applecorped
Banned
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2008
- Messages
- 20,145
Would you be for a Universal Health Care system in the U.S.?
One Opinion:
http://www.news-sentinel.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090126/EDITORIAL/901260336
"The solution is a complete paradigm shift away from a profit- driven model in the health care sector to a single-payer system. The trail leading us to this solution has already been blazed, and America is ready to take the first step. Public opinion polls show upward of 68 percent of citizens support such a shift, while 51 percent of American physicians are in favor of implementation of a single-payer system."
Another opinion:
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=8852
"A bad idea to improve quality is a government-run "pay for performance" system. In theory, it is an excellent idea. The government would figure out what sorts of processes and treatments are most effective, and it would pay bonuses to providers who use such best practices. In practice, as the United Kingdom has found, "P4P" is a system that is ripe for gaming, because it is political. Doctors in the UK were able to build in an "exception" system, where they could designate certain patients as requiring exceptions from best practices."
One Opinion:
http://www.news-sentinel.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090126/EDITORIAL/901260336
"The solution is a complete paradigm shift away from a profit- driven model in the health care sector to a single-payer system. The trail leading us to this solution has already been blazed, and America is ready to take the first step. Public opinion polls show upward of 68 percent of citizens support such a shift, while 51 percent of American physicians are in favor of implementation of a single-payer system."
Another opinion:
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=8852
"A bad idea to improve quality is a government-run "pay for performance" system. In theory, it is an excellent idea. The government would figure out what sorts of processes and treatments are most effective, and it would pay bonuses to providers who use such best practices. In practice, as the United Kingdom has found, "P4P" is a system that is ripe for gaming, because it is political. Doctors in the UK were able to build in an "exception" system, where they could designate certain patients as requiring exceptions from best practices."