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Every Other Country Has Universal Health Care - And It Works


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2009 Aug 30, 12:19pm   22,770 views  94 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (59)   💰tip   ignore  

Every other industrialized country has universal health care. It works for them:

  • All other industrialized countries have higher life expectancies than we do in America. There are 41 countries with higher life expectancies than America.
  • No other countries bankrupt their citizens with health care costs. Only America bankrupts you with health care costs -- even if you have insurance. Medical costs are the leading cause of bankruptcy in the US -- and most of those had health insurance. So under our current system, you are fucked, sooner or later. Unless you're Bill Gates you're just one serious illness away from bankruptcy. Most of the medically bankrupt were average Americans who happened to get sick.
    Summary: You have no financial security unless we get health care reform.
  • No country tells its citizens to commit suicide rather than get health care. If you believe any health care reform would do that, perhaps euthanasia is right for you after all!
  • US private insurance companies are death panels - they ration health care and if they decide against you, you die. Every day, they deny care and rescind coverage to maximize profit. Got a serious pre-existing condition and applying for insurance? What do you think the private death panel is going to say to you?
  • US private insurance companies are already bloated bureaucracies worse than government. You have no choice in health insurance, except to pay whatever they say, or die. They are only a few insurers, they all offer about the same coverage for a given price, and they don't answer the phone. There is no market.

Something needs to be done about health care in the US. It is badly broken: it wastes money, it bankrupts families, and fails to provide the the quality of health care that all other developed countries get for far lower cost.

The Republican plan is... what? It's to do nothing except deliberately stoke fear of "socialism" and "death panels" while raking in insurance company lobbyist money. There are there are six insurance company lobbyists for every member of Congress.

Insurance industry lobbying money is killing the public-plan health insurance option. And you know that they are funding Fox News, Glen Beck, O'Reilly and others like them. "Fair and balanced" my ass. Turn that crap off and read the actual proposals.

Democrats are guilty of taking their money too, but at least they are talking about real solutions.

The Republicans won't even propose one.

#politics

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1   nosf41   2009 Aug 30, 2:45pm  

You have so much faith in Obama and big government.

How about starting slowly, government does not have the required trillions of $ for Obama health care reform proposal.

The CEO of Whole Foods wrote the following article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204251404574342170072865070.html

2   Patrick   2009 Aug 30, 2:55pm  

nosf41 says

You have so much faith in Obama and big government.

OK, so what would YOU do to reform health care?

3   1logicalthinker   2009 Aug 30, 3:09pm  

I don't understand why so many people are opposed to spending 1 trillion dollars on Universal Healthcare for ten years, but so few people care that the Pentagon spends over $600,000,000,000 every year with nothing to show for it.

Universal Healthcare will improve the health of millions of people in this country. What has been the benefit of killing thousands of people in Iraq or Afghanistan? or throwing money away on weapons systems that are outmoded before they are deployed, and spending more money on defense than the rest of the world combined.

Our military couldn't even stop 4 guys with box cutters. According to the Pentagon's own list, there are 865 U.S. military bases around the world, not including Iraq and Afghanistan. Close half of those bases, bring the troops home, and we'll have more than enough money to pay for healthcare. Of course, that would require "real change" in this country.

JFK tried that change, but the C.I.A. and the Joints Chiefs of Staff were opposed to it. Please read "JFK and the Unspeakable, Why He Died and Why It Matters" by James W. Douglass.

5   hollyhoffmannd   2009 Aug 30, 3:50pm  

Stick with housing, Patrick.

6   srla   2009 Aug 30, 4:09pm  

I think it would be rather easy too come up with a far better system, as we have the diverse examples of literally every other developed nation to study and learn from. It's like having 60 years of case studies done with hundreds of millions of subjects testing out a wide range of healthcare plans that all have 3 things in common: they cover all citizens, and they have comparable (or better) outcomes, and they pay around half as much as we do. So what's stopping us from learning from the success and failures of every country from Germany to Taiwan (many of which actually have LESS government involvement than we do)? Our massive and incredibly adept healthcare lobby.

And what else should we have expected when we handed over control of our industry to the "free market" forced of for-profit corporations? After all, it's their mandate to maximize shareholder profits, not to extend life expectancy or provide better patient outcomes. Our system gives us exactly what we should expect from any corporate run healthcare system: dazzling innovation in techniques and medicines that make the biggest products and equally dazzling neglect of all other areas of healthcare that don't provide as much money per transaction, most notably primary care, preventative care, and access to care.

