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so this nationalized health care reform, would this mean I no longer have to pay out the ass for my insurance and prescriptions and maybe I will actually be able to use it?
our current health insurance sucks, we pay $200/month (family coverage) and have a $2400 annual deductible, so unless one of has surgery we pay 100% for everything all year, i.e. doctor visits, prescriptions, etc.
and die waiting six+ months for a surgery you could have gotten immediately as of now. Or contract a disease that the government deems not worth the monetary risk of treating... let them make your personal medical decisions for you.
seriously... the government can't do anything right & people want them in charge of our health care? WTF?
and die waiting six+ months for a surgery you could have gotten immediately as of now. Or contract a disease that the government deems not worth the monetary risk of treating... let them make your personal medical decisions for you.
seriously... the government can't do anything right & people want them in charge of our health care? WTF?
In summary, I would not use our infant mortality data to show what a sucky job we are doing compared to the rest of the world. Data that show how countries with national health insurance kicks our butt in terms of managing chronic, long term diseases would have more solid ground to stand on in my book.
Are these politicians really looking out for YOUR BEST INTEREST?!
Put Single Payer Health Care On The Table Now
I live in Canada and I will go in on Monday next week for the 4th MRI in the last few years.
I had to wait three days for the first one, a few months for the second one (I told them I could wait that long, it wasn't acute), about a month for the third one (also an old injury and thus not acute) and two weeks for this one (doc sped it up because it's a follow-up for a nerve conduction test).
Not one of them cost me a dime out of pocket. Neither do checkups, follow up appointments to see my GP or any specialist, x-rays, or blood tests. If I want to switch to a different GP or request a particular specialist, I do. I've had emergency surgery for my appendix, an ovarian cyst, and a broken arm. All covered by my national health plan.
You'll have to pry socialized medicine out of my cold dead hand. And because getting regular checkups and excellent health care is a luxury I'm afforded through socialized medicine, you may have to wait a long time to do that prying - I fully intend to make it to a hundred.
My .02 CDN.
I thought that was what it was discussing, QoL of disabled people, disease treatment outcome, etc. I think it was done in 2000, though,it was around when I started at Penn.
I want to add that one of the reasons companies go overseas is because of health care, again I keep talking about my old Company Motorola, the rising cost of health care was one of the reasons they decided to sub-contract us.
Then once we were sub-contracted the new management would lay off those who used their medical plan too often.
I would like to hear or read a single first person account of how someone waited 6 months for healthcare or was refused service from a nationalized healthcare. This is often one of the primary reasons people cite against nationalized healthcare. Find 1 person who is currently getting nationalized healthcare that would rather be here getting what we currently get. There has to be millions in England alone. Find one person that finds our way to be better that is actually from a nationalized healthcare providing nation, and not just a conservative talking head.
Don't politicians get a huge amount of money from them already?
Me thinks these crooks will lose a lot of money if there is any type of reform.
I would like to hear or read a single first person account of how someone waited 6 months for healthcare or was refused service from a nationalized healthcare. This is often one of the primary reasons people cite against nationalized healthcare. Find 1 person who is currently getting nationalized healthcare that would rather be here getting what we currently get. There has to be millions in England alone. Find one person that finds our way to be better that is actually from a nationalized healthcare providing nation, and not just a conservative talking head.
My grandfather who lives in Canada came to the US for his open heart surgery and paid cash for it because of Canada's free national health care
I live in Canada and I will go in on Monday next week for the 4th MRI in the last few years.
I had to wait three days for the first one, a few months for the second one (I told them I could wait that long, it wasn't acute), about a month for the third one (also an old injury and thus not acute) and two weeks for this one (doc sped it up because it's a follow-up for a nerve conduction test).
Not one of them cost me a dime out of pocket. Neither do checkups, follow up appointments to see my GP or any specialist, x-rays, or blood tests. If I want to switch to a different GP or request a particular specialist, I do. I've had emergency surgery for my appendix, an ovarian cyst, and a broken arm. All covered by my national health plan.
You'll have to pry socialized medicine out of my cold dead hand. And because getting regular checkups and excellent health care is a luxury I'm afforded through socialized medicine, you may have to wait a long time to do that prying - I fully intend to make it to a hundred.
My .02 CDN.
I have lived in both the US and Canada. I had an MRI in the US. I made the appointment and was in the next day. I had broken bones in Canada and they handled that well. I was hospitalized in the US for 3 days with pnemonia. I have also watched as a close friend of mines child went through leukemia treatments over the last year.
There are some issues in the US but they aren't about the treatment or the fact it isn't paid for by the government. They are about the business practices of the insurance companies and the fact that this country is completely sue happy over any little thing.
Given the differences I would much rather pay my $200 a month in healthcare than have GST (national sales tax) and a higher tax bracket. Not to mention all the taxes on things like beer, tobacco, gas. People in the US think their's is expensive. Go live in Canada for a while.
Oh, I can also write off my mortgage interest on my taxes... you can't do that in Canada.
After paying my healthcare in the US, I am saving at least $1500 a month living here compared to Canada. And Canada only spends a fraction (percentage wise) of what the US does on the military.
Where do you think all this Canadian tax money goes?
How much was that? Again, I am looking for an experience. Was it because he had to wait so long? Why did he come here instead of staying there?
I'm not sure how much it cost but yes, he came here because he could get in the same week rather than wait three months that he had to wait in Canada. He wasn't taking any chances.
So, what are the primary issues, in your opinion, on the business issues from the insurance companies?