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Night Strike wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Night Strike wrote:I've never understood how medical costs could go down when taxes are being added to the actual tools being used in treatments.
Yo will have to back that up with data.
but overall, taxes have very little to do with real medical costs.
http://www.irs.gov/uac/Medical-Device-Excise-Tax:-Frequently-Asked-Questions
The government is directly adding 2.3% to the cost of medical devices, which is in addition to any inflation and other normal market forces. How will health care costs go down when the government is forcing suppliers to pay more?
jbrettlip wrote:I can't believe this thread has gone 289 pages of the same shit. Either you are a socialist or you understand economics. All of you could have made enough money to buy your own insurance had you only channeled this energy into something more productive.
Lootifer wrote:Im left leaning (what you would call socialist), I also understand economics... Probably better than you
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
jbrettlip wrote:Lootifer wrote:Im left leaning (what you would call socialist), I also understand economics... Probably better than you
Probably not...
Night Strike wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Night Strike wrote:I've never understood how medical costs could go down when taxes are being added to the actual tools being used in treatments.
Yo will have to back that up with data.
but overall, taxes have very little to do with real medical costs.
http://www.irs.gov/uac/Medical-Device-Excise-Tax:-Frequently-Asked-Questions
The government is directly adding 2.3% to the cost of medical devices, which is in addition to any inflation and other normal market forces. How will health care costs go down when the government is forcing suppliers to pay more?
jbrettlip wrote:I can't believe this thread has gone 289 pages of the same shit. Either you are a socialist or you understand economics. All of you could have made enough money to buy your own insurance had you only channeled this energy into something more productive.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Night Strike wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Night Strike wrote:I've never understood how medical costs could go down when taxes are being added to the actual tools being used in treatments.
Yo will have to back that up with data.
but overall, taxes have very little to do with real medical costs.
http://www.irs.gov/uac/Medical-Device-Excise-Tax:-Frequently-Asked-Questions
The government is directly adding 2.3% to the cost of medical devices, which is in addition to any inflation and other normal market forces. How will health care costs go down when the government is forcing suppliers to pay more?
Among the reasons for medical pricing, taxes are pretty low on the list.
PLAYER57832 wrote:jbrettlip wrote:I can't believe this thread has gone 289 pages of the same shit. Either you are a socialist or you understand economics. All of you could have made enough money to buy your own insurance had you only channeled this energy into something more productive.
Hmm.. because according to you economics dictates that there is plenty of work out there, plenty of people willing to pay a decent wage... and oh, yeah, who cares if we are stealing our children's future to support a fictitious growth model..
AndyDufresne wrote:What about today's current children?
--Andy
thegreekdog wrote:AndyDufresne wrote:What about today's current children?
--Andy
They all had access to medical care prior to the passing of the Affordable Care Act.
Night Strike's rhetoric notwithstanding, the correct way to do this was to go completely free market or completely socialist. The Affordable Care Act essentially requires people to pay for health insurance and the government pays if the people can't pay. So both a boondoggle for insurance companies and a boondoggle for those that cannot afford health insurance. It's the Republicans' plan from the 1990s.
Lootifer wrote:thegreekdog wrote:AndyDufresne wrote:What about today's current children?
--Andy
They all had access to medical care prior to the passing of the Affordable Care Act.
Night Strike's rhetoric notwithstanding, the correct way to do this was to go completely free market or completely socialist. The Affordable Care Act essentially requires people to pay for health insurance and the government pays if the people can't pay. So both a boondoggle for insurance companies and a boondoggle for those that cannot afford health insurance. It's the Republicans' plan from the 1990s.
Thats what I dont understand about the whole trainwreck.
"Hey we've got a broken system; we need to fix it"
"Okie dokie; how about since the system is already complex and unoptimised, lets tack on a whole lot more complexity and a whole lot of "greater good", but untested and under researched, ideas in the hope that the resulting trainwreck solves all of americas healthcare woes!!"
"Ok but it might cost a bit more; thus we need to invent some matching wtf-taxes to go along with our nice new shiney wtf-healthcare system!"
Seriously I blame the democrats/left almost more than I do the opposition. If you are going to increase government funding of healthcare at least do it in a remotely sensible way...
Lootifer wrote:Yeh I can believe that. And thus I can see why some of the optics around big business repubs is far more convincing than big business democrats.
Sure both are trying to screw us, but at least the repubs are being somewhat honest about it lol.
Question: If you were faced with a choice between the new setup (which I dont fully understand, and cbf trying to) or a far more socialised/left setup (Norway/ NZ etc)? Those are your only two options.
