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  • the wonderful world of private healthcare US style
  • molgrips
    Free Member

    I agree with you but I am not a US national, I an a UK national and so believe the NHS is great

    Mrs Grips is a US national, and she also believes the NHS is great…

    CM – I can’t get involved in those kind of debates. They boil down to one thing. That is, should the government force society to look after the disadvantaged, or should people take that responsibility themselves.

    However, I suspect that some people are adopting that argument to cover up for a) greed in wanting lower taxes and smaller govt and b) mistrust of government.. even if they don’t realise it themselves.

    LHS
    Free Member

    To put some perspecive:

    Average Single cover isurance policy – $4800 a year
    Which in real money is £3000 a year, or £250 a month.

    How much do you pay for the NHS a month? I know it differs per person but my National Insurance contributions in the UK far exceed £250 a month.

    CharlieMungus
    Free Member

    CM – I can’t get involved in those kind of debates. They boil down to one thing. That is, should the government force society to look after the disadvantaged, or should people take that responsibility themselves.

    However, I suspect that some people are adopting that argument to cover up for a) greed in wanting lower taxes and smaller govt and b) mistrust of government.. even if they don’t realise it themselves

    I’ve been down some of that road with them, you are right, they don’t feel govt. should be forcing anyone to do anything, beyond a very few essentials (i forget the details). They deny the greed claim (a), by attesting to the voluntary work and charitable contributions they make and they happily admit to (b) and provide evidence as to why that is entirely justifiable, especially with Obama in place. What is clear is that they don’t know much about the UK, but they are quick learners! Honestly, try them!!

    joemarshall
    Free Member

    Or getting knocked unconscious even whilst having insurance and having the luck to be taken to an emergency room at a hospital that your insurance doesn’t cover – when you wake up, they’ll check your insurance details and transfer you, but you still owe them for what happened beforehand.

    Myth

    At least in California, this was true until I think 2009 – if you got taken to an out of network hospital (not contracted with your insurer), or got treated in emergency by a doctor who is not contracted to your provider, you were eligible for much higher fees. In other states you still have to pay – if you get taken to an ER which is out of network your healthcare provider will pay what it thinks are ‘reasonable’ costs for the service you got, then you get billed for the balance if the hospital thinks it should charge more – and some insurers make up ridiculously low costs for the ‘reasonable’ cost, so in practice you end up paying a lot. The practice is banned in 10 states, but not everywhere by a long shot.

    Read more below if you like:

    http://scrubsandsuits.com/news/california-bans-out-of-network-billing-for-er-group

    http://www.kaiserhealthnews.org/Features/Insuring-Your-Health/Emergency-Room-Costs.aspx

    molgrips
    Free Member

    I know it differs per person

    You say that as if it’s a small detail!

    It’s already been established that the US pays in one way or another much more for healthcare than we do as a percentage of GDP.

    Your cover is also FAR FAR better than those typical US policies you talk about, even when you don’t consider being unemployed, having a temp job, having a rubbish job and so on.

    Plus national insurance does not fund the NHS, so it’s a pointless comparison.

    uplink
    Free Member

    Average Single cover isurance policy – $4800 a year
    Which in real money is £3000 a year, or £250 a month.

    How much do you pay for the NHS a month? I know it differs per person but my National Insurance contributions in the UK far exceed £250 a month.

    So in the US who would pay that $4800/pa for you’re parents/granparents/disabled relatives if they couldn’t work or had enough savings?

    DaRC_L
    Full Member

    so why should you be forced to make what is essentially a charitable donation to a cause for which you have no sympathy.

    I do believe it’s called civilization, even the Romans gave bread to it’s citizens.
    It’s proven that having a health system that cares for all benefits all – just think pandemics, measles & mumps.

    However the problem with the inexorable decline of our society towards an american model is the focus on me, me, me 🙄
    I was brought up and indoctrinated in a very Tory family, I started having strong doubts about the wisdom of all this by the mid-80’s.
    Then I went to the US and came back quite rabidly socialist in disgust at the poverty and lack of health care there.

    CharlieMungus
    Free Member

    I do believe it’s called civilization, even the Romans gave bread to it’s citizens.

    That’s a really bad example!

    It’s proven that having a health system that cares for all benefits all – just think pandemics, measles & mumps.

    Yes, all true, the herd immunity stuff is all correct, and further The Spirit Level shows that greater equality is better in health and social terms for all starta of society, not just on average.

    LHS
    Free Member

    So in the US who would pay that $4800/pa for you’re parents/granparents/disabled relatives if they couldn’t work or had enough savings?

    Medicare and Medicaid systems provide a level of cover, and the new recovery and reinvestment act has helped this out.

