You're claiming that this is significant which can only be the case if it is different. The null hypothesis says they are the same, you have to disprove the expected result.FEOS wrote:
Such a system neither exists nor is being offered as an alternative.PureFodder wrote:
So a government run helathcare that offered several choices of levels of care and costs would replicate (and in some cases increase) the choice seen in the current system?FEOS wrote:
As I stated before, there are multiple options available from single providers...even for the smallest businesses.PureFodder wrote:
but it is company dependent, therefore a lot of people won't get that choice, especially in small businesses and for the low paid workers.You tell me.PureFodder wrote:
and is this any different in the US than anywhere else?
The other effects I discussed have the same effects, causing doctors to do unnecessary tests, therefore to show that tort is the prime cause of the costs as opposed to the other effects that have the same result, there is a burden of proof, again on you.FEOS wrote:
The proof has already been provided by the doctors doing the unnecessary tests and procedures.PureFodder wrote:
As the effects all have the same general effect of increasing unneccessary procedures, the burden of proving that tort as opposed to the other effects os what is driving this cost.FEOS wrote:
Pretending tort reform wouldn't address much of the behavior-driven costs is just as much of a misrepresentation. I didn't bundle up the effects of overall tort--only the medical-related torts (primarily malpractice). It helps your argument to make the assumption that I did bundle up all torts, but since I didn't, all it does is show that you don't bother to actually read or understand contrary arguments to your own. You argue to argue, not to learn.PureFodder wrote:
As I've shown below, the legal differences are mainly misrepresented by bundling the effects of the tort system with several other effects that all act in the same way and then pretending that they don't exist. The legal systems in the Us and other EU countries are fairly similar.
All rich countries with government run healthcare have private companies that wilfilly choose to operate in the healthcare sector and do so profitably. It works everywhere else.FEOS wrote:
There is a difference between having one's profits lowered and operating at a loss. The former already occurs within the current system. The latter occurs when servicing government-only patients.PureFodder wrote:
Or to have their profits lowered by reasonable market forces (remember that drug companies operate predominantly within the government granted monopoly markets of the patent system).FEOS wrote:
There's no doubt that that legal action was stupid. But considering the prices the government will pay under Medicare/Medicaid, I can understand the drug companies wanting no part of it...nobody willingly operates at a loss.PureFodder wrote:
The political differences are significant I guess as the US government has a history of being more willing to prioritise the profits of big business over everything else in healtcare in comparison to other countries (see the mind shatteringly dumb move to legally prevent the US government from negotiating for lower drug prices.)
Profits are already governed by market forces...as they should be. And as opposed to what you would impose, which is government-determined "reasonable" profits.
I take it that you accept that you didn't read the report properly, accept that their results were based on the Kessler and McClellan figures and that you apologise for accusing me of not reading sources when I clearly did read it properly and you didn't?FEOS wrote:
Except for those who are getting screwed coming to the US for their care.PureFodder wrote:
And yet every other country manages to keep their costs well below those seen in the US with a fairly wide range of different levels of involvement of the private sector. The private sector in those countries willfully participates in it showing that they obviously aren't getting totally screwed as there's nothing stopping them from just doing somewthing else.FEOS wrote:
No, the entire US system doesn't pay too much. And even if it did when averaging in the underpayment by the government, that bundling misrepresents the entirety of the situation. What we have is a government-run program (similar to what is being offered up as a possible single-payer alternative) that doesn't pay anywhere close to the actual costs, much less cover even a minimal profit margin for the businesses involved. That deficit is then taken up by the private industries effectively subsidizing the government by paying reasonable charges. Again, the reason why many physicians do not accept government programs or government provided insurance--nobody wants to operate at a loss.PureFodder wrote:
The entire US system pays too much. If almost the entire system is government run then the government will by definition be paying the correct costs. That's how it works everywhere else.
If the entire system is run by the government, then the entire system will cease to operate because the government doesn't pay enough to keep the system sustained. In order for that to happen, ALL medical-related industry would have to be run by the government, not just delivery of care. There is simply no way that will happen.So where is your sourcing that the Kessler and McClellan work is invalid? If you don't like that, I can find plenty of others. Just as you can find plenty to support your position.PureFodder wrote:
FEOS wrote:
No, you didn't. You ignored the actual costs associated with overtreatment and other actions performed by doctors explicitly because of the fear of malpractice claims. Add in the actual costs of insurance to those who provide care and it stops becoming a trivial situation. You conveniently lump all torts in to the situation instead of looking at the actual impact of medical-related torts. The studies are there. I can't make you stop ignoring them simply because they aren't in line with your views.
There was nothing in the source I provided that said poor decisions by doctors was the primary reason--only that it could be a contributing factor. The bottomline is that when doctors were interviewed, the primary reason given for the prescription of extra tests was to cover their asses in a malpractice environment.
The tort system is the primary driver of the unnecessary costs, as stated in the source provided and related by the doctors being interviewed. And, as has been provided in other sources, the tort system as currently enacted has not accomplished it's stated intent as more innocent doctors are punished than those who are actually guilty of malpractice. The two situations feed on each other.
No, it certainly does not. Your argument ignores the findings of the study, which I pointed out above.
That number is from the JEC, not Kessler and McClellan. Go back and actually READ the sources you try to debunk. Better yet...just go back and READ the posts previous to this one, particularly the ones citing the JEC studies.So their source IS exactly the report that I was talking about, maybe if you had read the JEC report you would have seen it as the fact that they base it on the Kessler and McClellan work is utterly transparent as they repeatedly state that.JEC wrote:
In an authoritative study on defensive medicine,
Stanford University researchers Daniel Kessler and Mark McClellan found that expanded
malpractice liability significantly increased medical expenditures. Specifically, they found “that
malpractice reforms that directly reduce provider liability pressure lead to reductions of 5 to 9
percent in medical expenditures without substantial effects on mortality or medical
complications.”56 Based on national health expenditure data, Kessler and McClellan’s estimates
imply that medical liability reforms could have reduced defensive medicine expenditures by
between $69 billion and $124 billion in 2001, or between 3.2 and 5.8 times the amount of
malpractice premiums.57 Importantly, the practice of defensive medicine does not produce
measurable health benefits.58
......
Reform of the medical liability system would generate savings in a number of areas.
Kessler and McClellan’s research indicates that medical liability reforms, such as those
discussed here, would reduce health care spending by 5 percent to 9 percent, without an
appreciable impact on health outcomes. Assuming the reforms are fully implemented after three
years (i.e., by 2006), the gross savings would range from $99 billion to $178 billion.
You're not going to convince me. I'm clearly not going to convince you. The difference between your position and mine is that mine is not academic. It is practical. I have dealt with both systems extensively and have seen positives and negatives of both. Government-run programs have their place for a subset of the population. But for the vast majority of the US population, the current US system is as good or better than alternatives offered in other countries. Multiple polls and studies support that position. That position is not mutually exclusive of a desire for doing things better and more efficiently...but none of the alternatives offered up thus far do either of those things.
If you actually look at the report properly you'll also note that they conclude the savings will not be anywhere near the $230 billion that you claim, but $39 to $71 billion per year. That would be a third to a quarter of what you claim their results to be. That represents a 1.9-3.4% saving in the US healthcare costs. Whilst these high numbers would be better than nothing that's a long, long way from making any significant impact in the healthcare costs of the USA. Clearly even this data doesn't support the idea that tort reform will have a significant impact on healthcare costs in the USA especially when you realise that healthcare costs are increasing at an annual rate of 6%.
Last edited by PureFodder (2009-08-25 00:56:18)