sandorski
No Lifer
- Oct 10, 1999
- 70,879
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Health care and health insurance are very different things.
They are, but they are closely intertwined and a large part of what gives us our superior Lifespan.
Health care and health insurance are very different things.
How does distribution of risk / risk reduction change through pooling, i.e., how is it different when you have a pool of 100,000 people from one employer compared to 100,000 people who bought individually?Distribution of risk / risk reduction through pooling. That's the principle behind insurance, it's not about the prices through volume/efficiency, it's about reduction of risk through pooling.
If they wanted to, they could, if not, they wouldn't. They can price their products the way they want to. It's up to you if you want to purchase from them or from some other vendor.
How does distribution of risk / risk reduction change through pooling, i.e., how is it different when you have a pool of 100,000 people from one employer compared to 100,000 people who bought individually?
How does distribution of risk / risk reduction change through pooling, i.e., how is it different when you have a pool of 100,000 people from one employer compared to 100,000 people who bought individually?
Exactly, wholesale pricing for bulk purchases is not a good model for group rates in insurance.
For thousands of years 40 years Old was being very Old.
They are, but they are closely intertwined and a large part of what gives us our superior Lifespan.
How does distribution of risk / risk reduction change through pooling, i.e., how is it different when you have a pool of 100,000 people from one employer compared to 100,000 people who bought individually?
Nonsense. Health care is what has increased our life spans dramatically, health insurance that covers everything is a relatively new phenomenon and hasn't really impacted life span. Health insurance should provide a safety net, much like car insurance provides a safety net, it doesn't pay for your gas refill or vehicle maintenance.
For thousands of years 40 years Old was being very Old.
That's right. Liberals want you to work for free. Liberals want you to go to med school, graduate with 200k of debt and make minimum wage. That's what Democrats want for you. That's Democrats' version of "equality". Businesses are evil, doctors be damned if they want to start their own practice.
You're able, and you should provide for everybody. Most liberals have never worked hard and did anything substantial with their lives and they're only looking to redistribute. Scientists (many of whom don't get paid a whole lot), MDs, Engineers, etc all work for free while Democratic trial lawyers and welfare queens leech off of everybody's elses' hard work.
So? Your lifespan doesn't increase, or decrease with the purchase of health care insurance.
contact your state board of insurance
damn those doctors for their high standard of living!
or do you really just mean the payment systems for medical care delivery shouldn't be a for profit industry?
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I just want to see the vast majority of my HC dollars going to the doc, not shareholders and admininistrators and politico's that don't do a damn thing for me but take my money getting 90% like they do now. And I want to see the doc paid well based on the value of the procedure he performed, not what he can fuck the insurance company for to try and make up for the fucking he expects from them.
So they can discriminate based on who the buyer is regardless if they were to buy in quantity?
Health Insurance makes HealthCare Affordable for me. Thus increasing my Lifespan.
So don't buy health insurance and just for the doctor when you need him.
Fern
No, it doesn't. If you lost your insurance tomorrow, your life span wouldn't suddenly shorten. How it's paid doesn't matter, what extends your life is health care.
So don't buy health insurance and just for the doctor when you need him.
Fern
If I didn't have Health Insurance and had to Pay for my own HealthCare, I'd be dead already.
All you've managed to do is explain the shift of costs from the unhealthy person to the healthy person.Effectively, it will mean unhealthy people won't be covered. As a healthy young person under my employer's plan, I overpay because I am subsidizing the older and sicker people on staff. In return, I am guaranteed that if I develop cancer or any other serious acute or chronic condition, my premiums won't be raised to the extent that I can't afford them. Being part of the pool assures me stability.
If I get thrown off my employer's plan, I'll have to buy as an individual. In the short-term, this is beneficial as my premiums will reflect my personal risk. If I developed a severe or chronic condition, my premiums will be raised accordingly. This might mean the premium becomes unaffordable.
If we throw everyone into the market to purchase their own insurance, it will basically mean that healthy people seek the cheapest insurance possible while premiums for sick people will drastically rise as a whole. It will be an end of subsidies for the working ill. Whether these people would still get care they can't afford will probably be a matter of policy.
Personally, even if offered individual plans, I'd like to be a part of a pool for stability and the bargaining power it provides me. Being in a pool with coworkers is a matter of convenience and it does mean that the healthy subsidize the sick. If people formed coops outside of work, I worry that they'd kick out a person as soon as they got sick to keep premiums low.
Give me a fucking break, people have survived thousands of years without health care insurance. Health care insurance is a luxury item. If people were responsible and used health care insurance right, we likely wouldn't even be having this debate, but since everyone wants to put everything from a bottle of aspirin to a check-up on their insurance instead of just paying for it out of pocket, it has set an environment for prices to skyrocket.
So what? Insurance didn't save your life, the medicine did. If you'd had the money to pay and not use insurance the result would have been the same, just like some that gets a terminal disease and has excellent insurance, the insurance doesn't save them.
/facepalm
It's amazing the lengths people go to to defend a poorly made point.
