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Thunderdome: Should we all be responsible for everyone else's health care?


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2017 May 4, 9:59am   20,428 views  134 comments

by Blurtman   ➕follow (2)   💰tip   ignore  

1. No, I should only be responsible for the care of me and my family.
2. Yes, healthcare is a basic human right for everyone in this country.
3. Yes, healthcare is a basic human right for every citizen of this country.
4-5. Add "except the fatties." to 2 and 3.
6. Extra credit: Kill the bankers!

#SuperSizeIt

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66   joeyjojojunior   2017 May 5, 9:00am  

"Our empirical evidence suggests the opposite."

Yes, please show that empirical evidence. Because I can show a buttload of evidence that government run health care is orders of magnitude cheaper than the US cluster of a system.

67   CBOEtrader   2017 May 5, 11:31am  

joeyjojojunior says

Because I can show a buttload of evidence that government run health care is orders of magnitude cheaper than the US cluster of a system.

Yes, please share. We already have government run healthcare in the US. Our government spends more than per capita on healthcare than all but a tiny handfull of countries. Our current cluster of a system is a perfect example of the mess caused by a lack of a free market.

68   CBOEtrader   2017 May 5, 11:32am  

FP says

see any other developed country in the world

you are mistaken, but please give it a try and show us.

69   Dan8267   2017 May 5, 3:05pm  

CBOEtrader says

Straw man much? You consistently take concepts to the extreme. I never said any of this.

This is not a straw man A straw man is a fallacy in which a person misrepresents the argument of his opponent. What I did was showed the logical consequence of your reasoning. If your reasoning leads to five conclusions and you disagree with four of them, why should I accept your reasoning?
CBOEtrader says

You claimed that government could lower healthcare costs. Our empirical evidence suggests the opposite.

Socialized medicine empirically provides better health care at lower cost. Here's the evidence.
http://www.pnhp.org/facts/single-payer-system-cost
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/edwin-g-dolan/bernie-health-care-europe_b_9387966.html

Now present your evidence. This is going to be fun. People evidently haven't learned the most important lessons of PatNet, the most famous of which is never get involved in a land war in Asia, but only slightly less well-known is this. Never go in against Dan in an evidence war.

70   Dan8267   2017 May 5, 3:07pm  

Ironman says

So, how come it works fine for other markets like auto insurance, life insurance, homeowners insurance, life insurance, business insurance?

It doesn't. You get ripped off in all those businesses.

71   Dan8267   2017 May 5, 3:08pm  

Ironman says

Once you do your research and educate yourself, you can make that statement.

I'm sorry I didn't graduate from the University of Dumbassery like you with a degrees in animal husbandry and wifery.

73   Blurtman   2017 May 5, 4:02pm  

1. Obesity rates are low in Switzerland, relative to most OECD countries (Figure 1). 9% of adults are obese in Switzerland, while nearly 38% are overweight (including obesity). The latest data show that the prevalence of overweight (including obesity) has increased by 3 percentage points from 2007 to 2012.

https://www.oecd.org/switzerland/Obesity-Update-2014-SWITZERLAND.pdf

Link compares obesity rates in Switzerland with USA (eye opening) as well as with other countries.

74   Dan8267   2017 May 5, 4:53pm  

Ironman says

Yeah, you graduated from the University of Gay Fat Nerds that Fuck Goats.

Stealing more of my jokes? Clearly, you know who's your superior.
Ironman says

Trying to compare single payer in Europe to our fucked up system is like comparing apples to horseshoes or comparing your gay fat ass to Mr. Universe.

Yeah, because cancer is different in Europe as are the laws of physics and mathematics.

Yet, somehow you have no problem using a very specific implementation of socialism in Venezuela for making a universal generalization that socialism is always bad. What hypocrisy.

75   marcus   2017 May 5, 5:53pm  

CBOEtrader says

 

Dan8267 says

Because of economies of scale, reduced waste and needless competition, better coordination, and elimination of redundancies, socialized

This is the promise of every socialized program. Its an evil lie.

