Folks back to the topic - TFian especially.
Replying to this modbox in thread will be off topic Posted By: Darat
Alllllllllll riiiiiighty, then...
MC: Sorry it took me so long to respond, but here it goes. What do you think currently happens in America? Do you think kids in your situation are routinely left to die? No. We have a collective soft spot for kids and there plenty of doctors, hospitals and charities that would have helped out. Even as an adult, there are clinics who care for patients in your situation regardless of ability to pay.
Our system isnt perfect, but that doesn't mean that people who need care don't get it -they do for the most part.
Charity care won't even pay for our burials.
Counties often pay burial expenses for the indigent. If not there's always your local dumpster.
Illegal.
Oh ok, so if we simply change the name of the programs, that means we have the money to pay for them all of a sudden?![]()
Too bad I never actually said that.
So then explain how we can pay for healthcare FOR everybody, if we can't afford them for a select group of poor.
That's like saying I don't have enough to feed 5 people with current supplies, so I'm going to go feed 50 people instead with my current supplies.![]()
Set them on fire. Or take a loan out if the county won't pay for it. Whatever happened to people paying for things themselves? Everyone wants a damn handout nowadays.
Can I ask why life expectancy and infant mortality aren't "valid" comparisons?
Because they are measured differently from country to country. For example, in the US, an infant who dies at 22 weeks gestation is figured into the infant mortality rates but in other counties that is not always the case. ...snipo...
Because they are measured differently from country to country. For example, in the US, an infant who dies at 22 weeks gestation is figured into the infant mortality rates but in other counties that is not always the case. If you're going to compare infant mortality rates you have to be certain the definition of 'infant' is defined identically across the board. In addition, the US spends more on fertility treatments than other countries. These also inflate the infant mortality rates.
Similarly, life expectancy must be universally defined. Does it include homocides and/or suicides? If we are talking about healthcare these should not be included as they have nothing to do with healthcare.
How are these studies calculated and compiled from one country to another?
I've asked a few times before and you seem to have a grasp of the issues involved so can you tell me how health statistics are collated in the USA? For example is their mandatory universal reporting of certain medical data as there is in the UK?
As you say we need to know this before we can even start to work out whether we have two pears or an apple and a pear to compare!
I've asked a few times before and you seem to have a grasp of the issues involved so can you tell me how health statistics are collated in the USA? For example is their mandatory universal reporting of certain medical data as there is in the UK?
As you say we need to know this before we can even start to work out whether we have two pears or an apple and a pear to compare!