If Democrats ignore health-care polls, midterms will be costly

Discussion in 'Blazers OT Forum' started by Denny Crane, Mar 11, 2010.

  1. Denny Crane

    Denny Crane It's not even loaded! Staff Member Administrator

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    whoa

    I never said govt. health care would be more efficient than private care. I've stated all along and numerous times that I favor a socialized health care system (like the VA) alongside the private sector one. Let the govt. compete. Though I predict it will be a lot like county hospitals now, or the VA, or the DMV, in terms of quality. But I think it could be funded much like the post office - by charging people for their stamps, not taxing a huge % of the economy just to pay for everyone's stamps.

    Note that socialized health care is not single payer. The govt. owns and runs the hospitals and clinics and pays the salaries of the doctors, nurses, and other staff.
     
  2. Denny Crane

    Denny Crane It's not even loaded! Staff Member Administrator

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    Extended unemployment benefits and your medical marijuana paid for. You're set for life!

    The reason why I think drug stocks would be a good investment is the same reason why the drug companies are behind this Bill. When someone else is paying for the drugs, and you can wine and dine doctors, the doctors will prescribe more drugs.
     
  3. MikeDC

    MikeDC Member

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    Seems to me its designed to make the problems in the current system worse, thereby paving the way for a complete takeover. Enertainingly, as I mentioned, it takes the bad things about the current system, which are largely government mandated, and expands and unimproves on them. A big part of the subtext of the current health care debate has been that this design is quite explicit. This plan is not explicitly a takeover, but it's meant to lead to one. And thus, anyone who has much sense and doesn't want that, should see these guys for the snake oil salesmen they are.

    Also, it's set to cost a couple trillion dollars we don't obviously have, which will impose deadweight costs on everything else.

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    Denny, I think some level of subsidization for rural medicine is already in place. From a broader perspective, many of those resources are publicly funded at least in part at state and local levels.

    One of the really big problems here, and its a typical symptom of how the government does things, is the typically high regulation in medical labor markets. This especially hits rural areas hard, and they would benefit by allowing NPs, paramedics, etc to perform more medical services. A good example of how this is playing out is in Alaska.

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    And, again, I'll ask for the tangible benefits of providing extremely high level health insurance to the uninsured. I'm solidly with Denny on this one. Studies (discussion and links here) have indicated that the uninsured actually get fairly good and fairly cheap health care. So the improvement that may come from this is likely quite small and relatively expensive.

    One of the biggest problems here is the current plan mandates extraordinarily high levels of coverage for folks and discourages out of pocket spending, which is yet another reason to expect it won't cut costs. It'll take a large swath of people who now have strong incentives to economize on health care, and give them strong incentives not to.
     
  4. Minstrel

    Minstrel Top Of The Pops Global Moderator

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    Hello darkness, my old friend
    The main issue to me is that everyone should have catastrophic health insurance. Yes, anyone can go to the emergency room and get treatment for an immediate issue. However, everyone can't get the drugs needed to treat cancer, that can run into the tens of thousands of dollars per month. Even if you did as Denny has suggested and provide the drugs as a loan and bill them later, that means people without catastrophic insurance will have to choose between life and the complete financial destruction of themselves and, potentially, their families. That isn't a reasonable thing to do, in my opinion, to force people to decide between the needed drugs to combat a serious illness and financial solvency.

    While I'd be in favour of even non-catastrophic health insurance for everyone, as I think it's important that people not avoid preventative care due to lack of money and then end up in the much more costly emergency room, it's really the catastrophic that I think is the absolute need.
     
  5. blazerboy30

    blazerboy30 Well-Known Member

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    I agree with this, and believe this could be done at a small cost, or possibly even a decrease in overall spending. I've said previously that even using the conservative numbers for savings from tort reform could go a long ways to paying for catastrophic insurance for the uninsured.

    Part of the problem of that many of those in favor of government run health insurance use the "cancer patient" example as a reason we need to provide full health insurance to everybody. And that just isn't a valid argument. They need catastrophic insurance coverage, not cadillac coverage.

    But the proposed plans are nowhere near just providing a safety-net / catastrophic insurance. The proposals are closer to making everybody have the same insurance, and government takeover of ~20% of our economy.
     
  6. Denny Crane

    Denny Crane It's not even loaded! Staff Member Administrator

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    two points:

    1) Pharma gives out $5B per year in free drugs to people who can't afford them.

