Collarspace Discussion Forums


Home  Login  Search 

RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day


View related threads: (in this forum | in all forums)

Logged in as: Guest
 
All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Dungeon of Political and Religious Discussion >> RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day Page: <<   < prev  1 2 [3] 4 5   next >   >>
Login
Message << Older Topic   Newer Topic >>
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/3/2014 12:59:57 PM   
mnottertail


Posts: 60698
Joined: 11/3/2004
Status: offline
remove 883 billion from healthcare costs:

http://healthcareforamericanow.org/ourissues/health-insurance-industry/

another billion here:

http://healthcareforamericanow.org/2011/08/09/ceos-from-10-health-insurers-took-nearly-1-billion-in-compensation/

a few more million here:

http://www.creators.com/opinion/daily-editorials/health-insurance-ceo-paid-106-million-feel-better.html

few more million here:
http://blogs.marketwatch.com/health-exchange/2013/05/13/highest-paid-executive-in-health-care-is-a-scientist-study-says/

some here in more of the inneficiency of the private sector:

http://www.forbes.com/sites/stevensalzberg/2012/12/31/making-a-profit-from-offering-ineffective-therapies-to-cancer-patients/

And more here and there, and by god, pretty soon we are talking about some real money.

And we haven't even scanned pharma.

_____________________________

Have they not divided the prey; to every man a damsel or two? Judges 5:30


(in reply to freedomdwarf1)
Profile   Post #: 41
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/3/2014 1:08:58 PM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: freedomdwarf1
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri
quote:

ORIGINAL: susie
An obvious way to reduce costs is through buying power. The costs of providing a product will be higher if it is purchased by say 5,000 different customers than if the same amount of product is supplied to one customer. Admin costs etc are reduced so the supplier can reduce the cost to the single purchaser.
This is how in the UK the NHS is able to obtain items at lower rates than the private sector is able to obtain. Multiply that by all the products used and of course the cost of running a national organisation will be lower than running an individual operation.

Did switching over to the NHS allow the UK to enjoy lower costs? Every graph I've seen shows that's not the case. If the UK didn't see cost reductions, then what makes anyone think the US will?

What graphs are you comparing desi??
Costs will always rise according to the markets.
Is that wht you are saying?
It is always rising so therefore never a drop in costs?
The costs of the medicine were on a par with everyoine else.
The US went the private route.
The UK, Canada, Auz, NZ etc went the single-payer route.
Yes, all the cost are rising.
We are all supplied by the same small number of companies for the drugs, the buildings, the R&D.
Now compare the costs of the single payer system to those in the US.
Same input all round. Ergo, identical starting point.
US costs are several orders of magnitude greater than any single-payer system.
Yes, it shifts expense from the personal to the government purse.
End cost to the overall 'thing' (whatever you are measuring), by power of monopoly and number, single-payer systems pay far less for the identical 'thing' than the US does.
That's about as much proof as you can get.
Same input from the same companies, reduced cost at the target.


Now, here is where we agree. We all started out at roughly the same %GDP location decades ago. Then, US costs started spiraling up, up, up. Some have intoned that costs started rising with the advent of health care being made into a perk. Costs weren't railed against back then, but once business decided to use it as a perk - which is how they got around the wage caps government instituted - and government started doling out the tax preferences towards it, costs really started to go up.

But, if costs aren't going to decrease, the US will continued to spend 9+%GDP more than anyone else, with costs just shifting to the taxpayers. What's the point of that?


_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to freedomdwarf1)
Profile   Post #: 42
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/3/2014 1:10:26 PM   
mnottertail


Posts: 60698
Joined: 11/3/2004
Status: offline
costs are going to decrease. 

_____________________________

Have they not divided the prey; to every man a damsel or two? Judges 5:30


(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 43
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/3/2014 3:28:14 PM   
freedomdwarf1


Posts: 6845
Joined: 10/23/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri
Now, here is where we agree. We all started out at roughly the same %GDP location decades ago. Then, US costs started spiraling up, up, up. Some have intoned that costs started rising with the advent of health care being made into a perk. Costs weren't railed against back then, but once business decided to use it as a perk - which is how they got around the wage caps government instituted - and government started doling out the tax preferences towards it, costs really started to go up.

