And you think thoughtone was making that distinction?
I wouldn't want to speculate on what T.O. was thinking. I'll let him speak for himself.
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And you think thoughtone was making that distinction?
I already speculated and gave him the answer consistent with his question.I wouldn't want to speculate on what T.O. was thinking. I'll let him speak for himself.
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That's capitalism!
The article included many not-for-profit hospitals. How is that an indictment of capitalism?
Nonprofit hospitals aren't supposed to be making a profit anyway.
PR statements notwithstanding, some of the biggest money-making entities are non-profits or charities. Best way to wash money there is, actually.
Thats not an accurate statement.
Non-profits DO make/earn profits. ...Non-profts want profits as much as any for-profit entity, to use for its corporate purposes.
And you think thoughtone was making that distinction?
That's capitalism!
...“We use the CT scan because it’s a great defense,” says the CEO of another hospital not far from Stamford. “For example, if anyone has fallen or done anything around their head — hell, if they even say the word head — we do it to be safe. We can’t be sued for doing too much.”
...We can’t be sued for doing too much.”
David Goldhill is the president and chief executive officer of the cable TV network GSN. This is a series of three excerpts from his new book, “Catastrophic Care: How American Health Care Killed My Father -- and How We Can Fix It,” to be published Jan. 8 by Alfred A. Knopf.
Focus on Health-Care Costs Causes More Spending
Obamacare Math Doesn’t Add Up to a Healthier U.S.
To Fix Health Care, Turn Patients Into Customers
I read the articles when they first came out so I don't remember the specifics, but I do endorse treating health insurance like every other form of insurance like car insurance. You don't have insurance for oil changes or tire rotations, you have insurance for high-severity, unpredictably timed, and certain-to-happen (within the insurance pool) events. Stop having premiums reflect the cost of checkups and the most simple health care needs, then by definition premiums go down.Are you endorsing the "fix" ???
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I read the articles when they first came out so I don't remember the specifics, but I do endorse treating health insurance like every other form of insurance like car insurance. You don't have insurance for oil changes or tire rotations, you have insurance for high-severity, unpredictably timed, and certain-to-happen (within the insurance pool) events. Stop having premiums reflect the cost of checkups and the most simple health care needs, then by definition premiums go down.
But mostly, just dump the pre-tax aspect of health insurance and the problem will mostly fix itself, because the insurance companies won't use a much richer employer as the middle-man to service a not-as-rich employee. Without health expenses being pre-tax, employers won't have an incentive to offer it at all.
I'm a believer that if insurance companies and hospitals' primary point of contact for bills were individuals, then cost would go down just like any service industry in general.
Sure, since those monopolies only exist because of government favors anyway. Get rid of them.I would add to this: force them to actually compete like car insurance companies. End their local/regional monopolies.
No matter what your record you can find affordable car insurance (as a person who got popped all the time, I know this to be a fact), the same should be true for health insurance.
Sure, since those monopolies only exist because of government favors anyway. Get rid of them.
http://depositfiles.com/files/3x4idcpyb
http://depositfiles.com/files/3x4idcpyb
I read the articles when they first came out so I don't remember the specifics, but I do endorse treating health insurance like every other form of insurance like car insurance. You don't have insurance for oil changes or tire rotations, you have insurance for high-severity, unpredictably timed, and certain-to-happen (within the insurance pool) events. Stop having premiums reflect the cost of checkups and the most simple health care needs, then by definition premiums go down.
The ObamaCare debate obsessively focused on insurance companies, and when someone would point out that doctors and hospitals are just as money-hungry, it would be dismissed since the AMA had given their implicit endorsement of ACA.
Sure wish that was a focus in 2009. They really bent that cost-curve. Too bad it was in the wrong direction.
I'm a believer that if insurance companies and hospitals' primary point of contact for bills were individuals, then cost would go down just like any service industry in general.
The ObamaCare debate obsessively focused on insurance companies, and when someone would point out that doctors and hospitals are just as money-hungry, it would be dismissed since the AMA had given their implicit endorsement of ACA.
Sure wish that was a focus in 2009. They really bent that cost-curve. Too bad it was in the wrong direction.
A $10,169 blood test is everything wrong with American health care
. . . baffling why, in California, a lipid panel can cost anywhere between $10 and $10,000 . . . More than 100 hospitals — with more than 100 different prices . . . a lipid panel ranged from $10 to $10,169 . . . an appendectomy ... anywhere between $1,529 and $186,955 . . .
In my example, the middleman is the employer-based system. Obviously, I don't want to see the government as the new middleman destroying the industry.OK, how about this. Let's eliminate the middle man, the insurance companies.
Let's go to the Single Payer model.
I'm sure you haven't seen it. The same way you haven't seen anything but the goodness in the law after 6 years.
I think you raise an excellent point (hospital/doctor costs are just as important in the healthcare equation as having insurance in the first place), but I haven't seen where anyone has limited the discussion to either/or as you have suggested.
Here again, in your typical style of arguing, you attempt to put words into the mouths of others, in an attempt to make your point superior
In my example, the middleman is the employer-based system. Obviously, I don't want to see the government as the new middleman destroying the industry.
I'm sure you haven't seen it. The same way you haven't seen anything but the goodness in the law after 6 years.
No, because of efficiency. I didn't say get rid of the middleman because I didn't prefer any one particular middleman. The concept of a middleman doesn't work.Why? Because of ideology.
No, because of efficiency. I didn't say get rid of the middleman because I didn't prefer any one particular middleman. The concept of a middleman doesn't work.
Your ideology led you directly to the government babysitting everyone.
Single payer would be the most efficient.
Which dailyKos thread did you get that from?
. . . and you expect a fellow poster to do that which you adamantly refuse to do: answer a simple question.