0
0

Personal Responsibility and Health Care Reform


 invite response                
2010 Apr 21, 1:19pm   15,508 views  89 comments

by Leigh   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

What do you envision when you think of those words together?

Or, in other words, if you were king, what would our system look like?

Details, please:O)

« First        Comments 11 - 50 of 89       Last »     Search these comments

11   simchaland   2010 Apr 26, 10:35am  

Make sure to get your daily dose of high fructose corn syrup. It's patriotic.

12   bob2356   2010 Apr 26, 12:08pm  

Honest Abe says

“Why do almost no one buy it even when paying for HC insurance for themselves?”. Could it be because they don’t want to. Freedom of choice. Freedom.
Freedom = the ability to exercise one’s will in the absence of coercion.

I don't have a problem with that as long as they accept the responsibility that goes with it. If people want to be free to make that kind of choice then they will have to be responsible for dying quietly if something pops up they can't afford. What happens in the real world is people want to be free to mooch off of the rest of society if the things they don't want to pay for don't work out. Why should I be coerced as a ratepayer for my insurance to take up the slack when someone without insurance goes to the er and pays nothing? Why don't I have any freedom? It works both ways.

13   Brand1533   2010 Apr 26, 12:19pm  

ZippyDDoodah says: Health care should be dealt with like food. We need both to live, yet health care has attracted massive govt. interference which has driven up prices.. whereas relatively unregulated grocery stores offer a plethora of affordable food.

What! Seriously? There is no American industry with more government manipulation than agriculture. Congress effectively decides via subsidies and tax credits which foods we eat, which size farms are profitable, and how much of each crop is produced and where. U.S. agriculture is as close to centrally planned as it comes. You can argue that farmers have choices, but ultimately the subsidies and price stops will decide profitability, and the farms get pushed in specifically intended directions (or get smashed up and absorbed into different farms).

14   ZippyDDoodah   2010 Apr 26, 1:06pm  

What! Seriously? There is no American industry with more government manipulation than agriculture. Congress effectively decides via subsidies and tax credits which foods we eat, which size farms are profitable, and how much of each crop is produced and where

End all ag subsidies now. Let's have a national referendum on it. Grocery stores are relatively unregulated and farms are less regulated than healthcare. You pretend as if you have some salient point when you don't. My points in my previous post are still 100% valid.

15   ZippyDDoodah   2010 Apr 26, 1:13pm  

I don’t have a problem with that as long as they accept the responsibility that goes with it. If people want to be free to make that kind of choice then they will have to be responsible for dying quietly if something pops up they can’t afford. What happens in the real world is people want to be free to mooch off of the rest of society if the things they don’t want to pay for don’t work out.

bob, I agree with this statement of yours entirely, even though you are too ignorant to have a clue as to typical healthcare deductibles as evidenced by your earlier comment upthread. If you meant what you wrote here, then I see very little substantive disagreement between your point of view and mine. Freedom of choice means taking responsibility for those choices and living with those responsibilities no matter what. I think you've made this point very well.

16   elliemae   2010 Apr 26, 2:14pm  

ZippyDDoodah says


How about dissolving the military, and every person can defend the country themselves? When that mig jet comes over and bombs you, do you think your colt 45 is going to do anything?

Since you’re so stupid that you need it spelled out for you - National defense cannot feasibly be handled by individuals on their own. Healthcare, and house payments, most definitely can be handled by individuals on their own.

Wow, you are, like, totally smarter than the rest of us. You're an angry little bugger, huh? (Since you're so stupid that you need it spelled out for you, you are offensive and rude).

17   simchaland   2010 Apr 26, 5:09pm  

elliemae says

ZippyDDoodah says

How about dissolving the military, and every person can defend the country themselves? When that mig jet comes over and bombs you, do you think your colt 45 is going to do anything?

Since you’re so stupid that you need it spelled out for you - National defense cannot feasibly be handled by individuals on their own. Healthcare, and house payments, most definitely can be handled by individuals on their own.

Wow, you are, like, totally smarter than the rest of us. You’re an angry little bugger, huh? (Since you’re so stupid that you need it spelled out for you, you are offensive and rude).

I don't know what malt liquor will do for defense but it may help some people around here to relax.

Elliemae, I'm so glad that you've finally acknowledged the massive intelligence and superior personhood of Zippo. Maybe he/she will finally stop foaming at the mouth and offer us some real solutions for a change.