The best we can hope from the current process is a mandate for universal coverage, for without universal coverage, we will end up either utterly unable to control spiraling costs or with a system of rationing that would make Palin's Death Panel scenario seem tame by comparison. But whatever the outcome, we will need to revisit this issue again and again until we finally get it right, because the particular political theater we're currently witnessing is being scripted for both parties by the healthcare lobby. So for this round, at least, they are bound to end up with more profits regardless of the outcome.

7   nope   2009 Aug 30, 5:28pm  

nosf41 says

You have so much faith in Obama and big government.
How about starting slowly, government does not have the required trillions of $ for Obama health care reform proposal.

But we have the required trillions of $ that we will be spending on medicare during the same time period?

The CEO of Whole Foods wrote the following article:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204251404574342170072865070.html

The CEO of whole foods is a guy who makes his living selling overpriced bullshit to people with more money than time to spend actually studying the facts about what it is that they're getting -- kind of like the way that we currently handle medical care. Nothing more fitting than taking advice from a guy who's entire business is based on selling people stuff that they don't need.

8   nosf41   2009 Aug 30, 5:29pm  

nosf41 says


You have so much faith in Obama and big government.

OK, so what would YOU do to reform health care?

1. Remove any laws preventing insurance companies to offer their services across state lines.
2. Make medical costs transparent - everybody should pay some portion of their health care bill from their own pocket.
3. Tort reform - good doctors should not be forced to pay six figure (US$) amounts for insurance from lawsuits.
4. Balance the government budget to reduce the tax burden. Ever increasing government deficits and national debt will require higher taxes, thus leaving people with less money for everything else including health care.
This includes reducing the military budget: close the majority of overseas bases and return the troops home.

9   carrieon   2009 Aug 30, 7:40pm  

Right on Patrick. The entire American health care system is a piece of shit! People and employers need to grow up and stop paying their stupid health insurance premiums for a change. Maybe then they will get the message. They don't get any money from me and I'm far more more healthy than all their Zombies on drugs. I just wish others would do the same.

10   stefania_nj   2009 Aug 30, 10:26pm  

Just an opinion from some one that has experienced european health care and the american private one. There is nothing to fear about universal health care! it is great and the republicans do not want you to know it.
I do not understand why the American people do not hit the streets protesting for the health care reform just like they did when supporting Obama.
I grew up and lived in Italy. I had a doctor that made house calls; when my son was born his pediatrician made house calls; I could call her directly and speak to her "the doctor" not the nurse any time. 3 days of the week I could stop at her office without appointment. It happened that few times I had to run to the emergency room; guess what? No waiting lines! All this cost me nothing! I have a "good" health care plan here but I have anxiety over loosing it if I lose my job. I think all Americans will relax even those that oppose health care reform if we had a European style health care. It is such a great think having not to worry about getting sick or losing your job and health care benefits with it. It is worth to pay a little more tax to have peace of mind. One thing more in Italy there is private and public health care providers; but if you have something serious most people will trust the public hospital over the private because it is about health and not profit!!! I do not trust doctors here much because i am not sure if it is for my benefit or theirs.

11   ja   2009 Aug 30, 11:02pm  

Calling any side "death panels" is an bios simplification. They are just individuals looking for their best interest. The interesting part is that Americans will have to realize that a pure market system where there are no rules of the games (except guaranteeing the private property), can make wonders to produce and sell potatoes, but is extremely inefficient selling medical insurance. A society that chooses to follow always the same strategy without questioning it validity, is condemn to disappear.

Said that, I'd like to know if somebody has a strong (economical) argument for the public option vs. just reforming the market. Moral points, like "a well-off society has to care about the less fortunate" are reasonable but not what I'm asking for.

12   jackanderson129   2009 Aug 30, 11:29pm  

For someone who has studied the effects of government policy on the housing market and the economy I am amazed Patrick advocates further government in health care. Yes, many insurance companies are awful. Here is a brief article by someone who has been at odds with the worst ones for decades. He names some good ones as well

Health Care War!
http://www.moneyandmarkets.com/health-care-war-35069

I agree with nosf41, competition is the best solution. Insurance companies have “bought” their territories from State legislatures. This is an infringement on individual freedom and Federal run insurance would be an even greater loss of freedom.

The proposition
“Every Other Country Has Universal Health Care - And It Works”
is false.

