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Name:   copperline - Email Member
Subject:   A national healthcare system
Date:   4/1/2012 9:03:02 PM

              This is a really interesting article that i’ll use to make a pro-universal healthcare argument to the forum.    BTW, i just bought a new asbestos monitor just to prepare for the flaming i expect to get…  i must be in the mood to be abused….

http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/137358/sonia-shah/when-superbugs-attack?page=show

              Case in point:  the recent discovery of naturally occurring super-nasty infection that has the potential to become a world-wide killer as it mutates & becomes more infectious.   Right now, it’s primarily in india.  However, the indian national medical health care system is so fragmented into areas of vastly underserved (poor) people, and vastly over-treated (rich) people.   Because it came into existence in this society, the bug stands a much better chance of developing and spreading, well beyond the boundaries of the indian border.

              For those interested, check out the article for more details while i jump to my point:  i believe having a fragmented & uncoordinated Health Care system(or should i make that systems) like we currently is not going to protect the state of our nation’s health over time, in fact, it’s going to make it worse.   As the healthcare demand grows and healthcare expenses rise, the population stratifies into groups of haves and have-nots.   Certainly, those people who don’t get adequate health care suffer terribly.   But the article points to a larger problem:   antibiotic resistant bugs are actually promoted by the lack of uniform healthcare… more easily allowing them to mutate into a more transmissible incarnation… becoming more damaging and less stoppable.

              What we have in the US  is a patchwork system primarily designed around profit-seeking medical corporations,  insurance corporations battling each other for market share while spending huge sums on that administrative portion of your healthcare dollar,  consumers who frequently can’t make sense of their insurance options, mazes of regulations to comply with, hungry lawyers…..   A country where pharmaceutical companies buy TV time to convince me that depression hurts and tell me that Cialis will really jazz up my life.

              it seems to me that only a highly centralized and uniform healthcare system, with the ability to reach the largest possible number of the US population is the only answer.  That, i think, fairly well points me toward favoring a single-payer system… like a nationwide Medicare program might look.   The article describes what an unplanned system looks like (as currently in india).   Chaotic, ineffective, unfair and unable to respond to national healthcare needs because it developed around market  forces.  This ineffective, fragmented national health care system can then actually promote bugs that have potential to become epidemic, leading to some pretty horrifying scenes i had hoped to only see in a movie….   i don’t base my argument simply on some apocalyptic scenario of mass devastation, but this article describes a really frightening nation-wide health crisis for india that’s on the verge of being exported into the developed world.     i think that if universal healthcare isn’t going to be available anytime in the future of the US, then we won’t be prepared for treating problems like bird flu, and now NDM-1 as they arrive.      

              Maybe not now, but sometime in the near future, i don’t think we will have any choice except to have a Universal Healthcare System, with all it’s very likely flaws and shortcomings…   Not a cure for everything, but better than where we are headed now.    Everybody should hope it won’t take another Spanish Flu-type calamity to prompt the changes we need, but i’ll readily admit it’s going to be a hard pill to swallow.   ;)

    Your thoughts?





Name:   wix - Email Member
Subject:   You are suggesting
Date:   4/1/2012 9:52:38 PM

a bureaucracy with all the efficiency of, oh say, the US Post Office, or any number of other "centralized" efforts.  You probably need to stop reading left wing propaganda before you are lost completely in their BS.  If India's health care is the answer, why are all their doctors practicing in the US.  We have terrible problems with our system, but most of the problems are government induced, not by pill companies, doctors, and hospitals as you insinuate.  Without US medical care and all its ills you wouldn't have to worry about Cialis and its terrible effects.  If the courts and Congress hadn't ordered free care for all, your costs would not be as ridiculous they are.  Wait till we add 15 million more to Medicaid and your health care costs now will look like $1.00 gas.  Remember that.



Name:   GoneFishin - Email Member
Subject:   Mr Wix
Date:   4/1/2012 10:34:21 PM

Let's assume everything you have written is true. How would you solve the problem?



