kellyb
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2006
- Messages
- 12,632
No. The most important factor was the economy and the recession.
http://www.usnews.com/opinion/blogs...e-healthcare-law-or-want-it-more-liberal.html
Heh. I'm part of that lonely 13%.
No. The most important factor was the economy and the recession.
http://www.usnews.com/opinion/blogs...e-healthcare-law-or-want-it-more-liberal.html
Growing, harvesting, transporting and distributing food is very expensive.
Planning, obtaining materials, building and maintaining a home is very expensive.
People can't opt out of these markets; everyone needs both. Yet somehow, we are able to feed and shelter 99% of our 300,000,000+ people through the free market.
Give me specific reasons why healthcare is different and I can point to a way the free market might help.
The difference is markets in food and shelter are free in the sense it's relatively easy for suppliers and consumers to enter and move around. Individual consumers in those markets have enough information to make reasonable choices and the ability to apply it when choosing which products to buy.
The difference is markets in food and shelter are free in the sense it's relatively easy for suppliers and consumers to enter and move around. Individual consumers in those markets have enough information to make reasonable choices and the ability to apply it when choosing which products to buy.
A market in healthcare cannot be free because in general individual consumers do not know enough to make reasonable choices about what type of healthcare services represent the best deal for them, or are in no condition to be able to make such a choice.
Speak honestly now: If the NHS is so Universally Loved in the UK, then how can David Cameron even have a plank of his platform about "hiving off the NHS to the private sector?" It should be political suicide, no? Yet somehow, he's the Prime Minister . . .
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And the results of the last election show that the American people agree with them.
The private sector works to distribute the two fundamental human needs 1)Food and 2)Shelter. In healthcare markets that are completely private sector: 1)Vetrinary medicine, 2)Lasik, 3)Cosmetic surgery and 4)Self-pay primary care, it works just fine.
Or, some of them are completely unable to foresee, budget for, or afford the proper care they need even with private insurance.
As Rolfe pointed out earlier, no amount of shopping around gets me an affordable porsche, yet that is what I needed to repair my spine and get treatment.
...snip...
Speak honestly now: If the NHS is so Universally Loved in the UK, then how can David Cameron even have a plank of his platform about "hiving off the NHS to the private sector?" It should be political suicide, no? Yet somehow, he's the Prime Minister . . .
...snip...
Labour was voted out because of what happened with Tony Blair and the Iraq war and the whole WMD mess that was revealed.
I don't think that the Tories are going to get another go.
...snip...
How you imagine a universal healthcare system could be implemented without it being paid for at least to some extent by the govermnent, I have no idea. Feel free to elaborate though.
You've got that bit wrong - his platform was that the NHS would be safe in his hands and there would not be "constant reorganisation". Rolfe was commenting that true to form for his party they will try to hive more and more of the NHS to the party donors, sorry the "free market".
You haven't provided any good evidence that self-pay primary care works.
It's not that the government can't manage healthcare reasonably well. It's that 1)The American people don't want the government managing it
2)The private sector can manage it much better
Speak honestly now: If the NHS is so Universally Loved in the UK, then how can David Cameron even have a plank of his platform about "hiving off the NHS to the private sector?" It should be political suicide, no? Yet somehow, he's the Prime Minister . . .![]()
It works well for some things. In my city there's a FP practice that caters to our immigrant population who often have to self-pay. What they can offer is limited (they don't do oncology, for example) but they do offer a lot of services at a relatively cheap price.
Exactly. We have a substantial self-pay population. We're able to offer them services within our scope of practice at very affordable rates. These people aren't just immigrants; they are the working uninsured for the most part. We can't do cancer surgery, but we can do quite a bit.
You'd also be amazed at what our local physician-owned hospital provides in the way of heavily discounted (sometimes pro bono) services to these uninsured people.
It can be done, people. It really can. If, I'm filtering your comments through my ideology then you are doing the same.
Why fire? Why not have private sector fire services?
xjx388 apparently "forgot" that a privatized fire department stood around and watch as a house burned to the ground.
http://www.salon.com/news/politics/war_room/2010/10/04/libertarian_fire_department
GB