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What's the matter with healthcare in the U.S.??
Message
From
03/10/2003 19:50:33
Dragan Nedeljkovich (Online)
Now officially retired
Zrenjanin, Serbia
 
 
To
02/10/2003 15:21:11
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00834396
Message ID:
00835036
Views:
23
>YIKES. I agree with you on one point: I would love to have free medical care in this country. However, I do not support it and will not ever because:
>
>Nothing in life worth having is free. I would still be paying for it from my taxes or you, someone next door, my sister, aunt, or uncle would be paying for my medical care from their taxes. Those that pay taxes would be supporting those that do not. It would be an incentive to be lazy and do nothing and let the government be all for you. Hence, we would be a socialist society, not a free capitalist society. I want to decide where my money goes. I do not want to put it all into a 'pot' and let over half of it go to administrators making those decisions for me. And where would it stop? Where does it state that human rights include free medical care? What about free housing then? Free food? Free entertainment? Where do we stop? Where is the incentive for our citizens to put forth any effort to do anything to attain anything? If you want a free life move to Vermont. :o) Free healthcare is also not everything it is cracked up to be. I know an eye surgeon that spent time in
>London teaching and observing her students in a prominent hospital in London perform eye surgery. The surgeons would actually leave a patient that had waited literally months for surgery on the table sedated while they took a lunch break. On top of that they would drink alcohol at lunch. Sheesh, talk about scary. How to complain when something is free? Also, if there is no incentive (respect, achievement, admiration, competition) for the doctors to do better, why would they? This is a very controversial subject in the U.S. today and not likely to be solved anytime soon. I'm pretty sure everyone mostly sees it differently too.

What's the difference between a govt's clerk and a HMO clerk? At least in the former case you know his bosses are appointed by the party of your choice, and that he's paid more than a minimal wage, and he's not so disgruntled and therefore error-prone.

So instead of having one bureaucracy, the choice is to have several: the internal paperwork of the "performer of medical labors" (as would have been said in my country 20 years ago), the paperwork of the HMO, plus the paperwork of the insurance companies where they both pay liability insurance (malpractice etc).

My general feeling about the state-of-the-art government operations in the US is that the quality is intentionally lower than it could be, which serves several agendas. One is to prove that government intervention is intrinsically bad, and to use that as evidence when proving that free market is a panacea. The other would probably be to divert the money for various programs into wrong direction (but profitable for diverters). And last, but not least, to water down any programs which could influence someone's profits. This introduces a state of mind, which I see here a lot, where the majority opinion is that nothing a state (or government) does will be done right. For those who haven't seen any other state (or government) in action, this may sound like a truth.

Speaking of medical market - somehow I can't see a sick person as one who will have the time, clarity of mind and will to shop around and read tons of legalese to decide where to buy health. Anyway, one doesn't shop then, one should rather shop in advance. But then nobody knows what one is buying - until the moment of truth. Just like another old profession, these insurance guys like to be paid in advance.

Coming here, I thought I would be afraid of random shooting or being mugged. I'm not - haven't seen anything of the kind. But I'm scared spitless of two things: medicine and litigation.

back to same old

the first online autobiography, unfinished by design
What, me reckless? I'm full of recks!
Balkans, eh? Count them.
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