(Where was that link about pigs flying?)

18   bob2356   2010 Apr 26, 8:14pm  

ZippyDDoodah says

I don’t have a problem with that as long as they accept the responsibility that goes with it. If people want to be free to make that kind of choice then they will have to be responsible for dying quietly if something pops up they can’t afford. What happens in the real world is people want to be free to mooch off of the rest of society if the things they don’t want to pay for don’t work out.

bob, I agree with this statement of yours entirely, even though you are too ignorant to have a clue as to typical healthcare deductibles as evidenced by your earlier comment upthread. If you meant what you wrote here, then I see very little substantive disagreement between your point of view and mine. Freedom of choice means taking responsibility for those choices and living with those responsibilities no matter what. I think you’ve made this point very well.

I was asking you for a clue. Back up your opinions with facts. How about some research findings? How about some hard numbers? You know it all, prove it. I worked (although I got out that industry 9 years ago, people I talk to say it hasn't changed) in medical office management and know for a fact that at that time high deductable and/or catastrophic plans are few and far between even for people who pay their own way. Why I don't know.

You missed my secondary point altogether, which is that your dreamworld scenario of people taking responsibility doesn't exist in real life, as much as I would like it to be so. People talk a good game about freedom, but when the responsibility part comes up they are the first in line to suck off other peoples teat.

There are many, many factors in the cost of health care. Many things could be done to cut costs. To simply say people see the doctor too much because they don't pay enough out of pocket shows that you are the one utterly lacking a clue.

19   ZippyDDoodah   2010 Apr 27, 12:30am  

You know it all, prove it. I worked (although I got out that industry 9 years ago, people I talk to say it hasn’t changed) in medical office management and know for a fact that at that time high deductable and/or catastrophic plans are few and far between even for people who pay their own way. Why I don’t know.

Let's be clear - you aggressively accuse me of misrepresenting facts when I was just offering suggestions. And the "facts" you claim are completely unsupported and bogus http://ur.lc/iue . Average deductible for individual health insurance was $2,000 back in 2005. With the rise in health care insurance premiums, it's a near certain bet that the average individual health insurance deductible has risen above that $2,000 average. And it makes sense that it would. Anyone who has shopped individual health insurance plans know that the sweet spot in individual health insurance is with annual deductible of $500 and up.

bob, did you misremember those "facts" from your days working in medical office management ("I know for a fact that high deductible plans are few and far between!") or did you simply make it up?

To simply say people see the doctor too much because they don’t pay enough out of pocket shows that you are the one utterly lacking a clue.

When something is "free" or "near free", demand for that product or service rises. Did that really need to be spelled out for you?

20   ZippyDDoodah   2010 Apr 27, 12:34am  

Maybe he/she will finally stop foaming at the mouth and offer us some real solutions for a change.

As anyone reading this thread can see for themselves, I'm the ONLY one on this thread except for LowlysmartRenter who made suggestions for solutions to the health care system in my very first post. The rest is just sniping from those like you who want to discourage any real discussion. That's why you came out with your absurd "analogy" regarding national defense.

21   simchaland   2010 Apr 27, 3:53am  

ZippyDDoodah says

Maybe he/she will finally stop foaming at the mouth and offer us some real solutions for a change.

As anyone reading this thread can see for themselves, I’m the ONLY one on this thread except for LowlysmartRenter who made suggestions for solutions to the health care system in my very first post. The rest is just sniping from those like you who want to discourage any real discussion. That’s why you came out with your absurd “analogy” regarding national defense.

Zippo, I think you're getting your Liberals confused. Oh, sorry, you must be right due to your superior nature even though the evidence in this thread proves otherwise.

22   tatupu70   2010 Apr 27, 4:04am  

ZippyDDoodah says

Health care should be dealt with like food. We need both to live, yet health care has attracted massive govt. interference which has driven up prices

Yes, Zippy, your analogies are much, much better...

23   simchaland   2010 Apr 27, 4:31am  

tatupu70 says

ZippyDDoodah says

Health care should be dealt with like food. We need both to live, yet health care has attracted massive govt. interference which has driven up prices

Yes, Zippy, your analogies are much, much better…

That's because government never interferes with agriculture, food preparation, inspection, or delivery, ever. C'mon tatupu70, get with the program. Zippo is far superior and it's time we just silently admire the intellect.