But, if costs aren't going to decrease, the US will continued to spend 9+%GDP more than anyone else, with costs just shifting to the taxpayers. What's the point of that?


They will decrease, in relative terms.

If the US price rise by 15%, those self-same items will only rise by 2-4% in the single payer system because they can, to a point, dictate the final price.
As time goes by, those differences in the increased prices will start running into multiples and orders of magnitude that we see today.

So yes, they are increasing, in a literal $$ sense.
But when compared to GDP or average cost demanded by insurance companies, they will actually be decreasing.

And it's not a direct shift from personal pocket to government purse as you seem to see it.
The NI would be applicable across the board, from coast to coast, as a percentage figure, not a fixed sum. So the more you earn, the more you pay in actual $$'s.

Lets take an example (all guestimated figures) of where the US is going wrong...
Joe Average earns $30k/pa. At present, probably paying something in the region of 3k/pa just in insurance premiums. On top of that he's paying $50 a pop to visit his GP, $100 for a trip to ER. So for an average year he's spending probably $600+ in GP visits and $100 for the hospital. On top of all this, he has to pay his deductibles and prescription costs and for any treatment he has.
What do you think his average yearly healthcare is costing him? I'm guessing (in round figures), around 5k in total. That would be just over 16% of his wages.
Now lets take mega-CEO earning 300k/pa in exactly the same position as Joe Average.
He has a slightly more expensive healthcare plan.
But, he writes off the cost of it from his taxes so it doesn't really cost him a bean.
Same costs for hospital and GP visits.
His total out-of-pocket expenses is 2k. That's barely 0.7% of his salary.
Total $$'s into the healthcare pot would be $7,000.
Is that system fair?? I don't think so.

Under the single-payer system, they would each pay, let's say 10% of income.
Joe Average would pay his 3k in NI. No more GP or hospital costs.
Total cost for Jow Average would be just 3k plus medication - that's 10% of his income.
CEO would pay 30k in NI plus his medication just like Joe Average.
Total $$'s into the healthcare pot would be $33,000.
See the difference??
You'd get an extra $26,000/pa from those 2 people alone.
Now multiply that by, say 60% of the population that are working and maybe only 70% of the workforce are eligable for NI payments??
That would be something in the order of nearly 140 million people paying into the healthcare pot.
Now you have the buying power to dictate the cost of drugs to big pharma and demand a 70% reduction in price. They still make loadsa profit because they would sell more units, albeit at a lower per-unit cost.
Now factor in the fact that you don't need any advertising or PR costs - that'll save $$millions.

See how this all works desi?
Sure, the extra costs involved would come from the public purse if needed.
But the majority of the costs would be covered and maybe even have some profits.
End cost to the user? Just 10% and it would be faily distributed across the board.
The richer people would pay considerably more $'s and the average person would be a lot better off.
Big pharma wants to raise the prices by 10%??
No problem. 10% of a 70% reduced cost of meds is shitloads less $$'s than what they are wanting for the private insurance.

That's about as good as I can explain it for now.
All  hypothetical figures used as an example to show how it it works.

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 44
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/3/2014 4:30:20 PM   
Politesub53


Posts: 14862
Joined: 5/7/2007
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri


Did switching over to the NHS allow the UK to enjoy lower costs? Every graph I've seen shows that's not the case. If the UK didn't see cost reductions, then what makes anyone think the US will?



Any chance of seeing such a graph then, not that I am being cynical. I call bullshit, since it is impossible to compare any cost regards the NHS with costs before.... IE, there was NO health service as such for the majority prior to the NHS, except for the unworkable insurance scheme introduced in 1911.

http://www.historyextra.com/feature/nhs-what-can-we-learn-history

What I can show you though, is a graph showing that between 1970 and 2006 US costs rose faster than anywhere else.

http://www.significancemagazine.org/details/webexclusive/876609/How-much-does-public-health-cost-in-the-US-and-the-UK.html

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 45
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/3/2014 4:36:54 PM   
Politesub53


Posts: 14862
Joined: 5/7/2007
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri

quote:

ORIGINAL: Politesub53
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri
And, you do understand, do you not, that whatever government pays, is coming from the taxpayers, who likely include the consumer, right?

