Hey numb-nuts, for the umpteenth time, you haven't established the "general rule" in the first place, except to state it as an axiom. You consistently quote snippets of articles out of context in order to suggest that there is some yawning gap in patient care between Canada and the US when they say no such thing, you consistently insist that the reason the US produces more R&D is privatization instead of sheer size and cash flow, and you act as though both claims are accepted when they are not.
I consistently quote the numbers, when you didn't like my quotes and tried to BS about one of them I gratuitiously quoted the full body of the article which showed exactly what originally stated: Canadian heart patients were less likely to survive, as the body count showed, and they were healthier on average than their American counterparts. The reason American care was better was more access to newer and better treatments. Rather than have you BS about the semantics of quotes I've just been quoting the raw numbers. If you think the numbers are wrong, provide your own. Maybe even use comparative data from the same decade or *gasp* a peer reviewed journal
I further went on to cite the actual causes of death which Americans suffer disproportionately from Canadians - Circulatory diseases, homicide, accidents, and diabetes. If American healthcare is really so much worse - why isn't infection, cancer, organ failure, etc. up there?
Which are more numerous in the US: a fact that you try to handwave away by blaming the victims and categorizing them so that they don't count.
You claim more bodies, show em. If you can find a peer reviewed journal that shows a higher baseline adjusted mortality rate in the US than the rest of the G7, I will concede. And just so there is absolutely no weasal room by baseline adjustment I mean a study wherein the risk factors above and beyond medical care; like obesity, climate, activity level, demographics, etc.; are stasticly normalized.
I have already pointed out that the Canadian government does not buy drugs for people
And I have pointed out SEVERAL TIMES that I am talking about MONOPSONY, given that I've also stated Canada ISN'T A MONOPOSONY, I would hope you could put two and two togethor and conclude I'm talking about OTHER COUNTRIES. As nice as the Great White North is, and by the numbers it looks like it has the 2nd best healthcare in the world, it is not the sum total of socialized medicine. Canada has a single PAYER healthcare sytem, it is not a single BUYER system.
Yet again you state your assumption as fact.
Maybe because it HAS BEEN TRIED AND FAILED?
What exactly is your required burden of proof here?
And production scaling disproves the utility of government-funded university research ... how?
Government-funded university research is a fraction of the cost. It costs an order of magnitude more money to scale up than to do the basic research. The basic research for Lipitor was few hundred thousands dollars, the cost to bring it to market was around 600 million. Do the math, the big cost is not the basic research done in the 1920's.
Irrelevant. The R&D was done by Fleming. The fact that you need a corporation to mass-produce it doesn't change that fact. If I invent something but I need a company to mass-produce it, does that mean I didn't invent it?
BS. The research was done by Fleming, and was a fluke of his lousy laboratory practice, the
development was done by Moyer and Florey and without them penicillin would still have been too expensive to do clinicals for testing human safety. Indeed Fleming sat on his discovery until IG Farben came out with Prontosil and he thought to emulate their successful mass production and commericialization techniques.
Inventing something is the easiest step in the process. That gets you IP rights. Once there you need to do much
development and normally a good bit of research to bring a product to market. The costs of invention opposed to mass production are MINISCULE.
Oops- anecdotes to disprove the general rule! See, I can dismiss claims using your rhetorical trick too!
Oh I'm sorry let me put it this way on average about 60% of the drugs in pharma pipelines target novel function, i.e. at one point the top end of Merck contained: a chemo mitigator, a novel function diabetic, an incremental anti-depressant, and vaccines for Herpes, rotavirus, and HPV. Granted I'm ignoring the companies outside of the top 20 when I state that figure and I'm not looking at data before 1995, but running the student T gives a nice bit of confidence.
Research has NOTHING TO DO WITH MASS PRODUCTION.
You are kidding me right? Where in hell do the billions of dollars pharma line items for scale up research go then? The first leg of the drug race is to synthesize something you can patent and show it might work. Then you have to start again from scratch and research/egineer a way to make it in clinicly useful quantities. Think of it this way, the first leg allows processes with unlimited thermal budgets, unlimited per unit costs, and has unrestricted methodoly play with. The second leg has limited thermal budgets, limited per unit costs, and drasticly limited methodolgy.
