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What the blank could possibly go wrong?


RowdyRebel

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Hello!

In Europe most countries have state-owned health insurances, and, while not perfect, they prevent people from going broke because of healthcare costs. I always wondered, how can Americans live without such a system. I wish you all good health and many happy years, have a nice day

Paweł

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Hello!

In Europe most countries have state-owned health insurances, and, while not perfect, they prevent people from going broke because of healthcare costs. I always wondered, how can Americans live without such a system. I wish you all good health and many happy years, have a nice day

Paweł

When somebody else pays for your medical care, somebody else controls it....where you can go, what you can have done, how long you have to wait, etc.

Personally, I don't WANT anyone else having that sort of control over my healthcare options...which is why I pay for my own individual insurance policy. I chose the policy based upon my own individual wants & needs, not based upon what somebody else thought was best for me or what works for somebody else's bottom line.

The biggest problem with allowing somebody else to choose your health insurance coverage is that your options are limited to what they are willing (or able) to pay for. When the payer is broke, what level of care do you suppose you'll receive? Waiting 6 months to see a doctor....then by the time you DO get in, your health has either gotten better on its own or it has deteriorated to the point where they give you a pill to ease the pain while you die because there's nothing more they can do. This is one of the reasons the US leads the world in cancer survival rates....we can get in to see a doctor for diagnosis and specialists for treatment NOW...no waiting.

Huge gap in world cancer survival

----snip----

The study showed the US had the highest five-year survival rates for breast cancer at 83.9% and prostate cancer at 91.9%.

----snip----

The UK had 69.7% survival for breast cancer, just above 40% for colon and rectal cancer for both men and women and 51.1% for prostate cancer.

There were also large regional variations within the UK, which were linked to differences in access to care and ability of patients to navigate the local health services. Both are directly linked to deprivation.

----snip----

It meant an American man was four times more likely to survive prostate cancer than an Algerian, while a Japanese man was six times more likely to survive colon cancer.

Poland, Slovenia, Brazil and Estonia had survival rates half as good as the best performers.

----snip----

When approaching a 4-way stop, the vehicle with the biggest tires has the right of way!
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Well, Rowdy, like I wrote the systems around here are not perfect, far from it, many might say. Of course the reaction time is very important - having to wait months before you can go to the doctor defeats the purpose. You wrote:

...your options are limited to what they are willing (or able) to pay for. When the payer is broke...

And that's the trick - making the system state-owned means it's really tricky to make it go broke.

If you have money, you can buy additional services - but how about the people that don't have enough money? I don't think we can say "let them die, they're lazy or old anyhow".

Thanks for reading, have a nice day

Paweł

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