24   justme   2010 Apr 27, 6:56am  

>>We already have a clear example of what results in healthcare when individuals make their own decisions - Laser/Lasik eye treatments have steadily improved in quality while going down in price.

Zippy, I think you are overlooking something obvious: Lasik is not a *necessary* procedure, as a heart surgery is. There exist ultra-cheap alternatives. They are called eyeglasses (or contact lenses), and you can get them all over the web for $40.

If you can demonstrate that ALL lifesaving medical procedures have cheap and safe alternatives, then we can talk again. But was we all know, that is not the case and likely never will be. Your argument does not hold water.

The reason lasik is getting cheaper is competitive pressure, nothing else.

25   pkennedy   2010 Apr 27, 8:13am  

Lasik is a simple procedure that is elective, has a great sales team pushing it, and requires almost no doctors time. I had it done, it was 15 minute procedure at most. The most time was spent in discussions and sales pitches.

Heart surgery there is *NO* time to comparative shop, it's a done deal. When you need it, you need to get it done asap. It requires massive amounts of high tech gear, it requires massive numbers of trained professionals.

How about we have an option to stop paying for defense spending as well? Any tax payer who doesn't deem it necessary can have a 50% deduction on their taxes. Let's see what happens next year. The whole mentality of "let someone else pay" would probably take over.

Medical isn't something people might need, it is something they will need at some point in their life. If they don't understand this, then it's a failure in the education system. We don't buy military defense insurance, we invest in it, because it will be needed at some point. It's just a fact of life. Medical falls into the same category. It needs the government to ensure everyone pitches in for something everyone needs, whether they "want it" or not.

26   elliemae   2010 Apr 27, 11:12am  

LowlySmartRenter says

It’s cute how we think we have a voice about health care.

I think it's even cuter that zippy thinks we're stupid, yet condescends to bestow his wisdom upon us. His keyboard seems stuck on that link, but otherwise he seems like a nice chap. simchaland says

I don’t know what malt liquor will do for defense but it may help some people around here to relax.

Mixed drinks are clearly a necessity here. It's hard to take you seriously when you're obviously lacking in your awareness of situational alcohol appropriateness. It was my college major.

27   ZippyDDoodah   2010 Apr 27, 12:00pm  

What happened to bob2356 and his angry demands to "Back up your opinions with facts!"? As soon as said opinions were backed up with linked citations, he seems to have exited out the back door in search of his credibility.

28   ZippyDDoodah   2010 Apr 27, 12:06pm  

Lasik is a simple procedure that is elective, has a great sales team pushing it, and requires almost no doctors time. I had it done, it was 15 minute procedure at most. The most time was spent in discussions and sales pitches.

Heart surgery there is *NO* time to comparative shop, it’s a done deal. When you need it, you need to get it done asap. It requires massive amounts of high tech gear, it requires massive numbers of trained professionals.

Yet with all those sales pitches, the quality kept improving and the cost keeps dropping.. unlike other medical procedures that are widely covered by insurance. Why do you think that is and what could we possibly learn from it?

Btw, modern Lasik also requires expensive "high tech gear" too in case you didn't know. Many medical procedures covered by insurance involve plenty of time to comparative shop. And others offer opportunities, if there was freedom to do so, to negotiate *In advance* for discounted rates for emergency situations.

The Laser/Lasik example is still standing tall at this point

29   deanrite   2010 Apr 27, 12:43pm  

I try to be personally responsible for my healthcare. I currently enjoy healthcare insurance through my employer. The problem I see is that premiums have increased and continue to increase so much that my employer my have to drop or radically decrease coverage. I have a self-employed friend now paying $1800 a month to cover himself, his wife, and e children. It is no Cadillac plan. That is $21600 per year. He makes about 100k. His fed and state taxes are half that. Once you think about it, considering the vast array of services ranging the worlds most powerful defense to providing medical care for the most cronically Ill it seems to me that the taxpayer is getting a pretty good bang for their buck.

As far as I am aware there are only 3 insurance companies doing business in California. Where is the competition? There is none because basically the insurers collude to fix rates. And try to find a catastrophic policy. Sorry, they want high deductable comprehensive but still very high cost. Frankly insurers are currently jacking rates into the stratosphere because they like all the rest of the financials are taking a thurough assbeating in real estate-commercial. The execs and board members will get their asses fired if they pass the losses on to share holders. So the only way to save themselves is to screw the ratpayers. This is the main reason why we should have open competition in the insurance market. This is also why we should have a public option. Why should I not have a choice of paying premiums to the gov for healthcare is I so desire?

