- Longevity. Infant mortality. Morbidity figures.
*First of all, statistics like: longevity, infant mortality and morbidity do not tell the whole story, that is like using GDP to determine which nation is more prosperous, by that logic Cuba has a larger economy than Bermuda by a factor of 20. Yet it doesn’t take a economic genius to see that Bermudians are vastly more prosperous than Cubans. Statistics like longevity have little to do with a nation’s health care system and more to do with a general populace’s lifestyle choices. Even such, some of those statistics are muddy because of different methods in recording. Canada and Europe have more stricter definitions in regards as what constitutes as a “live birth”. In the UK, they don’t record babies born before 24 weeks. In France one needs a certificate of live birth, if the child died immediately after birth it is not counted. Mortality rate is also a weak argument, considering that the majority in America is due to homicides and accidents…kinda hard to measure a HC system when they are already dead.
If you wish to use statistics, use one that involves the point of medical intervention. Using the study from CONCORD, Americans have a 73.8% 5-year relative survival rate to various cancers. The highest among nations*
The rule is pretty much that societies with more evenly distributed incomes, and with public health care are healthier and happier by nearly every measure, ranging from health statistics, social mobility, levels of education achieved, child welfare by every know standard, and the list goes on.
This is probably the most ignorant statement I have read. If that were true…North Korea would be the happiest healthiest place in the world, for they have the lowest Gini coefficients and public healthcare, yet they are starving to death.
Even the wealthy do better in such societies by all these measures than the wealthy do in a country with large disparity.
*So by your logic, the wealthy --who are trying to flee from China, and are non-existent in places like Cuba and DPRK unless they are bureaucrats or generals-- do better in nations that tax them to pay for other people’s lives. If that were true, why is in Britain millionaires declined by 50% in 2009, compared to 39% in US…despite the epicenter happening in US? *
It is no coincidence that the US performs the worst in all these areas. It is also the country with the most disparate income distribution among the “advanced” countries.
Just abject statements with faulty logic and careless use of statistics *
- Easy to fix. Take the responsibility back from the employer. Public healthcare. That would put the fire out completely. We are lucky that there are enough good systems in Europe and Asia, that we can design a good system by learning from their mistakes and their successes.
If that were true, why is Medicare and Medicaid (which are public healthcare systems) going bankrupt and the government
hasn’t* fixed them yet?
- Easy. Everyone gets it. A big part of the reason for doing it is to reduce healthcare costs, while improving care. I am not opposed to giving basic food commodities to people in need. I think we already do that with food stamps.
Wow another reason why we don’t need economic illiterates trivializing the dangers of Socialized medicine by spouting abject nonsense. First off, you cannot create a high-quality mass-produce product cheap…if you could, we would all be driving Lamborghinis. Second government DOES NOT create wealth, it can only re-distribute it. So the only way government can reduce costs is through price controls by artificially lowering the costs of healthcare which would lead to shortages and rationing because demand will necessarily skyrocket.
- You make my point for me. If we can provide better health care at a lower cost, while covering the entire population,
Impossible, you are asking everyone to drive Lamborghinis for the price of a Ford.
then if we keep spending levels where they are now, that money could be put into research.
So what happens when the population increases? Anyone who can do basic arithmetic knows more people will mean less resources for everyone…also by that logic, if we kept Medicare spending levels at 1966 levels, the nation would only be spending $3 billion on health care for everyone…which reminds me back in that year the government estimated that by 1990 Medicare would only cost $12 billion, they were off by $95,000,000,000 dollars…and you want a government that can’t even amortize to be in charge of our health care? Oh by the way did I mention we have $34 Trillion in unfunded liabilities? How are we gonna pay that off?
It is well known that open source research which comes out of Universities, and other public research, has a tremendous synergistic effect, while private research restricts the dissemination of idea, and the benefits to society.
The place where I saw the least innovation was a university…last time I checked it was a individual not a uni that created facebook…it was Apple Inc that created the iPods, Pad ect. It was companies like AOL and Netscape that opened us up to the web, it was GM that created an electric car, it was Exxon Mobil that learned how to drill more oil out of wells that were deemed “dry” not universities…BTW who do you think pays for a lot of the grants to universities? Private business.
Well, if you call Germany and Japan socialist countries, maybe I am proposing socialism by your definition. But I mine would put Toyota down as an example of a Company in a capitalist country.
Yes you proposing Socialism.
If you go to an ER, they are legally required to stabilize your condition. Nothing more. Whether a hospital decides to do more than that, is a matter of charity - well not charity, it is paid for by health insurance premiums by everyone else. The legal requirement does not constitute adequate medical care.
Yes, that’s health care!
Finally, I can prove my statements to my satisfaction with objective data. If you want to check it out, just google “health quality statistics”, “mortality rates”, “age of death”, “infant mortality”… anything you can think of related to measuring medical care. Then google “health care costs as a percentage of GDP”.
*
Sadly the only thing you proved unfortunately was just how illiterate you are about economics.*
What you will find is that the countries with the best records in health care by objective measure all have public health care systems, and all spend substantially less than the US as a percentage of GDP.
Wrong!
What they don’t have is large insurance companies manipulating the market to maximize their profits, while they don’t provide a service which excludes large percentages of the population, such as those with pre-existing conditions (until the obama plan).
Yes those evil insurance companies are manipulating the market…it’s not like the government doesn’t do it when they artificially manipulate the cost of food or gasoline. What you seem to forget, is that Private insurers only constitute 60%, while the other 30% is through Single-payer government insurance