What I actually said was that I want doctors, teachers, footballers, writers -just about everybody to get paid what they are worth to society. I believe the best way to accomplish that is through the free market.
You are the ones who say that health care is a basic right. OK, then why don't you prioritize at as such? You don't deny there is inequity in your system. You don't deny that people who need care are denied.
We do deny that people who need care are denied care in our system, which is why when it happens or appears to happen, it's headline news and reviews are ordered, and if necessary things change. In your system, people are denied care which they need every single day on the ground of cost.
The reason that this is so is that there are not enough resources to go around, so you have to ration care.
Zing! This is where your misunderstanding lies. People are not denied treatment on the basis of cost, they are denied treatment on the basis of clinical need and the evidence-based assessments of the effectiveness of the proposed treatments. This is why tabloid headlines may scream out about "treatment denied due to cost" but it's actually "treatment denied due to cost-effectiveness". An expensive drug which is no more effective than other treatments will not be prescribed because there is no
evidence that it will give a better outcome. Surely you should be applauding evidence-based rather than cost-based medicine?
For example: An alcoholic who cannot/will not abstain from alcohol for six months will be denied a liver transplant, until they get off the alcohol. Once they do abstain, they are on the transplant list.
Someone who is so morbidly obese that surgery would be too dangerous would be denied all but life saving surgery until they lose weight - but they'd also be helped to lose it, by whatever means is deemed to be the best for that individual.
We keep saying that cost is not the driver of the (rare, and headline making) decisions to deny care, clinical need and evidence-based medicine is what drives these decisions. Possibly we're not saying it loud enough, because you don't seem to be hearing it.
Yet, the UK spends about £3bil on football each year. You spend £13.4bil on tobacco products. How many more people could be served with £16bil? Ah, but the people want Football and Ciggies. But those things are not rights like Health Care is, so why not take that money and spend it on Health Care if it's so damned important?
I say Health Care is no more a right than food and shelter are. We distribute the latter two through the free market and healthcare should be no different.
And we say it's a right that we in our society are happy to pay for, and we do it at half the cost of your broken system. BTW, are there are no homeless shelters or social housing projects over there? Strange. I also thought I'd heard of food stamps in the US.
I note you have skipped over this bit again:
Agatha said:
A free market would exclude the complex, expensive cases because the recipients would never be able to afford them. A free market would exclude those people born into poverty who need care from birth (or before).
A free market would leave me out in the cold, even if I put every penny I ever earn over my whole life into healthcare. I could prioritise healthcare over everything else; no money ever for mortgage or rent, no money to feed or clothe myself, and still I could never earn enough to pay for the care I need.
And not just me, everyone born into poverty, everybody with a lifelong chronic illness (which, remember, severely limits their earning power), everyone who develops a rare cancer, and people like Stephen Hawking who need the treatment and support for ALS before they can possibly earn the money to pay for their care.
Is it your position that it is acceptable for people born into poverty, people with lifelong chronic illnesses, people with rare cancers, people with early onset ALS (etc) to be denied care by the free market on the grounds that they do not and will never have the means to pay for their care?