It's not like we don't have proof. Look at all the countries that don't practice, "oh, you want to continue living ? How much will you willing to pay for that ?"

Good incomes for services provided have a place in health care, but not the profit motive to the degree it does. It's a service, and those providing it should be paid very well becasue of the amount of training involved. Big pharma ? Providing cheap drugs to Canada ? What's up with that ?

I wonder how much drug research is heavily subsidized by the govt at the University level. Then when they're hot and on the verge of a breakthrough, they go to work for a drug company.

76   anonymous   2017 May 6, 8:03am  

I've worked in the healthcare industry for years. I think a bunch of you are making valid points. Here is my research and conclusions up to this point:

- Our population is fatter, unhealthier, larger and more diverse than most every other developed nation, so you can't compare healthcare administration costs as apples to apples.
- We have a lot of poor, illegal immigrants who use our healthcare system because we don't really check citizenship and have IDs like other countries do.
- The US produces the most medical innovation than any other country in the world by far. We end up subsidizing the generics and copy-cats deployed elsewhere. If the US innovation didn't exist, our healthcare options would be much more antiquated. Leftists, be careful what you wish for if you do "too much" price fixing; will get to this later. The HepC cure may have never even existed had it not been for capitalism.

What Do We Do? (my opinion only obviously)
- WE HAVE TO FIX OUR ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION PROBLEM.
- If a life-saving drug is invented, we can't let capitalism reign. We must have some level of price fixing to allow Gilead, for example, to make money but not let people die. I'm not saying this will be easy, but an independent third party (i.e., government) would need to facilitate price-setting.
- I don't think we should get rid of gov't-paid healthcare for the poor and elderly. However, Medicare/Medicaid should be 1970s level of healthcare. In other words, procedures paid for by the government shouldn't be cutting edge or uber expensive.
- Most healthcare costs come from a small percentage of the population, and from the elderly in the last years of life. That small percentage needs to pay more via cost sharing than they are today. For the elderly, we need to make more forceful decisions about providing quality of life in the their last years, vs extending their life unnaturally.
- The Right will hate this, but we need more price fixing, period. There's too much subsidy by those who pay, vs those you can't, so you end up with people paying $1500 for stitches. HOWEVER, I don't think single payer is the answer because gov't is so fucking inefficient and corrupt. Just set price ranges for procedures and drugs (by region) and let the free market deal with out claims are adjudicated, etc., and technology and automation will drive down the cost of administration. Medical device companies will have to change their cost/pricing structures to match the cost of procedures.

So, I see this as a CAREFUL balance of free market and gov't intervention. If we lose too much free market, we lose innovation and increase gov't corruption and inefficiency. If we allow too much free market, we get outrageous pricing and certain portions of the population left out to die.

77   Blurtman   2017 May 6, 8:35am  

just any guy says

- Our population is fatter, unhealthier, larger and more diverse than most every other developed nation, so you can't compare healthcare administration costs as apples to apples.

- We have a lot of poor, illegal immigrants who use our healthcare system because we don't really check citizenship and have IDs like other countries do.

- The US produces the most medical innovation than any other country in the world by far. We end up subsidizing the generics and copy-cats deployed elsewhere. If the US innovation didn't exist, our healthcare options would be much more antiquated. Leftists, be careful what you wish for if you do "too much" price fixing; will get to this later. The HepC cure may have never even existed had it not been for capitalism.

just any guy says

What Do We Do? (my opinion only obviously)

- WE HAVE TO FIX OUR ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION PROBLEM.

A brilliant observation and one that could tantalizingly get enough bipartisanship support.

78   anonymous   2017 May 6, 8:55am  

I have trouble believing that illegal immigration is causing the burdensome and exorbitant healthcare costs. The people that crowd the parking lot at all the health campuses every day all day doing who knows what, are all regular white fat Americans. And tons of old people causing traffic on the roads just to go to their daily appointments that yield virtually no benefit. I don't participate in any of that bullshit.

