Re: the difference is the focus of the organizations
Isaac Send a noteboard - 30/09/2009 12:40:38 AM
if politicians and evil businessmen are equally corrupt and evil, what advantage is there to handing it over to a group also known for doing a somewhat dull job?
when a private company's only incentive to provide health insurance is a monetary one, then they can set the rules that govern the acquisition of health care. this includes deciding that certain practices and/or treatments are unnecessary and refusing treatment to patients who desperately need the service in order to get their health in balance.
when a government agency is given incentive to provide health insurance, they are not bound by profit as the private company would be, therefore their level of care is designed more towards actually providing the health care that people are asking for, not refusing treatment based on an arbitrary formula in order to maximize their margins. i highly doubt the government is going to deny a transplant to someone dying of cancer only to approve it later because of public pressure the way a private insurer would
I could definetly see the government denying treatment then changing it's mind from public pressure, ironically it would probably be wrong to do so in many of those cases. It's like a lot of government funding for disease research, because of public opinion many diseases receive massively large funds per death then others. Transfering funds away from one to fund more popular ones is tantamount to mass murder.
LEt us be realistic here, either way there will be a place for judgement calls that land on some bureacrats desk who will lokk at his data and his guidelines and make a decision. The squeaky wheel will get oiled often though, if someone makes a media firestorm over it. From a practical POV, that analyst probably made the right call, or does so 9 times out of 10. But the phone calls come in and in case A the PR team comes in and tells the CEO to bail waiter, and in case B the re-election comitee comes in and does so. I don't really see too substantial a difference, except the CEO probably has a bit more room to ignore public opinion, that can be a good or bad thing, case by case.
The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift.
- Albert Einstein
King of Cairhien 20-7-2
Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
- Albert Einstein
King of Cairhien 20-7-2
Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
Senate Finance Committee Votes Against Government-Run Health Insurance Plan
29/09/2009 09:08:40 PM
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I just hope this doesn't squash all health-care reform attempts
29/09/2009 09:12:15 PM
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It definitely needs work, but not scrapped.....
29/09/2009 09:16:32 PM
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Opinion polls with health care have huge swings depending on how it's phrased
29/09/2009 09:28:28 PM
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Polls are horrid evidence in my mind
29/09/2009 09:32:58 PM
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Re: Polls are horrid evidence in my mind
29/09/2009 10:12:26 PM
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Not that I totally disagree with you, but that being said
29/09/2009 10:29:13 PM
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Re: Not that I totally disagree with you, but that being said
29/09/2009 11:21:21 PM
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Re: Not that I totally disagree with you, but that being said
29/09/2009 11:40:42 PM
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his statements on health care are precisely my point, but much more well stated. *NM*
29/09/2009 11:54:29 PM
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the difference is the focus of the organizations
29/09/2009 11:44:56 PM
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Re: the difference is the focus of the organizations
30/09/2009 12:40:38 AM
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Difference is that the law is subject to more checks and balances than the whims of a CEO
29/09/2009 11:44:58 PM
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Re: Difference is that the law is subject to more checks and balances than the whims of a CEO
30/09/2009 12:28:36 AM
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that the private sector has a long history of abusing both customer and employee *NM*
30/09/2009 03:46:03 AM
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That's indisbutable
30/09/2009 05:55:45 PM
- 513 Views
It doesn't work at all
30/09/2009 04:27:44 AM
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i have yet to see any evidence of malpractice insurance being a driving cost of health care
30/09/2009 05:27:34 AM
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When the malpractice insurance can cost well over $100k a year of course it effects the costs.
30/09/2009 06:21:29 AM
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it's not THAT they pay malpractice
30/09/2009 02:00:04 PM
- 423 Views
but doctors are *required* to buy malpractice insurance
30/09/2009 04:13:08 PM
- 472 Views
that's completely moot to the situation malpractice insurance causes.
30/09/2009 04:21:42 PM
- 439 Views
hooray, we're going to continue in mediocrity when it comes to our health
29/09/2009 10:15:00 PM
- 551 Views
That is a decade old and horribly discredited citation
29/09/2009 11:46:51 PM
- 632 Views
regardless, we still spend a lot more on health care while having too many uncovered people
29/09/2009 11:56:24 PM
- 463 Views
My objection, in this context, is strictly about references
30/09/2009 12:13:40 AM
- 469 Views
i understand your point about the reference
30/09/2009 12:54:25 AM
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Re: i understand your point about the reference
30/09/2009 01:15:30 AM
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Re: i understand your point about the reference
30/09/2009 12:24:45 PM
- 556 Views
Re: i understand your point about the reference
30/09/2009 06:29:09 PM
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Re: i understand your point about the reference
30/09/2009 10:57:36 PM
- 526 Views
Interesting...
01/10/2009 12:09:35 AM
- 461 Views
Hooray! The government isn't going to get directly involved and make HC even worse! *NM*
30/09/2009 01:03:50 AM
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