Isn't it a bit odd that the supposedly competitive insurance don't want to compete with gov? Could it be that maybe insurers have to many legacy costs to compete? I think so.

I am trying to be responsible but the insurers have rigged the game.

30   simchaland   2010 Apr 27, 12:48pm  

elliemae says


simchaland says

I don’t know what malt liquor will do for defense but it may help some people around here to relax.

Mixed drinks are clearly a necessity here. It’s hard to take you seriously when you’re obviously lacking in your awareness of situational alcohol appropriateness. It was my college major.

Bloody Mary's all around! My treat.

31   ZippyDDoodah   2010 Apr 27, 12:52pm  

Frankly insurers are currently jacking rates into the stratosphere because they like all the rest of the financials are taking a thurough assbeating in real estate-commercial.The execs and board members will get their asses fired if they pass the losses on to share holders. So the only way to save themselves is to screw the ratpayers.

They've probably taken losses in real estate. But they are small in comparison. Insurance companies operate on a 2% - 4% profit margin. The total profits of the largest 10 insurance companies in the US, that total is less than 1/2 of the amount Medicare fraud every year. And that fraud-ridden, wasteful as hell government system is what we have to look forward to with Obamacare

Why should I not have a choice of paying premiums to the gov for healthcare is I so desire?

Because I, and the other 53% of those in this country still paying taxes will have to pay to subsidize you. Pull your own weight

32   deanrite   2010 Apr 27, 1:22pm  

2 to 4 percent? Why would anyone run a company for 2 percent? Oh I know, how bout for the mulimillion dollar salaries.

Oh and just so we're here I said premiums not subsidies. I already pay subsidies-some to grossly overpaid executives.

By the way I have and continue to work and pay my way through life.

Maybe zip needs to cool down and concentrate a little harder on peddling his overpriced insurance.

33   Leigh   2010 Apr 27, 1:39pm  

Gosh, and private health insurance companies have the cream of the crop. Imagine if they had to cover those expensive folks, like the elderly, the disabled?

I was shocked to hear that only three insurance companies operate in California. In Oregon we have plenty of competition but it doesn't seem to lower costs. Our options: LifeWise, BC/BS, Aetna, United Health, Kaiser, Providence, HealthNet, Pacific Source, ODS and that's just off the top of my head.

34   Leigh   2010 Apr 27, 2:02pm  

A recent example of how personal experiences shape your opinions:

I was visiting the in-laws this weekend in the Puget Sound area. My MIL is 62, unemployed and without health insurance, mentioned her before. My SIL and BIL are anti-universal health care in a big way and would even like to see Medicare and Medicaid shrunk. They recently dropped employer sponsored health care as they started their own business and discovered that individual plans have lower premiums for similar coverage compared to group health which lead them to the belief that uninsured people have no excuse due to the individual plan options.

Well, their 18 month old has numerous food allergies and early signs of asthma. The child has been hospitalized 2x already for breathing problems. This is where you find out how good of coverage you have. Well, they owed nearly $3K out of pocket. When the BIL asked about a payment plan the billing office was able to hook them up with assistance which covered the entire bill not paid by insurance. I was shocked that they qualified considering they have insurance and he makes nearly $100K. And now the latest, their premium got increased 20%.

It will be interesting to hear how the health care conversations go now that they will be frequent users of the system as it is very likely their child will be an asthmatic.

35   4X   2010 Apr 27, 3:50pm  

Honest Abe says

The saying goes like this: “Take whatever you want and pay for it”, NOT ‘take what you want and force others to pay for it’. The former represents personal responsibility, the latter represents your typical liberal, do-gooder, free-loader, socialist, elite, dependent, “its nooooot fair”, whiney, the world owes me, cry baby, over-reaching, manipulative, coercive, nanny-state, democratic stinkin’ thinkin…YUCK.

@ABE

If you dont think you will ever need these services then you are lost. Many people in our nation cannot afford to take what they need and pay for it so it is the responsibility of those of us who can to assist them. You need to relinquish the thought that all socialism is bad because its not, and stop thinking that all capitalism is good because the recession has shown that it is not.

