If I want to protect myself, I should do it at my expense.
The government ought not be allowed to require us to buy a private product simply because we are alive.
If I want to protect myself, I should do it at my expense.
Really wish people who stop with the blatant lying about the public picking up the bill for the uninsured. The public picks up nothing, or least a very very small portion of that bill. The hospitals and insurance companies get the brunt of that cost. Unless someone is comming in with Medicare/Medicaid, the public as a whole is paying none of that cost. Only people with health insurance currently get hit with some of it through increased premiums but is minor since its spread across the board. The hospitals will collect if you are capable of paying but for some reason don't have insurance.
Obamacare will change none of this by the way. You still will have uninsured freeloading albeit in smaller numbers, people will still be getting subsidized healthcare, and the public will still be picking up more than their individual share of healthcare. So please stop lying about Obamacare being the solution to this problem. It's not going to be a pay you own way or pay as you go solution, so just stop.
I really wish you would realize that the hospitals and insurers pass those costs on to the rest of us through more expensive medical care and higher insurance premiums.Really wish people who stop with the blatant lying about the public picking up the bill for the uninsured. The public picks up nothing, or least a very very small portion of that bill. The hospitals and insurance companies get the brunt of that cost. Unless someone is comming in with Medicare/Medicaid, the public as a whole is paying none of that cost. Only people with health insurance currently get hit with some of it through increased premiums but is minor since its spread across the board. The hospitals will collect if you are capable of paying but for some reason don't have insurance.
Obamacare will change none of this by the way. You still will have uninsured freeloading albeit in smaller numbers, people will still be getting subsidized healthcare, and the public will still be picking up more than their individual share of healthcare. So please stop lying about Obamacare being the solution to this problem. It's not going to be a pay you own way or pay as you go solution, so just stop.
So which is it? Nothing or a small amount? The fact that we are picking up any amount for them is the problem. I dont want my premiums to go up one cent because others are not insured (under the current crap system weve had for a long time now)
I really wish you would realize that the hospitals and insurers pass those costs on to the rest of us through more expensive medical care and higher insurance premiums.
I notice you ignored the mandate for everyone to purchase the insurance in the first place. The one that many opponents of the law use to characterize it as a handout to the insurance companies. So for some opponents, this bill is a handout to insurers and to others like you it is a burden. What does that tell you? You guys can't have it both ways. Pick one and then stick with it.It amounts to pennies to the public that actually does have insurance. Most of the cost is ate by the insurance company that recovers it will the small increase in premium that they then turn around and invest.
Again, Obamacare doesn't change this so stop trying to make it sound like a solution. If anything, it makes it worse because of all the extra mandates it puts on coverage for the insurance companies (no maximum benefit, required to cover pre-existing, etc).
Tiny increase in premium? LOL you crack me up. :awe: I suppose you think medical care costs haven't increased substantially either?The hospital may charge more for services but then its negotiated with the insurance companies. The person paying insurance doesn't pay anything more than the deductible. That and along with everyone else, tiny increase in premium. Again, in the case where you are able to pay but don't have insurance, its between you and the hospital, the hospital will collect and nothing is getting passed on.
The increase in premiums in not dollar for dollar. Its tiny, pennies, even fractions of pennies on the dollar. But they do this for a large number of customers and then invest that money as usual to cover the losses. And as I have said before, Obamacare changes none of this.
It amounts to pennies to the public that actually does have insurance. Most of the cost is ate by the insurance company that recovers it will the small increase in premium that they then turn around and invest.
Again, Obamacare doesn't change this so stop trying to make it sound like a solution. If anything, it makes it worse because of all the extra mandates it puts on coverage for the insurance companies (no maximum benefit, required to cover pre-existing, etc).
Is there a single payer proposal that you - or anyone else for that matter - support that I can read?
Tiny increase in premium? LOL you crack me up. :awe: I suppose you think medical care costs haven't increased substantially either?