Here is a link to many horror stories from the British press.

http://www.neoperspectives.com/britishhealthcare.htm

Even the NY Time was critical of British Healthcare
until Obama started pushing for it

British Balance Benefit vs. Cost of Latest Drugs
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/03/health/03nice.html?_r=2

Thomas Sowell who is one of Americas foremost economists and historians
has several recent articles on the subject:

Care versus control

http://jewishworldreview.com/cols/sowell080509.php3

Whose medical decisions? I. II, III, & IV

http://jewishworldreview.com/cols/sowell081809.php3

http://jewishworldreview.com/cols/sowell081909.php3

http://jewishworldreview.com/cols/sowell082009.php3

http://jewishworldreview.com/cols/sowell082109.php3

Do not give up your Liberty, your Freedom to choose!

13   stefania_nj   2009 Aug 31, 12:21am  

jackanderson129 I am sorry but maybe you should be more concerned about the thousands and thousands of horror stories in this country. And something needs to be done about it. Maybe for the real wealthy there is freedom to choose here but not for the rest of the nation. No system is perfect and maybe we could do a better job than the British!

14   elliemae   2009 Aug 31, 12:28am  

I do have a problem that we spend billions of dollars on failed military projects and "wars" we'll never win, yet allow American people to starve, drown (Katrina), and die from lack of appropriate medical care.

15   dg1j   2009 Aug 31, 12:41am  

No! Patrick you are wrong. What are you reading? The countries that have socialist healthcare are looking at how to reverse the disaster they have created. Of course the Communist dictatorships will never reverse to freedom because they want absolute control over their serfs. Read F.A. Hayeks The Road to Serfdom to learn of the dangers of government control. The gov't creates the problem and then throws tons of money at it to create a huge bureaucratic mess; but the process solidifies their power. Let the free market work. Right now the cost is what it is because of excessive gov't regulation. But if we eliminate gov't regulation and provide for free market competition, we will see the price come down. It is a law of economics. And by the way, the Dems have no original idea, only more gov't and more taxes. At least the Republicans tried the HSA and other creative ideas. But the only solution is to get the gov't out of medicine. Get the gov't out of med schools and get the gov't out of Dr's offices. And stop the regulators from telling Dr's how to run their practice and dictating all of the regulatory BS. This all cost alot of money folks and who do you think pays the bill. That's right, you do.

16   dg1j   2009 Aug 31, 12:48am  

We must dismantle the New Deal and the Great Society and all other Democreat power grabs. And shame on the Republicans for playing along and not really being true to their principles of limited gov't and the free market and thus liberty and freedom. We have not been a free nation for probably about 70-80 years because the mantra has been established into our national psyche: "What's the gov't going to do for me?"
It was Johann Wolfgang Goethe who said, “None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free.”

17   Spokaneman   2009 Aug 31, 12:50am  

This weekend I noticed on the bulletin board of the local grocery store a sign attempting to raise funds to help for the medical costs for a young man that had been badly injured in a motorcycle accident and had no insurance or the personal wherewithall to pay for his ongoing rehabilitation costs. Such fundraisers are far too common, and are seen across a broad dempgraphic spectrum.

This particular person was very likely one of those "young healthy individuals" who thought that he had no need for medical insurance. This demonstrates very clearly the need for an individual manditate and the need for universal coverage. I'm sure this individual's ER treatement will ultimately be paid for by those with insurance or the wherewithall to pay thier medical costs directly, and his ongoing care will be paid medicaid (ultimately the taxpayers).

As a society, we have decided defacto, that everyone who needs medical care will get it through some mechanism. The problem is that we provide those services in the most inefficient, haphazard and costly manner possible. The current system also forces the costs of this inefficiency onto employers and taxpayers.

18   Indian   2009 Aug 31, 1:11am  

Kevin says

nosf41 says

You have so much faith in Obama and big government.
How about starting slowly, government does not have the required trillions of $ for Obama health care reform proposal.

But we have the required trillions of $ that we will be spending on medicare during the same time period?

The CEO of Whole Foods wrote the following article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204251404574342170072865070.html

The CEO of whole foods is a guy who makes his living selling overpriced bullshit to people with more money than time to spend actually studying the facts about what it is that they’re getting — kind of like the way that we currently handle medical care. Nothing more fitting than taking advice from a guy who’s entire business is based on selling people stuff that they don’t need.