I understand all too well that the taxpayers pay, here is what you cant or wont grasp. We dont give a fuck, at least the majority dont, because everybody benefits INCLUDING those who cant pay.
Your point about US costs being too high is correct, although costs differ wildly between hospitals. Those of you who support your system, and less government intervention (IE Cost regulation or a proper NHS) have no room to complain. You have got your wish, warts and all.


Horseshit. If you don't give a fuck, then what's got you worked up here?

If the cost of medical care is lower, there will be fewer who can't pay, and those who can't pay will still benefit. Charity will have a bigger impact if medical care costs are lower, too, won't it? Everyone will benefit with a lower cost of medical care, regardless of what payment methods are used.

You can't grasp that my point wasn't in support of any payment plan, but aimed solely at the costs. Would you have the right to complain that the cost of medical care was too high in the UK, if costs were the same as in the US, but you still had the NHS system? Of course you would. From all the graphs I've seen, it sure looks as if those with national health care systems have had lower rates of cost inflation. That's great. But, that's not going to solve the problem of high care costs in the US. If the only thing it's going to do is reduce cost inflation, we'll always be spending more than national systems anyway.

I have seen no proof, and no one has been able to show any, that costs in the US will drop if we adopt a national system. That your costs are lower isn't proof that ours will drop, as your costs are lower because you've had lower cost inflation since inception. If you have proof otherwise, post it, and I'll take it into account. This is not the first time I've asked P&R for this, either.



Who said I was worked up, other than you ?

I clearly stated UK taxpayers dont give a fuck about paying tax to fund the NHS as it benefits everyone. If you wish to quote me, at least learn to read what I post.

As for the lower inflation costs, thats patent nonsense as the link in my previous post will show. Statisticians take all that into account.

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 46
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/4/2014 2:26:35 AM   
hlen5


Posts: 5890
Joined: 3/2/2008
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: MrRodgers
........... Mankind lived in abundance until the Sumerians invented money...6000 years ago.



Damn those Sumerians!!


_____________________________



My fave Thread: http://www.collarchat.com/m_2626198/mpage_1/tm.htm

One time "Phallus Expert Extraordinaire"

(in reply to MrRodgers)
Profile   Post #: 47
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/4/2014 3:10:31 AM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Politesub53
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri
Did switching over to the NHS allow the UK to enjoy lower costs? Every graph I've seen shows that's not the case. If the UK didn't see cost reductions, then what makes anyone think the US will?

Any chance of seeing such a graph then, not that I am being cynical. I call bullshit, since it is impossible to compare any cost regards the NHS with costs before.... IE, there was NO health service as such for the majority prior to the NHS, except for the unworkable insurance scheme introduced in 1911.
http://www.historyextra.com/feature/nhs-what-can-we-learn-history
What I can show you though, is a graph showing that between 1970 and 2006 US costs rose faster than anywhere else.
http://www.significancemagazine.org/details/webexclusive/876609/How-much-does-public-health-cost-in-the-US-and-the-UK.html


Was there medical care before the NHS? Was there no cost for that medical care? Sure, you can't compare costs of the NHS from before the NHS was created, but that's not the question. If you just want to look at government spend, the US Federal Government is already spending a higher %GDP than the UK, but not by too terribly much (roughly 2% more). Total health care expenditures are about 17% (Government + private expenditures). If costs won't be lowered from where they are, our Government expenditures will be 17% (roughly). Essentially, a cost shifting scheme, rather than a cost reduction.

Nowhere have I stated that costs aren't rising faster in the US than anywhere else. I have acknowledged that they are rising slower everywhere else. But, "reducing costs" is more than just reducing the rate of price inflation.