Name:   Barneget - Email Member
Subject:   GF, define the problem
Date:   4/1/2012 11:49:18 PM

CL offered a good read, and an opinion. What or which problem is Wix tasked with solving? Curing the Indians? Building clinics in Bombay? Or should he focus on the US and access to care? Market forces? Too many lawyers? Improving the CDC? Redistributing wealth to close the gap between haves and have nots? Helping people make decisions about their medical insurance plans? Limiting Cialis commercials? Or the growth in depression diagnosis since chairman o occupied the White House? We have short memories. Health care costs began their escalation in the mid 80s, supposedly because of a shortage of RN's. HMO's were introduced as a way to manage health and related costs. Premiums stabilized, and remained relatively stable even as shrillary was working diligently to inject greater central control. As she was rebuffed, the dim Congress got involved and passed new legislation requiring coverage for HIV, mental illness, drug and alcohol rehab, and portability. That's when premiums started their steady annual double digit increases, without letup. They, the dim dipsticks in DC created the problem of insurance affordability, and now pretend to solve it by taking it from a catastrophic insurance plan to financial catastrophe. And Wix's point was those same jackasses, elected or appointed, have to this point, regardless of cost, failed to demonstrate any ability to provide any service equal to or better than similar services in the private sector. I think the dems designed this takeover to eliminate health care consumers capacity to compare the at best lousy services they are capable of providing to the acceptable or better services most of us enjoy access to today. So again, which problem is Wix tasked with solving?



Name:   GoneFishin - Email Member
Subject:   GF, define the problem
Date:   4/1/2012 11:59:55 PM (updated 4/2/2012 12:01:58 AM)

"And Wix's point was those same jackasses, elected or appointed, have to this point, regardless of cost, failed to demonstrate any ability to provide any service equal to or better than similar services in the private sector." Are both you and Wix suggesting there are no problems in the USA??



Name:   copperline - Email Member
Subject:   You are suggesting
Date:   4/2/2012 12:09:56 AM

What I'm suggesting is that we need a system where you can walk into any MD's office or hospital and get the treatment you need.   I don't think that any large organization can be truly efficient, but I do think a uniform system of coverage is bound to be more efficient than a patchwork of insurance policies that only cover a portion of us.   I just don't believe I want commercial companies controlling national healthcare, because you would never want a fox to guard the henhouse.  And I'd have to disagree... the government hasn't been running the healthcare system and causing costs to rise.... cost increases are equally likely to be the product of insurance, pharmaceutical, and medical corporations that have narrow interests, not national ones.  Costs are rising because of a whole lot of diverse & complex factors.   But popular opinion that government should stay out of healthcare ignores the fact that some problems are so big that only the government has the resources, power and responsibility to address them. 

The Post Office may be inefficient, ....as big as it is, it would just have to be.   But imagine how it would have limited the development of the country if we hadn't developed a national postal service in the first place.  Didn't we need the government to set up a uniform system for carrying the mail because it was in our national interests?



Name:   Barneget - Email Member
Subject:   GF, define the problem
Date:   4/2/2012 7:14:31 AM

I am not saying there are no problems in the US. But since you asked, there are very few crisis at the national level, and health care, along with the vastly over reaching response, is among the long list (much longer since January 07) list of fabrications. You asked how Wix would solve it? I asked for a definition of "it".



Name:   copperline - Email Member
Subject:   distilling down the question
Date:   4/2/2012 8:41:53 AM

Distilling the question is a good idea, the topic is way big.  So here goes:    Would you support or oppose  the idea that everyone should have equal access to healthcare in the US?   Would universal healthcare improve & protect the health of the US population as a whole?  Or is this not important enough to try to do?

is the reason for opposing universal coverage based on a bias against all government programs in general because they are seen as inefficient ....while private corporations are regarded as not wasteful as we are confident that competition will eliminate the "poor" performers?    Can we trust that private corporations will make the best choices about such a large (and potentially profitable) issue?   And are they be guided by what's best for the country, or by their balance sheets?





Name:   comrade - Email Member
Subject:   distilling down the question
Date:   4/2/2012 9:13:27 AM


Define "access to healthcare"



Name:   copperline - Email Member
Subject:   distilling down the question
Date:   4/2/2012 1:42:47 PM

In this case, equal access means the same healthcare would be available to every citizen.



Name:   MrHodja - Email Member
Subject:   distilling down the question
Date:   4/2/2012 2:21:23 PM

Equal at what level?  Who pays for it?  What about those who want and can afford more?



Name:   copperline - Email Member
Subject:   distilling down the question
Date:   4/2/2012 5:37:23 PM

I was thinking about that... We'd have to have a system where everyone has the same basic level of care, but y o u could buy supplimental benefits. I don't think I can convince anyone, but expect the costs would be paid by taking the corporate profits out of the equation, and reducing overhead by streamling the system under one entity. The devil is always in the details... Basic question remains: would it be better or worse for us if everybody had a right to basic healthcare?



Name:   wix - Email Member
Subject:   copperline
Date:   4/2/2012 6:36:09 PM

Where in heavens name do you get the idea that everyone has a "right" to healthcare.  The whole idea was dreamed up as a way to buy votes; do you not understand that concept.  You have a right to freedom and the pursuit of happiness; everything else must be achieved via sweat of the brow.  Grasp the concept.



