Nursing Jobs
|
|
Job Seeker:
Employer:
|
How-To allnurses |
 |
|
Welcome to allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses
The largest most active online nursing community. Join 304,349 nurses from around the world to learn, communicate, and network. For full allnurses.com access, register today - it's free! Problems during registration? Please don't hesitate to contact support.
|
Would you like to comment?
Join or Login if already a member.

Mar 07, 2008, 06:45 PM
|
|
|
"In our decentralized, pluralistic system, no single purchaser has the market power or political authority to impose cost controls." Quote by David Blumenthal MD, director of the Institute for Health Policy at MGH, taken from Mschrisco's post above
Thank goodness for that! If we allowed a single purchaser or political authority to impose price controls, we would also be inviting that same single entity to dictate our salaries. No, thank you. I'll allow mine to be set by competition.
|

Mar 07, 2008, 06:58 PM
|
|
|
Then why isn't the free market and competition working now? If there is money to be made, there is someone who can find a way to make it.
The following members say Thank You:
|

Mar 07, 2008, 07:04 PM
|
|
|
Originally Posted by Mschrisco
Then why isn't the free market and competition working now? If there is money to be made, there is someone who can find a way to make it.
As Timothy has very clearly explained, we don't currently have a true free market system. We have 3rd party payors interfering with the process of consumers negotiating and freely choosing their health care providers and services.
There is plenty of money to be made in healthcare. The vast majority of facilities and providers (even non-profit organizations) are making money, or they would be closing their doors. On the contrary, we have new offices opening almost weekly in our area, with hospitals growing, expanding, re-building, entering new markets, etc. That would not be possible if they were not profitable.
The following member says Thank You:
|

Mar 07, 2008, 07:06 PM
|
|
|
Originally Posted by ZASHAGALKA
I pointed out the flaw in your argument: more gov't control is NOT less gov't control.
Even if you want it to be.
~faith,
Timothy.
You don't get the logical flaw in a straw man argument. Cool, attribute anything to those opposed to your....not sure it qualifies as a point, but for lack of a better word...point. Then decide that those things you attributed to the opposing position is not correct and score.
Good job. I began following this thread only slightly leaning towards favoring UHC, your arguments have convinced me that the only rational choice is for UHC. I suspect you're actually playing devils advocate and in truth will be voting for UHC.
|

Mar 07, 2008, 07:12 PM
|
|
|
Re: Universal Healthcare
|
|
Originally Posted by Woodenpug
I suspect you're actually playing devils advocate and in truth will be voting for UHC.
You don't spend much time here, do you?
|

Mar 07, 2008, 07:34 PM
|
|
|
Originally Posted by Jolie
As Timothy has very clearly explained, we don't currently have a true free market system. We have 3rd party payors interfering with the process of consumers negotiating and freely choosing their health care providers and services.
There is plenty of money to be made in healthcare. The vast majority of facilities and providers (even non-profit organizations) are making money, or they would be closing their doors. On the contrary, we have new offices opening almost weekly in our area, with hospitals growing, expanding, re-building, entering new markets, etc. That would not be possible if they were not profitable.
Not adding up for me. Government, 3rd party payors, they are all stopping greedy people and corporations from making money.
Nope. Government, political powers, corporations, elected officials... pure greed. Rules would have already been changed, new regulations to prevent anyone or anything from getting in the way of the $$$.
"All other things being equal, the simplest solution is the best."
|

Mar 07, 2008, 07:47 PM
|
|
|
Originally Posted by Jolie
You don't spend much time here, do you?
All too much time. My point is that timothy, and those opposed to UHC, are most effectively supporting UHC. The ostensibly opposed position is doing a very good job of supporting UHC.
I would sincerely, as I've written before, like to see a logical reason for opposing UHC. It must be possible, so far it has not happened. Red herrings, straw men, and well for that matter every sort of logical flaw has been used to oppose UHC. None opposed have presented a logical and supported argument. No tricks are needed, I simply want to be able to reasonably argue against UHC. Please, those opposed, do present something valid.
The following members say Thank You:
|

Mar 07, 2008, 08:20 PM
|
 |
TARDIS
|
|
|
Originally Posted by Woodenpug
All too much time. My point is that timothy, and those opposed to UHC, are most effectively supporting UHC. The ostensibly opposed position is doing a very good job of supporting UHC.
I would sincerely, as I've written before, like to see a logical reason for opposing UHC. It must be possible, so far it has not happened. Red herrings, straw men, and well for that matter every sort of logical flaw has been used to oppose UHC. None opposed have presented a logical and supported argument. No tricks are needed, I simply want to be able to reasonably argue against UHC. Please, those opposed, do present something valid.
    