I am looking to see how we can actually reduce that 17% number, not how we can shift the numbers around from private spend to public spend.


_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to Politesub53)
Profile   Post #: 48
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/4/2014 3:13:58 AM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Politesub53
Who said I was worked up, other than you ?
I clearly stated UK taxpayers dont give a fuck about paying tax to fund the NHS as it benefits everyone. If you wish to quote me, at least learn to read what I post.


Not clearly. It was my misinterpretation. I do apologize.

quote:

As for the lower inflation costs, thats patent nonsense as the link in my previous post will show. Statisticians take all that into account.


Patent nonsense?!? You have shown that your cost inflation is lower than that in the US. How is it patent nonsense, then?


_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to Politesub53)
Profile   Post #: 49
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/4/2014 7:12:28 AM   
susie


Posts: 1699
Joined: 11/21/2004
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri

quote:

ORIGINAL: Politesub53
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri
Did switching over to the NHS allow the UK to enjoy lower costs? Every graph I've seen shows that's not the case. If the UK didn't see cost reductions, then what makes anyone think the US will?

Any chance of seeing such a graph then, not that I am being cynical. I call bullshit, since it is impossible to compare any cost regards the NHS with costs before.... IE, there was NO health service as such for the majority prior to the NHS, except for the unworkable insurance scheme introduced in 1911.
http://www.historyextra.com/feature/nhs-what-can-we-learn-history
What I can show you though, is a graph showing that between 1970 and 2006 US costs rose faster than anywhere else.
http://www.significancemagazine.org/details/webexclusive/876609/How-much-does-public-health-cost-in-the-US-and-the-UK.html


Was there medical care before the NHS? Was there no cost for that medical care? Sure, you can't compare costs of the NHS from before the NHS was created, but that's not the question. If you just want to look at government spend, the US Federal Government is already spending a higher %GDP than the UK, but not by too terribly much (roughly 2% more). Total health care expenditures are about 17% (Government + private expenditures). If costs won't be lowered from where they are, our Government expenditures will be 17% (roughly). Essentially, a cost shifting scheme, rather than a cost reduction.

Nowhere have I stated that costs aren't rising faster in the US than anywhere else. I have acknowledged that they are rising slower everywhere else. But, "reducing costs" is more than just reducing the rate of price inflation.

I am looking to see how we can actually reduce that 17% number, not how we can shift the numbers around from private spend to public spend.



You clearly refuse to understand the logic of buying power reducing costs so I don't see much point in trying to explain it again.

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 50
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/4/2014 8:13:41 AM   
tj444


Posts: 7574
Joined: 3/7/2010
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: susie

You clearly refuse to understand the logic of buying power reducing costs so I don't see much point in trying to explain it again.

in some countries like Canada, its the govt that decides what is a reasonable payment for treatment and drugs.. the govt takes the majority of greed outta the system.. The US govt/Obamacare has not done that.. it has left the greed in the system.. and the tail wagging the dog.. good luck to Americans with that..

_____________________________

As Anderson Cooper said “If he (Trump) took a dump on his desk, you would defend it”

(in reply to susie)
Profile   Post #: 51
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/4/2014 1:39:55 PM   
LookieNoNookie


Posts: 12216
Joined: 8/9/2008
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Lucylastic

http://www.viralnova.com/hospital-bill/

A 20 year-old man came down with appendicitis in October of this year. He posted the bill on Reddit and it has gone viral. The US Health Care system is a topic of much debate, not only in the US but around the world. A lot of countries get ‘free’ health care, so needless to say, this has stirred up a lot of conversation.

As if waking up in excruciating pain isn’t enough, this is the bill he received in the mail a couple months later. Take a look:

The original cost was over $55,000. Because the 20 year-old man was on his father’s insurance, the cost was lowered to $11,000.

There are pictures here as well, http://imgur.com/a/WIfeN
the reddit site
http://www.reddit.com/user/zcypher

Im so glad I dont need my kids on my insurance, or that they would have to pay a bill like that.
Think its going "viral" cos its aimed at young adults??
nah couldnt be....


