bdh wrote:What a load of shit. Triage dictates who see's whom in an emergency situation.
Did I even mention emergency situations? Thank you for putting words in my mouth.
Triage has been extended to apply to ANY medical situation where resources are limited. Even non-emergencies are seen in the emergency room, typically in the order of severity of complaint.
'Wait time' is a very general term. In the United States, access to MRI's(and other kinds of expensive medical equipment) and certain kinds of emergency treatment are much much faster than in other countries (excluding Germany, which has the shortest wait times in general).
Arguably, there are
too many very expensive machines like MRI's in the US, which has lead to over utilization. It is
wasteful to use an MRI on every sprained ankle because the vast majority of sprained ankles don't require such an expensive test to diagnose and treat. CAT scans are over utilized to the point where there are documented cases of actual, real harm stemming from too many of them in too short a time period. "More tests" is not necessarily better medicine. "More expensive" tests are not inherently better.
Of course people always have to wait, but difference between surgery next week and next month can be very significant. Certainly it also cuts down on wait times since the US has more specialists than most countries per capita but also less people per capita seeking treatment because they don't have insurance.
WTF? The US has
46 million without health insurance, more than the
entire population of many countries! And you say this is a
good thing? How?
Do you see how that doesn't answer the question? In order for any Single Payer system to work, there has to be some point at which treatment is denied because it is too expensive.
As opposed to our current system, where if you don't have insurance, or enough insurance, you just don't get treated period. Try getting an organ transplant without insurance. Good luck! Of course, you'll
die without that new heart or liver, but whatever...
Some insurance policies in the US cover treatments that are denied to people in other countries where they are thought too expensive. What is the premium Americans pay due to this? Or does it not exist?
And yet... if I recall correctly, Serafina is getting full coverage for treatment from her government health insurance, whereas NO American insurance company will cover treatment for that condition
at any price. This has bummed out Marina (Duchess of Zeon) considerably. I have to wonder if she's contemplating moving to Germany instead of France.... This notion that somehow you can get coverage for everything in the US whereas all but the most minimal is denied elsewhere is manifest bullshit.
'Treatment' isn't some all encompassing words. There are degrees of treatment and in some countries more is available than in others and the quality varies.
Yes. Like how in the US my Other Half went nearly a year without a particular medical test regarded as
standard treatment for diabetes in every civilized country as well as the US
because he had no insurance and lack the money to pay up front. Uh, yeah, that's a variation in quality!
Personally I wouldn't trust someone with my life unless they had some references and at the very least looked up what medical school they went to.
What makes you qualified to judge the quality of a medical school? Is there an appreciable difference between the top of the class at, say, the University of Buffalo vs. the bottom of the class from Harvard Medical School, or vice versa, or any way for you to know the doctor's class standing?
If you're airlifted into an ER after a bad traffic accident are you going to insist on researching the trauma doctor prior to letting him touch you?
And you're analysis is a poor one since you didn't even deduct the payment contribution from the employer among my other mild criticisms.
Not all of us have an "employer contribution" in our health insurance costs. I sure as hell don't.
I just find it very frustrating when people just gloss over little details while ignoring huge differences in culture and outcomes.
Translation: America is different! Nevermind that it works
everywhere else in the world, America is different so it won't work here!
(Because Americans are really fucked in the head on the issue, mostly.)
It also plays into the assumptions that by 'living right" one can truly avoid chronic health problems. You know, my mom exercised daily (until she was physically no longer able to) and ate right - but she still had debilitating heart disease. Why? It was genetic - she was going to have heart disease no matter what she did. So, while pursuing a "healthy lifestyle" might have benefits for her, it did jack to keep her medical costs cheap. I have a sister who inherited the same condition. She is fanatical about exercise, healthy eating, taking her medications.... she still has heart disease. Granted, it's not as bad as mom's was at her age, not nearly so, but she's already cost money and there wasn't a damn thing she could do to prevent it. So this is just another way of saying "the sick/chronically ill must have done something wrong and deserve to be sick" just as so many conservatards think the poor deserve to be poor and should be punished for lack of money.
That's nonsense. Regardless of your personal family history, insurance works on the grand scale. If we separated the population into two groups, the people who ate healthy foods and the people who ate unhealthy foods and then compared the groups you would find that while both groups had heart disease one group had a significantly reduced risk.
It's bullshit - my mother would have had cardiac problems
no matter what she did. In fact, most people with her condition die in their mid-40's. Some die in their teens from it. That's why insurance companies look a hell of a lot farther than just what you eat. That's why they want to exclude anyone who carries that particular gene
regardless of what they eat.
Reasonably, there should be some relationship between the risk you produce and the costs to you. While discriminating against someone for being a man in the case of car insurance is wrong (since they can't change being a man)
Um... actually there is surgery available today that
can do that, at least from a physical standpoint...
Men can not change being men, but they CAN change their behavior. That is why older, more experienced male drivers have a lower accident rate than younger, inexperienced male drivers. I remember a number of FAA seminars where, upon pointing out that female pilots have a lower accident rate than male pilots, the men in the room were urged to "fly more like women". Yes, it generated some chuckles, but it's also generating some behavior changes, too.
Saying "men can't help it" in regards to auto accidents is like saying "smokers can't help it" in regards to nicotine addiction. Yes, change is difficult, but it most certainly can be done and has been done by many.