rgraham666
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2004
- Posts
- 43,695
Because Obama is the source of all evuhl on this planet. 
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Obama isn't talking about the government taking over health care.
He's talking about the government offering health care insurance.
Why can't you people see the difference?
In a perfect world, that's what I'd envision for private health care. I have a Condition, and I need a Treatment, so I shop around for the best package deal, and choose that hospital. If that means cutting edge gear, comfy hospital beds, friendly staff or more likely low prices, is up to me.In America we pay for medical treatments a la carte. MDs and nurses waste gobs of time specifying every little billable unit they performed so the billing clerk can milk the patients insurance. This accounts for the long delays in our emergency rooms; staff are in the lounge writing detailed notes for the billing clerk. The system has reduced everyone to a clerk and scribbler, to get the money.
Hospitals and MDs buy all kinds of Flash Gordon toys they can bill for. You may not use them in your treatment, but your MD adds them to the treatment order and you pay for them. Ditto for your sleeping pills and pain killers. You may not use them but you pay for them because the MD puts them on the treatment order. Unused meds is where nurses get their illicit supplies. Its the a la carte business, again.
MDs and hospitals can bill for lab work, so you get lotsa tests.
If we switched to a Scope of Work system, the hospitals would bid for the whole process and eliminate the unnecessary and unused procedures, to save time and money.
Why do you assume that government provideed health care is equal to government health care mononpoly?The problem with government based health plans is that they inevitably involve loss of choice. If you don't like your private insurance plan, you can at least try to find another private insurance plan. If you don't like a government based health plan, you don't really have a choice.
True. For some reason though, my elected representatoive don't need to make any speeches about that. Our government hospitals provides perfectly on par service.A private company that provides substandard service will go out of business. If the government provides substandard service, your elected representative will make a speech.
Let's make a deal then. You don't give us the "socaliced medicine is satan because anything the government touch turns to shit" tripe, and we won't gave you the "private corporations are only in it to squeeze money out of people and don't give a damn about their well being" tripe.
Ok?
ps. About government running things: The three most profitable service enterprises in Sweden, if we talk return ratio, are the national Post service, government owned cargo ports, and one just recently privatized telecom entity. Then comes IKEA. Don't take a dime of tax money to run, and return a hefty profit for the state. Because they are more streamlined, less buerocratic and less bound by sort term result demands than the private competition. Also, they have well working unionization (yes, it's possible, it CAN work well), which means a low employee turnover and good working conditions, something that turned out to be good for the bottom line in the long run.
Just sayin' .
To begin with, I have never framed my contributions to this thread in such antagonistic hyperbole as you have claimed in your generalistic statement. I'll thank you not to refer to them as such.
Just sayin'.
I'm sure you are eminently satisfied with the state of affairs in your country, after all you have known nothing else. Also, I am fairly positive things aren't as flawless as you describe them; realistically, nothing is. That being said, an overwhelming majority (I have seen figures as high as 97% of citizens polled) in the US are perfectly satisfied with their health care as it currently exists.
The rationale of discarding or disrupting what is extant in the health care system in favor of accommodating the uninsured citizenry is foolish in the extreme. Ideally, a system of multi-tiered health care services should be made available relating to the severity of the illness or injury and ones ability to pay. This, however, would immediately inflame the 'fairness' and 'equality' advocates, so it will never happen.
I imagine some temporarily workable compromise will be cobbled together that will initially please everyone...repeated tinkering by Congress with said compromise when goaded by various and sundry pressure groups will in time produce the predictable chaos. The histories of numerous federal programs bear this out.
Only time and the politics of the situation will tell.![]()
Why do you assume that government provideed health care is equal to government health care mononpoly?
O'er here, we have public hospitals, dentists and special clinics. As well as private ones, side by side. Public health care is not free, but reasonably affordable, and heavily subsidized for the really expensive stuff, like long term rehabilitation. You can also apply for grants that subsidize up to the same level at a private hospital. But their service is more expensive, so you eventually have to dish out more from your own pocket.
True. For some reason though, my elected representatoive don't need to make any speeches about that. Our government hospitals provides perfectly on par service.
Fair enuff. I'll dial it down.To begin with, I have never framed my contributions to this thread in such antagonistic hyperbole as you have claimed in your generalistic statement. I'll thank you not to refer to them as such.
Just sayin'.
On the other hand... Let's make another deal. I'll refrain from hyperboles, when you refrain from patronizing assumptions that I'm an idiot who don't know what the hell I'm talking about because I have yet to experience the Glory that is America.I'm sure you are eminently satisfied with the state of affairs in your country, after all you have known nothing else.
How good then that that was not what I'm attempting to tell you.You tell me that you have two service providers, side by side, supplying the same services with one charging more than the other and both providers remain in business? Truly your screen name fits. What you're attempting to tell me violates one of the few laws of economics that actually works.
You tell me that you have two service providers, side by side, supplying the same services with one charging more than the other and both providers remain in business? Truly your screen name fits. What you're attempting to tell me violates one of the few laws of economics that actually works.
Yes, they do stay in business but because they DON'T provide exactly the same services.
In the UK, private health care, whether funded by insurance or by the patient buying services themselves, gives a more comfortable experience and for some conditions a faster treatment than the NHS.
The NHS provides fast emergency care for which the private sector is not equipped, and covers all life-threatening and chronic conditions. It cannot provide the excellent hotel facilities that are part of the private package, nor fund expensive treatments that are considered to be of limited value. It is worst at dealing quickly with conditions that are not life-threatening but reduce the patient's quality of life such as joint-replacements. It stays well clear of elective cosmetic surgery except reconstructive work after burns or accidents.
Most people in the UK who can afford private medical insurance know what they are buying - faster treatment and a much better standard of comfort when in hospital.
If I have a new medical problem I have four choices - NHS medical care at no cost to me; claim on my private medical insurance IF it covers what is wrong; use the hospital provided by my mutual society; and pay for private care out of my own pocket. I have never used the hospital provided by the mutual society but I have used all the other three methods when appropriate.
Og
There have been plenty of third-party reviews of different health providers' quality, and the government option never falls behind on the "ability to heal the sick and fix the broken" criteria. If I go to the public hospital or the private with the same aliement (sp?), you have the same odds of walking out healthy. But that is not the only factor that private hospitals and clinics can compete with. You mentioned one - multilingual service. We have many persian, kurdish and arab emigrants in my town. There's a private practice there that specializes in not only arabic and farsi personell, but also people who are well versed in their customs and culture. The public hospital does have the required translators, but is impersonal, business like and makes many people unfamiliar with Swedish culture uncomfortable. So they pay a little extra for personal service and familiarity.
Other places offer swifter service for non-emergency treatment, private rooms for longer stays, alternative treatments, and much more.
It's like beer. Cheap beer gets you drunk as much as expensive beer. Why is there still expensive beer?
I had to consult a Swedish map, and the online Yellow Pages to be sure. But now I'm fairly positive that there is no place called Saskatchewan in Sweden, which I thought I made it obviously clear was where said review was made.Oh yeah?
Man, 22, Dies After Liver Transplant Refused
A 22-year-old alcoholic has died after being refused a life-saving liver transplant because he was too ill to leave hospital and prove he could stay sober.
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