Agreed that opposition to universal health care from whole foods CEO sounds phony. This guy charges 4 times margin on basic groceries. Fools with IVY league education and who just plain got lucky in life go there and think how smart they are eating that organic banana....:-) :-)

19   dg1j   2009 Aug 31, 1:14am  

Kevin, It is a fact that we don't have the money for medicare. It is in huge debt. Back in the early 2000's Alan Greenspan reported that social secutity was $5 trillion in the red and Medicare was $13 trillion in the red and the red ink continues to flow.
Folks, don't be simpletons. Logic would naturally tell you that if we are going to have a national healthcare plan then shouldn't we have a national fruit and vegetable plan to help us be healthy (part of our preventive care), shouldn't we have a national telephone plan so we can call the dr., shouldn't we have a national car plan so we can get to the dr., shouldn't we have a national toilet paper plan (it's shameful the toilet paper that McD's and others make us use) so we can prevent disease, shouldn't we have a national fitness club plan so we can stay fit and healthy, shouldn't we have a etc, etc. The healthcare debate is nothing about healthcare but it is about who is going to control your life.
Question: Why don't we see the Dems fighting for national lawyer care? Well because the trial lawyer association is the sugar daddy of the super wealthy democrats who want to control your life. But logic would say it is not fair that only the rich can afford the lawyers, so we should have a national lawyer plan. NOT! And we should NOT have a national healthcare plan. Wake-up America before your demise issigned, sealed and delivered.

20   coolcam   2009 Aug 31, 1:15am  

Great Article Patrick. This is a mentally sick country that has demons rooted in a population that has been programed to vote consistently against it's own best interest. It's the same ideology that allowed 100's of thousands of white Americans to die in the civil war who in most cases were too poor to ever own a slave but would send their only child off to die to defend a system that they would never see the full benefits of. This healthcare debate is not about "socialism" or any other nonsense distraction issue that they bring up. This is about white Americans fearing that their white tax dollars will go to benefit the health of minorities. It's not hard to figure out the simple minded. Their arguments simply do not hold up to logic. Rep: Anthony Weiner made a great point that left Joe Scarborough speechless when he asked him. "what value do health insurance provide to the healthcare industry? they don't provide one single check up, nor do they operate on people". For every dollar spent with private insurance $00.35 goes to admin cost including CEO swollen salaries. Medicare has only a 4% admin cost. And if gov't run health care was so evil and bad, why is it that ZERO republican politicians opt out of it and buy their own public plan. That should make any logically thinking person question the sincerity and judgment of the opposition. You don't want ME to have something you enjoy free. What I find even more disingenuous is that the Republican Gop senators and congress men, who are all wealthy enough to afford "private insurance" that they endorse so much choose to have no parts of it regarding their own health. Why is that? This is a racist and dumb country i'm sorry to say. A country that elected for Bush 2x that is now reaping the fruits of their evil motivated behavior. And last, ask your self, what side of the debate do you think Jesus or whatever higher power you believe in (if any at all) would be on? That should end the debate right there. Have a good day ;-)

21   Indian   2009 Aug 31, 1:16am  

c16187 says

You should stick to real estate because you don’t know what you are talking about when it comes to health, life expectancy and the health care industry in America. I’ve worked in this business for over 20 years from public health to academic research settings, and there is no “crisis” in health care today. What’s happening now in America is that too many Americans are acting irresponsibly. It’s similar to what got us into the real estate mess.
The last thing we need is to have the Federal Government takeover of our health care industry. Just look at what they’ve done to the economy. Are you a freaking idiot?

No you are an Idiot, sir. Federal government screwed up the economy ? I am sure that FOX news channel told you that. Federal government SAVED the economy. We would have been in deep sh*t if not for them. Who bailed out your free market banks and wall street ?

22   chupitula   2009 Aug 31, 1:35am  

Hi all.
I grew up in Germany and France; both systems are considered superior then the system in the USA. It's right, the socialized systems are massively underfunded. But so is the system in the USA. Per GDP, and per nose, the USA spends far more for care. How come the quality is better in other places? It's because the profits are just less for the Health Care Industry. The remaining dollars are received by the citizens. They don't have better doctors or facilities, but they do have a different attitude. What the citizens here have to decide is whether to take away the fear of it's people to go broke if sick, and pretty close to everybody will if seriously ill, or to protect the profits of it's providers. My wife does lung transplants at mayo clinic, she gets offers for 850k and up every other day. I made as jumbo captain 150k in my best year. Physician salaries are a joke. A brand new MD makes average 160k, more than me in my best year. They are way overpaid. Guess who gets the short end of the stick?