It's gone viral because....

1) "News" agencies, hungry for a story, refuse to go looking for actual news (i.e., do their actualjob).

and

2) Because everyone wants their 15 minutes, and the latest way to achieve same is to post a copy of a receipt for something.

(in reply to Lucylastic)
Profile   Post #: 52
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/4/2014 2:26:06 PM   
calamitysandra


Posts: 1682
Joined: 3/17/2006
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: mnottertail

...
Ach, mensch, meine nerven, too long away from Germany.  CRIPO, pronounced Creepo.


Very close. It is KriPo (Kriminalpolizei), a branch of the police force.
If it has been too long, come over for a visit, there might just be a blow job in it for you.



quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer


quote:

ORIGINAL: calamitysandra
I did some searching, and an appendectomy, including a 3 day hospital stay works out to something between 2000 and 3000 Euro in Germany.


If that appendectomy had been performed in the USA it would have been much cheaper, Sandra. This is because the free market always leads to greater competition and lower costs to the consumer. For the same reason, it would have been done much more efficiently. Finally, the patient would have woken up after the surgery feeling immensely grateful that his life had not been interfered with by a Stalinist.




I would not know. Living in one of those damned socialist/maoist/stalinist/communist European countries, our media is controlled and we are beeing kept from those dangerous ideas.



_____________________________

"Whenever people are laughing, they are generally not killing one another"
Alan Alda


(in reply to mnottertail)
Profile   Post #: 53
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/4/2014 4:51:25 PM   
Politesub53


Posts: 14862
Joined: 5/7/2007
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri

Was there medical care before the NHS? Was there no cost for that medical care? Sure, you can't compare costs of the NHS from before the NHS was created, but that's not the question. If you just want to look at government spend, the US Federal Government is already spending a higher %GDP than the UK, but not by too terribly much (roughly 2% more). Total health care expenditures are about 17% (Government + private expenditures). If costs won't be lowered from where they are, our Government expenditures will be 17% (roughly). Essentially, a cost shifting scheme, rather than a cost reduction.

Nowhere have I stated that costs aren't rising faster in the US than anywhere else. I have acknowledged that they are rising slower everywhere else. But, "reducing costs" is more than just reducing the rate of price inflation.

I am looking to see how we can actually reduce that 17% number, not how we can shift the numbers around from private spend to public spend.




No bogus graphs yet then ? After all, you claim to have seen the one comparing costs prior and after the NHS came into being. If I sound cynical, go figure.

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 54
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/4/2014 4:53:35 PM   
Politesub53


Posts: 14862
Joined: 5/7/2007
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri

quote:

ORIGINAL: Politesub53
Who said I was worked up, other than you ?
I clearly stated UK taxpayers dont give a fuck about paying tax to fund the NHS as it benefits everyone. If you wish to quote me, at least learn to read what I post.


Not clearly. It was my misinterpretation. I do apologize.

quote:

As for the lower inflation costs, thats patent nonsense as the link in my previous post will show. Statisticians take all that into account.


Patent nonsense?!? You have shown that your cost inflation is lower than that in the US. How is it patent nonsense, then?



Lmao.....you would like to think all your extra cost is down to inflation and not down to maximising profit. Good luck with that.

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 55
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/5/2014 7:37:04 AM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: susie
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri
quote:

ORIGINAL: Politesub53
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri
Did switching over to the NHS allow the UK to enjoy lower costs? Every graph I've seen shows that's not the case. If the UK didn't see cost reductions, then what makes anyone think the US will?