    Clong
    Free Member

    But what does that £250 cover LHS? In my freinds case his insurance didnt cover him for childbirth (didnt cover his wife more to the point). What about long time care?

    Does that £250 equate to the level of cover provided by the NHS?

    I seem to recall that, somethig like 40,000+ US people die anually due to lack of health insurance. That seems a bit high to me, so there probably a bit of “figure massage” going on. If that is to be believed, that’s pretty harsh. Not sure how the NHS would compare to it though.

    uplink
    Free Member

    Medicare and Medicaid systems provide a level of cover, and the new recovery and reinvestment act has helped this out.

    Sounds like they have it all sorted
    wonder how the poor fella in the OP managed to miss out on all that help?

    LHS
    Free Member

    But what does that £250 cover LHS? In my freinds case his insurance didnt cover him for childbirth (didnt cover his wife more to the point). What about long time care?

    With the insurance policies you can tailor it to whatever you feel you will need. If you are a female and have no intention of having kids then you can state this. You can choose to have high or low deductables depending on how many times a year you think you will see your doctor.

    Does that £250 equate to the level of cover provided by the NHS?

    Hard to do the exact comparison

    I seem to recall that, somethig like 40,000+ US people die anually due to lack of health insurance. That seems a bit high to me, so there probably a bit of “figure massage” going on. If that is to be believed, that’s pretty harsh. Not sure how the NHS would compare to it though.

    Thousands die each year in the UK from contracting MRSA, then take into account the level of service you get from hospitals like that one in Staffordshire…..

    joemarshall
    Free Member

    Average Single cover isurance policy – $4800 a year
    Which in real money is £3000 a year, or £250 a month.

    How much do you pay for the NHS a month? I know it differs per person but my National Insurance contributions in the UK far exceed £250 a month.

    Median employer + employee NI contributions for employed people are about £490 a month. Although don’t forget that NI contributions to cover NHS, unemployment benefit if you lose your job, state pension and a bunch of other things. The NHS also pays for much more stuff – on many US plans we’re talking a deductible of $1000 or more, ie. you pay the first up to $1000 of any illness you happen to get. Not to mention having to pay for stuff like GP visits and full costs for prescription drugs (which are also expensive over there for various reasons), oh and some cheaper insurance not paying for the whole amount, just a percentage (I think they call it ‘co-pay’), so you can still end up with big bills even with insurance.

    Also, for a family the typical cost is somewhat more – $13700, which assuming both adults are working is about $7000 each.

    http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/health/2009-09-15-insurance-costs_N.htm

    Every time someone looks at the true costs of the US healthcare system, it is way way more than any other developed countries as a percentage of GDP, or per capita, despite basically not doing preventative healthcare on a surprisingly large proportion of the population, and having completely insane defensive care and/or over-treatment to increase profit on the rest (eg. the extreme medicalisation of birth that was mentioned above, which doesn’t lead to better outcomes, but does lead to fatter profits and less chance of lawsuits).

    uplink
    Free Member

    Thousands die each year in the UK from contracting MRSA

    and your point is, it’s better in the US?

    http://www.mrsainfection.org/mrsa-in-the-usa.php

    joemarshall
    Free Member

    Sounds like they have it all sorted
    wonder how the poor fella in the OP managed to miss out on all that help?

    Cos medicare doesn’t cover preventative or non-urgent care.

    eg. If you have chronic pain, mental illness, or any other long term problem that makes it so you can’t work or afford insurance, over here, you go to the doctors, get treatment, and you can become a productive member of society again. In the US, if it isn’t going to kill you, they don’t give a damn, you don’t get treatment.

    Oh and from figures on here (there is a reference for where they get them from, so I guess they’re probably accurate):
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datablog/2010/mar/22/us-healthcare-bill-rest-of-world-obama

    In the UK, we spend $2815 per person per year, to cover everyone in the country for both emergency and non-emergency treatment. All paid for from tax.

    In the US, they spend $6719 per person per year, to cover some people for emergency only treatment, and the lucky ones for all treatment. On average, people spend $3500 themselves on healthcare, and the government spends $3200.

    So, their government spends more money per person out of tax, plus they individually spend more additional money each than the cost of UK healthcare, yet they still have a large proportion of people receiving basically third world healthcare, with no non-emergency care.

    Clong
    Free Member

    MRSA and poor service don’t exsist in US hospitals?

    Cant be that hard to do a comparsion though, the NHS system doesn’t seem to exclude anyone or anything for treatment (stand to be corrected on that though). What would a policy cost with a similar level of cover cost?

    konabunny
    Free Member

    Hospitals need to make profit, so they tend to do as many treatments as expensively as possible. The insurance companies grumble a bit but then they just pass the cost onto the employers who pay it.

