Insofar as I don't believe we're doing anything to cover the uninsured, I must agree with that statement. ALthough in fairness, we do already have a number of systems in place on the matter, and nobody has to worry about bleeding to death because they are broke.
The point is, the statement above is basically as misleading as the flawed WHO study. True, no one has to worry about bleeding to death because they are broke, but how many millions in the US forgo medication, proper preventative care, medical advice and etc and etc and etc, because they can't afford it? A couple of cases in point from my own personal experience.
There is a family that lives several houses down from me. Parents, three kids and grandmother. The wife had high blood pressure. Husband lost job and the wife's medical insurance was of the "catastrophic intervention" type. They couldn't afford better, so she stopped taking the medication she couldn't afford. She died two weeks ago of a stroke, she was 37.
I have health insurance, it's OK, not great. It pays $35/mo for medication, all other medication expenses come out of my pocket. I'm 60, and have slightly high blood pressure and slightly high blood sugar. My out of pocket medication costs are well over 100/month. To keep costs down, I test my blood sugar twice every other day instead of the recommended twice a day. I can take my own blood pressure and frequently skip my blood pressure medication if it's not "too high". I'm not as bad as my neighbor Sylvia was, but I'm still "rationing" my care due to monetary restraints.
Sylvia wasn't "bleeding to death" but she's still dead because they couldn't afford decent health care.
NaCl(and there are millions and millions and millions like us)H2O
How can my statement be true but as misleading as a flawed study? I said people don't hae to worry about bleeding out, true, I said we have many programs already in place, we do, they address many if hardly all of the problems. Personally, I think most of them do a pisspoor job, which to me is an indicator that the gov't is not likely to do a better job than they are already doing if given wider power. Insurance companies, of course, do not want to spend money on people who cost them more than they yield. Who can blame them, saying they should is like saying you personally should have to pay if your neighbor's barn falls over. They are in a business that amounts to telling a lot of people "Here's the deal, everyone gets sick, if you all contribute, when you get sick we'll pay the tab, so long as you pay a fee the whole time that's designed to roughly represent your personal anticipated costs and give us some profit." In that regard, they have a duty to both their shareholders and customers to not accept people who will definetly cost more than they can charge. By rights if someone's average medical expenses each month are $300, they should be charging them at least $300-$350 a month, otherwise they are stealing from their other customers.
Now... if you believe medical treatment is a right, then you shouldn't even be talking about insurance, you just set some guidelines for acceptable treatment and tax everybody to pay the national medical cost per year. There should be no insurance companies if health care is a right, and if it's not, then we have no business involving ourselves beyond the usual anti-trust regulations and such.
It's one or the other, the rest is just BS and emotional arguments to obscure. It is either a right or it isn't.
Any of the arguments people are otherwise suggesting could be applied to house or auto insurance, does someone have a right to get auto-insurance if they've crashed their car ten times in the last year? Of course not. Your house has mysteriously burned down five times and you've been diagnosed with pyromania? No, these arguments are only valid if healthcare is a right, if it is, health insurance is stupid, if it isn't, then the same rules as apply to other forms of insurance should apply. DEmanding a private company give people insurance when they know they'll spend more than they bring in is like asking car companies to sell cars based on the buyer's income, so an unemployed person can get one for free and a millionaire has to pay $100,000 for a pinto. If everyone has a right to a car, like they have a right to police or military protection, what's the point of having car dealerships?
Now, this is of course obvious, or should be, I think most people miss it. Ultimately it comes down to whether it's a right or not, and once in place the veils will start to drop. That's why so many of us on the right call it a naked power grab, trying to make everyone covered by insurance, because we know they know it's just a mechanism to hide the real intent. Perhaps we should have 'free' medical care for others, I don't favor it but I doubt it would be an unprecedented disaster, but all this other stuff is just smoke and mirrors, and that makes it a lie, and I don't trust politicians who do that, hence why I don't trust most politicians, even the ones I know and like.
All that said, there is room to consider subsidies for insurance, to help the poor, the equivalent of giving a tax break to people who buy, say, fuel-efficient american cars, a break that would by nature favor lower income buyers. There is room for the gov't to poke it's nose in, but this should always be done carefully, and currently everything has been rushed to capitalize - no pun intended - on post-election popularity and breathing space. Further, if the ultimate goal really is to get everyone health insurance, then it is, again, tnatamount to calling it a right, easier to just nationalize the blasted thing and get the fund via taxes as normal for such things.
But that should be done by passing direct legislation calling it that, an amendment preferably. If it is a right, then it should be in the constitution, or in a law that the supreme court can make a call on and say "is/isn't constituional". Just like all our other rights.
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
- 766 Views
I just hope this doesn't squash all health-care reform attempts
29/09/2009 09:12:15 PM
- 489 Views
It definitely needs work, but not scrapped.....
29/09/2009 09:16:32 PM
- 493 Views
Opinion polls with health care have huge swings depending on how it's phrased
29/09/2009 09:28:28 PM
- 563 Views
Polls are horrid evidence in my mind
29/09/2009 09:32:58 PM
- 491 Views
Re: Polls are horrid evidence in my mind
29/09/2009 10:12:26 PM
- 658 Views
Not that I totally disagree with you, but that being said
29/09/2009 10:29:13 PM
- 445 Views
Re: Not that I totally disagree with you, but that being said
29/09/2009 11:21:21 PM
- 544 Views
Re: Not that I totally disagree with you, but that being said
29/09/2009 11:40:42 PM
- 552 Views
his statements on health care are precisely my point, but much more well stated. *NM*
29/09/2009 11:54:29 PM
- 205 Views
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
- 542 Views
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
- 524 Views
that the private sector has a long history of abusing both customer and employee *NM*
30/09/2009 03:46:03 AM
- 199 Views
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
- 551 Views
i have yet to see any evidence of malpractice insurance being a driving cost of health care
30/09/2009 05:27:34 AM
- 560 Views
When the malpractice insurance can cost well over $100k a year of course it effects the costs.
30/09/2009 06:21:29 AM
- 539 Views
it's not THAT they pay malpractice
30/09/2009 02:00:04 PM
- 422 Views
but doctors are *required* to buy malpractice insurance
30/09/2009 04:13:08 PM
- 471 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
- 462 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
- 513 Views
Re: i understand your point about the reference
30/09/2009 01:15:30 AM
- 570 Views
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
- 547 Views
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
- 200 Views