D'rok
Free Barbarian on The Land
- Joined
- Dec 29, 2006
- Messages
- 6,399
Yup. I can't be denied service.Your doctor is also free to practice medicine without checking first with an insurance company clerk.
Yup. I can't be denied service.Your doctor is also free to practice medicine without checking first with an insurance company clerk.
In other words, consumers are too stupid to shop for their own medical services in a free market, so we need Big Brother to protect us by removing all our choices, lest we make the wrong ones.
Yes, I admit that doctors have incentives other than money to strive for excellence. However, I think that giving them money incentive as well is a positive thing.Ok. I understand what you're saying. Here's where I think you aren't making a good argument. You are making an assumption that the only incentive for excellence in the medical profession is the opportunity to bill high. I think you would have to back that up with data. Are medical professionals in universal systems like Canada's really less outstanding? Would you admit the possibility that doctors could have incentives other than money to strive for excellence?
There you go. If I were that dentist, I would not live in a country with Canada's laws. Why should I settle for being paid less than what patients, free to choose a cheaper dentist, are willing to pay me?
In other words, consumers are too stupid to shop for their own medical services in a free market, so we need Big Brother to protect us by removing all our choices, lest we make the wrong ones.
Life is not fair. Bill Gates, Bill Clinton, and Hugh Hefner can afford medical care I can not. So what? Prices drop. Ten years from now I will be able to afford what they can afford now -- even while some newest procedure will remain out of my reach. I still prefer to live in the country where medicine advances fastest, even if the price of it is newest life-saving procedure are only available to those of great means.And I am sure you would never want to live in a country that you couldn't use your money to live longer than someone of less means. Provided you were not the person of less means.
Life is not fair. Bill Gates, Bill Clinton, and Hugh Hefner can afford medical care I can not. So what? Prices drop. Ten years from now I will be able to afford what they can afford now -- even while some newest procedure will remain out of my reach. I still prefer to live in the country where medicine advances fastest, even if the price of it is newest life-saving procedure are only available to those of great means.
Are you saying that's not the case?I have a sneaking suspicion the thought process here went:
"US style healthcare systems lead to the fastest health care advances.
We know this because the fastest health care advances come from US style systems."
Life is not fair. Bill Gates, Bill Clinton, and Hugh Hefner can afford medical care I can not. So what? Prices drop. Ten years from now I will be able to afford what they can afford now -- even while some newest procedure will remain out of my reach. I still prefer to live in the country where medicine advances fastest, even if the price of it is newest life-saving procedure are only available to those of great means.
The more stuff to buy = more costs = longer, healthier lives. Restricting profit slows development, and more people suffer because of that than socialized medicine helps.
Any drop in income a physician might experience under a single-payer system would be mitigated by a drastic reduction in practice costs. For instance, the average malpractice premium for an Ob/Gyn, the medical specialty with the highest malpractice rates, was $195,000 in Florida for 20045. Comparatively, in the most expensive province in Canada for 2008, the malpractice rate for an Ob/Gyn was $33,563.28 annually, or $161,000 less than Florida’s6.
It happens to be today's news but does not prove anything. Some spectacular advances are bound to happen outside US. Thesyntaxera's post is much more convincing -- it is true that US life expectancy is 24th in the world despite 2nd largest per capita health care expenditures. However, US health care costs are driven up by absurdly litiginous climate which does not exist in Europe. Without it, US costs would have been much lower.Got access to a stem-cell trachea transplant in the US?
Sounds like we have a failure in communication. This is the situation I am describing:
1. Insurance provider pays X amount for a dental procedure.
2. Most dentists charge X + some small Y. Patient pays Y out of his pocket. Y value may vary.
3. Some dentist only charge X. Patient pays nothing.
4. Nothing prevents a dentist from charging X + very large Y, possibly more than X. Insurance provider will still pay only X. Patient will pay much larger amount. Obviously, he will get business only if he is significantly better than other dentists.
It happens to be today's news but does not prove anything. Some spectacular advances are bound to happen outside US. Thesyntaxera's post is much more convincing -- it is true that US life expectancy is 24th in the world despite 2nd largest per capita health care expenditures. However, US health care costs are driven up by absurdly litiginous climate which does not exist in Europe. Without it, US costs would have been much lower.
Well, do you think British doctors are overly protected from being sued?So are you saying you think physicians need an even larger share of the power in the physician-patient relationship to protect them from being sued?
I never claimed that. I claimed it is most conducive to innovation.But hang on. You claim to have the best health care system in the world.
Because too many people are greedy and can get away with it.Why on earth would so many physicians in the US be being sued if they all provide such a good service?
Well, do you think British doctors are overly protected from being sued?
The difference between US tort system and that of the rest of Western world (including Britain) is that in the rest of Western world, LOSER PAYS. Consequently in Britain people initiate lawsuits only if they have reasonable expectations of winning -- in case of doctor-patient relationship, only if doctor really did something wrong. In US anyone can sue a doctor (or anyone else, for that matter) with absolutely no danger to themselves. A lot of tort lawyers accept cases on "percentage fee" basis -- if plaintiff loses the case he pays nothing, if plaintiff wins, the lawyer gets a percentage. The defendant has to pay lawyer fee even if he wins. Most tort cases never reach the court -- the defendant (doctor, in this case) pays the plaintiff just to get rid of him; it is actually cheaper than winning the case. Whether or not he did anything wrong. Doctors' malpractice insurance premiums reflect the fact that any doctor can be sued at any time. Do you see now why US medical costs are highest in the world?
No, he didn't.But hang on. You claim to have the best health care system in the world.
He just said why, weren't you paying attention?Why on earth would so many physicians in the US be being sued if they all provide such a good service?
No, he didn't.
He just said why, weren't you paying attention?
In the US tort system, even if the doctor wins, he loses, because the cost of winning is often higher than the cost of simply settling the suit. This applies to many different industries besides medicine.
Because of this situation people sue for every little thing, and it's very easy and cheap to file such a lawsuit. So greed ensures that many people will file spurious lawsuits, knowing that the doctors will simply settle out of court, rather than ensuring the expensive and hassle of a trial. Even large corporations will typically settle rather than endure the cost of a suit. It's free money if you can work it right.