People with kids in sports should pay a butt load more as well. Twenty five years ago, none of that existed and we seemed to do better with the injuries. Now there's a med express on every corner with a queue around the block. I don't think anyone would be any worse off if all of those just disappeared

79   RC2006   2017 May 6, 9:10am  

errc says

I have trouble believing that illegal immigration is causing the burdensome and exorbitant healthcare costs. The people that crowd the parking lot at all the health campuses every day all day doing who knows what, are all regular white fat Americans. And tons of old people causing traffic on the roads just to go to their daily appointments that yield virtually no benefit. I don't participate in any of that bullshit.

People with kids in sports should pay a butt load more as well. Twenty five years ago, none of that existed and we seemed to do better with the injuries. Now there's a med express on every corner with a queue around the block. I don't think anyone would be any worse off if all of those just disappeared

Think the Illegal issue is more of an issue with certain states. I had a Doctor friend that worked ER in an area that got flooded with illegals after another hospital in a Hispanic area had to shut down the ER, he suddenly started having tons of people with no insurance and no way to collect.

80   anonymous   2017 May 6, 9:58am  

The illegal immigrant issue is a significant problem. I've seen it first hand over and over and over. The Left has politicized this issue so much that there's a great level of cognitive dissonance. This is why I've been banging the drum on this issue here on Pat.net for so long. It's a no-brainer

One more thing to add what I stated above. We have to have the individual mandate for this to work. However, we need to ensure we provide catastrophic options for healthy individuals so that they're not subsidizing the sick too much, but that we're not "directly" on the hook for when catastrophe strikes a seemingly healthy individual...it's baked into the actuarial model. And, we need to ensure cost-sharing with each plan assigned to an individual or family. If there's no cost-sharing, there's no skin in the game and services will be over-used.

81   MisdemeanorRebel   2017 May 6, 11:16am  

I notice that programs that make the kids sit in groups and work on problems together are really popular with teachers. hahaha

82   Dan8267   2017 May 6, 11:35am  

CBOEtrader says

Regardless, a tiny country with one dominant civilized culture group that shares a strong patriotic loyalty to each other can do a lot of things that our 500 million multi-cultural society cant...like enact socialized health care system that doesn't degrade into a venezuelan nightmare.

You can't compare the us to Switzerland.

If you cannot compare the U.S. to Switzerland, then you cannot compare the U.S. to Venezuela either, and so any attempt to show failures of socializing in other nations are not applicable to attempts at socialization in the U.S. That principle goes both ways.

It's funny how one side of the argument over basic economic strategies loves to point out the failures of bad implementations of socialist policies by governments with many other problems, but hate it when competent governments demonstrate successful socialist policies.

In actuality, it makes far more sense to compare the U.S. to Switzerland than to Venezuela. The former two are rich countries with politically and socially stability and are highly developed. The latter meets none of those conditions. Consequentially, socialist policies implemented in the U.S. would be more like those in Switzerland than Venezuela. Anti-socialists don't like this because it's clear evidence that socialism, when used wisely, works.

Furthermore, it would be utterly impossible to run a society without socialism. You could have no military, no police, no streets, no sewer system, no electric grid, no lighthouses. Your society would be a third-world hell hole with para-military gangs constantly waging wars on the streets.

83   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2017 May 6, 11:38am  

just any guy says

The illegal immigrant issue is a significant problem. I've seen it first hand over and over and over. The Left has politicized this issue so much that there's a great level of cognitive dissonance.

I don't really care if CA or any of the other border states want to kick Mexicans out. But if this was the main issue, you would expect everything to be working smoothly in the non-border states where immigration isn't a big issue. That's not really the case, so I doubt that fixing the immigration issue will solve much.

84   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2017 May 6, 11:49am  

just any guy says

- Our population is fatter, unhealthier, larger and more diverse than most every other developed nation, so you can't compare healthcare administration costs as apples to apples.