Any chance of seeing such a graph then, not that I am being cynical. I call bullshit, since it is impossible to compare any cost regards the NHS with costs before.... IE, there was NO health service as such for the majority prior to the NHS, except for the unworkable insurance scheme introduced in 1911.
http://www.historyextra.com/feature/nhs-what-can-we-learn-history
What I can show you though, is a graph showing that between 1970 and 2006 US costs rose faster than anywhere else.
http://www.significancemagazine.org/details/webexclusive/876609/How-much-does-public-health-cost-in-the-US-and-the-UK.html

Was there medical care before the NHS? Was there no cost for that medical care? Sure, you can't compare costs of the NHS from before the NHS was created, but that's not the question. If you just want to look at government spend, the US Federal Government is already spending a higher %GDP than the UK, but not by too terribly much (roughly 2% more). Total health care expenditures are about 17% (Government + private expenditures). If costs won't be lowered from where they are, our Government expenditures will be 17% (roughly). Essentially, a cost shifting scheme, rather than a cost reduction.
Nowhere have I stated that costs aren't rising faster in the US than anywhere else. I have acknowledged that they are rising slower everywhere else. But, "reducing costs" is more than just reducing the rate of price inflation.
I am looking to see how we can actually reduce that 17% number, not how we can shift the numbers around from private spend to public spend.

You clearly refuse to understand the logic of buying power reducing costs so I don't see much point in trying to explain it again.


Clearly refuse? Yeah, you have a clue who I am.

Enjoy ignoring anything else I post. I have a feeling it won't bug me.

Btw, doesn't the US Government have "buying power" when it comes to Medicare reimbursements? How's come those costs are still ridiculously high? What kind of leverage will the government have, anyway? How many knee replacements are they going to guarantee to "buy," in exchange for a lower cost? What about dialysis treatments? How many laser eye surgeries? How many impacted wisdom teeth are they going to guarantee will be pulled in exchange for a lower price?




_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to susie)
Profile   Post #: 56
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/5/2014 7:43:19 AM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Politesub53
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri
quote:

As for the lower inflation costs, thats patent nonsense as the link in my previous post will show. Statisticians take all that into account.

Patent nonsense?!? You have shown that your cost inflation is lower than that in the US. How is it patent nonsense, then?

Lmao.....you would like to think all your extra cost is down to inflation and not down to maximising profit. Good luck with that.


Lmao right back! You know what medical cost inflation is? It's the rise in medical costs. If medical cost inflation (aka the rise in medical costs) isn't the cause of the rise of medical costs, then, what else can it be?

Note that I have been pretty damn good about talking about medical cost inflation, and not general inflation. I may not have put "medical" in the post you responded to, but I've been pretty clear that's what I'm talking about.


_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to Politesub53)
Profile   Post #: 57
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/5/2014 8:35:37 AM   
eulero83


Posts: 1470
Joined: 11/4/2005
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri

quote:

ORIGINAL: susie
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri
quote:

ORIGINAL: Politesub53
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri
Did switching over to the NHS allow the UK to enjoy lower costs? Every graph I've seen shows that's not the case. If the UK didn't see cost reductions, then what makes anyone think the US will?

Any chance of seeing such a graph then, not that I am being cynical. I call bullshit, since it is impossible to compare any cost regards the NHS with costs before.... IE, there was NO health service as such for the majority prior to the NHS, except for the unworkable insurance scheme introduced in 1911.
http://www.historyextra.com/feature/nhs-what-can-we-learn-history
What I can show you though, is a graph showing that between 1970 and 2006 US costs rose faster than anywhere else.
http://www.significancemagazine.org/details/webexclusive/876609/How-much-does-public-health-cost-in-the-US-and-the-UK.html

Was there medical care before the NHS? Was there no cost for that medical care? Sure, you can't compare costs of the NHS from before the NHS was created, but that's not the question. If you just want to look at government spend, the US Federal Government is already spending a higher %GDP than the UK, but not by too terribly much (roughly 2% more). Total health care expenditures are about 17% (Government + private expenditures). If costs won't be lowered from where they are, our Government expenditures will be 17% (roughly). Essentially, a cost shifting scheme, rather than a cost reduction.
Nowhere have I stated that costs aren't rising faster in the US than anywhere else. I have acknowledged that they are rising slower everywhere else. But, "reducing costs" is more than just reducing the rate of price inflation.
I am looking to see how we can actually reduce that 17% number, not how we can shift the numbers around from private spend to public spend.

You clearly refuse to understand the logic of buying power reducing costs so I don't see much point in trying to explain it again.


