• rickyk95
    53
    Can someone point me to resources that would give me some background behind the whole healthcare debate?
  • Rich
    3.2k
    The debate centers around these concepts:

    1) Runaway cost of medical care in this country that is approaching 20% of GNP, by far and away the most costly medical system in the world-with the worse life expectancy outcome.

    2) To pay for this largesse, Obamacare forced everyone to buy insurance called the government mandate. A substantial portion of the population considers this gross government overreach.

    3) The government subsidizes some portion of the population, but for a variety of reasons including certain mandated coverages such as pre-existing conditions, free yearly checkups, etc., affordable health insurance is becoming more and more difficult to find as younger people are dropping out of the system, forcing some insurers out of states or greatly increasing rates.

    4) Costs are rising at an unsustainable rates.

    It's a mess, but Google these key ideas and you may find some unbiased discussion but it is unlikely.
  • WISDOMfromPO-MO
    753
    I can't find it again, but an article I read said that the U.S. didn't want to be like its enemies such as WW II Germany and later during the Cold War for ideological reasons did not want anything that was thought of as socialism, therefore the U.S. never adopted a single-payer system like much of Europe did.

    Consider the present health care mess in the U.S. to be the legacy of the U.S.'s role in world politics from the early 20th century through the Cold War.

    If I find the article I will provide a link.
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    Vox's guide to Obamacare is pretty excellent reading:

    https://www.vox.com/cards/obamacare

    I also found their explanation-via-cartoon also wonderfully enlightening:

    https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2016/11/17/13652466/trump-obamacare-preexisting-cartoon
  • Thanatos Sand
    843
    2) To pay for this largesse, Obamacare forced everyone to buy insurance called the government mandate. A substantial portion of the population considers this gross government overreach.

    A substantial portion of the population, Democrat and Republican, consider this not enough government involvement and that we need Single Payer to make sure all Americans are covered, as all citizens in a First World country should be.
  • Rich
    3.2k
    The overreach is in the form of forcing citizens to purchase a service from private industry. This is unprecedented.

    Single payer, such as Social Security and Medicare had been around for some time. However , for good reason, citizens feel that all of this is becoming its own private industry where government keeps growing for its own benefit.
  • Thanatos Sand
    843
    Single payer, such as Social Security and Medicare had been around for some time. However , for good reason, citizens feel that all of this is becoming its own private industry where government keeps growing for its own benefit.

    No, not for good reason, since most citizens need health care and cant afford it, so they are not going to begrudge the US government paying for it. The fact over 60% of Americans support Single Payer backs that up.
  • BC
    13.5k
    That's a good request. I don't have a nice succinct resource.

    A lot of the reporting on health care is not helpful. There are some questions, however, that can be productively pursued:

    1. Health care is provided less and less by small clinics, independent hospitals, and individual physician practices. Most of the care is now provided by a much smaller number of very large clinics and hospital chains. What difference might concentration of capital make?

    2. In 1980 there were still many non-profit hospitals and clinics, many operated by religious organizations (like Sisters of St. Joseph Carondolet or large denominations like the Methodists, Lutherans, or baptists). Most of these non-profits either closed or were sold to for-profit companies. What effect on cost might the departure of non-profits from health care had?

    3. Doctors quite often buy expensive equipment such as MRI and CT scanners to which they then refer patients for diagnosis. What effect might this practice have on health care?

    4. Uninsured individuals generally avoid early proactive visits to a clinic. They tend to wait until their medical problem is very uncomfortable or unbearable, and then they utilize emergency rooms. What effect might this practice have on the complexity of care needed, and cost? What effect does this practice have on emergency room operations?

    5. Surgeons, dentists, and orthodontists are among the highest paid professions. How might very high rates of pay affect cost of care?

    6. Hospitals consume a vast array of single use disposable material, all purchased from for-profit companies. What effect might this have on cost of health care?

    7. Insurance companies do not finance or provide health care. Their only function is to make money by managing premium income and paying claims. This function is a significant part of the overhead cost of medical care. Health care would be cheaper if the government collected premiums (from taxes) and paid all claims at a fixed rate (as they do for Medicare and Medicaid). A single payer health care payment system would eliminate perhaps 10% to 15% of the cost of obtaining health care.

    8. Many Americans have unhealthy lifestyles relating to diet, exercise, smoking, and drinking. A significant share of avoidable illness is caused by poor diet, insufficient exercise, smoking, excessive drinking, and so on. We spend very little time, effort, or money in actually promoting good diet, regular exercise, smoking cessation, and moderation in alcohol use.

