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U.S. Republican Senator Switches Parties
Message
From
30/04/2009 15:13:40
 
 
To
30/04/2009 15:04:06
Walter Meester
HoogkarspelNetherlands
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01396733
Message ID:
01397311
Views:
77
>>>>Why not? As soon as this person spends enough liquid assets on medical care to pass eligibility criteria he/she will receive Medicaid. >One may consider it cruel, but it is exactly safety net in action. Anything better than that would be called luxury. Please, note that >every person with cash in pockets has option to buy health insurance, this is an economic decision when things are Ok. When it gets >worse, then at some very bad point safety net starts to work. Again, it is cruel, but I don't think that the opposite system, one that you >experienced in Romania (extreme case, but essentially realistic) is more humane.
>>>
>>>I agree, it is cruel. My problem is that quality of life drops a lot just because one needs to meet the Medicaid criteria. By passing Medicaid eligibility criteria , that person may pass the eligibility for becoming homeless or to live in some form of assisted living.
>>>Even if you buy health insurance when things are OK, health insurance company can drop you right away or increase the premiums when things go bad or do not cover preexisting situations.
>>>
>>>In Romania the problem is that a person has been paying all life long for national health care and when it needed it, there was none or minimal..Basically the person had to purchase the medicine (in some cases quite expensive, in some cases paid by gov) and "take care" of the medical staff as well. I still think that there is one good aspect of it though: I met some cancer patients that got chemo treatment for free. Thats probably the single positive thing Ive seen there.
>>>So if the service provided had been lets say decent, I would have agreed to paying for the national health care.
>>
>>Quality of health service depends on how much wealth a country creates to afford the service. If wealth is sufficient then even formally uninsured people will be Ok. If wealth declines, i.e. not sufficient then enrolling everyone to some kind of universal coverage will still leave them with miserable service.
>
>Health service in the US is sick... The extreme greedy capatilisitc approach made it about 3 to 4 time as expensive as it needs to be. Even worse, it sometime leads to totally irresponsible and unethical situations. For example, how on earth could any physician agree with a women getting 8 babies pregnancy.

As long as some physician agrees with a woman getting late-term abortion or euthanasia. By the way, her service was free, so it does not qualify for "extreme greedy capatilisitc approach". You seem to insert a bit (mildly saying) of propaganda in every message.
Edward Pikman
Independent Consultant
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