-You run to church to give 10% tithes so the church can prosper and spread your hatred of other religions but refuse to spend the same for programs that actually help assist our communities.

- You become infuriated when you hear that we are going to provide health care to the poor because you believe that the POOR are BLACK/MEXICAN when in actuality whites still make up a majority of the lower income families in terms of sheer numbers.

- You become infuriated when you hear that we liberals are attempting to introduce banking legislation, but proclaim your excitement when told we would invade Iraq to destroy another 1 million muslim lives.

- You would rather engage in war with other countries than take care of the problems hear in America

- You and the PARTY OF NO refuse to allow our nation to spend on programs aimed at progressing past a 3rd world education system, health care system, economic system but are openly OK with spending 1 trillion a year on War and Defense.

36   elliemae   2010 Apr 27, 11:47pm  

Leigh:
I liked the diaper head! Does this mean I have to change my icon?

37   Leigh   2010 Apr 28, 12:09am  

elliemae says

Leigh:

I liked the diaper head! Does this mean I have to change my icon?

No, keep the Aussie:O) The pull-up wasn't keeping the sh!t out so I gotta think of something else.hehehe

38   elliemae   2010 Apr 28, 12:17am  

She's almost 3 now, might do a grown-up pic. Right now she's trying to herd cats out back. Not working out so well...

39   justme   2010 Apr 28, 1:56am  

Zippy,

>>The Laser/Lasik example is still standing tall at this point

Huh? I completely exposed the fallacy of your example, and you just ignore it.

40   MAGA   2010 Apr 28, 2:44am  

The Veterans Administration (VA) is real good about helping Vets live a healthier life style. They have a number of programs that do that. Anti-smoking, weight control, etc.

This helps the Vets as well as reducing the cost of healthcare.

41   bob2356   2010 Apr 28, 4:35am  

ZippyDDoodah says

What happened to bob2356 and his angry demands to “Back up your opinions with facts!”? As soon as said opinions were backed up with linked citations, he seems to have exited out the back door in search of his credibility.

Bob was out of town kitesurfing for a few days. I bow to your superior attitude thank you. You are correct on the average deduction number. My experience was to be distorted by the fact the regional market I worked in was heavily represented by the HMO/POS segment. My experience based on this dovetails very nicely with your cited article by the way. I didn't realize and failed to research the fact the national market was so much higher in the PPO model. Mea Culpa.

I didn't demand anything, angry or not. I just asked for some backup to your strongly worded assertion that having people buy their own insurance would make a major difference in the cost of health care in the United States. A research article on the rates of utilization broken out by the level of deduction would be interesting, but I haven't been able to uncover one. I assumed you did and could provide it. Once we have this data we could extrapolate it against the total health care costs and see what the real savings on a system wide basis would be. Otherwise what you are offering is a theory not a suggestion.

For the record I always thought that making benefits tax deductible to business without being considered income to the employee was a very bad idea. Not because of deductions, but because it means large unfair distortions across the entire tax system.

I question you on this point because I have never bought into the skin in the game article of faith. I don't believe, in my opinion, that there are very many people who wake up in the morning and say "I'm going to the doctor just because I have unlimited health insurance". Going to the doctor is a pain in the ass. You have to take time off work, drive there, and wait forever. People go to the doctor because they are sick, not just because they can. I also question whether there is any real savings in people avoiding going to a doctor until they are very sick. Frequently things are are very easy to treat at an early stage become much more difficult (expensive) if treatment is delayed. Providing your research on utilization vs deductions would be a major help in proving or disproving this THEORY of mine based on anecdotal experience.

At one time many of our hospitals were private charities. At one time almost everyone paid for medical out of pocket. At one time average lifespan was less than 40 years. At one time almost all medical treatment consisted of helping people die in comfort. This time was less than 2 generations ago. We have almost doubled the average lifespan in those 2 generations. The majority of conditions that are routinely treated today were a death sentence prior to the 1950's. Cancer? Here is some codeine, have a nice funeral. Heart disease? Have some nitro and a short life. Diabeties? Been good to know you. Etc. Etc. This additional lifespan is the direct result of very expensive medical treatment. Like a bumper sticker I once saw said "Ass, Gas, or Grass no one rides free".