Indeed, any claims to alleged efficiency of the private health care over Medicare are squashed simply through a comparison of Medicare's Administrative cost structure to that of private insurance. 3% vs 25%. Which yields more value per dollar spent. Its not if money will be spent on health care its how well we spend it. I wouldn't have a problem with private insurers bidding for large groups as long the bids meet some basic tests:
1. Accept all comers regardless of preexisting conditions.
2. First dollar coverage for treatment of the chronically ill.
3. Administrative costs do not exceed 5%. If they hold admiinistrative costs to under 5% that is where they make their profits. If they match Medicare they make 2% on every dollar managed. If they can get it below 3% they get 2.++% and so forth.
For that matter I wouldn't even oppose bonuses for meeting certain population health targets for members of the group. (Eg mean hgba1c at <7 for diabetics yields one bonus...decrease of mean group BMI over time yields another bonus.) The organizations need to be competing on the basis of giving results based quality care NOT denial of care.
The following members say Thank You:
|

Mar 07, 2008, 08:26 PM
|
 |
TARDIS
|
|
|
Originally Posted by BlueRidgeHomeRN
Sorry-you can't have Biblical quotes AND the "separation of Church and State".
Pick one.
I reveiwed my post. It did not reference any religious texts. Jefferson wrote from a natural rights perspective and if memory serves was a deist. Personally I think that he would have pursued health care reform as a pragmatic necessity to preserve the nation.
My quote about the public library was my own philosophical statement. Undoubtedly as a sentiment it exists in some variant throughout the universe of political philosophy.
I don't remember reading the following before but in the interests of academic inquiry:
Libraries: The Cornerstone of DemocracyLibraries are . . . essential to the functioning of a democratic society . . .
libraries are the great symbols of the freedom of the mind.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Democracies need libraries. An informed public constitutes the very foundation of a democracy; after all, democracies are about discourse—discourse among the people. If a free society is to survive, it must ensure the preservation of its records and provide free and open access to this information to all its citizens. It must ensure that citizens have the resources to develop the information literacy skills necessary to participate in the democratic process. It must allow unfettered dialogue and guarantee freedom of expression.All of this is done in our libraries, the cornerstone of democracy in our communities.Libraries are for everyone, everywhere. They provide safe spaces for public dialogue. They disseminate information so the public can participate in the processes of governance. They provide access to government information so that the public can monitor the work of its elected officials and benefit from the data collected and disseminated by public policy makers. They serve as gathering places for the community to share interests and concerns. They provide opportunities for citizens to develop the skills needed to gain access to information of all kinds and to put information to effective use.Ultimately, discourse among informed citizens assures civil society. In the United States, libraries have greeted the self-determination of succeeding waves of immigrants by offering safe havens and equal access to learning. They continue this mission today. Indeed, libraries ensure the freedom to read, to view, to speak and to participate. They are the cornerstone of democracy.
http://www.ala.org/ala/ourassociatio...edemocracy.htm
Last edited by HM2Viking : Mar 07, 2008 at 08:33 PM.
The following member says Thank You:
|

Mar 08, 2008, 06:52 AM
|
 |
TARDIS
|
|
|
BTW American Tax rates are hardly confiscatory.
Can America afford to pay more? What America can afford is largely a question of values. The United States is one of the least taxed industrialized countries. Twenty-eight out of 30 countries in the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) pay a larger share of GDP in taxes than does the United States. Only Korea and Mexico pay less. In 2005, total federal, state, and local taxes in the United States were 25.8% of GDP; the other 29 OECD countries paid 35.5% (Citizens for Tax Justice 2007).
Citizens for Tax Justice. 2007. “United States Remains One of the Least Taxed Industrialized Countries.” Washington, DC: Citizens for Tax Justice. April.
http://www.sharedprosperity.org/bp208.html
As I wrote earlier in regards to some of the tax and finance issues:
As to the tax question every credible proposal that I have read speaks to the idea of replacing premiums with either a payroll tax OR allowing employers and individuals the option to purchase health care insurance directly from Medicare, or FEBP. IF private insurers want to stay in the game they will have achieve dramatic administrative cost reductions. 1 dollar should buy at least 95 cents of health care instead of our current 70 cents. We simply cannot afford double digit administrative costs or health care inflation.
The OECD average is about 9% GDP for health care. We spend 16% GDP. A substantial driver of the difference is administrative inefficiency and duplication along with incomprehensible and inconsistent benefit plans.
Last edited by HM2Viking : Mar 08, 2008 at 07:06 AM.
The following member says Thank You:
|
Would you like to comment?
Join or Login if already a member.
Similar Threads
|
| Thread |
Thread Starter |
Forum |
Replies |
Last Post |
| Universal Healthcare |
Alibaba |
General Nursing Discussion |
4 |
Sep 06, 2008 08:22 PM |
| Universal Healthcare |
kitkat24 |
Social & Health Care Coverage Activism |
111 |
Aug 28, 2008 10:43 PM |
Currently Active Users Viewing: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
| Thread Tools |
Search this Thread |
|
|
|
|