Optimus Prime
Electric Beats
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2007
- Messages
- 405
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2010
opinions don't make false things true.
That goes for yours too.opinions don't make false things true.
Firstly, being a health care expert doesn't really mean anything. I mean, take a doctor working in a public hospital and ask him how to improve things and he'll probably say "more funding". Which, in the short term is true, and obviusly he'll be concerned more with his immediate future than the nature of the system decades down the line.Yeah, I got this, but what I was asking was why (predominately in other threads, less so in this one) you're so vehemently opposed to Obama's healthcare plan when you are neither a healthcare professional nor health economist and thus only appear to have your preconceived ideas about government intervention to go on. (I'd like to note here that I'm not saying that I'm an expert in this matter either. Just stating facts.)
-Obviously on a free market, things would be cheaper.I kept both these assumptions for the sake of the argument, but mentioned in parenthesis that this kind of market doesn't exist, nor can it ever exist, simply because of the exhorbitant costs associated with most advanced medical equipment and the low supply and long lag-time on the training of new doctors.
insurance would work on a free market. The fact that it doesn't now is completely because of statist regulations.Even in a perfectly competitive market, there will still always be a minimum price based upon the minimum possible attainable costs for the firm.
There is absolutely no garuantee that everyone is going to be able to afford this price.(and in fact, looking at current insurance plans it seems rather unlikely)
- Poverty is far less. If the current levels of wealth were around back then, far more people would have been able to afford lodge membership. heck, if they were as wealthy as we are today, most people wouldn't have needed lodge membership.In reference to the idea of the lodges, your article states that in 1920 over one-quarter of adults were in a lodge. But what of the other 3 quarters? Given relative poverty rates at the time, it is unlikely that all of them could afford a more comprehensive coverage. And what of the non-adults? What of the elderly? This is a time before FDR introduced the aged pension, so the elderly would have been without both an income and hence a lodge memerbship. And what of children? Or the unemployed?
Given the low cost, it seems absurd to suggest that three quarters of people couldn't afford lodge membership, considering that most people in lodges were poor people themselves. A lot of people wouldn't have needed lodge membership, others didn't want to be.One-quarter of Americans were covered by a comeptitive, low-cost system.
For the completely broke, charity will assist them.See above for why minimum prices that are achievable may not always still be attainable. Again, you seem to have forgotten the people who can't afford any coverage at all.
If people honestly care enough about the poor receiving healthcare (which it seems they would given the total apparent lack of opposition to our public health system, for example), then there would be enough donations and enough volunteers to pick what the market is unable to provide forWhat I'm saying is that just because a free-market (not that medical services can ever be completely free) lowers costs, doesn't mean that these costs are magically low enough for everyone to afford. There are still basic costs associated with healthcare and hence the insurance industry based upon it, and for such a vital-to-life service, this is unnacceptable and demands some form of intervention for humanitarian needs.
nope. America is closest, and the value of it (the free market) is reflected in their superlative quality of healthcare. however, government regulations restrict supply and hence, prices rise and people can't afford it.Just curiously, is there any country today with completely "free market" healthcare? And how well are they going?
No, because the fool doesn't realise that for all his talk of a benign, absolutist free market, it has little or no practical application.Just curiously, is there any country today with completely "free market" healthcare? And how well are they going?
ughNo, because the fool doesn't realise that for all his talk of a benign, absolutist free market, it has little or no practical application.
I would say quality, would be inclusive of accessibility.nope. America is closest, and the value of it (the free market) is reflected in their superlative quality of healthcare.
i mean the quality of treatment.I would say quality, would be inclusive of accessibility.
Give me a succinct summary as to how the free market can address issues of accessibility amongst the poor
except, you know, you have to wait months or even years.With state-based healthcare, no matter how poor you are, you will still get access to healthcare. Even if the life saving surgery costs thousands, you will still receive it.
Did you read the first post?Then, how can these people, the poorest of the poor, be better off with a free market? The actual cost of providing the healthcare may be cheaper, but it would still be too much for some.
What happens when a homeless man arrives at a hospital with a stab wound? "Sorry mate, you can't pay us so we'll just leave you to die on the side of the road"
Months maybe, depending on the type of case. Where the f*** did you get 'years' from?except, you know, you have to wait months or even years.
That's for plastic surgery dude... Doesn't exactly entail life threatening situations.