers to get the point across.'

This UMaine paper points to the fact that the US health care system despite having the hightest per capita expenditure in the world (and the highest expenditure in proportion to GDP), also has the highest administration costs (approachign 25%) due to the fragmented and complex nature of how healthcare is paid for. It also produces the highest infant mortality rate of any OECD nation and is the 37th best performing system in the world (France 1, Italy 2, both fully socialised systems although both have some form of patient contribution, in France up to 30%). Even the Uk which when these figures were collected was spending half that of the US and 2/3rds that of France was still ranked 18 in the world in terms of performance.

Ed (dali), Monday, 7 November 2005 15:51 (eighteen years ago) link

HAHAHAHAHA Clouded Vision believes that private companies are going to find cures for cancer and AIDS.

They have no financial incentive to do so.

Hurting (Hurting), Monday, 7 November 2005 16:04 (eighteen years ago) link

i'm by no means an expert but isnt it private companies who come up with most drugs? isnt someone trying to make a cure for cancer NOW?

Lovelace (Lovelace), Monday, 7 November 2005 16:28 (eighteen years ago) link

it private companies who come up with most drugs

I'm trying to find a citing for this, but many private companies base their work on research already done by publicly funded/gov't group.

kingfish, Monday, 7 November 2005 17:19 (eighteen years ago) link

Do you mean a citation?

KSTFUNS (Ex Leon), Monday, 7 November 2005 17:25 (eighteen years ago) link

that too

kingfish, Monday, 7 November 2005 17:26 (eighteen years ago) link

so no one can actually make an argument against my last post?

clouded vision, Monday, 7 November 2005 19:21 (eighteen years ago) link

Your post points out that despite the US system cost vastly more than the socialist canadian one, the results achieved are much the same. However the Canadian system guarantees everyone healthcare and the US one does not. You argued against your point of view in your own post.

Ed (dali), Monday, 7 November 2005 19:39 (eighteen years ago) link

B/C using lines like

why should we hand it out to such ingrates?

makes it so conducive for argument. Or upsupported statements like,

Private and Public Health care coverage produces the same result in treatment

then later mentioning the varying levels of medical specialists in American vs Canada, which of course don't mean shit if you're too broke too ever see one.

Still, ignoring all this, the tone of your posts is illustrative.

Much of the traction against and framing around doing American universal healthcare has a core of "I shouldn't have to pay for health care that I can't immediately see as benefitting me." I.E. only those who can afford it are worthy(the rich as Blessed by God), and poor folks are poor 'cuz it's just their own damn fault, thus ain't worthy for our help. "Ingrates" in our own borders, even!

Poor folks obviously chosen their status, so they should have to live with the consequences. If you spoil them by reducing their costs to a level they can actually afford, they'll never develop the thrifty, hard-working, disciplined character required for success in our obviously meritocratic society. Why, all those poor black folks in New Orleans were stuck in that city since they were spoiled by relying on government.

Why, just look at our Dear President! He'd never have been so successful in life as oilman, ball-team owner, or elected official, were it not for his rugged individualism! Everything he's enjoyed in his lifetime was all earned thru the determined sweat of his own brow, and a product of his labor and his labor alone.

Etc.

So, to thses folks, it doesn't matter that having a baseline, minimal level of treatment for everybody would save plenty of dosh for all in the end, it's all seen in the framing of "the gubmint is taking my money to pay for those lazy, undeserved layabouts." It's a framework entrenched so deeply that no amount of actual facts will dislodge it, as Lakoff would say.

xpost: again, wot Ed said.

kingfish orange creamsicle (kingfish 2.0), Monday, 7 November 2005 19:50 (eighteen years ago) link

Yeah. Or to put it more bluntly, some of us just lack the energy to argue about these things with people who don't know wtf they're talking about and show no interest in learning about how things actually work outside the strictures of some blinkered "pro-marketplace" ideology. There's metric tons of information on health care all over the Internet, but I don't get the sense that any of it is likely to dent your views because your views (like a lot of Americans') are based on ideological fantasy and thus unassailable with mere data.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Monday, 7 November 2005 19:52 (eighteen years ago) link

gypsy OTFM.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 7 November 2005 20:44 (eighteen years ago) link

& excuz my shitty grammar plz

kingfish orange creamsicle (kingfish 2.0), Monday, 7 November 2005 21:46 (eighteen years ago) link

I highly doubt you're going to find cures for cancer, aids, or other disease plaguing our world from a public health care system.

Bullshit. Disease prevents consumption of goods. Businesses of all types cannot profit if consumption falls. Businesses are thus incentivized to search for ways to cure disease, prevent disease, or provide care for the afflicted to support further consumption. Q.E.D.

rasheed wallace (rasheed wallace), Monday, 7 November 2005 23:03 (eighteen years ago) link

Ed amazingly, succintly, overwhelming OTFM!!