    That’s too simplistic. Medical insurance companies have medical staff on board and are very aggressive about hammering practitioners who overbill. Medical insurance is a pretty competitive market and they can’t just pass costs on to members/policyholders – besides, why would they go out and collect money for other people where by stopping waste they could keep it for themselves.

    Lifer
    Free Member

    Thousands die each year in the UK from contracting MRSA

    Very disingenuous:

    On 19 per cent of death certificates which mentioned MRSA in 2009, this infection was recorded as the underlying cause of death. This figure varied between 17 per cent and 36 per cent over the 1993-2009 period.

    Those who die with MRSA are usually patients who were already very ill and it is their existing illness, rather than MRSA, which is often designated as the underlying cause of death. There is therefore an interest in the number of deaths where MRSA contributed to the death – only conditions which contribute directly to the death should be recorded on the death certificate.

    http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=1067

    LHS
    Free Member

    I wouldn’t trust government statistics if I were you!

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-stoke-staffordshire-13620261

    billysugger
    Free Member

    Among the scroungers of this country who will spend a life of taking more from the UK system than they contribute there will be a percentage who do not seek to intentionally abuse the system and have merely had the misfortune to end up needing a service such as the NHS.

    I believe to treat these people is what makes us civilised.

    Some of us (although on this forum the proportion of Henrys is above the national average) could just end up in such a situation one day.

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    Genuiinely interesting points re: ‘tailoring’ your cover depending on what you are or aren’t likely to need treatment for, so i guess if you don’t have children and live a very healthy ‘straight edge’ lifestyle you don’t need to subsidise fat, boozy or smoky folk.

    LHS has managed not to mention the money that US medical ‘invests’ in loss adjusters, whose work entirely consists of trawling through patients/claimants policies, personal and family histories with the express aim of making claims ‘ineligible’ and not paying out for their treatment. These people are not employed to make sure the premiums of honest (as in when they apply for insurance with regards to their medical histories) healthy folk are kept low, they are employed to maximise the profits of the insurer.

    Don’t get cancer, type 2 diabetes, mental health, respiratory, heart, liver or kidney problems as these people will work day and night to find a way of not paying for your care.

    konabunny
    Free Member

    It was, by the way, autoworkers’ labour unions that were among the people pushing for company-based healthcare instead of state-based healthcare. That was just the beginning of their awful decision making.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    They boil down to one thing. That is, should the government force society to look after the disadvantaged, or should people take that responsibility themselves.

    the thing is the disadvantaged are not in a position to look after themselves and if they were they would not be disadvataged
    CM, Molgrips I have the log on of Junkyard for that there forum I will start a thread on Socilaist healthcare to see where i get – feel free to join me and make your presence know via some subtle STW reference to airplanes , bombers or the like.
    I wont be doing it as a troll I am interested to see how other folk think on this.

    Lifer
    Free Member

    LHS – Member
    I wouldn’t trust government statistics if I were you!

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-stoke-staffordshire-13620261

    Where did you get your figure of ‘thousands’ from?

    CharlieMungus
    Free Member

    CM, Molgrips I have the log on of Junkyard for that there forum I will start a thread on Socilaist healthcare to see where i get – feel free to join me and make your presence know via some subtle STW reference to airplanes , bombers or the like.

    Don’t call it socialist health care, try to be very precise, you might find yourself drawn into an argument about socialism rather than health care. Try some thing like US / UK healthcare provision

    I’m there already, in fact that site has a very useful lesson for us. A few years back, maybe 5-8 years ago it was very active in the off-topic section as people from all sorts of political persuasion came together and argued and argued and argued about anything and everything. Eventually, the regulars became familiar with other’s standpoint to the extent that there was pretty much no point in trying to discuss anything as the debates eventually reduced to their idealogical standpoints. Slowly the debates died out

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    Cheers CM will start one tonight and attempt to be precise.
    Are they grammar nazis ? do i need to spell stuff proper like?
    EDIT:The arguments here wont dry up as we are far too stubborn- not sure that is a good thing. I actually get your point and vow to mix it up a bit. I can see why the roll of gentle troll /debate facilitator is a good one/essential.

    CharlieMungus
    Free Member

    no, not grammar nazis and actually very amenable to being proved wrong, if you have reliable evidence. Most are American, so the time lag is a bit frustrating

    deadlydarcy
    Free Member

    You might find some contributions from a truculent bastard called deadlydarcy 😀

    EDIT: CM, why that forum in particular?

    CharlieMungus
    Free Member

    EDIT: CM, why that forum in particular?