23   moonmac   2009 Aug 31, 1:53am  

I used to install new kitchen cabinets in Section 8 housing complexes. Apartment after apartment there was always 3 guys sitting on the couch all day watching TV with a single Mom letting her 3 year olds run wild with no supervision. On Thursdays it was government cheese day, so you’d see hundreds of able bodied people huddled around outside waiting for the truck to pass out boxes of food. This is what our country is becoming & now you want to give all these free loaders even more free healthcare? You idiots really are clueless as to what’s going on in this country! Everyone I know is getting sick of working their asses off just to pay for these fucking Leeches!

24   10caipirinhas   2009 Aug 31, 1:57am  

Some of the best countries IMHO have both private "and" public systems that work together perfectly. Seen it first hand myself and I travel to one of them regularily for check ups that I pay for out of pocket.

Here in Canada however, the land of the "no you cannot have private health care" brand of socialism, people routinely die due to the nature of the health rationing that exists and/or deliberate denial of end of life care that may or may not extend their livelyhoods further after decades of paying exhorbitant taxes to support the "health care system". This is just one of our many problems.

My mother passed away in 2008 due to our system (Patrick has an e-mail on this and he is free to post it if he wants). My wife works directly in the health care system as a medical professional and in her opinion the problems are numerous and all caused by two things, first, the concept of outright socialism in health care, and secondly, the refusal of people and society to accept/punish the consequences of ones own personal actions.

The public hospital where she works are crammed full of people with COPD (smokers lung disease) drug addicts, obese people and alcoholics. You can imagine where I could go with this sentence...........and you would be right.

Both our systems are screwd up badly, we need a renewal of health care, but adopting the socialist approach solely on it's perceived "merits" (which are all false) will not work (just see Canada or the UK for proof) nor will allowing purely for profit care to exist in it's place. We must incorporate both inorder for it to work, as well as hold people who destroy their bodies personally accountable for their actions. The fact that junk food, booze and smokes are legal is irrelevant.....if you are irresponsible, my tax dollars are not going to pay to fix your fat, coughing, drunken ass. Pay for it yourself, as you could afford all the crap you put into your body get in this condition in the first place.

25   Patrick   2009 Aug 31, 2:03am  

nosf41 says

OK, so what would YOU do to reform health care?

1. Remove any laws preventing insurance companies to offer their services across state lines.
2. Make medical costs transparent - everybody should pay some portion of their health care bill from their own pocket.
3. Tort reform - good doctors should not be forced to pay six figure (US$) amounts for insurance from lawsuits.
4. Balance the government budget to reduce the tax burden. Ever increasing government deficits and national debt will require higher taxes, thus leaving people with less money for everything else including health care.
This includes reducing the military budget: close the majority of overseas bases and return the troops home.

Good start! I agree with all of those. I would add a few more:

5. Make it illegal to deny coverage or raise rates (same thing) because of any existing condition.
6. Present exact bills before providing care, except in emergencies.
7. Do not make individuals pay any more out of pocket than any insurer has to pay for the same thing.

I'm glad you agree that:

A: We need heath care reform.
B: There are things the government can do to help.

26   info2381   2009 Aug 31, 2:06am  

c16187-"The last thing we need is to have the Federal Government takeover of our health care industry. Just look at what they’ve done to the economy. Are you a freaking idiot?"

The Fed has caused much of the economic troubles, which IS NOT A PART OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT. Read the fine print.

27   MDS   2009 Aug 31, 2:18am  

When the majority of folks who view the public health option as "free" discover that it is not free....support for these proposals will be greatly diminished. Folks there is no free lunch! With that said, the provision of health care can be greatly improved.

I have worked in health care for 40 years and do have a few thoughts on how to control costs:

-Localize resources...we do not need a MRI etc. on each corner. Localities should band together to ensure that adequate resources exist so that everyone can get a service within a reasonable time...say two weeks....and reduce the duplication of services.
-Decrease defensive medicine practices...control trial lawyers and you control a significant portion of health care costs.
-Control the borders and you control health care costs....remember,even a lifeboat can sink when overloaded. The current proposal as written will serve as another magnet to draw more illegals across the border since everyone will be covered....with our tax dollars.
-Reward practices that show good outcomes with reduced costs...good cost/benefit measures
-Offer county public health services for those who do not have insurance. Many folks who can afford premiums choose not to be insured. Public health care is no frills and focuses on prevention practices.
-If we really are concerned that many fall through the gap, encourage those who really have low income to apply for Medicaid. If they do not qualify for Medicaid wage limits, then apply for each county's hospital district coverage which is provided on a sliding scale.
-Continue to expand the regulation of "marketing" by pharmaceutical companies.
-Get rid of lobbyists in all areas. We need to listen to constituents...not special interests.
-Allow NO political special deals for AMA, AARP, Pharma companies etc. These organizations support the current proposal because they were given special "considerations" by the White House in exchange for their support.
-Eliminate all pre-existing exclusions on all insurance policies.
-Allow all small businesses to band together to get best premium pricing. (Offer several options much like AARP offers.)
-Allow consumers to secure policies from neighboring states.
-Allow consumers to get medications from Canada etc. We need to increase competition...not destroy it!
-Ensure that everyone pays something out of pocket everytime they use health care....cost shifting needs to stop!
-Encourage states to pilot various health care solutions. This way we can adopt the best of the best tested ideas .