Orbit (Orbit), Tuesday, 8 November 2005 06:20 (eighteen years ago) link

three weeks pass...
I was reading through this thread and I'm was wondering if anyone could send a few sources my way, either book titles or websites, that back up some of your points in the thread, particularly the bankruptcty, long waiting periods for those without healthcare, insurance companies charging small businesses more for health care coverage, not getting medicair if you recieve minimum wage, the quote on the UMaine paper about administrative costs. Plus anything else you think is relevent. I'd really appreciate it.

Lovelace (Lovelace), Wednesday, 30 November 2005 13:06 (eighteen years ago) link

anyone...

Lovelace (Lovelace), Wednesday, 30 November 2005 17:56 (eighteen years ago) link

bump for the last time

Lovelace (Lovelace), Thursday, 1 December 2005 01:53 (eighteen years ago) link

one year passes...
Restart. Partially because of what's been said on other threads, but also because the issue is already starting to fire up on the current and 2008 political front.

Tim F. at Balloon Juice has been posting about this off and on for a bit (see here for his thoughts last month re: this issue and Obama, specifically:

Needless to say, tossing together American industry behind universal healthcare isn’t beginner chess. Somebody will have to overcome business leaders’ instinctive mistrust of socialist-sounding ideas and Democrats in general. Then we can even start talking about problems like institutional inertia. For that reason it seems unlikely that John Edwards, career trial lawyer, will make much headway. Fairly or unfairly Hillarycare gives me shudders. Obama, though, has a knack for making unlikely friends, a pragmatic tendency to look for common ground and little to no skeletons to get in the way. The idea of marshaling American industry against American insurance may be a fool’s errand for any pol, but I have an odd feeling that Barrack Obama may have what it takes to pull it off.)

Today, he's noted what looks like a big sea change at work -- WalMart and the SEIU joining up on healthcare matters. From the head of SEIU:

It is time to admit that the employer-based health care system is dead—a relic of the industrial economy. America cannot compete in the new global economy when we are the only industrialized nation on earth that puts the price of healthcare on the cost of our products.

That is a major drag on American business competitiveness, and job creation—and it is a stupid 21st century economic plan as well.

American business by 2008 will pay more for health care than they will make in profits. That is untenable.

...

It is time – in fact it is long overdue – for America to come together and insure that every man woman and child has quality, affordable health care by 2012.

That seems to be widely accepted everywhere but Washington, D.C.

We can’t keep tinkering, hoping that incremental change will fix our broken health care system. We need fundamental change, meaning new thinking, leadership, and new partnerships; some risk taking, and compromising.

And that’s why I chose to be here today, standing with several major corporations—some of whom I don’t always agree with, and of some of whom, frankly, I have been critical.

Which is why this partnership of unlikely allies offers even greater hope that we can finally stop talking about health care and do something about it.

That’s what we all owe our country.

Tim F.'s thoughts:

It is about time somebody figured out that Democrats need powerful allies to move healthcare reform forward, and it will never be the insurance biz. I have only pointed this out now in three separate posts. You can read those to get the gist of my point so I will just observe that it is very, very exciting to see Stern working together with Wal-Mart on this. For one, Wal-Mart is the single largest employer in America and a heavy contributor to party politics. That’s a lot of pull.

Equally interesting, Stern’s SEIU is naturally positioned to represent Wal-Mart’s 1.2 million employees in America. As most know Wal-Mart practically stands by itself in the fierceness of its union-busting policies. It has a history of forcing employees to watch misleading anti-union propaganda, firing managers who don’t stop meetings and closing entire branches when the union gains a foothold. Wal-Mart and Andy Stern come pretty close to sworn enemies. Seeing Stern and the Waltons working together on this is about the best possible illustration of my point that real progress will necessitate making some awkward friendships.

...

Finally, I would love to see the right wing boycott Wal-Mart over this. In rural America Wal-Mart has long since quashed the competition. Where else ya gonna go?

His commenters are generally skeptical. *checks watch and waits on Dr. Morb and Roger Fidelity's first posts*

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 7 February 2007 20:48 (seventeen years ago) link

seven months pass...

A family friend of ours just had a major stroke at an unusually young age (late 30s or early 40s, I think) and has no health insurance. Her family and friends basically have to take a collection to pay for the treatment. I know this isn't a new or unique story, just a part of it that happens to touch me. This system fucking sucks. Fuck this country.

Hurting 2, Saturday, 8 September 2007 14:51 (sixteen years ago) link

^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Jordan Sargent, Saturday, 8 September 2007 17:23 (sixteen years ago) link

one year passes...

Is this being discussed elsewhere? http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/03/health/03nice.html

caek, Friday, 5 December 2008 11:51 (fifteen years ago) link

Going out on a limb, I'm going to guess that the real problem is not the British NICE putting a price on six months of a person's life, it's what the drug companies are charging to begin with.

