Your source cites two figures from two different sources from two different years. The WHO data is one source, same year (2005) with the raw numbers.
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Can you please re-link your data? The thread had gotten very long.
Thanks.
Your source cites two figures from two different sources from two different years. The WHO data is one source, same year (2005) with the raw numbers.
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With "sacrifice" being defined as accepting a full-ride scholarship that was paid for by threatening incarceration to get people to pay their taxes. You know, the very same taxes that could be used to, I dunno, pay for medical treatments.
Apparently "sacrifice" also means depending on family members to support you because, well, everybody has lots of family able to support a couple of teenagers who end up with a baby. Tell us, who paid your medical bills for the birth of the child? Right now an ordinary vaginal birth costs about 1,300 hours of minimum wage labor. It would only be about 1,200 hours if we didn't take out FICA/Medicare.
We definitely need better, more honest politicians.You're kidding me right? That's supposed to be the way it works in the US too but since every politician has backroom deals going on there isn't an honest one among the bunch and we get the choice of dishonest Democrat A or dishonest Republican B. The current US healthcare system has more incentive to please consumers than government, period.
False. If we got "hard-core" and implemented an NHS-emulated system on January 1st (or June 1st, or next January, etc.) there would be droves of people flocking to doctors for their "free" healthcare and the system would be overwhelmed and, let's see, there would be rationing. Oh yeah, a large portion of providers would decide they're not going to lose money accepting solely Medicare (or a Medicare-type system) and they'd retire early or quit and go do something else. It would be mass pandemonium with millions of patients and too few providers. The government would raise taxes to "pay for it" so all the people who work 80 hours a week and employ people would decide not to work 80 hours a week just so the government could take their 60%. The people employed by the 80-hour-work-week business owners would then be unemployed and they and the business owners would go on food stamps and welfare in addition to free healthcare (because now most the small businesses would close) and the government would have to raise taxes even further because there would be less workers funding all the stay-at-home welfare/food-stamp/free healthcare people.
Gee, that would be a real utopia.
My rant is now over.
Can you please re-link your data? The thread had gotten very long.
Thanks.
You're completely mixed-up on this.What was the opening sentence of that statement? "If Healthcare is so much of a universal need . . ." Every other part of my "argument" followed from that. Just about all of you here are saying that access to basic healthcare (from strep throat treatment to liver transplants) is a fundamental human right. OK, then put your money where your mouth is. If society has a duty to provide everything to everyone that they will ever need: (health-care wise) then how can that society justify spending money on luxuries? Your continued insistence that the NHS covers everyone's needs perfectly is a utopian fantasy. Find me a source besides you guys that says that. Just one. You will not find such a source. There are inequities between rich and poor and they will never go away. There is rationing of care because of finite resources.
Our words say that we choose to cover everybody resident in the country for all the evidence-based medicine that they need, up to a ceiling that's so high it's in the realms of marginally-effective drugs that don't cure and may only prolong the dying process for a few weeks.In other words, your words say it's a right, but your actions (i.e., rationing care people have a right to instead of increasing funding to cover those needs) are louder.
You have absolutely no evidence that this equation has any basis in reality. On the contrary, costs are spectacularly lower in universal healthcare systems where the government is very much in. This is a fact.That's right, you can't save the ridiculous sums that healthcare costs under our current system. That's support of my argument, not a flaw. There have to be fundamental changes. Government out + Free Market in = lower cost.
Remember, we are America with the can-do attitude! Eliminate the high costs involved in our current system and the free market will drive healthcare costs down which in turn will drive down the price of catastrophic insurance like this.
In the NHS, anyone can access the healthcare they need, without being asked to pay a penny (except for the prescription charge if they are eligible to pay it). It's reality, regardless of xjx388's fantasies.That's right. In the NHS, people go without all the time, regardless of what you read on here. It's reality. Go back and read my sources for the inequities in health care between rich and poor and the news reports about cutbacks.
But the NHS doesn't tell these people that their treatment isn't covered. If you lived here, you would never be told that the NHS wouldn't pay for your treatment. Nikki Blunden got high-quality cancer care, free. She wanted a drug the NHS didn't think was likely to do her any significant good. We still don't know whether it did or not, because a case series of one is insufficient data.If my catastrophic plan told me they wouldn't pay for my treatment, it's no different than the NHS telling people like Nikki Blunden, obese people, alcoholics, and the others cited on here and in the press that their treatments won't be covered.
