Fred[OZ75] wrote:
I'm an Aussie so I didn't vote as this is up to the sepo's
We have universal health care like every other OECD country except the US, what it does is set a minimum level of health care which any private hospital or service needs to meet or better otherwise people just go to the public system. The public system is far from perfect and if you don't have private cover of some type then you pay more tax so there is plenty of incentive for those how can afford private cover to get it.
The biggest problem is mainly people going to the government hospital for general GP visits and clogging up the hospital and the "waiting list" for general surgery (ie non-life threatening conditions). Then again for basically free health care that's the price you got to pay, if you want better get private cover lower your tax and get a government rebate of 30% of the private insurance cost.
Also we don't really pay that much extra in tax compared to Sepo's, then again we only help out in US invasions and don't invade countries on our own which is where most of the US tax dollar seems to be going. Oh we also control our boarders so we don't end up paying for other countries health care costs too (well except those Kiwi's)
(Edit for typo-dyslexia)
In Eastern Europe, public hospitals are no-questions-asked. The doctors are barely paid, but take minor bribes (in the $20-200 range) to expidite their services.
You then have private care clinics (Swiss, German, Arab, Swedish) with top-quality care but forced to compete pricewise.
End result, birth of my kid, with 5 ultrasounds, German doctor, Westernized facility, in Romania...$700 start to finish out-of-pocket, including all bribes and a generous tip to the nurses.
What the poll leaves out though is the 3rd option. Both. They can and do successfully co-exist. The emergence of a national healthcare system provides a new standard of competition for the private clinics. We'll end up with a very good system for the average joe. Free healthcare but with a lower (but still safe) service standard, and privatized healthcare with top service but no more $100 aspirins dispensed at the hospital.
Last edited by GorillaTicTacs (2007-08-08 05:14:04)