PureFodder
Member
+225|6588

HollisHurlbut wrote:

Ty wrote:

As for long waits the only thing you have to wait for is organ transplants, and that's mostly because matching donors aren't easy to come by.
O RLY?  Perhaps we could take your statement as true if we consider people who get denied treatment because the medicine is just too durned 'spensive or the patient is due too old as not having to "wait".  But oh shucks, we can't do that either because people (SHOCK!) do have to wait under commie health care, sometimes with potentially lethal results.

Oh, and let's not forget the fact that Canada's "excellent" system of government-only health care, with private care being illegal, was declared a violation of human rights recently by the Canadian Supreme Court because the waiting lines were so long and the care was so crap.  But let's not let a piddly little thing like that ruin our vision of government-run health care as a panacea for all our ills, shall we?  Press onward, young soldiers!

You'll say, I'm sure, that some care is better than no care. Perhaps that's true, for those who have none to begin with. But the rest of us who do have it will be subjected to rationing and waiting queues that we don't have now. The biggest problem with socialized health care isn't that it would (supposedly) improve the lives of the minority who are uninsured, it's that it would do it at the cost (health-wise, not just money-wise) of the rest of us who are insured now.

If you have a major accident and need immediate medical attention you will get it. They won't shove you out the door as soon as you're stable either, they'll make damn sure you've recovered first. I think it's perfectly reasonable for Americans to want this kind of sevice, the truth is they're certainly not getting it.
Oh, that is the truth, is it?  From a car rollover to ACL reconstruction to fucking cancer, I've had nothing but positive things to say about US health care.  And those are just the major things I've had to deal with.  I see no reason I should be compelled to dumb down the quality of my care for the benefit of someone else.  Am I being selfish?  Yeah, I probably am.  But it's my health we're talking about here, so why shouldn't I be selfish?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/deborah-b … 55749.html
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/co … 042072.htm
If you find a suspicious-looking mole and want to see a dermatologist, you can expect an average wait of 38 days in the U.S., and up to 73 days if you live in Boston, according to researchers at the University of California at San Francisco who studied the matter. Got a knee injury? A 2004 survey by medical recruitment firm Merritt, Hawkins & Associates found the average time needed to see an orthopedic surgeon ranges from 8 days in Atlanta to 43 days in Los Angeles. Nationwide, the average is 17 days. "Waiting is definitely a problem in the U.S., especially for basic care,"
There is no systemized collection of data on wait times in the U.S. That makes it difficult to draw comparisons with countries that have national health systems, where wait times are not only tracked but made public. However, a 2005 survey by the Commonwealth Fund of sick adults in six nations found that only 47% of U.S. patients could get a same- or next-day appointment for a medical problem, worse than every other country except Canada.
The argument that the US system doesn't suffer from large waiting times may not be as true as you think. By far the main reason for the belief in the US system not having long wait times is that unlike other countries, the US doesn't collect and publish them, leading to the assumption that they don't exist. Oh, and when you hear (true) stories about how fast the US system gives hip replacement surgeries, remember that the vast majority of those are done via medicare, showing how good that is, not how good the private system is.

As far as rationing goes, remember that the current US system cannot continue, unlike other countries, the US system has to change in the next decade or so or it will cripple the US. The debate around US healthcare is not 'the currents system vs. a nationalised system', but 'which system that will cost over a trillion dollars a year less than the current system will the US change to'.
Catbox
forgiveness
+505|7019

Karbin wrote:

If you were to have Universal health care in the US, (not going to happen, but we'll carry on) you would have to kill off the private heath care system.
It's one of the reasons its gotten so expensive.
A two tier system is just as bad, and what the US has right now. If you can pay, out of pocket or through a (shudder) HMO, for most things you go to the front of the line.
If you have no coverage....  well.... all of us have heard of "dumping".

If you have a good health plan, every one will question it. God help you if it's a good plan from your employer.... that the employer pays for.
A good example would be the coverage in the unionised auto industry.
Ok, that's another debate.

I do live in a country that has universal care both of my parents are alive and financially sound because of it.
Mom had a heart valve replaced, took 8 months to get it done but, it got done.
I've been told in the US it's a $100,000 operation, here it didn't cost a dime.
Dad had a stroke. No questions asked, just treated fast, fast, fast.

Here thats all under threat now, as the only hospital in my town is a "For Profit" hospital
You aren't from the US?   you said you work in the US auto industry?
Love is the answer
Catbox
forgiveness
+505|7019

PureFodder wrote:

HollisHurlbut wrote:

Ty wrote:

As for long waits the only thing you have to wait for is organ transplants, and that's mostly because matching donors aren't easy to come by.
O RLY?  Perhaps we could take your statement as true if we consider people who get denied treatment because the medicine is just too durned 'spensive or the patient is due too old as not having to "wait".  But oh shucks, we can't do that either because people (SHOCK!) do have to wait under commie health care, sometimes with potentially lethal results.