How does someone going to the doctor for an ache or cough drive medical prices up? I would think a doctor love a nice $500 take two aspirin and call my assistant, if you have the patience to get through the 15 minute robo operator, in the morning 5 minute visit.Over the years, yes. But that isn't due to the uninsured, its due to the cost to provide care. Most is due to overuse of the medical field because people go to the doctor for every little ache and cough. Some is also do the increase in pricing of equipment. Technology isn't cheap. The rest is due to a shrinking medical field because it doesn't pay like it used to to become a physician. Insurance companies have taken over.
http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa211.html
Obamacare, yet again, fixes none of this.
Are you saying that you wish to repeal the law that requires emergency rooms to treat people regardless of ability to pay?
No, because those people will be required to pay for their care afterward. Just because they can't pay doesn't mean they're getting free care, and they will be billed.
How does someone going to the doctor for an ache or cough drive medical prices up? I would think a doctor love a nice $500 take two aspirin and call my assistant, if you have the patience to get through the 15 minute robo operator, in the morning 5 minute visit.
There are two main factors driving up medical care costs. The biggest is malpractice. The other is providing care for the uninsured. Trying to brush this one off as insignificant is ridiculous.
What makes you think that people aren't already billed for their care?
How would you go about collecting on these bills, and what do you do when someone with a net worth of 0 racks up $200,000 in bills?
How does someone going to the doctor for an ache or cough drive medical prices up? I would think a doctor love a nice $500 take two aspirin and call my assistant, if you have the patience to get through the 15 minute robo operator, in the morning 5 minute visit.
There are two main factors driving up medical care costs. The biggest is malpractice. The other is providing care for the uninsured. Trying to brush this one off as insignificant is ridiculous.
What about when you include malpractice insurance? I swear I've read many articles with doctors complaining about this. :hmm: Please correct me if I am off base here.If you mean malpractice lawsuits, it is not true that they are the biggest cost driver of health care costs, or even remotely close to it. They are in fact one of the smallest drivers of health care costs.
What about when you include malpractice insurance? I swear I've read many articles with doctors complaining about this. :hmm: Please correct me if I am off base here.
The whole point of the mandate part of the law is to cut down on the number of uninsured. So you can stop saying the bill does not fix this, it's blatantly false.Simple, the patient is getting a service that isn't worth what they are paying for. They go to the doctor for a cough and get a prescription. Altogether they, or more importantly, their insurance is paying several hundred dollars for a visit not worth what they are paying for. The cough would have gone away or been easily treated with OTC medicine for $10 instead of several hundred.
Medical malpractice yes. That is what I was partly alluding to when saying that the medial field is shrinking because it doesn't pay to be a physician like it did. The other being insurance companies nickle and diming the doctors for their services. Providing care for the uninsured is a bullshit statement. This is a relatively tiny driver for the increasing of health insurance costs when you compare it to other factors. The other points I mentioned far exceed this.
Yet again, Obamacare fixes none of this, especially the uninsured costs so I'm not sure why you keep bringing it up.
Nothing. I'm sure they are billed. I'm just saying that immediate inability to pay doesn't mean you're not expected to find a way.
The same way any institution does when it's owed a debt. Debt-collection agencies and whatnot. If that fails, you write off the debt. It's not perfect.
What you DON'T do is say, "Since there are a handful of people in a country of millions that are absolutely unable to pay no matter what, we should all be forced to pay for everyone else's health care."
Yes, I was just looking into this. You are right, I'm going to edit my original post to point out the misinformation...Yes, including malpractice insurance. According to the CBO the total, cumulative cost of all malpractice insurance and malpractice judgments totals less than 2% of US medical spending. This cost can be highly unevenly distributed by region and specialty, however. Including the costs of 'defensive medicine' the CBO estimates that capping damages would reduce health care costs by about 0.5% going forward.
That can hardly be counted as the 'biggest issue'. It's a red herring used by the extreme right in order to provide a scapegoat for the failures of private health care insurance.