    So, research these angles and you will find out a good deal about why health care costs are so high.
  • Rich
    3.2k
    People need to learn to lead healthier lives and how to take care of themselves. Other countries pay half as much per capita with better results. U.S. is absolutely in last place when it comes to life expectancy in developed countries and last year, for the first time in decades, life expectancy actually went down. The U.S. had become a cesspool of drugs, MRIs, and if course prescription opioids that are killing 10's of thousands of people each year. Out medical industry has become a killing machine and some people are reluctant to finance even more of the same.
  • Thanatos Sand
    843
    ↪Thanatos Sand People need to learn to lead healthier lives and how to take care of themselves. Other countries pay half as much per capita with better results. U.S. is absolutely in last place when it comes to life expectancy in developed countries and last year, for the first time in decades, life expectancy actually went down.

    And that has nothing to do with the many congenital conditions and unexpected diseases, cancers, or physical ailments from accidents that can cost hundreds of thousands to pay for. You're blaming the victim here, and that's not impressive. Those people suffering from those conditions, and even ones from their own contribution, need medical care for those conditions. And as a First World country, it is our governments position and responsibility to do that.

    We spent trillions on the war in Iraq and continue to spend billions on war; we can pay to keep our citizens, including our children, from dying. And this benefits the rest of our country as well, as we don't lose important workers in our society.
  • Rich
    3.2k
    And that has nothing to do with the many congenital conditions and unexpected diseases, cancers, or physical ailments from accidents that can cost hundreds of thousands to pay for.Thanatos Sand

    There World Health Organization is attempting to address this "misunderstanding".

    http://www.who.int/chp/chronic_disease_report/part1/en/index11.html

    MISUNDERSTANDING #4: chronic diseases can't be prevented
    Adopting a pessimistic attitude, some people believe that there is nothing that can be done, anyway. In reality, the major causes of chronic diseases are known, and if these risk factors were eliminated, at least 80% of all heart disease, stroke and type 2 diabetes would be prevented; over 40% of cancer would be prevented.

    80% of premature heart disease, stroke and diabetes can be prevented
  • Thanatos Sand
    843
    ↪Thanatos Sand People need to learn to lead healthier lives and how to take care of themselves. Other countries pay half as much per capita with better results. U.S. is absolutely in last place when it comes to life expectancy in developed countries and last year, for the first time in decades, life expectancy actually went down.

    That's very interesting, but I said congenital conditions and unexpected diseases like Cancer. And even if that is the case, the 20% sure need care too, and many of the 80 % had no idea they were contributing. But you would rather moralize and have people, including children, die of their congenital and/or chronic diseases then have the government pay for their care as they do our military wars and coups.

    Congratulations, you've just proven yourself to be as lacking in compassion as Donald Trump.
  • rickyk95
    53
    thanks for that Ill look into it.
  • Rich
    3.2k
    unexpected diseases like CancerThanatos Sand

    Not according to WHO. Cancer can be quite predictable: e.g. cigarette smoking, excess drinking, environmental hazards, obesity, food toxins, etc. I wouldn't be surprised if all of those toxic drugs that people are being prescribed are causing all kinds of cancer. We do know that taking prescription opioids is definitely a no-no, but physicians keep prescribing and killing. Go figure.
  • Thanatos Sand
    843
    Not according to WHO. Cancer can be quite predictable: e.g. cigarette smoking, excess drinking, environmental hazards, obesity, food toxins, etc.


    Sorry, you're reading it wrong, many cancers are not preventable. And people who don't know about food toxins or environmental hazards can't prevent their cancers either. So, they are not to "blame" for those cancers, but you would still rather see them, and the other cancer sufferers dead, then have their government pay for their care. Again, your lack of compassion, and moralizing judgements of cancer sufferers, is disgusting.


    We do know that taking prescription opioids is definitely a no-no, but physicians keep prescribing and killing. Go figure.

    And this in no way is an argument against Single Payer. Go figure.
  • Rich
    3.2k
    The argument against single payer is that government just skims off the c top, as it consumes more and more of the economy. 7 of the 12 richest counties in the U.S. circle Washington D.C. as government gets fatter and fatter off if the hard labor of the working class. People are pretty tired of being slaves for the Bureaucracy. It's really quite out of control.
  • Rich
    3.2k
    Sorry, you're reading it wrong, many cancers are not preventable. And people who don't know about food toxins or environmental hazards can't prevent their cancers either.

    Looks like WHO has their work cut out for themselves.
  • Thanatos Sand
    843
    ↪Thanatos Sand The argument against single payer is that government just skims off the c top, as it consumes more and more of the economy.

    And that argument is wrong and has never even been well-argued, much less proven.

    7 of the 12 richest counties in the U.S. circle Washington D.C. as government gets fatter and fatter off if the hard labor of the working class.