I too am very familiar with the health care offered in Ireland, England, and Canada. (BTW, all are trying to find alternative health care solutions because of the cost.) Additionally, the stories of waiting long times for "elective" surgery are true. One of my family in the UK waited over two years for gall bladder surgery. Every time her "number" came up, she was contacted and told that the priorities had changed due to "flu season costs" etc. She finally went and paid for the surgery herself. Oh, yes...their health care system is great until you really need care. (Fortunately for her, UK has a public system and a private one ....Canada does not have this option.)

As to rationing, think! How will we as a nation cover 43+ million more folks while reducing the percent of GDP that we spend on health care? When our budget states that we will spend no more than 12 percent of GDP on health care (example) then that becomes the dollar number and health priorities are set. Decisions will be made on these health priorities. Call it what you wish but rationing is what it is...

One other point, our government is already our country's largest health care provider through Medicaid and Medicare. Review their success at controlling costs and fraud in these programs before you consider giving over more control. With increased government (and insurance) control, health care costs spiraled out of control.

Changes are needed to be sure but a THOUGHTFUL DEBATE needs to occur before we turn over our health care to anyone. My grandparents had a saying that seems applicable "Act in haste, repent in leisure"

Yes, we need to change the "bathwater" but also we need to be careful not to throw out the baby with the bath water. Let your federal and state representatives know of your thoughts for controlling health care costs.

28   Zeppelin   2009 Aug 31, 2:59am  

The biggest problem was Trying to Push this through Too Fast.
That Scared People, as Nobody Seemed to have Heard all of the Details.
I think that caused people to start throwing around a lot of False Interpretations.
That led to a "Frenzy of this Administration", and 2/3 of the Nation Ran the other way!

How about taking a set amount of Tax Dollars to Fund Our Elections.
Have the FCC have a Clause, that a set amount of Airtime be Given to the Parties seeking Election.
Create a True 3 Party System, instead of the Failed 2 Parties of Republicans and Democrats.
Start Banning all of the "Payoffs" (Oh, I mean CONTRIBUTIONS) from These Lobbyists from Big Business.

Not Too Many Voters, TRUST the Majority of Politicians.
10 Years in Congress should be the Limit.
This is because of All the PAC Money, which Corrupts Policy.
The Corruption Needs to End, then once the Politicians are Representing the People, instead of Big Business, a true form of Ideas will Take Shape.

Once the GREED has Diminished, We will All be Better Off!!!

29   Zeppelin   2009 Aug 31, 3:10am  

One other Point I would Like to make, is Governments Reckless Spending.
When they are actually able to Live with their Means, and Stop Wasting so much of Our Tax Dollars, then People might actually TRUST Them to Make Good Policy Decisions.
Bailing Out Corporations with Our Tax Dollars, because they also Failed to Analyze Their Risks, is BAD Policy.

Once Again, TRUST has been Shaken and the FAITH of the American People in Government, has Greatly Diminished.

I Mean, Seriously, WHY are Corporations Funding Politicians Campaigns, because they like Them?
Anyone in Their Right Mind Can See this is The #1 Problem Right Now.
We are on a Path to Self Destruction, and Need PAC Elimination Immediately!!!

30   yodaking   2009 Aug 31, 3:33am  

Hello Patrick, Love your site, and I must say I really appreciate your taking the time to consolidate all the real estate bubble info.

One thing about your first point however that many people miss....

The reason 29 countries have higher life expectencies then America is due to higher homocide and accident rates in America. If you take out the murders and car accidents, Americans have the highest life expectancy. Now this is a sad commentary perhaps on our gun culture and unsafe roads..but it says little about are health system

My Data comes from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control
Source: http://politicalcalculations.blogspot.com/2007/09/natural-life-expectancy-in-united.html

It has been argued however that better health care system would have saved more accident victims and thus would have boosted life expectancy. However, a Harvard study has shown that it is in fact our superior health care system that allows us the lower the actual homocide rates...to a still high number, but counter to the argument listed above.