    Quite an international forum, of some very smart fellas, orignally brought together for puzzles and such, and encompasses views which we don’t often see here, including Right libetarians. Also worth exploring Palestinian / Israel questions on there. But they really know their stuff and are strongly driven by evidence

    These two, long threads, should give you a sense of audience
    http://www.greylabyrinth.com/discussion/viewtopic.php?t=13736

    http://www.greylabyrinth.com/discussion/viewtopic.php?t=13578

    molgrips
    Free Member

    if you have reliable evidence

    Not all arguments can practically be evidence based though unfortunately. Especially not this one, as it’s ideological.

    the thing is the disadvantaged are not in a position to look after themselves and if they were they would not be disadvataged

    True, but not what I meant. I meant should govt force the well off to look after the disadvantaged or should the well off take the responsibility themselves to help the poor, ie through charities etc.

    Most compassionate right-wingers that I’ve spoken to (there are some) believe that charity should be enough, and that if people don’t choose to give enough to charity then that should be worked on through means other than legislation or taxation.

    kimbers
    Full Member

    Most compassionate right-wingers that I’ve spoken to (there are some) believe that charity should be enough, and that if people don’t choose to give enough to charity then that should be worked on through means other than legislation or taxation.

    what other means are there?

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    True, but not what I meant.

    I cant be held repsonsible for the fact you cant write what you mean 😉 thats jokey not abbrassive

    I meant should govt force the well off to look after the disadvantaged or should the well off take the responsibility themselves to help the poor, ie through charities etc.

    There would have been no need for govts to develop. Givts did not devlop and start to solce problems that were not there. i would say most of Europe and the “modern” world has tried the libertatrian philanthropist way and deemed it a failure tbh “let them eat cake”. Most “left wing” huminatarian stuff has been a response to a need as charity did not do it… perhaps the default setting of rich people is to be selfish 💡

    Most compassionate right-wingers that I’ve spoken to (there are some) believe that charity should be enough, and that if people don’t choose to give enough to charity then that should be worked on through means other than legislation or taxation.

    i wonder how many centuries of failure they require to realise this view is wrong. it is a bit like expecting people to pay taxes but not enforcing it if they dont and thinking you will get the same money. I can see why they think this is the best solution tbh but it does not work and results in poor uncovered people. i suppose you have to decide which is then the least bad option, taxation to pay for this or suffering whilst pettiton the wealthy to pay. I go for the former

    molgrips
    Free Member

    what other means are there?

    Good question. I think they are talking about charity campaigns and appeals and so on. It clearly doesn’t work very well!

    I suspect that the concept of free will is like a pillar of faith to many there. However I believe we have a moral obligation to help out those less fortunate, which from some points of view contradicts ultimate free will. As above, it’s why we came up with the idea of government and taxation.

    Ultimate free will is great, but not when it means ignoring your unfortunate fellow man to preserve it.

    grum
    Free Member

    American culture is heavily permeated with a lot of myths about the power of individual enterprise and self-determination. They can’t help it, bless ’em.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    There certainly does seem to be a lot of propaganda floating around.

    grum
    Free Member

    If you’ve been raised to believe with an almost religious fervour that anyone can achieve anything as long as they work hard (The American Dream), then it’s no wonder you see the poor as undeserving.

    Of coures this ignores the fact that the American Dream is largely a myth.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    America had to be marketed to those living there and those wishing to go there in the 19th and early 20th centuries, for political and economic reasons. This seems to have had knock-on effects.

    BoardinBob
    Full Member

    Fair amount of crap being spouted on this thread by those with no knowledge of what they’re talking about, but hey it is STW after all. Plenty of holes I could pick with both sides of the argument, but one point sticks out the most and it’s the one surrounding the greedy profits of the insurers.

    The average EBIT of the 5 biggest health insurers in the US was 4% last year.

    Compare them to Microsoft at 38.46%

    Compare them to Shell at 10%

    Compare them to Halliburton at 22%

    Compare them to Apple at 28%

    Compare them to Lockheed Martin at 9%

    So remind me again who’s making the monster profits?

    LHS
    Free Member

    In my experience the American people donate to charity a lot more freely than in the UK due to mostly (although they would say its from the kindness of their heart) because of a tax right-off. This also means that more diverse and numerous charities receive significant donations rather than the reliance on the big one-off deals like Comic Relief and Children in Need where only a handful of charities benefit.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    the greedy profits of the insurers

    Well posting a list of profitable companies is hardly useful.

    But I didn’t accuse insurers of being greedy, I accused them and the hospitals of being profit-making companies. So they have a vested interest in doing MORE to you than might be strictly necessary, or at least making it cost more. This has advantages I imagine, but it also has disadvantages, especially when cover is limited.

    Plenty of holes I could pick with both sides of the argument

    I’m interested to hear more.

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