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emily47017
Guest
of the single payer system? Does it allow them to keep the money they save? Does it allow them to pay out of pocket for treatements not covered by the single payer?Does it allow them to opt out
nope, yup, and not applicable.
the point of spreading risk across the whole population is A) a large pool has greater clout in negotiations over price, B) a large pool is better able to absorb the blow when someone gets really sick, and C) it drastically reduces bureaucracy and waste. if you don’t want to use the services available to you, that’s your business, but you can’t opt out of paying your fair share.
the way the PNHP proposal is funded involves a 2% income tax. do you have health insurance? take your monthly premium, and subtract from it 2% of your monthly income. unless you’re making a heck of a lot of money or have only the barest minimum of insurance, you’re going to save money. that money will be yours to keep.
(when i was working, i was making about $1000 a month shelving books at the library, and paying $90 a month for my premium. under the national system, i would pay $20/month, or just under a quarter of what i had been paying.)
now add a broken leg. my brother broke his femur in a skiing accident, and the total cost of the surgery, cast, brief hospital stay, and a month lost at work cost upwards of $20,000. how big is your deductible on that barest minimum of catastrophic insurance? what percentage of the bill will the insurance company cover after the deductible is met?
if you were saving x number of dollars a month by paying 2% on your income instead of a premium, the additional cost to you for a broken leg would be nothing. all those savings would belong to you, and live happily in your wallet.
cash-for-service seems like an okay idea, but it means we’d end up with some version of a two-tier system: one for the rich and one for everyone else. that’s what would ensure that the system was, indeed, set up for the lowest common denominator. that said, i’m not strictly opposed to doctors setting up a cash practice, though having eliminated the problem of battling insurance companies for approval, payment and inclusion in PPO lists, in addition to the massive piles of paperwork, i don’t know why they would bother. either way, you’d still have to pay your fair share for the national system.
but your real question was about things that aren’t covered in a single-payer system: EVERYTHING’S COVERED IN A SINGLE-PAYER SYSTEM! the long lists of excluded procedures you see in your insurance pamphlet? gone. the restrictions on the number of times you can see a doctor for the same condition? gone. the discrepancies between types of illnesses, some being covered more comprehensively and some getting the shaft? gone. the only things excluded are those not medically necessary. face lifts. liposuction. i think we can all agree that individuals ought to pay for those themselves.
a person with private health insurance is a person who needs to sweat about what’s not covered; a person with single-payer insurance knows that it’s all covered.
furthermore, the only people deciding what is or isn’t medically necessary are you and your doctor, not a profit-minded bureaucrat in a call center in las vegas. talk about other people making your health care decisions for you… that’s what we’ve got going now, and it’s a durned nightmare.
that dilemma – the poor can get the pap smear free.if they live in a big city or have the transportation and gas to get to a big city, if they know who to call and where to look, and if they have it together enough to bring proof of income and fill out all the paperwork. those conditions knock out a whole lot more people than you might think… i’ve been eligible for free pap smears all my life, but i’ve never gotten around to getting one. i’ve always paid to save the hassle. but the pap smear was only an example. insert whichever routine test/procedure makes sense to you.But most people don’t have