Source: Harvard Study
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/08/12/us/medical-gains-reduce-deaths-from-assaults.html?sec=&spon=

Another reason we have a lower life expectency is because of our low infant survival rate. We have an intolerably high infant mortality rate (die before first birthday) ... Again, I would argue that this has more to do with poor education and 'culture' then a 'broken health' care' system. This report shows that factors such as drug use, low level of education, and single mother (absent father) contribute just as to the lowe rate then the health care system.

Source: CBO
http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/62xx/doc6219/doc05b.pdf

Finally, the last reason we have a lower life expectency rate is because Americans are by far more obese then other industrialized nations...again - something that has very little to do with our health care system, but more from our 'fast food nation' culture.

I agree that we need some sort of reform, so I hope you don't feel that I don't agree that some reform is necessary - I just wanted to add context to your first point.

Again, thanks for your site.

31   barrelrider   2009 Aug 31, 3:41am  

Patrick,

I have greatly appreciated your insightful commentary on the housing crisis. And so I am surprised that you so uncritically accept the statistics on life expectancy and their relation to various healthcare systems. Much, if not all, the life expectancy data is explained by the very different lifestyles Americans choose to live. We have a much higher rate of obesity, teenage pregnancy, and violence then the rest of the Western world which greatly skews are statistics of life expectancy downward. If you look at survival statistics of specific illnesses, adjusted for severity, we compare very favorable with the rest of the world. I am not excusing our overeating and our propensity to shoot and stab each other, but unfortunately I do not see any of the healthcare proposals put forth putting a dent in these social problems.

And we do have a government health plan that people are very happy with. It is called Medicare. And it is very, very broke. It currently has an unfunded liability that is in the tens of trillions of dollars. Please explain how you plan on expanding that system, which politically has been very resistant to any change for DECADES, and save money.

And the rest of the posters: please stop with the nonsense that cutting physician salaries would solve the problem. Physician salaries are a very small percent of the overall healthcare budget and have increased at a much slower rate then healthcare inflation overall. You could cut the salary of very physician in half today and it would put a very small dent in our funding problem. People want a simple solution to a very complex problem.

We need to make people more responsible for their lifestyle decisions. I admit I do not have a great idea of how to do that. But, it really will not matter what system is put in place if we continue overeating, smoking, drinking, not exercising, having kids at age fifteen, and stabbing each other we will continue to compare unfavorably with the rest of the world.

32   drintrnet   2009 Aug 31, 3:59am  

1. Remove any laws preventing insurance companies to offer their services across state lines.
2. Make medical costs transparent - everybody should pay some portion of their health care bill from their own pocket.
3. Tort reform - good doctors should not be forced to pay six figure (US$) amounts for insurance from lawsuits.
4. Balance the government budget to reduce the tax burden. Ever increasing government deficits and national debt will require higher taxes, thus leaving people with less money for everything else including health care.
This includes reducing the military budget: close the majority of overseas bases and return the troops home.
5. Enable individuals to start Tax Free Medical Savings Accounts. Tax and penalty free for covered expences.
6. Federal Tax Free status for parents of disabled children.
7. Federal Tax Free status for disabled veterans.
8. Enable individuals to purchase individual programs from providers rather than group programs.
9. Enable choice and freedom shop for providers.
10. If all else fails, demand that we have the very same coverage as your senator.

It's not that government is not doing enough, they have done too much already.

33   Mikejay   2009 Aug 31, 6:17am  

Hear, hear, Patrick. You articulated many of the things I've been saying for years. And this recent nonsense about rationing and death panels? PLEASE! Who has more incentive to ration care? An organization concerned about its profits? Or the government?

While other countries' heatlh care systems have plenty of problems, the U.S. system is FAR from being the best.

34   alexn74   2009 Aug 31, 9:21am  

It's bit overrated. In this country many physicians became MD's after being engineers or accountants. And most them say that it's easier job and better paid. I'm not kidding. Higher debt? Right, because it's proportionally more paid then, say, accountant's job.
As for high life expectancy of Hispanics. You guys should remember that only Hispanics are actually looking for medical help and who're propertly registered are mostly legals and well paid. Most illegals are not even registered. If they die, nobody cares to figure our their age, cause or anything else.

