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Who do you think set things up enabling private healthcare monopolies in the first place???You have it wrong. Who do you think lobbies the government to allow all those layers of parasites. We need a system where the patient pays the healthcare provider directly and the government only subsidizes the patient based on need.
Well, then I guess you've run aground on the status quo. At least you have no shortage of factors to blame.Of those I am familiar with, it is perhaps the most. I have been given to understand Switzerland has a not-terribly blended system
, but, none of those nations are the U.S., with the U.S. government, or the U.S. population. A system that works very well for a small, homogenous population that generally eats healthy and exercises, has a relatively efficient and non-bloated/corrupt government, and doesn't get millions of people from mostly poorer nations flooding in both legally and illegally every year..... may work very poorly here.
Even among Bernie Sanders supporters, a majority are unwilling to pay additional taxes in order to have single-payer healthcare.
Contributers, no doubt, but other violent countries rank higher. Brasil, for example.
Obesity is an odd one. Is that due to inactivity?
Future generations.It depends on who the single payer is that is going to pay for everyone's healthcare
Our cultures are very similar.You might be right - but this isn't Canada, and never will be. The people, the culture, the history, and so much more pretty much guarantee the same system won't work similarly here.
In terms of rankings no developed country with UHC falls below the US.Moreover, ratings of healthcare systems are altogether too subjective to be of any concrete value - plus it depends on the system ranking them and what factors they consider for a "good" healthcare system - and both Canada and the US generally fall somewhere in the middle to upper middle of all countries so it's virtually impossible to say this system is "better" than that one and have everyone agree.
Well, then I guess you've run aground on the status quo. At least you have no shortage of factors to blame.
A truism comes to mind- just because you can't do something doesn't mean it can't be done.
I'm guessing that you're guessing.
In terms of rankings no developed country with UHC falls below the US.
Not in this context they're not. I agree, similarities do exist, but there are some distinct differences too.Our cultures are very similar.
In terms of rankings no developed country with UHC falls below the US.
Yeah, your football is 4 downsNot in this context they're not. I agree, similarities do exist, but there are some distinct differences too.
True dat, eh?Yeah, your football is 4 downs
Means testing like we do for rent and food subsides.Who do you think set things up enabling private healthcare monopolies in the first place???
And do you really want some government bureaucrat responsible for determining your "need" of their subsidies? How do you define "need" anyway? Frankly, that's half the problem we're confronted with now where some actuary working for a healthcare company determines "need" based on their company's economics.
To your edit- It's not rocket science and you don't have to reinvent the wheel. There's umpteen government health insurance schemes around the world and many work very well. Just pick one that does what you want it to and copy it.
Specialist physicians surveyed report a median waiting time of 27.4 weeks between referral from a general practitioner and receipt of treatment—longer than the wait of 25.6 weeks reported in 2021. This year’s wait time is the longest wait time recorded in this survey’s history and is 195% longer than in 1993, when it was just 9.3 weeks.
The evidence shows that, in the case of certain surgical procedures, the delays that are the necessary result of waiting lists increase the patient’s risk of mortality or the risk that his or her injuries will become irreparable. The evidence also shows that many patients on non‑urgent waiting lists are in pain and cannot fully enjoy any real quality of life.
The evidence in this case shows that delays in the public health care system are widespread, and that, in some serious cases, patients die as a result of waiting lists for public health care.
Nope. Canada is a close second to the US in cancer survival rates. The cost to me if I get treated for cancer = zero dollars.It depends on what you measure. Are you sick with cancer, but want to survive? You probably want the U.S. system.
I don't think anyone can claim that the Canadian system, for example, works "very well" considering the very long wait times:
Keep in mind that socialist institutions get worse over time, not better, as each player figures out how to work the system to his maximum advantage. From almost 20 years ago, here is the Supreme Court of Canada:
and
That is the opposite of "works very well".
"Means testing?" Shades of the Twentieth Century Motor Company.Means testing like we do for rent and food subsides.
Do you want a system where 90% of lifetime money spent is to prolong last two years of your life?It depends on what you measure. Are you sick with cancer, but want to survive? You probably want the U.S. system. Do you want to ensure that people die at more equal rates across the income spectrum? You want a U.K. or like system.
Works well according to organizations that rank systems. I'm happy with it.I don't think anyone can claim that the Canadian system, for example, works "very well" considering the very long wait times:
Our system is single payer, not socialized.Keep in mind that socialist institutions
The SC ruling resulted in best practice improvements to speed up delivery.get worse over time, not better, as each player figures out how to work the system to his maximum advantage. From almost 20 years ago, here is the Supreme Court of Canada:
and
That is the opposite of "works very well".
Yeah, your football is 4 downs
non sequitur"Means testing?" Shades of the Twentieth Century Motor Company.
My mother survived not one, but two separate cancers last year. She has many years left to watch grandkids grow up.Do you want a system where 90% of lifetime money spent is to prolong last two years of your life?
Doesn't have to be that way. The feds in Canada only fund the system, they don't control care.
No, you just don't get the connection.non sequitur
It isn’t an opinion. It’s empirical fact. Single payer systems provide better care at a fraction of the cost.An opinion I don't share.
Irrelevant to the delivery of UHC.There are differences, demographically and in terms of governance.
All the more reason to have UHC.We also have a higher obesity rate and higher death rate from drug abuse.
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