One has to useually research an entire new chemical/physical pathway to make the drug or device in question; often with no use of the orgininal pathway. It is atypical that the first method of production found for IP purposes is useful for mass production.
How does that disprove the fact that massive sums of money are poured into the system in the US?
Let's see the US spends less than half the money to be had and less than half the manpower to be had; hence when it accounts for more than half the market it is more efficient than the rest of the world.
In short, if you're poor, you don't deserve the same health care as rich people. That way, rich people can get better health care. I get it.
Deserve hasn't got a damn thing to do with it. I'm for the best health care for the most amount of people. You know UTILITARIANISM. Take queu jumping. It is not fair that rich people can jump the queu and have their surgeries done faster (and if nothing else they can go outside the country), however when they pay a premium to do so then there are more resources to ADD CAPACITY. This is EXACTLY why Britain, Australia, and a host of other countries allow for parrallel private healthcare. Likewise giving the rich access to medications, devices, and procedures which are not cost effective to give to the general public is a good thing - it puts more resources into the system to bring down prices.
I'd rather have an inequitious distribution of superior healthcare than an equitable distribution of inferior healthcare if it means saving more lives.
Mockery does not disprove the point. You feel that bankruptcy is a perfectly acceptable solution to the problem of middle-class people who can't afford health-care.
What are is so terrible about bankruptcy that is unacceptable for healthcare but is acceptable for acts of nature? To me there isn't a bloody difference if you go insolvent due to a healthcare bill or because a tornado thrashes your home and business.
Of course I am skeptical of any claims that large numbers of middle class Americans in otherwise fiscally sound positions are going broke due to healthcare.
So "some disincentive" means "make it so that the co-pays and deductibles make health-care unaffordable unless they have self-diagnosed it to be an emergency worthy of financial hardship?"
Do you have a mental deficiency that precludes you from discussing this subject without gross strawmanning? The typical copay is nowhere near the true cost of treatment, it has nothing to do with pricing services out of people's reach and everything to do with encouraging them to make good choices. For example the copay for a brand name drug can be as low as 2% of the real cost, the copay for the generic might be 3% of the full cost, yet the patient only sees a 25 vs 15 dollar copay and they are statisticly more likely to opt for the 15 dollar copay. In a related note copays for hospital services are small fraction of total costs, the goal is to get people to THINK before they use services. The idea is to discourage people from overusing healthcare just because they have NO cost for doing so.
That would depend on how you define "middle class", wouldn't it?
Fine give me a definition for middle class that you would typicly use and I will state if the stastics hold.
After all, you believe in the superiority of "unequal care".
Along with several governments with two tiered socialized medicine. The rich can opt for medical treatments which are not cost effective to implement in the general population. This adds resources to the system, brings down prices, and improves minimum standard of care. I do not approve of a system like the current US one where the floor for the minimum standard of care is so low and ass backwards. Unequal care, when done properly, raises the minimum standard of care.
You have completely failed to show that any of my criticisms are strawmen.
Right, keep telling yourself that
All you do is take the same thing I say and try to repackage it in a positive-sounding way
Funny because all you are doing is repackaging what I say in a negative-sounding way, along with blatently strawmanning positions.
That, and your insistence on LYING about Canadian drug policies, is the entirety of your argument.
Here's a clue. I'm talking about SOCIALIZED MEDICINE, in general. Canada is ATYPICAL. If you are specifically talking about Canadian healthcare, frigging say so. If I don't attach a country I'm most often talking about world healthcare in general or socialized medicine in general.
For instance, generally a single insurer is tantamount to a single buyer, Canada is an exception in this regard and hence the comment is not a statement about Canada.
When I'm talking specifically about Canadian health care I tend to use words like well: "Canada", "Canadian", "Canuck", "The Great White North", etc. If you don't see one of those words or phrases you might, just might, stop and pause before assuming I'm talking about Canada.
Very funny, Scotty. Now beam down my clothes.