Weight is a part of health care. A lot of people in the US think that doctors will just fix them if they get sick and that getting sick is just a genetic crap shoot. They don't realize that their own lifestyle will have a tremendous impact on how healthy they are. They also don't realize that doctors can't really 'fix' heart disease, cancer, etc. With heart disease, they can save your life if you are lucky. But they cannot reverse the disease. With Cancer, they can prolong your life with some of the less aggressive types. But the more aggressive ones will probably just kill you 'pretty quickly' regardless of what a doctor does.

Also, with regard to Obesity, 34% of Americans were obese in 2014. This is compared to 28-29% of people in the UK, Canada, New Zealand, Australia, and Mexico. That's not a huge difference - pun intended.

It's hard to believe that diversity of genetic backgrounds complicates the work of doctors all that much. Diversity of genetic material probably helps an individual, but I may be wrong on that. Correct me if you know something about that.

85   anonymous   2017 May 6, 12:15pm  

YesYNot says

But if this was the main issue

I never said it was the main issue. Healthcare is a very complex issue to solve with numerous factors to consider. Illegal immigrants using our healthcare system without paying for services is a problem...period.

I know your ideology says otherwise, but it's mistaken. I have first-hand experience with this.

86   missing   2017 May 6, 12:22pm  

It's hopeless. People muddle the issue with irrelevant details instead of looking at the big pucture.

How can removing the middle man, streamlining and simplifying the administration, removing the for-profit element, improving preventive care, and regulating services and costs does not make health care better and more affordable?

87   CBOEtrader   2017 May 6, 12:23pm  

http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/31/8/1803.full.pdf+html

Or how about this? US compared to EU countries is an apples to oranges comparison. You are literally comparing white people with healthy lifestyles to obese black people. Im assuming facts are acceptable since this is thunderdome.

88   CBOEtrader   2017 May 6, 12:25pm  

FP says

It's hopeless. People muddle the issue with irrelevant details instead of looking at the big pucture.

How can removing the middle man, streamlining and simplifying the administration, removing the for-profit element, improving preventive care, and regulating services and costs does not make health care better and more affordable?

A monkey could take a dump on our current system and it would be more affordable.

89   missing   2017 May 6, 12:26pm  

just any guy says

I know your ideology says otherwise, but it's mistaken. I have first-hand experience with this.

Having seen a few illegals going to the ER does not mean you know how significant a burden on the system they are.

90   anonymous   2017 May 6, 12:35pm  

FP says

Having seen a few illegals going to the ER does not mean you know how significant a burden on the system they are.

You're wrong. Having worked as an executive in the health plan for one of the largest health systems in the nation, I know what the burden was based on actual payor data as well as interacting with hospitals and physicians in 6 different states. Don't tell me my business.

91   missing   2017 May 6, 12:37pm  

CBOEtrader says

http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/31/8/1803.full.pdf+html

Or how about this? US compared to EU countries is an apples to oranges comparison. You are literally comparing white people with healthy lifestyles to obese black people. Im assuming facts are acceptable since this is thunderdome.

Why did you ignore the hispanics? They are as many as the blacks?

92   CBOEtrader   2017 May 6, 12:38pm  

We have a problem of cultural choices. We choose to eat too many ho-ho's and shoot each other.

93   anonymous   2017 May 6, 12:38pm  

FP says

It's hopeless. People muddle the issue with irrelevant details instead of looking at the big pucture.

How can removing the middle man, streamlining and simplifying the administration, removing the for-profit element, improving preventive care, and regulating services and costs does not make health care better and more affordable?

In the words of Trump, healthcare is A LOT hard to solve than you think. If it were as trivial as you make it out to be, it would've been solved by now.

94   missing   2017 May 6, 12:38pm  

just any guy says

FP says

Having seen a few illegals going to the ER does not mean you know how significant a burden on the system they are.

You're wrong. Having worked as an executive in the health plan for one of the largest health systems in the nation, I know what the burden was based on actual payor data as well as interacting with hospitals and physicians in 6 different states. Don't tell me my business.

