A
Al_Masetti
Guest
There are doctors even today in the United States who treat indigent people without charging them.
They don’t advertise their charitable work.
They don’t advertise their charitable work.
Ok, so you worry about hospitals being able to make a profit, I worry about hospitals going broke. Single payer or multiple payer, there will still be a limit on how much health coverage can be given. I’d still say Vern still had enough heart in his orginal plan to say, those who cannot get paid will still receive treatment.our priorities are out of whack when we think that it’s okay to make a profit off of sick people, and to sit around and watch people die if they can’t pay – it doesn’t matter how they got sick, and it doesn’t matter why they can’t pay.
lifestyle choices are a big deal, don’t get me wrong. but let’s be honest here: are meth addicts children of god? are they your brothers? if you find one vomiting up blood in the parking lot of a hospital, will you walk on by feeling proud of the good choices you’ve made?
careful. this is a trick question.
I left this one alone because I thought it was too easy. Of course the meth addict gets treatment, and I have not heard anyone say we just let anyone die without it.lifestyle choices are a big deal, don’t get me wrong. but let’s be honest here: are meth addicts children of god? are they your brothers? if you find one vomiting up blood in the parking lot of a hospital, will you walk on by feeling proud of the good choices you’ve made?
careful. this is a trick question.
i wasn’t thinking so much about hospitals as about private insurance companies, who make a profit without providing any actual health care services. as i clarified for trader, do i think service providers ought to make a good living at what they do.Ok, so you worry about hospitals being able to make a profit, I worry about hospitals going broke. Single payer or multiple payer, there will still be a limit on how much health coverage can be given.
ah, thank you. you both rightly perceived that it wasn’t a trick question after all.I left this one alone because I thought it was too easy.
If the insurance companies don’t provide you a service, why do you pay the premiums?i wasn’t thinking so much about hospitals as about private insurance companies, who make a profit without providing any actual health care services.
It does indeed. Emergency rooms are required to treat anyone who walks in – regardless of ability to pay.i wish i knew more about the specific economics of why certain hospitals go broke and others don’t. does it have to do with the disproportionate amount of charity care that big city public hospitals have to provide?
The administrative waste of government healthcare plans is twice that of private insurance.it’d be really great if we could ensure that all physicians/hospitals are getting the same reimbursement for the same services. reducing the administrative waste (31%) of a patchwork private insurance system could also help, but i really don’t know enough to make any sweeping recommendations.
Note the reason!!tangentially, here’s an interesting study of canadian hospitals, showing that for-profit hospitals have a higher mortality rate than not-for-profit hospitals.
A systematic review and metaanalysis of studies comparing mortality rates of private for-profit and private not-for-profit hospitals
I doubt we would have doctors making house calls anyway, if only because technology has changed and the doctor’s little black bag could not carry all the equipment he(or she) needs now. The doctor’s time is more valuable now and the travel time would be considered very wasteful by most of them. Nurses do make house calls now and they are nearly as well trained as doctors were 50 years ago.A doctor called in to a talk show the other day, and reported that Medicare reimbursement is actually below cost for some services, to the point that some medical service providers have had to close for financial reasons.
Medicare is run by the Federal Government.
The most under-reported Federal agency is probably HCFA. Yet they control a lot of the fee structures.
Seems to me that before the Feds got involved, doctors routinely made house calls.
vern, it’s no fun engaging you in debate because you consistently refuse to integrate any new information.If the insurance companies don’t provide you a service, why do you pay the premiums?
It does indeed. Emergency rooms are required to treat anyone who walks in – regardless of ability to pay. In some places, people use the ER as their primary care facility, and get free treatment. As a result, some hospitals have been forced into a hard choice – go broke (and deprive everyone of health care) or close their emergency rooms.
The administrative waste of government healthcare plans is twice that of private insurance.
Note the reason!!
funny you should mention house calls. there’s a private company in france, SOS medicins, that makes 24 hour house calls and is reimbursed for their services by the government single-payer system.Seems to me that before the Feds got involved, doctors routinely made house calls.
By focusing on rapidity and quality, SOS MÉDECINS FRANCE contributes strongly to the patients’ well-being and to a economical management of healthcare costs.
http://www.sosmedecins-france.fr/images/t6.gifBased on their experience with emergency services, doctors working for SOS Médecins rarely send patients to hospitals. SOS Médecins is financially independent. It does not receive any governmental subsidy but its usefulness to the general public is a guarantee of cohesion, efficiency and responsibility.
The hospital dietician, the janitor, the billing clerk, the maintenance man and the scrub-room nurse don’t provide any “health services” either – but they are all part of the system.vern, it’s no fun engaging you in debate because you consistently refuse to integrate any new information.
- i said “health care services”. the guy/gal in the call center in las vegas doesn’t diagnose or treat anything; instead s/he gets paid to refuse reimbursement.