Oh, and let's not forget the fact that Canada's "excellent" system of government-only health care, with private care being illegal, was declared a violation of human rights recently by the Canadian Supreme Court because the waiting lines were so long and the care was so crap.  But let's not let a piddly little thing like that ruin our vision of government-run health care as a panacea for all our ills, shall we?  Press onward, young soldiers!

You'll say, I'm sure, that some care is better than no care. Perhaps that's true, for those who have none to begin with. But the rest of us who do have it will be subjected to rationing and waiting queues that we don't have now. The biggest problem with socialized health care isn't that it would (supposedly) improve the lives of the minority who are uninsured, it's that it would do it at the cost (health-wise, not just money-wise) of the rest of us who are insured now.

If you have a major accident and need immediate medical attention you will get it. They won't shove you out the door as soon as you're stable either, they'll make damn sure you've recovered first. I think it's perfectly reasonable for Americans to want this kind of sevice, the truth is they're certainly not getting it.
Oh, that is the truth, is it?  From a car rollover to ACL reconstruction to fucking cancer, I've had nothing but positive things to say about US health care.  And those are just the major things I've had to deal with.  I see no reason I should be compelled to dumb down the quality of my care for the benefit of someone else.  Am I being selfish?  Yeah, I probably am.  But it's my health we're talking about here, so why shouldn't I be selfish?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/deborah-b … 55749.html
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/co … 042072.htm
If you find a suspicious-looking mole and want to see a dermatologist, you can expect an average wait of 38 days in the U.S., and up to 73 days if you live in Boston, according to researchers at the University of California at San Francisco who studied the matter. Got a knee injury? A 2004 survey by medical recruitment firm Merritt, Hawkins & Associates found the average time needed to see an orthopedic surgeon ranges from 8 days in Atlanta to 43 days in Los Angeles. Nationwide, the average is 17 days. "Waiting is definitely a problem in the U.S., especially for basic care,"
There is no systemized collection of data on wait times in the U.S. That makes it difficult to draw comparisons with countries that have national health systems, where wait times are not only tracked but made public. However, a 2005 survey by the Commonwealth Fund of sick adults in six nations found that only 47% of U.S. patients could get a same- or next-day appointment for a medical problem, worse than every other country except Canada.
The argument that the US system doesn't suffer from large waiting times may not be as true as you think. By far the main reason for the belief in the US system not having long wait times is that unlike other countries, the US doesn't collect and publish them, leading to the assumption that they don't exist. Oh, and when you hear (true) stories about how fast the US system gives hip replacement surgeries, remember that the vast majority of those are done via medicare, showing how good that is, not how good the private system is.

As far as rationing goes, remember that the current US system cannot continue, unlike other countries, the US system has to change in the next decade or so or it will cripple the US. The debate around US healthcare is not 'the currents system vs. a nationalised system', but 'which system that will cost over a trillion dollars a year less than the current system will the US change to'.
Obama says thanks for your support...
Love is the answer
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6708|North Carolina

Bertster7 wrote:

Which is it? Are the American people paranoid and selfish or is the government incompetent and corrupt?
We're paranoid, the government is corrupt, and we'd rather spend tons on healthcare via research rathar than on actually increasing affordability.

The center of our problem culturally is that we're all about advancing things with public money, but we tend to lack much faith in actually using that money for increasing public access.

We'd rather believe in markets that are rife with corporate collusion and lobbyist pandering.

In effect, we have a plutocratic system.  Granted, the sad thing is...  our system is still far better than most of the world's.  It's just that, among the First World, we have some of the greatest wealth disparity and disparity of access of any nation.

We err too much on the side of individualism.  Granted, Europe often errs too much on the side of collectivism.  Somewhere in between is a happy medium.
Harmor
Error_Name_Not_Found
+605|6851|San Diego, CA, USA

Spark wrote:

So you would not object to turning away a cancer patient, just because they're poor?
No.  We are only obligated to fix things like broken arms, or immediate care at our emergency rooms.

If you can find a doctor and a hospital willing to give you free health care, go for it, but I'm not going to pay for it.
Karbin
Member
+42|6597

[TUF]Catbox wrote:

Karbin wrote:

If you were to have Universal health care in the US, (not going to happen, but we'll carry on) you would have to kill off the private heath care system.
It's one of the reasons its gotten so expensive.
A two tier system is just as bad, and what the US has right now. If you can pay, out of pocket or through a (shudder) HMO, for most things you go to the front of the line.
If you have no coverage....  well.... all of us have heard of "dumping".

If you have a good health plan, every one will question it. God help you if it's a good plan from your employer.... that the employer pays for.
A good example would be the coverage in the unionised auto industry.
Ok, that's another debate.

I do live in a country that has universal care both of my parents are alive and financially sound because of it.
Mom had a heart valve replaced, took 8 months to get it done but, it got done.
I've been told in the US it's a $100,000 operation, here it didn't cost a dime.
Dad had a stroke. No questions asked, just treated fast, fast, fast.

Here thats all under threat now, as the only hospital in my town is a "For Profit" hospital
You aren't from the US?   you said you work in the US auto industry?
I'm not from the US but, I do work for one of the Detroit 3. For the purpose's of keeping my own sanity on this board, I'll not name it. 

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