Name:   copperline - Email Member
Subject:   copperline
Date:   4/2/2012 6:47:48 PM

I'm asking if US citizens should have a right to healthcare, certainly right now we do not. Even people who work can't always afford healthcare insurance these days... And that number more likely to grow in the future. That's part of the problem.



Name:   wix - Email Member
Subject:   copperline
Date:   4/2/2012 7:00:00 PM

What is your basis for thinking anyone has a "right" to healthcare.  I find it interesting that you state "US citizen".  Illegal aliens only have to go sit in the ER of any hospital to receive free healthcare.  Mandated free healthcare is available today;  read my post to GF above to see how it has affected our healthcare system.



Name:   copperline - Email Member
Subject:   copperline
Date:   4/2/2012 8:47:44 PM

I don't believe there is any "mandated free care", we have a system where MDs (fearing liability risks) treat people without insurance and the costs are passed on to insured patients by increased charges. This forces us all to pay for uninsured care anyway...only at greater cost. But people without insurance can't get adequate care (such as meds or followup care). The is a long term cost to inadequate care, as the article suggests.



Name:   wix - Email Member
Subject:   copperline
Date:   4/2/2012 9:38:42 PM

Read my second answer to GF concerning the Hill-Burton Law. If you don't believe me about the mandated free care, google Hill-Burton and educate yourself. Your perception of healthcare in the US needs some enlightening and a dose of realism. Believe me, MD's don't do anything for free unless they are forced to.



Name:   comrade - Email Member
Subject:   copperline
Date:   4/2/2012 9:50:30 PM

Copperline - you make the assumption (assertion?) that health care is denied to a certain group at the present. Who are you talking about? If anyone shows up at any ER in the US, they must be treated to the standards of adequate care as agreed upon the by the AMA, hospitals, and the US government - no one can be denied treatment or the hospital/provider is subject to prosecution at the federal level. It is true that to be treated, one has to show up and request it - so are you thinking that people don't show up because they don't feel they can pay for it? (Not being able to afford basics doesn't keep most of them from asking for it.) This care is paid for by everyone's taxes already, and the ones that can't afford the care don't pay taxes anyway. It just seems a grand shell game to me, and the only intent is to glom on to even more of the "haves" money....... Access suggests the opportunity, which we all have. Purchasing power and choice are different things, and unfortunately are basics of capitalism. There are many governments based on socialist principles that would love to have you join them.



Name:   wix - Email Member
Subject:   comrade
Date:   4/2/2012 10:12:09 PM

Just to clarify your statement about who pays for the free loaders in the ER, most of that free care is passed on to patient charges which wind up being paid by insurance companies who pass it along to premium payers, or to the few who pay billed charges. Of the guvment programs Medicare pays best, but doesn't pay actual costs so private payers have to pick up some of the cost shift. Medicaid is a huge loss for the healthcare industry and cost shifting to private insurance is the primary reason for escalating premiums. Free care is a total cost shift to privates. Illegal aliens are free care. Copperline, believe what you want, but there are the facts.



Name:   comrade - Email Member
Subject:   comrade
Date:   4/2/2012 10:33:53 PM

In an ER, there is no private insurance company to pay for non-payers. It is a hospital obligation (courtesy of the government) for any hospital that accepts Medicare/Medicaid. The very few hospitals that are entirely private and do not accept Medicare are still obligated to treat, and that money comes from hospital capital entirely. It is true that insurance companies and hospitals have lots of back-room and under the table dealings over re-imbursement/charges  (to "square up" at the end of the year) and there may be some passed on rate increases as a result, but the majority is essentially government subsidization for the opportunity to treat the giant volume of Medicare/Medicaid





Name:   wix - Email Member
Subject:   comrade
Date:   4/2/2012 11:07:17 PM

Just exactly where does the guvment subsidy come from? Does the Fed write a check? I hope you don't think Medicaid and Medicare pay enough to cover the overhead and free care. Every billing center has to adjust its charges to try to cover costs of the guvment patients. Example: MRI. Billed at $1,600, Medicaid pays $200, Medicare pays $450, Blue Cross $650, Xyz Insurance $750. Freeloader $000. Cost for MRI is $ 500. As you can see, the insurance companies have to make up the losses by guvment payers. To my knowledge the only direct subsidy to a.hospital comes from local guvment, not the Feds.