Due to a very unwise government law that assumes all hospitals have a magic money pot in the back room that magically refills itself overnight – and hence we require the hospital to pay for ER care.
- some inner-city hospitals are going broke because the ER is the only way poor people can get any sort of medical treatment, and inner-city hospitals serve a disproportionate number of poor and indigent.
And how would a “single-payer” system do that? It would be simply another insurance company – with all the bureacuracy and inefficiency you deplore, along with the same cost-cutting pressures.yep! sure enough! single-payer would ensure that these people could get more economical general practice treatment *and *that all ERs – including those in poorer areas – would get equal reimbursement for everyone they serve.
I see you fell into the trap – the government requires many medical facilities to charge private pay patients more than Medicare patients. If they charge less, they are accused of “Medicare fraud”](http://www.pnhp.org/single_payer_resources/devereaux_costs.pdf)
- simply false: medicare advantage benchmarks and payments compared with average fee-for-service spending
see also: administrative costs in US hospitals , [payments for care at private for-profit and private not-for-profit hospitals
Why is it wrong for investors to want a profit?
- noted: “Typically, investors expect a 10%–15% return on their investment. Administrative officers of private for profit institutions receive rewards for achieving or exceeding the anticipated profit margin. In addition to generating profits, private for-profit institutions must pay taxes and may contend with cost pressures associated with large reimbursement packages for senior administrators that private not-for-profit institutions do not face.”
Remember, no profits, no investors.so when they’re getting the same reimbursements for services, they’re wasting a significant portion of that money on other things, like profits for investors,
So why aren’t not-for-profit hospitals taking over the universe?huge salaries for CEOs, the greater administrative waste (see above), and, yes, taxes, which a not-for-profit hospital doesn’t have to pay.
Interesting – I note they don’t directly measure mortality. They just measure “number of highly skilled personnel per hospital bed” and tell us this is “strongly associated with hospital mortality rates.”and then there’s this: “The private for-profit hospitals employed fewer highly skilled personnel per risk-adjusted bed. The number of highly skilled personnel per hospital bed is strongly associated with hospital mortality rates, and differences in mortality between private for-profit and private not-for-profit institutions predictably decreased when investigators adjusted for staffing levels. Therefore, lower staffing levels of highly skilled personnel are probably one factor responsible for the higher risk-adjusted mortality rates in private for-profit hospitals.”
What argument of mine is not supported here?i guess you were hoping the reason better supported your arguments? sorry.
your other favorite debate tactic: when stumped, redirect to square one. i’m not wasting my time with this one. the PHNP proposal is here, information about financing is here, a shorter and more accessible piece about the financial advantages of single-payer is here, and the FAQ is here. the whole shebang can be found at www.pnhp.org.And how would a “single-payer” system do that?
When you get personal lie that, you forfeit the argumentyour other favorite debate tactic: when stumped, redirect to square one. i’m not wasting my time with this one.
I’m well aware of what the PNHP proposal is.the PHNP proposal is here, information about financing is here, a shorter and more accessible piece about the financial advantages of single-payer is here, and the FAQ is here. the whole shebang can be found at www.pnhp.org.
When you resort to unchristian remarks like that, you forfeit the argument.the rest of your post is the same old strawmen you’ve been using all along, and i’m not wasting my time with them, either.
What is unchristian is to use an accusation like the above.when a *person *intentionally and repeatedly derails honest debate, it’s not unchristian to call him on it, is it?
Before one can use Christ as a metaphor for oneself, one must be truly Christ-like.or maybe all these years i’ve been misreading christ’s debates with the pharisees.
Actually, since you pay your own way with MSAs and spend your own money (except in the rare event you reach the catestrophic deductable) the incentive is not to spend more than you need – since you save all you do not spend.OK Vern,
The problem with subsidized insurance is that it inflates costs across the board. Whenever the government meddles in the price, everyone takes action to maximize profit. Thus, if I had an 80/20 split, I would upgrade my insurance. The insurance company would respond by raising the rate, and the doctors would raise their rates as well. Hey, it’s their tax money too!
That’s the status quo, and its all but impossible to avoid.
The key would be placing the income cap for the sliding scale low enough. Even then, however, you could have greatly increased demand (not necessarily bad) that increases costs. And, some people still wouldn’t buy it.
If everyone gets health care for free, who pays for it?In my opinion, health care should be free for everyone and especially so for the poor.
By that same reasoning, shouldn’t food, clothing, and shelter also be free for everone?In my opinion, health care should be free for everyone and especially so for the poor.
the public school system is free education for all; those who support school vouchers also support free or near-free private education for all.By that same reasoning, shouldn’t food, clothing, and shelter also be free for everone?
How about education, entertainment, and transportation?
Are you wealthy enough to support everyone for their every need and want? Who besides you would do any work at all when everything was provided for free?