The question should be how do we balance cost vs results. This is not addressed by a bunch of stick to the wall feel good crap thrown out on an ideological basis. There are real world working examples to look at. Places like the Cleveland Clinic and the Mayo Clinic deliver very good medical care at very reasonable costs (relative to the rest of the US). Excellent utilization of IT, tightly controlled costs, high standards of excellence, constant review of best practice procedures, close management of resource utilizaton are some (but certainly not all) of the things that make this possible. Things that are sadly lacking in the practice of health care across the country. Items that are also sadly lacking in any discussion of controlling the cost of health care.

So my suggestion (if I were king) is to study what works in the real world, like Mayo, and implement it on a national basis, while leaving out the sound bite libertarian posturing. I would even study what those awful socialist furriners are doing to let their people get medical care for half the cost of the US. Things like the no fault medical malpractice in NZ come to mind. Lasik is simply not a viable example of cost savings. It's a elective procedure that has a dirt cheap alternative.

Interesting that the article cited has a 12% denial rate overall with a denial rate of 30% for 60-64 year olds. I would have to wonder who the 12% were, why they were denied, and how they ended up paying for their medical care. I don't know but I would guess many were people who had pre existing conditions (ie the people who were actually sick) and couldn't get medical insurance at all. Which means they most likely ended up being cared for by some government program. Or as you zippippy would like to say, the governments fraud-ridden, wasteful track record in providing healthcare. That would be piss poor substitute healthcare to all the people that private insurance companies won't touch. Wonderful how the all the free markets in America have become privatized profits and socialized losses.

42   Leigh   2010 Apr 28, 11:28am  

Honest Abe says

The saying goes like this: “Take whatever you want and pay for it”, NOT ‘take what you want and force others to pay for it’. The former represents personal responsibility, the latter represents your typical liberal, do-gooder, free-loader, socialist, elite, dependent, “its nooooot fair”, whiney, the world owes me, cry baby, over-reaching, manipulative, coercive, nanny-state, democratic stinkin’ thinkin…YUCK.

Since caring for a medically fragile child is damn expensive, abortions should be performed soon after that 18 weeks ultrasound demonstrates the abnormalities: Down's, Fragile X, Spina Bifada? And any baby born prior to 28 weeks gestation should be left to die due to the complications and long NICU stay?

Since chemo therapy is damn expensive one should check into hospice with a confirmed diagnosis?

My delivery, an uncomplicated vaginal birth was $20K in 2009. Let's say your changes brings health care costs down 50%. Could I come up with $10K to pay for delivery? How's that for birth control?!

43   pkennedy   2010 Apr 28, 1:27pm  

Top rated medical care comes from countries like France, Germany, Norway, etc. All cheaper per person than the US, all end up superb care, and everyone is covered.

The US system is like communism. Show us one country where communism thrived and succeeded. It didn't. The US system is in the same boat. It's the only country left hanging onto a system that doesn't work. Ugh.

I read somewhere that 60% of bankruptcies where from medical costs and those people HAD coverage. That says something right there.

44   elliemae   2010 Apr 28, 1:29pm  

Bob, you coward, don't go running off kite surfing again when you have zippy to answer to. Do I have to tell you kids everything?

45   bob2356   2010 Apr 29, 12:16am  

elliemae says

Bob, you coward, don’t go running off kite surfing again when you have zippy to answer to. Do I have to tell you kids everything?

Sorry, it's coming into winter here in the southern hemisphere. I need to get my days in NOW.
Damn, PKennedy took my last argument on the subject. How does the rest of the first world provide health care at half the cost without any charges to the patients at all? They should be totally overrun by people using up that free health care because they can. I was saving that.

46   elliemae   2010 Apr 29, 12:22am  

Isn't there a Wii game that you can do, kite surfing-wise? Stand in your living room, put a fan on and put in a DVD or something. But stand by your computer. You have an obligation that you shouldn't be shirking.

ZippyDDoodah says

What happened to bob2356 and his angry demands to “Back up your opinions with facts!”? As soon as said opinions were backed up with linked citations, he seems to have exited out the back door in search of his credibility.

Unless you were searching for your credibility on the water. That's cool - if OJ could search for the "real killers" on every golf course in Florida, you certainly can choose your search location. But next time clear it with us.

There is no crying in patnet ball!