Give me the numbers then, don't just blablabla me.

95   anonymous   2017 May 6, 12:42pm  

FP says

just any guy says

FP says

Having seen a few illegals going to the ER does not mean you know how significant a burden on the system they are.

You're wrong. Having worked as an executive in the health plan for one of the largest health systems in the nation, I know what the burden was based on actual payor data as well as interacting with hospitals and physicians in 6 different states. Don't tell me my business.

Give me the numbers then, don't just blablabla me.

Roughly 15% of the uninsured were illegal immigrants. It was obviously worse in CA (upward of 25%) vs other states, but consider that a rough average. It's not just about the cost, but it's also about the experience that other legal and/or insured patients go through as it pertains to wait times.

96   CBOEtrader   2017 May 6, 12:45pm  

FP says

Why did you ignore the hispanics? They are as many as the blacks?

Stats suggest the hispanic population does not harbor the same cultural plague as our black communities, and are therefore not as noteworthy.

97   anonymous   2017 May 6, 12:53pm  

FP says

Give me the numbers then, don't just blablabla me.

Gave you the numbers. Now are you just gonna blablabla me back like you have been?

98   anonymous   2017 May 6, 1:03pm  

Let me also add that the uninsured tend to use the ER because they have to be admitted. The ER, on average, costs 5x that of a normal doctor visit.

99   missing   2017 May 6, 2:16pm  

just any guy says

Gave you the numbers. Now are you just gonna blablabla me back like you have been?

Now I'm going to tell you that the number you gave me is meaningless by itslef. The question was what burden are the illigas on the system. You tell me they are 15% of the uninsured. So if the uninsured are 150 people?

Try again Mr. executive. But this time think more before writing.

100   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2017 May 6, 2:21pm  

just any guy says

Let me also add that the uninsured tend to use the ER because they have to be admitted. The ER, on average, costs 5x that of a normal doctor visit.

That was a big driver that was expected to lost costs when the aca lowered the number of uninsured. Common sense tells you that the benefit is long term, while the cost is front loaded. That's too much nuance for a national debate though.

101   anonymous   2017 May 6, 2:28pm  

YesYNot says

just any guy says

Let me also add that the uninsured tend to use the ER because they have to be admitted. The ER, on average, costs 5x that of a normal doctor visit.

That was a big driver that was expected to lost costs when the aca lowered the number of uninsured. Common sense tells you that the benefit is long term, while the cost is front loaded. That's too much nuance for a national debate though.

Yep, I agreed with some of the things that ACA tried to do and its objectives. Healthcare is the hardest thing for our country to figure out. I give it to Obama for trying.

102   anonymous   2017 May 6, 2:31pm  

FP says

just any guy says

Gave you the numbers. Now are you just gonna blablabla me back like you have been?

Now I'm going to tell you that the number you gave me is meaningless by itslef. The question was what burden are the illigas on the system. You tell me they are 15% of the uninsured. So if the uninsured are 150 people?

Try again Mr. executive. But this time think more before writing.

Done with you bro. You give back nothing in return except insecurity and animosity for sound logic that shakes your ideology. It's like debating a religious zealot...your mind is made up.

103   missing   2017 May 6, 3:36pm  

just any guy says

You give back nothing in return except insecurity and animosity for sound logic that shakes your ideology.

What a fucking idiot. I just exposed your lack of logic.

104   missing   2017 May 6, 3:42pm  

CBOEtrader says

Stats suggest the hispanic population does not harbor the same cultural plague as our black communities, and are therefore not as noteworthy.

I though you posted that figure to show that the average American longevity is lowered because the blacks. But it also shows that the hispanics compensate for the blacks.

105   FortWayne   2017 May 6, 7:47pm  

marcus says

Good incomes for services provided have a place in health care, but not the profit motive to the degree it does.

If it's business, the only motivation is profit. Everything else is secondary.

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