Ah. Liberty. What liberty would that be then?There are finite resources. I opt for the plan that gives me access to the most of those resources at the maximum amount of my liberty.
And yet, when we tell you that Ducky would have been treated free if he'd been a UK resident, that means nothing to you. Because of one tabloid story about one woman who wanted even more than the large amount the NHS had already given her, and because of some bizarre notion about "liberty" that I'll just bet you can't explain rationally.Listen, I feel for your situation, sincerely. Your example is perfectly illustrative of just how messed up our current healthcare market is. It needs to change right now. The nature of that change is what is under debate.
I opened a small business. I knew I wouldn't have health insurance provided for me. It didn't stop me from opening a business. It doesn't stop anyone now.
Indeed, you do need to fix your system. I see no evidence that free markets work in healthcare. Find me a real free market in healthcare, if you can, and I'll show you one where access is extremely restricted.We need to fix our system so that everyone can have better access to care.
I see no evidence that shows free markets don't work in healthcare. I see a lot of rhetoric, but no actual study or case where it has failed.
That's me on the street then. Are you going to address the issue of people with lifelong chronic illness at all? Someone earlier pointed out that some people in the US were making the decision between asthma/type 1 diabetes meds and food. Or do you plan to respond to any of Rolfe's unanswered posts?Your continuing efforts to personalize this argument are ridiculous. Stick to the facts.
Sacrifice = putting your immediate wants aside in the near-term to achieve a more rewarding want in the far-term. Personal responsibility = finding your own way through life without using the crutch of "welfare." Two concepts many Americans have forgotten about . . .
This is nit-picking. You have shown no evidence that everyone in the UK gets all the treatment they need for their healthcare.
What if an alcoholic needs a liver transplant? They won't get one because of the drinking. So it's OK to let the alcoholic die.
What if an obese person needs a hip-replacement? They won't get it until they lose weight. They can't lose weight easily so they may never get it. So it's OK for the obese person to suffer with pain the rest of their life.
Rationing of healthcare is a fact, even in the NHS.
"Nobody needs to worry about the funding for any future healthcare needs because it's sorted." = covering everyone's future needs perfectly.
It was you, not I, who shared the story of teenage pregnancy, so don't accuse me of "personalizing" the discussion. It cuts both ways. You can't share a story of your personal triumph of personal responsibility then cry foul when somebody throws it back in your face.Your continuing efforts to personalize this argument are ridiculous. Stick to the facts.
Is that what you did when you decided to have a child and depend on your family to support you?Sacrifice = putting your immediate wants aside in the near-term to achieve a more rewarding want in the far-term.
Right. Just use the crutch of your family. You know, if you have one.Personal responsibility = finding your own way through life without using the crutch of "welfare." Two concepts many Americans have forgotten about . . .
Emet, it might be this data: http://www.photius.com/rankings/world_health_systems.html which shows that the USA spends more per capita than any other country on healthcare, and rates 72nd of 191 countries on "level of health performance". The UK comes 26th in the spending table, and 24th on the level of health performance.
Right. The care is rationed. Too fat? No treatment. You drink? No treatment. First let's cure those other problems. Can't cure those other problems? Too bad, we can't do your surgery. Suffer/die.
I disagree because it is not true. You can not account for the difference in healthcare spending per capita between the US and (pick a country) due to the mere existence of the health insurance industry. The US spent $2.47 trillion on healthcare in 2009. The top 14 health insurance companies posted $8,500 million in profits. That's .0034% of the US's healthcare expenditures in 2009.
Your doctrines I maun blame, you will hear, you will hear
That's the operative phrase here. They craft their guidelines putting costs ahead of care as evidenced by the three year recommendation for breast cancer screening.All drugs that have passed NICE (or equivalent) scrutiny as being cost-effective are covered for all people. The sort of things that make the headlines as being "denied" are what you're talking about - something that might extend the dying process by about six weeks, at the cost of tens of thousands of pounds.
I don't want to cling to anything. I want a change. You say health care is a right, but you aren't willing to cough up the millions it takes to truly give it to people who need it?If you're going to go on clinging to your terminally broken system until you can find something that will unquestioningly cough up millions for almost no benefit for whatever wizard wheeze the pharmaceutical companies just thought up, you'll have a long wait.