Clearly refuse? Yeah, you have a clue who I am.

Enjoy ignoring anything else I post. I have a feeling it won't bug me.

Btw, doesn't the US Government have "buying power" when it comes to Medicare reimbursements? How's come those costs are still ridiculously high? What kind of leverage will the government have, anyway? How many knee replacements are they going to guarantee to "buy," in exchange for a lower cost? What about dialysis treatments? How many laser eye surgeries? How many impacted wisdom teeth are they going to guarantee will be pulled in exchange for a lower price?





It's not a problem of mere number of operation, if an hospital could fill it's shedule and the beds only with medicare patients, than medicare would be in the position to negotiate a price, with a public offer race, the problem is patients would need to travel a lot to be cared in a medicare hospital if there are only a few in each state. A single payer would have buying power because he could control the whole market as it controls the whole demand, so only the hospitals offering the lowest prices to the national health insurance would still be in the market and the others will have ort to differentiate the product or be out of business.
There is also another cost that will be cut, the insurance profit that is actually a cost.
Anyway the point is not a mere cost reductions in terms of GDP% but it is a general quality of life issue, now in your sytem every individual is paying a share of the costs without a direct proportion to his/her income, with a national health care system everyone pays a share proportionate to the income, deciding that the state has not the duty to provide basic service like health care has the same effect of increasing the tax rate for the lowest till middle income classes, and if medical bills are one of the major bankruptcy causes in the usa than it means the system is really affecting the general quality of citizen's life.

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 58
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/5/2014 8:40:05 AM   
eulero83


Posts: 1470
Joined: 11/4/2005
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri

Lmao right back! You know what medical cost inflation is? It's the rise in medical costs. If medical cost inflation (aka the rise in medical costs) isn't the cause of the rise of medical costs, then, what else can it be?



One reason could be demand and supply, if americans as a people need more care and health care operators are the same than prices will raise even if the costs are costant.

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 59
RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day - 1/5/2014 10:24:25 AM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: eulero83
It's not a problem of mere number of operation, if an hospital could fill it's shedule and the beds only with medicare patients, than medicare would be in the position to negotiate a price, with a public offer race, the problem is patients would need to travel a lot to be cared in a medicare hospital if there are only a few in each state. A single payer would have buying power because he could control the whole market as it controls the whole demand, so only the hospitals offering the lowest prices to the national health insurance would still be in the market and the others will have ort to differentiate the product or be out of business.
There is also another cost that will be cut, the insurance profit that is actually a cost.
Anyway the point is not a mere cost reductions in terms of GDP% but it is a general quality of life issue, now in your sytem every individual is paying a share of the costs without a direct proportion to his/her income, with a national health care system everyone pays a share proportionate to the income, deciding that the state has not the duty to provide basic service like health care has the same effect of increasing the tax rate for the lowest till middle income classes, and if medical bills are one of the major bankruptcy causes in the usa than it means the system is really affecting the general quality of citizen's life.


What benefit is there for a hospital to accept a reduced payment, if there is no mention of a number of operations? Just as a general FYI, many private insurance companies set reimbursement rates based on the Medicare reimbursement rate, not the other way 'round. Government negotiates those reimbursements. Government passes a "Doc Fix" Bill every time it comes due, so that large cuts in Medicare reimbursements (signed into law by Clinton in the 90's) don't go into effect.

Makes you wonder why that is, doesn't it?


_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to eulero83)
Profile   Post #: 60
Page:   <<   < prev  1 2 [3] 4 5   next >   >>
All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Dungeon of Political and Religious Discussion >> RE: 20 yr olds Medical bill...viral of the day Page: <<   < prev  1 2 [3] 4 5   next >   >>
Jump to:





New Messages No New Messages
Hot Topic w/ New Messages Hot Topic w/o New Messages
Locked w/ New Messages Locked w/o New Messages
 Post New Thread
 Reply to Message
 Post New Poll
 Submit Vote
 Delete My Own Post
 Delete My Own Thread
 Rate Posts




Collarchat.com © 2025
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy

0.109