    That's completely irrelevant to Single Payer health care, and most of the people who will benefit from Single Payer are the working class.

    People are pretty tired of being slaves for the Bureaucracy. It's really quite out of control.

    Sorry, having the government pay for one's health care does not constitute being slaves for the Bureaucracy. It constitutes benefiting from it.

    Why aren't you complaining about all our wars and military actions the US Govt takes? They make us slaves to the Bureaucracy.
  • Rich
    3.2k
    Wars use to be great money makers for government and the top 1% but nowadays healthcare is much more lucrative. Tens of $trillions and growing. And it's people such as yourself who serve as unpaid marketers for this money-making machine.
  • Thanatos Sand
    843
    Thanatos Sand Wars use to be great money makers for government and the top 1% but nowadays healthcare is much more lucrative. Tens of $trillions and growing. And it's people such as yourself who serve as unpaid marketers for this money-making machine.

    No, it's people like you who serve as unpaid marketers for the money-making machine called the insurance industry. I want the government to put our taxes to work, do its job, and take care of its citizens. You actually want children to die instead of that...which is sociopathic and offensive.
  • Rich
    3.2k
    Actually it is prescription drugs like opioids that are killing 10s of thousands of people each year and hospitals that are killing hundreds of thousands, making hospitals the third-leading cause of death after after cancer and heart disease. So in a sense staying away from hospitals is a good lifestyle practice right after eating veggies and fruits.

    http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2016/05/03/476636183/death-certificates-undercount-toll-of-medical-errors
  • Thanatos Sand
    843
    ↪Thanatos Sand Actually it is prescription drugs like opioids that are killing 10s of thousands of people each year and hospitals that are killing hundreds of thousands, making hospitals after cancer and heart disease.

    Sorry, prescription drugs doesn't even cause 10 percent (if that) of the illnesses or diseases or physical ailments needing medical treatment. So, you make another pointless non-sequitur.

    So in a sense staying away from hospitals is a good lifestyle practice right after eating veggies and fruits.

    LOL. Man, you are seriously ignorant and kooky, as well terribly callous. So, we're done; I've wasted too much time on you already.

    I won't be reading any more of your posts.
  • Rich
    3.2k
    Bye, bye. Miss you.
  • BC
    13.5k
    The purpose of health care is actually not to prevent death. Everybody is going to die. Roughly a third will die from heart disease, roughly a third from cancer, and roughly a third from strokes. Then there are infections, accidents, gun shot wounds, and so on. Many of the corpses will have been paragons of healthy living.

    The purpose of health care, and healthy life styles, is to preserve good health for as long as possible. This is becoming more important as people live longer (but still die). Healthy old people can take care of their personal needs, walk, bike, drive, enjoy life, and so on, but they have to be reasonably healthy BEFORE they get old.

    Death from cancer can't yet be prevented, and whether it's heart disease, stroke, infection, a car crash, or whatever -- the specifics of dying are quite often pretty bad, whether it happens when you are 50, 60, 80, or 100.
  • Rich
    3.2k
    The WHO says that 80% of non-communicable diseases are lifestyle related. Their is a reason that the U.S., which spends 80% more on medical care than than the 35 other developed countries and has the worse life expectancy. A pretty sad situation but not considering considering the lifestyle choices of a large part of our population. The science of medicine actually is different once you leave the U.S.

    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11095-008-9661-9

    "This year, more than 1 million Americans and more than 10 million people worldwide are expected to be diagnosed with cancer, a disease commonly believed to be preventable. Only 5–10% of all cancer cases can be attributed to genetic defects, whereas the remaining 90–95% have their roots in the environment and lifestyle. The lifestyle factors include cigarette smoking, diet (fried foods, red meat), alcohol, sun exposure, environmental pollutants, infections, stress, obesity, and physical inactivity."
  • BC
    13.5k
    Actually it is prescription drugs like opioids that are killing 10s of thousands of people each year and hospitals that are killing hundreds of thousands, making hospitals the third-leading cause of death after after cancer and heart disease. So in a sense staying away from hospitals is a good lifestyle practice right after eating veggies and fruits.Rich

    2.6 million Americans die every year.

    Prescription drugs do, actually, kill quite a few people. Hundreds of thousands people die in hospitals -- but this is a bit misleading.

    People aren't dying left and right from taking the common Rx drugs. Quite often very sick people die from very potent drugs which might cure their disease. Drugs for cancer can have devastating consequences. But... it's the certainty of death by cancer or traded off against the possibility of dying from the cure.

    As for opiates, most people take narcotic drugs as prescribed and not have the slightest inclination to abuse them. However, maybe 10% of the population run the risk of dependence and addiction. Some people's brains are sitting ducks for drug abuse. Sad, but predictable. So -- give certain histories, some people should avoid narcotics.