Oh and so you pop over to the dermatologist whenever you feel like it and they just give you Accutane with no trouble? I hardly think so. According to this document, they must be referred to a dermatologist but only under certain conditions and after having tried other treatments. Anecdotally, it took a friend of ours in the UK two years to get her GP to refer her. Here in the US, your GP (Family Medicine) can take care of the whole thing. If your severe cystic acne doesn't respond to first-line treatment, you can get Accutane within a few months. I have not heard of any issues with covering it, although it is at a higher "copay."Meantime, back in the USA, when someone says "some drugs are not covered", they're talking about quite ordinary, well-established things that are available to others with no trouble. For God's sake, Accutane???
Define ordinary standard care. Cite sources of when such has been routinely denied, then we can talk. Until then all you've got is ranting and insults such as that last little bit there.Your system denies treatment to thousands of people, more or less on the whim of the insurance company. Insurance loss adjusters regularly over-ride the doctor's advice and deny something as "not medically necessary". Not brand new, eye-poppingly expensive drugs that won't stop you dying anyway, but ordinary, standard care.
So you find the extremely high ceiling on "rationing" in the NHS, and point to an exceptional case or two that made headlines, as if that weighs against the routine denials of basic care that go on all the time in the USA.
Hypocrite.
Both our families pitched in for the medical care. What a concept . . . families who love each other taking care of their own! Bah! Better to just let the nanny-state do it, right?It was you, not I, who shared the story of teenage pregnancy, so don't accuse me of "personalizing" the discussion. It cuts both ways. You can't share a story of your personal triumph of personal responsibility then cry foul when somebody throws it back in your face.
Are you going to answer the question or not? Who paid for the delivery of your child?
Ah, moral judgement! Why am I not surprised by this? We were two kids in love who fooled around. Happens everyday. We could have gratified our immediate needs and driven down the dead-end road that lead to. Instead, our family helped lift us out of that. If not for them, there's no way she could have accepted her scholarship.Is that what you did when you decided to have a child and depend on your family to support you?
That's pretty warped to think of a loving family as a crutch. As for those who don't, I have no problem giving them a helping hand with my tax dollars. I have a problem with those who make it a lifestyle. It should be used as a stepping stone to better things. That's why we need to cut Welfare significantly not increase it.Right. Just use the crutch of your family. You know, if you have one.
On this we agree 100%.Look, if somebody could assure me that 100% of my tax dollars went to only those who needed it, I'd be thrilled. That will never happen. What I want is my tax dollars to get the best bang for the buck in terms of helping those who need it while preventing people from milking the system.
Forever? For an able bodied/minded person?As long as there's an ongoing effort to do that, I'm okay with it. Nobody in my family needs my assistance right now. Same for my friends. Personally, I don't object to paying some taxes on an ongoing basis so that should any of them (or us) need it, it's there.
I'm actually okay if your child's birth was subsidized with my tax dollars. I'm okay if some of my money paid for her education. I'm okay that my tax dollars pay for the research she uses to make a profit in her business (it's not like she's actually discovered anything useful on her own). I just find the lines you draw to be hypocritical and not well thought out. You have yet to come up with any reasoning for drawing the line where you do.
I still can't wait to see XjX's explanation as to why we live longer for half the healthcare costs. Especially given her unsubstantiated claims of UHC rationing. It's been strangely absent so far.
OK, but there are plenty of people in the US -Men being a great example- who don't go to the doctor until something is really wrong. Yet, despite "universal access" compared to the US, your cancer survival rates are significantly worse.
You guys are the ones saying that the NHS provides comparable or better outcomes than the US system for less money. You provide surveys and flawed WHO reports to "prove" your claim. I show you the raw data proving the US has better mortality rates in cancer and your reasoning is that people in the UK don't use the free care given to them. But, I could just as easily conclude, based on the evidence I've seen, that the NHS refuses life-extending treatments based on cost-effectiveness.
http://www.businessweek.com/lifestyle/content/healthday/640380.html
Poor Breast Cancer Survival in Blacks May Not Be Due to Race
Many factors, including access to health care, could affect outcome, analysis finds
I have a problem with those who make it a lifestyle. It should be used as a stepping stone to better things. That's why we need to cut Welfare significantly not increase it.