35   wcalleallegre   2009 Aug 31, 1:57pm  

nosf41 is in the right direction. Patrick is off the wall. Patrick, there are other solutions out there - obviously you don't check them out. I would rather you not to because you are doing a decent job on housing/banking. You have a right to your opinions. It all goes back to the philosophy of government and the proper role of government. Socialized healthcare WILL bankrupt the state in the long run! Can you make a Constitutional argument for it? I am not a Republican. You bash the insurance companies. Don't you realize that they are only reacting to regulated market condition and make profits in a regulated environment? Insurance companies are not the problem. The Gov't is the problem (in Reaganese term). The free market has not failed. The Gov't failed.

Patrick, the issue of life expectancy is much more complicated than you think. Many other countries don't take stats the same way as we do. It is not apple for apple comparison. Other factors unrelated to healthcare delivery plays a role like diet, lifestyle, ethnicity, environment, murder rates, immigration, involvement in wars, etc.

36   wcalleallegre   2009 Aug 31, 2:03pm  

After reading more of these - dg1j is right on.

37   nope   2009 Aug 31, 8:34pm  

dg1j says

Kevin, It is a fact that we don’t have the money for medicare. It is in huge debt. Back in the early 2000’s Alan Greenspan reported that social secutity was $5 trillion in the red and Medicare was $13 trillion in the red and the red ink continues to flow.
Folks, don’t be simpletons. Logic would naturally tell you that if we are going to have a national healthcare plan then shouldn’t we have a national fruit and vegetable plan to help us be healthy (part of our preventive care), shouldn’t we have a national telephone plan so we can call the dr., shouldn’t we have a national car plan so we can get to the dr., shouldn’t we have a national toilet paper plan (it’s shameful the toilet paper that McD’s and others make us use) so we can prevent disease, shouldn’t we have a national fitness club plan so we can stay fit and healthy, shouldn’t we have a etc, etc. The healthcare debate is nothing about healthcare but it is about who is going to control your life.
Question: Why don’t we see the Dems fighting for national lawyer care? Well because the trial lawyer association is the sugar daddy of the super wealthy democrats who want to control your life. But logic would say it is not fair that only the rich can afford the lawyers, so we should have a national lawyer plan. NOT! And we should NOT have a national healthcare plan. Wake-up America before your demise issigned, sealed and delivered.

Oh what a load of bull. We don't have nationalized variations of those things because they have reasonably efficient markets. Health care does not (and can not) have anything remotely resembling an efficient market.

There are definitely options other than "socialized medicine" (i.e. the UK), and they all have their trade offs. All of them are better than what we have here today though. The systems of Canada, the UK, Australia, Switzerland, and Japan are all quite different from one another. Pick any one of them and we'll probably be OK.

38   wcalleallegre   2009 Sep 1, 12:23am  

Why should we or I subsidize healthcare for others? Taking from Peter to pay Paul? "Free" or subsidized Healthcare is not a right. Why should I pay (with my taxes) heaalthcare for unhealthy and immoral lifestyle such as those who don't care to take care of their bodies? Why should I pay for immoral lifestyles such as homosexuality? Gays have on of the lowest life expectancy. Why sould I pay for murder (abortions and infanticide)? Why should I pay for illegal aliens? Why should I pay for out of wedlock pregnancies and birth? All of these will be part of Nat'l healthcare and are major costs.

Kevin - you appeared to be ignorant about the major problems with UK and Canada's. You have tremendous faith in gov't provided programs. I have not seen one successful gov't program. Do you call SS, Medicare, Fannie and Fredie, post office, Fed Res banking, US Treasury, IMF, UN Programs and etc successful? Nat'l healthcare will likely lead to punitive medicine.

39   chupitula   2009 Sep 1, 1:20am  

to c16187: I don't know what you are smoking, but maybe the high salaries of physicians is more explainable with the limitation of medical school enrollments since the late 1970's, which the medical lobby orchestrated to keep up their loot, and the 80million or so more people in the country, rather than anything else; anyway, if you want to be a jumbo captain you go through at least as much studying and years of service as an MD in whatever speciality; I just remember who turned out to be a doctor in my high school class, and I'm already scared to go to the hospital. Please sir don't call me an idiot; a general physician istn't worth a dime more then 80k and a specialist maybe up to 200k; that's what they are worth, they know it and that's why we have FOX NEWs to spin that fact; but then MD in this country are generally part of the problem not the solution, inspite their oath. Next time you fly, think about your stupid comment.

40   den52nis   2009 Sep 1, 1:39am  

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