One Community Service Mummy, hold the Straightedge Merman (Laurel), Friday, 5 December 2008 14:24 (fifteen years ago) link

How any course of pills can be 50k is completely and totally beyond me. Patients should be folded into ongoing studies of drugs with FDA/NICE clearance and some cost benefit should be available to the patient in a private system. I am slowly starting to labour under the 'truthy' feeling that in many ways it was easier to suffer with cancer in the early '70s than it is now.

Meat ROFL (suzy), Friday, 5 December 2008 14:52 (fifteen years ago) link

six months pass...

How Pharma and Insurance Intend to Kill the Public Option, And What Obama and the Rest of Us Must Do

http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/blogs/robert_reich/2009/06/the-public-option-smokescreens.php/

Once those who want to kill the public option without their fingerprints on the murder weapon begin to agree on a proposal -- Snowe's "trigger" or any other -- the public option will be very hard to revive. The White House must now insist on a genuine public option. And you, dear reader, must insist as well.

This is it, folks. The concrete is being mixed and about to be poured. And after it's poured and hardens, universal health care will be with us for years to come in whatever form it now takes. Let your representative and senators know you want a public option without conditions or triggers -- one that gives the public insurer bargaining leverage over drug companies, and pushes insurers to do what they've promised to do. Don't wait until the concrete hardens and we've lost this battle.

Dr Morbius, Monday, 8 June 2009 01:26 (fourteen years ago) link

two years pass...

have to wonder if it would have been easier to just apply for medicaid

coffeetripperspillerslyricmakeruppers (Latham Green), Tuesday, 21 June 2011 20:05 (twelve years ago) link

amazing

jag goo (k3vin k.), Tuesday, 21 June 2011 20:09 (twelve years ago) link

two months pass...

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/23/opinion/cut-medicare-help-patients.html

good piece by the third emanuel brother - wasn't sure how i was feeling about him at first

karen d. foreskin (k3vin k.), Wednesday, 24 August 2011 03:31 (twelve years ago) link

Single-payer has the momentum!

I've talked to liberals who aren't thrilled with Obama's health care plan but nonetheless think it must still be worthwhile, because a) after all, Obama likes it, and b) it at least does something. The fact that the something it does is to entrench corporate power over health care in the US to the point where it would take a nuclear bomb to dislodge it, not to mention to put a lengthy debate about universal healthcare off the national agenda for decades, either doesn't occur to them or is subsumed by their knee-jerk partisan instinct to at least politely nibble at whatever shit sandwich the Democrats happen to be feeding them at any given moment. And the imperative of dining on that questionable meal also makes them willing to spin tortured rationalizations around the notion that it's ok for the government to compel us to buy a product from private for-profit corporations for our entire lives.

So it's left to conservatives and their knee-jerk partisan instincts to try to nullify this government gift to some of the most predatory and exploitative corporations in the US. Thanks for doing what you can to save universal healthcare from the ongoing assault by Democrats and their misguided liberal supporters, 26 Republican attorneys general and governors!

http://www.tinyrevolution.com/mt/archives/003549.html

incredibly middlebrow (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 25 August 2011 16:14 (twelve years ago) link

two years pass...

While my wife went on a 1.5 year (unpaid) childcare leave from her job, we had to switch to my health benefits (hers are better). Now we want to switch back because we pay so much less for hers, but it means switching all our doctors again because they're not in the network of her plan. Such a ludicrous system.

#fomo that's the motto (Hurting 2), Monday, 16 September 2013 01:47 (ten years ago) link

nine months pass...

Sitting by work phone waiting for the mail-order mega-pharmacy used by my health plan to arrange shipment of my cancer drug. Waiting out the last few hours before the deadline after the hematologist's staff SENT THE PRESCRIPTION SIX DAYS AGO never really gets fucking old, even the 20th time.

they are called EXPRESS SCRIPTS

avoid if you can

son of a lewd monk (Dr Morbius), Monday, 16 June 2014 18:22 (nine years ago) link

ugh, I have to go through Express Scripts too. you have my sympathies x1000000

macklin' rosie (crüt), Monday, 16 June 2014 18:26 (nine years ago) link

maybe 500,000 more and we can agitate for their annihilation

son of a lewd monk (Dr Morbius), Monday, 16 June 2014 18:28 (nine years ago) link

six months pass...

^ still in favor of this. i would burn them to the fucking ground if i could.

example (crüt), Tuesday, 16 December 2014 20:16 (nine years ago) link

scares me, I go through them now and the auto-refills have been timely? I have a pretty unchanging prescription, though

valleys of your mind (mh), Tuesday, 16 December 2014 20:18 (nine years ago) link

the problem I have is specifically with Accredo

example (crüt), Tuesday, 16 December 2014 20:19 (nine years ago) link


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