Yes, I've already admitted that there are some people who do have severe hardship due to medical costs... people too poor to afford insurance and too much income to qualify for medicare/medicade. (Although if you look at the numbers, that applies to only a very small portion of the population.)
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This is a site with a declared interest but the figures do seem to be substantiated:
http://www.nchc.org/facts/coverage.shtml
Nearly 46 million Americans, or 18 percent of the population under the age of 65, were without health insurance in 2007, the latest government data available.1
That does not seem a very small proportion of the population.
Is it any better to have the 'average' person suffering longer than they should (or dying as a result)? Some people, given a choice between financial bankruptcy and severe pain (or risk of death) would choose financial bankruptcy.
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I think many of us would be, however in the USA that is not the spectrum of the choice, many people simply cannot afford the treatment in the first place. And you seem to be treating health care and medical treatment as a "one-off" charge, that is very rarely the case.
Say I manage to scrape together enough to pay for my initial radiation therapy to treat my cancer, but that ends up bankrupting me. How do I now pay for all the follow-up and support treatment I require? What happens if I require yet more radiation therapy or now require chemotherapy or surgery? Again the choice has ended up being "never".
But what if the choice is one week or 6 months? 6 months of horrible pain and an inability to live a normal life waiting for a hip replacement (http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=2384274), or 6 months living with a potentially fatal condition because the health system doesn't consider your situation serious enough to give you priority. If you were faced with that situation, would it provide comfort to you just because others would be equally suffering? Or would you consider going into debt just to fix the problem?
See above. Plus, as I see it, it is very unlikely that any treatment for any condition that was so serious that you would be willing to face bankruptcy to have treated is going to be treated and paid for by a "one-off cost". For example most people requiring hip-replacements require a lot of follow-up treatment such as physiotherapy, without which the effectiveness of having a hip-replacement (I assume) is going to be severely reduced.
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