Name:   comrade - Email Member
Subject:   comrade
Date:   4/3/2012 7:38:02 AM

you are confusing billing with actual cost. the volume of the government business is what makes everyone fall in line so it isn't a direct subsidy, just as a tax write-off isn't a direct subsidy...



Name:   wix - Email Member
Subject:   comrade
Date:   4/3/2012 8:38:25 AM

No I'm not confusing costs with billing. Remember that city/county/authority facilities don't pay income taxes and many more facilities operate as not-for-profits. Before you can worry about deducting billing losses, you've got to be paid enough to cover actual costs. I agree that the guvment is an 800 lb gorilla in the picture and healthcare facilities can't generally live without their patients, at least Medicare. Problem is guvment portion of pie continues to grow, which also means cost shifting to privates grows exponentially. It's not a pretty picture.



Name:   copperline - Email Member
Subject:   A national healthcare system
Date:   4/3/2012 7:57:16 PM

              This thread is about to run out of steam but since i started it, let me make a few more observations.  it’s a terribly complex issue with lots of POV’s, but no one here argued that it is good for us to have lot of people going without healthcare coverage.   Disagreement with Universal Coverage comes from questions of how we would pay for it, whether the government caused the inflation of healthcare in the first place (and could fix it by ‘undoing’ this), and whether the government could deliver a system more efficiently than a multitude of private companies… but no one said it would be bad if everyone had basic care.    Everyone seems to agree that the costs of caring for uninsured people results in higher prices passed along and ultimately paid by all of us.   There was some suggestion that we might not actually have a national healthcare problem because free care is available in any ER, still….most people agree that rising costs are threatening the system and ER care is not really “free”.   Wix offered some specific ideas, but i think he might agree his ideas would only plug a few holes in a very leaky ship.

              Here are some numbers to ponder:   16.3% (50 million) of us don’t have healthcare insurance.   9.9 million of these are non-citizens, but 40 million are citizens.      31/% of people in the US relied on government programs for healthcare in 2010, and this number is on the increase…. it was 24.2% in 1999.

              And the World Health Organization ranked US Healthcare highest in costs…. but 37th in overall performance, and 72nd in overall level of health in 2000. 

              65% of Americans have commercial insurance policies thru their jobs or by direct purchase, and 31% rely on public programs.    14.5% (45 million) are on Medicare, 15.9% Medicaid (48 million), and 4.2% (13 million) have military health insurance.   With this public-private system, the U.S. spends more on healthcare than any other nation in the world, but is the only wealthy industrialized country in the world that lacks some form of universal health care.  We also spend more money per person than any other nation, and a greater percentage of total income in the US is spent on health care than in any UN member state.  

              But if government programs only account for 35% of the market,  how can we say that the government alone has caused the inflationary spiral?    65% of our healthcare was administered by for-profit corporations.   Everybody focuses on the need to reduce the government’s presumed role in the problem,  and shies away from  the need to change the impact of profit-driven strategies even though these occupy the majority of the market.  i don't understand how we can have faith that if the government "just got out of the way" and let those corporations create our national healthcare policy... that we would all be better off.

              So why don’t more people just buy commercial health care policies?    What would happen if we pared back government programs and told all those people to start looking for private medical insurance?    The average commercial premium for family coverage is now $13,770 per year now…and that cost has doubled in the past 10 yrs.   This means 1 in 4 working adults are already uninsured & 9.8% of kids under 18 have no coverage in spite of government programs targeting them.

              in Canada, the only country easily comparable to the US in size and culture, they have a single-payer healthcare system.   in 2006, per-capita spending for health care in Canada was (converted to US dollars) $3,678; in the U.S., $6,714.   Here we spent 15.3% of our GDP on health care in that year; Canada spent only 10.0%.   Studies do have different opinions when comparing the details of the two systems, but not the fundamentals.      But a 2007 review of all studies comparing health outcomes in Canada and the US in a Canadian peer-reviewed medical journal found that "health outcomes may be superior in patients cared for in Canada versus the United States, but differences are not consistent."    Canada appears to have found a way to constrain the growth of their healthcare costs.  We haven't.      

    Whether the differences were consistent or not, Canadians spent much less, had more of their citizenry covered by health insurance, and had at least the same health outcomes we did.         To me, that's pretty strong evidence that our way isn't the only way of doing things.