    2) What else could be more worthy of mortgaging your house to pay for than life saving or prolonging treatment? People gamble these things away at the craps tables in Vegas (literally) or to invest in a business or an education.

    Reference:
    http://www.pparx.org/
     
  7. Minstrel

    Minstrel Top Of The Pops Global Moderator

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    That's great. Not relevant to my point, but that's a good thing.

    Taking out a mortgage on one's house to invest in a business or education is a calculated attempt to recoup the money borrowed and more. Having to do it just to stay alive doesn't put one in a better economic position than prior to the illness and forced loan, so it's simply a crippling financial debt with no real way to address it.

    If one has to take on a crippling debt to save a loved one, I consider that a worthy sacrifice to make. I simply don't believe it's humane to force people to make that sacrifice. Scream socialism all you want, but I absolutely believe in a safety net to allow people to address expensive, life-threatening illnesses without having to take on a different enormous burden.
     
  8. Denny Crane

    Denny Crane It's not even loaded! Staff Member Administrator

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    Taking on a crippling debt to save a loved one is a calculated attempt to recoup something of value.

    Catastrophic insurance is available to provide safety nets. But we're not our brother's keepers and there's no way we can consistently pay for others' mistakes (not buying the insurance or saving for retirement, bad investments, whatever).
     
  9. Minstrel

    Minstrel Top Of The Pops Global Moderator

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    Absolutely. But not an attempt that I think people should be forced to make if they want to keep a loved one alive.
     
  10. MrJayremmie

    MrJayremmie Well-Known Member

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    I thought it was interesting that a British guy on the Daily Show last night said that people are 60-70% happy with their health care in Britain. There are long wait lines, and the doctors are also underpaid and not too happy about it (and the Docs are better in the national HC than the private). But he did say if you have money you can go the private route.

    I just thought it was interesting. Obviously we aren't going for a national health care.
     
  11. BLAZER PROPHET

    BLAZER PROPHET Well-Known Member

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    Since I'm in the healthcare industry, I went to a forum of doctors discussing the new healthcare bill. Clearly, it will mean a short term drop in income, but they state they will simply raise their rates to cover the increase in forced Medicare payments. Most of the doctors over 50 stated they will retire within 1 year. None of them felt this bill will actually provide anything for "uninsured" that they already do not have in one way or another. Their biggest concerns was that this will all be paid for by the next generation. Yet another case of this administration passing along trillions to today's 20 year olds. Of the 40 or so doctors, not one of them was for this bill. They also predicted it might mean a slow end to the PCP as they really don't make enough as it is.

    I guess what I don't get is that for all the good ideas to provide more coverage for people, why do we choose the worst possible idea?
     
  12. Sug

    Sug Well-Known Member

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    We spend trillions on keeping America(and other places) safe, so why not spend the same on keeping it healthy. I mean after all what's the point of protecting a dying herd when it is essentially going to kill itself? Maybe letting a nuke slip into the country would solve a lot of these issue, especially in the areas that have the most poverty. Imagine having 30 to 50 million people removed from the government tit in a matter of hours...it would be a conservative dream come true. Basically what people are saying is we will spend a shit load of money to "protect" you, but we don't care if you live or die unless you have the cash to pay for it. Hell that even goes for the poor bastards that sign up for the military and get life long injuries/illness. I see healthcare as a national defense issue, one that is much more important than say Iraq or Afghanistan, but wait we pay for their national healthcare...
     
  13. BLAZER PROPHET

    BLAZER PROPHET Well-Known Member

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    A very interesting (and humorous) post. Well stated.
     
  14. maxiep

    maxiep RIP Dr. Jack

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    I currently pay five figures annually to keep six people healthy (me, my wife, my son, my sister-in-law, my mother-in-law and my mother). How much more should I be expected to pay? How many more people should I be expected to cover? How much are you willing to pay? Give me a hard figure. Out of your salary, how much are you willing to pay to make sure those who can't afford it have health insurance? Do you think it's fair that future generations pay for our health insurance?

    In terms of care, do you believe that this bill will guarantee better care for everyone? Do you believe we'll be able to pay physicians less and have more physicians in the future? Do you believe that hospitals can staff fewer nurses and have better care? Do you believe you can add 30MM patients to the healthcare system and have improved care? Do you believe there won't be rationing?
     

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