And did they achieve significant healthcare savings? Or was their healthcare spending simply lower to begin with?
What
are you talking about?
Currently,pretty much every country that wants to provides a universal system that is at least as effective medically as the USA system, but for lower cost.
Better cover, equivalent helathcare outcomes, lower costs. If you want to compare "healthcare spending" of the UK in 1947 with today, be my guest, but I don't know what you'll think you're proving.
And how about we run the thought experiment in reverse? Imagine the UK ditched the NHS, and switched to the US system tomorrow. Would we achieve "savings", now that we have 8 times as many staff, a profit motive, means-testing and A&Es being used as GPs offices?
Here's a clue about bulk drug purchasing: it only works to lower the cost if you're willing to not purchase the drug. Easy to do with generics. New drugs? You tell me.
If you buy more, your unit price is lower. Basic economics. Universal healthcare providers buy more drugs than individual hospitals, or HMOs or whoever it is who buys drugs for the private patients in the USA.
Do the economics of bulk purchase not work for drugs? Even if your point is correct - that is to say, if manufacturers of wonder drugs will simply charge whatever they wish because they have no competetion - someone buying at volume will still be able to buy cheaper.
I've seen no evidence that this will provide a significant overall savings. I like the idea of doing that, because it should improve medical outcomes, but significant savings? Nope. I've seen nobody provide evidence of that. Take smoking, for example: I've heard various arguments in favor of taxing it on the basis that smokers put a burden on the public system because of their health problems. But because they die younger, smoking actually produces a net savings to the public.
In other words, deny treatment. Such denial may be justified, but that's still what you're doing. Now, can you quantify the potential savings this could provide? Maybe you can, but you haven't.
Rolfe covered that one already. Since when did a physician denying medically-superfluous procedures become a BAD thing? Anyway - I thought you guys were all against "free riders" and often potted out the argument that if healthcare were free at the point of use, people would demand everything and anything, like kids in a candy-store?!
Oh please. Spare me the self-righteous ad hominems.
You've been here long enough to know what an ad-hominem is, Ziggurat. That isn't one.
Fact is that you've swallowed the talking points of the ideological right - talking points that, it turns out, are fed directly to right-wing politicians by financially-interested insurance companies - hook line and sinker. The impediment to the system working is you, and those like you.
I've already told you why I think that's the case. Maybe I'm wrong. Good chance of that, in fact. But the reasons are ultimately irrelevant: either we can, or we can't. Where's the evidence that we can? Where's the evidence of actual, achievable, and huge spending cuts that don't dramatically cut services as well? Where, in our total healthcare spending budget, can you point to something and say, "this is where we can cut X dollars, and this is how we can do it"? And I'm not a "useful idiot" for being unwilling to radically overhaul the system from top to bottom without seeing where such savings will come from.
I told you, and plenty of others have done the maths. The fact is you're pretending that this is some great unknowable; that the expierment hasn't been done. It has - there are no fundamental barriers to the implementation of a well-functioning UHC system on a par with those of Europe and Canada. The only barrier is misguided ideology and lies.