    Yes, noscosomial infections, surgical errors, treatment failures and so on do kill quite a few people in hospitals. Without excusing poor infection control or surgical mistakes, people who are in hospitals for extended periods of time generally have one foot in the grave already. a very large number of people die in hospitals who could just as well die at home. They are admitted late in life, in poor health, and all sorts of things are done to keep them alive for another month or two, then they die.
  • Rich
    3.2k
    As all studies on the subject conclude, it is lifestyle choices that are far and away the leading causes of chronic illnesses and healthy people (especially young people who get it) are getting a little tired of paying for the poor lifestyle choices of other Americans. 20% of the GNP is going to medical care. This is astronomical and it is growing.
  • BC
    13.5k
    "This year, more than 1 million Americans and more than 10 million people worldwide are expected to be diagnosed with cancer, a disease commonly believed to be preventable. Only 5–10% of all cancer cases can be attributed to genetic defects, whereas the remaining 90–95% have their roots in the environment and lifestyle. The lifestyle factors include cigarette smoking, diet (fried foods, red meat), alcohol, sun exposure, environmental pollutants, infections, stress, obesity, and physical inactivity."Rich

    Well some cancers are preventable. Lung cancer is mostly preventable. People who don't smoke usually don't get lung cancer. Ditto skin cancers: people who stay out of the sun usually don't get melanoma (or even basal cell carcinomas--much less serious). Diet, drinking, and smoking probably have a significant role in colorectal cancer. However, there has recently been an spike in colorectal cancer among people younger than 40, sometimes in people who are only 25 years old. There doesn't seem to be any lifestyle influence there. Hepatitis B and C are probably causative in certain kinds of liver cancer -- but not liver cancers that start somewhere else (like pancreatic cancers that spread to the liver).
  • BC
    13.5k
    ↪Bitter Crank As all studies on the subject conclude, it is lifestyle choices that are far and v away the leading causes of chronic illnesses and healthy people are getting a little tired of paying for the poor lifestyle choices of other Americans. 20% of the GNP is going to medical care. This is astronomical and it is growing.Rich

    It isn't terrible that we spend 20% of GNP on health care -- it's terrible that we spend that much without getting better results.

    Look, I agree that lifestyle is a very significant factor in disease. That's an axiom of public health. But bear in mind, all the healthy people in Europe and America, Japan, Australia, China and Mozambique, and everywhere else are still going to die, and they are going to die of very similar causes: Cancer, Heart Disease, and stroke (circulatory failures in the brain).

    Like I said, it's very important for an aging population to get healthy before they get old, and that means dealing with excess weight, exercising, stopping bad habits like smoking and drinking, eating a healthy diet, avoiding excessive amounts of preserved, fried, and barbecued food (factors in stomach and gut cancers), and so on.

    Disease has deep cultural roots, so it isn't just a matter of irresponsible individuals; it's also irresponsible social practices.
  • Rich
    3.2k
    Disease has deep cultural roots, so it isn't just a matter of irresponsible individuals; it's also irresponsible social practices.Bitter Crank

    And this is part of the debate. Some people would rather see more money going to better food, cleaner water, cleaner air than to more medicine - which is already almost twice as much per capita than other developed nations. More money on medicine doesn't mean better health. In fact, it appears to decrease life expectancy.
  • BC
    13.5k
    We spend more money on medicine as health declines. But the issue of money needs to be separated from the incidence of disease and treatment. Americans, I suspect, live less healthy lifestyles than Europeans, and this is mostly a matter of culture. Americans, for instance, take much less vacation time than Europeans. American eating habits involve waaaay too much bad fast food (it isn't the fastness, its the badness). I don't know whether European young people binge drink as much Americans do.

    European countries generally have more effective public health programs -- like good, practically universal pre-natal care--something that a lot of American women don't get.

    You probably know that obesity is a world-wide problem; even in countries with much different cultures than either European or American, are experiencing more obesity (which is most likely caused by cheap fat and cheap sugar).

    As for costs, a Rx for XYZ drug is likely to cost much more in the United States than in France or Germany. Why is that? Well, for one thing, the Medicare program was forbidden by Congress from negotiating prices. Crazy? It's flat out insane.

    The way we finance health care allows for run ups in costs; the insurance companies raise premiums to match costs, rather than forcing the prices for drugs and procedures down. Single Payer could flatten prices.

    This is a personal issue. My copay on eyedrops for glaucoma medication is $24--not a lot, but the amount of medication is only a skimpy 1/2 teaspoon of liquid, if that. It's an old drug, not hot off the lab table. There is no reason for it being that expensive.
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