47   Leigh   2010 Apr 29, 12:56pm  

Leigh says

Honest Abe says

The saying goes like this: “Take whatever you want and pay for it”, NOT ‘take what you want and force others to pay for it’. The former represents personal responsibility, the latter represents your typical liberal, do-gooder, free-loader, socialist, elite, dependent, “its nooooot fair”, whiney, the world owes me, cry baby, over-reaching, manipulative, coercive, nanny-state, democratic stinkin’ thinkin…YUCK.

Since caring for a medically fragile child is damn expensive, abortions should be performed soon after that 18 weeks ultrasound demonstrates the abnormalities: Down’s, Fragile X, Spina Bifada? And any baby born prior to 28 weeks gestation should be left to die due to the complications and long NICU stay?
Since chemo therapy is damn expensive one should check into hospice with a confirmed diagnosis?
My delivery, an uncomplicated vaginal birth was $20K in 2009. Let’s say your changes brings health care costs down 50%. Could I come up with $10K to pay for delivery? How’s that for birth control?!

Damn, thought I'd get a staunch Conservative to admit that there are certain conditions that would justify abortion....shoot.

I had an interesting case the other day, a younger man in his forties suffered from an auto -immune condition that wreaks havoc on his vascular system. The belief is that his 20 years working in the Texas oilfields contributed to his condition. Well, he is on his 5th amputation, this one a below the knee job. So now he has both lower legs gone along with a few digits. And is dialysis dependent. He sure as heck couldn't afford the care without Medicare/Medicaid to get him through the rough spots. Using Honest Abe's beliefs he should have been dead a few years ago but yet he continues to be a productive member of society, running an internet business.

Abe, I think my hospital would be 95% smaller if we didn't help each other out.

48   ZippyDDoodah   2010 Apr 29, 1:06pm  

He sure as heck couldn’t afford the care without Medicare/Medicaid to get him through the rough spots. Using Honest Abe’s beliefs he should have been dead a few years ago but yet he continues to be a productive member of society, running an internet business.

Sounds like a sad situation, although your assertion about it being "believed" that working in TX oilfields contributed to his condition needs a bit more support, as many folks live their entire lives working on drilling rigs with no adverse effects. Also, if he is so "productive" with his internet business as you say, then why couldn't he buy his own health insurance?

49   ZippyDDoodah   2010 Apr 29, 1:11pm  

Top rated medical care comes from countries like France, Germany, Norway, etc. All cheaper per person than the US, all end up superb care, and everyone is covered.

If "top rated" is defined by cancer survival rates, then every country you named sucks badly in comparison to our healthcare system since they don't even come close to our track record in that respect.

I haven't been sick in France or Germany, but I have been sick in Norway. Did you know that their restrictive system prevents you from buying any over-the-counter medicine beyond aspirin? Incredibly restrictive and inefficient. Norway for years also got away with paying their doctors and nurses peanuts compared to other western countries. Not sure what their comparative pay scale is these days

50   Leigh   2010 Apr 29, 1:25pm  

ZippyDDoodah says

He sure as heck couldn’t afford the care without Medicare/Medicaid to get him through the rough spots. Using Honest Abe’s beliefs he should have been dead a few years ago but yet he continues to be a productive member of society, running an internet business.

Sounds like a sad situation, although your assertion about it being “believed” that working in TX oilfields contributed to his condition needs a bit more support, as many folks live their entire lives working on drilling rigs with no adverse effects. Also, if he is so “productive” with his internet business as you say, then why couldn’t he buy his own health insurance?

Ever heard of that 'pre-existing condition' issue? Denied! But now that is by the way side, we'll see if he can afford the premium and deductible of a private plan, ,especially when they see his health history.

BTW, there are lots of cancers and disorders linked to the environment but it's very difficult to link cause and effect. Some folks are susceptible to cancers and disorders due to genetics. Multiple Myeloma, various leukemias. and disorders of the bone marrow are linked to pesticide and herbicide usage. I grew up in Iowa, every one of my relatives that farmed soy beans /or corn died of cancer. My dad died of MM at the age of 65. There are communities along the Missouri that pull water from the river due to contaminated ground water from farm run-off.

Sure, some farmers live to a ripe old age, then there are some that don't.

The concern with the oil industry is the benzene exposure. Next time I'm at work I'll search for some articles.

« First        Comments 11 - 50 of 89       Last »     Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions   gaiste