Name:   comrade - Email Member
Subject:   A national healthcare system
Date:   4/3/2012 9:12:17 PM

Well, The question of whether healthcare is a "right" was once again addressed in the thread. It certainly is great for every person to have healthcare-if they choose to have it. Children are a special topic, but the rest of us supposedly have free will. You start with an assumption that everyone deserves/wants/seeks a certain level of immediate and on-going medical treatment. How do you afford homeopathy, chiropractic, mid-wives, etc., their place in the healthcare world? You understand that some walk amongst us who choose these options and actively avoid "conventional" medical care. Do you think the WHO includes this in their assessment of quality healthcare? I just wish I had known about Canadian medical care before I blew all this dough on my heart transplant...



Name:   Barneget - Email Member
Subject:   Problem solved
Date:   4/3/2012 9:17:55 PM

Copper, your calculator is the issue. Your numbers indicate 96+% currently covered, yet claim 50 million uninsured. That would estimate the current US population at something over a billion people. Major medical coverage, for a family of 4, $1000 deductible, $3500 stop loss, is available for far less than $13k. Hit the BC website, and try various ages. Alabama rates, higher than Georgia, range from $320-$650, with dental. Top rate, paying out deductible still brings it in under $11k, lowest rate at $7k. The ACA results in rates in excess of $10k per uninsured. Have you ever thought about how much it costs taxpayers to have Medicare payments administered? Do you think our gummint is remotely capable of providing payment administration for less than a private company?



Name:   copperline - Email Member
Subject:   Problem solved
Date:   4/3/2012 10:01:44 PM

Those statistics are from several sources, so the calculations should be seen only to the other stats in the paragraph.  But I do think the numbers tell a story, but I'm not shooting for a doctoral thesis when I post on the forum....  

I am in favor of being inclusive of those branches of medicine like midwives and such.   We'd have to cast a broad net, besides, midwives do a great job at much less cost now.  It's just that insurance companies hate them.    Thing is, I do see private corporations to be as wasteful in their own way as you think the government agencies are.   They spend money on competing with each other, and this is wasteful.   They develop overly complex, patchwork systems of billing and collections that require increases in operational expenses in hospitals & doctors offices.....  It is in the interest of an insurance company to delay payments for as long as possible, or deny them.   Insurance companies don't reward themselves for how much they paid out in claims, they hold out because that's the way the system is built.  

In any doctor's office, it is not uncommon for insurance claims to remain unpaid for many months.  Most often this is because the billing system is so diverse it's easy to make coding errors.    I don't think other types of businessmen would want to stand for that.    I try to imagine what would happen at the local auto parts store if everytime a customer came in, the clerk had to fill out a number of insurance forms, verify the insurance covers your store and the part your customer wants, give the customer the part they need....and you know all  the time that it cannot be returned.  Upon filing the request for payment, you will not necessarily know what the payment will be.   The parts clerk may have to refile your claim for the part a few times.  However, if your auto parts store happens to not be one of a limited number of stores approved by said insurance company, then your part is gone and you aren't going to collect a dime.       Oddly, the insurance company has decided that by limiting the number of autoparts stores in a region, they can keep their costs down even further.   They do this by pressuring other stores nearby to accept a lower price for that part the customer wants.  

Yeah, I think that's wasteful.



Name:   wix - Email Member
Subject:   Copperline
Date:   4/3/2012 10:22:33 PM

Wow, I'm sure glad Barnegat did the math for me, because it sure looked absurd at a glance. Must've com from your socialist BS guide on how to baffle the uninformed and ignorant, or the NY Times. The stats where US healthcare are compared unfavorably with some socialized medicine countries do not take into account the demographics of the US. A country ranked very high like, say, Norway doesn't have to deal with all your Democrat constituents like illegals, a huge dead weight of a welfare social element, or irresponsible individuals, crackheads, dopeheads, and the like. Eliminate the liberal element and the US can compete with any country. There I said it, let's move on. Your naive, idealistic essay is the thought process that got us where we are today. It's well intended, I'm sure, but just not true. Some famous President once said something like, "It's not that liberals are dumb, it's just that what they know isn't true."



Name:   wix - Email Member
Subject:   Coding
Date:   4/3/2012 10:52:00 PM

Just remember the CPT, DRG, and other coding systems used in healthcare were all designed and required by the US guvment. I agree it is an archaic system that promotes mistakes and much fraud, but it's the smartest thinking your bureaucrats could handle.



Name:   Talullahhound - Email Member
Subject:   Case in Point
Date:   4/7/2012 9:47:50 AM


Back in October, submitted a claim to health insurance for something specifically allowed under insurance.  Followed up several times to be told it was "under review".  Called the other day to be told that the check had been issued in January, and that it was still outstanding.  Had to request the check be reissued.  Total time elapsed has been 6 months.  Good thing I wasn't waiting for the reimbusement to pay other bills.  Ridiculous wait.







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