Uh, no. The primary reasons for rising cost is demand and need for profit. People will pay whatever they have to.. and so medical companies can charge what they wish, with few limits.Night Strike wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Night Strike wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Night Strike wrote:I've never understood how medical costs could go down when taxes are being added to the actual tools being used in treatments.
Yo will have to back that up with data.
but overall, taxes have very little to do with real medical costs.
http://www.irs.gov/uac/Medical-Device-Excise-Tax:-Frequently-Asked-Questions
The government is directly adding 2.3% to the cost of medical devices, which is in addition to any inflation and other normal market forces. How will health care costs go down when the government is forcing suppliers to pay more?
Among the reasons for medical pricing, taxes are pretty low on the list.
So it's ok to add direct taxes because the amount they increase prices is less than the amount other factors add to the price? Is this really how the liberal mind "works"?
By the way, some of those "other factors" are themselves higher taxes on personal income, corporate income, property, capital gains, etc.
PLAYER57832 wrote:jbrettlip wrote:I can't believe this thread has gone 289 pages of the same shit. Either you are a socialist or you understand economics. All of you could have made enough money to buy your own insurance had you only channeled this energy into something more productive.
Hmm.. because according to you economics dictates that there is plenty of work out there, plenty of people willing to pay a decent wage... and oh, yeah, who cares if we are stealing our children's future to support a fictitious growth model..
PLAYER57832 wrote:You know something, it was not so long ago that words like yours would have you investigated for treasonous activity.. you might just think about that. amongst all your whining about "liberal" takeovers.
PLAYER57832 wrote:You have a LOT of distorted ideas about the government and how it works. Government SERVES us. Companies work for themselves.. solely. Government absolutely can be abusive, but abuse and claiming that any payment to and by the government is waste are two different things. Unless and until you actually pay attention to that difference, most of what you say will continue to be garbage.
PLAYER57832 wrote:You have a LOT of distorted ideas about the government and how it works. Government SERVES us. Companies work for themselves.. solely. Government absolutely can be abusive, but abuse and claiming that any payment to and by the government is waste are two different things. Unless and until you actually pay attention to that difference, most of what you say will continue to be garbage.
MONTREAL — Surgery wait times for deadly ovarian, cervical and breast cancers in Quebec are three times longer than government benchmarks, leading some desperate patients to shop around for an operating room.
But that’s a waste of time, doctors say, since the problem is spread across Quebec hospitals. And doctors are refusing to accept new patients quickly because they can’t treat them, health advocates say.
A leading Montreal gynecologist said that these days, she cannot look her patients in the eye because the wait times are so shocking. Lack of resources, including nursing staff and budget compressions, are driving a backlog of surgeries while operating rooms stand empty. The latest figures from the provincial government show that over a span of nearly 11 months, 7,780 patients in the Montreal area waited six months or longer for day surgeries, while another 2,957 waited for six months or longer for operations that required hospitalization.
The worst cases are gynecological cancers, experts say, because usually such a cancer has already spread by the time it is detected. Instead of four weeks from diagnosis to surgery, patients are waiting as long as three months to have cancerous growths removed.
“It’s a crisis for Quebec women,” said Lucy Gilbert, director of gynecological oncology and the gynecologic cancer multi-disciplinary team at the McGill University Health Centre. Her team has had access to operating rooms only two days a week for the past year, with dozens of patients having surgeries postponed week after week.
Patients are prioritized according to need, Gilbert said, but surgical delays are still too long.
Gilbert says there are days she can’t face going into work at the Royal Victoria Hospital, a renowned cancer centre in gynecology, and dealing with crying patients. “Put yourself in their place. … I have difficulty making eye contact with patients. I am ashamed to be in such a situation.
“People are suffering. People are waiting too long,” Gilbert said. “This should not happen. No matter how good your surgery is, no matter how good your chemotherapy is, if you delay the surgery there could be a problem. The cancer grows. The cancer spreads.”
One worried patient, a mother of five children who waited three months for surgery for invasive breast cancer, said she is worried about the effects of such a long wait. After surgery, she paid $800 for a bone scan in a private clinic rather than wait five months for a scan at the Jewish General Hospital.
“They needed the scan to see what kind of treatment to give me,” said the woman, 40, who asked that her name not be published because she is starting chemotherapy this week. “The doctors are amazing but health system is not working.”
Montreal health advocates meeting in Toronto on Monday planned to discuss surgery delays in oncology, said Cathy Ammendolea of the Canadian Breast Cancer Network and a volunteer at the Hope and Cope Wellness Centre at the Jewish.
“We’re talking wait times of two to three months. Women are desperate and doctors are frustrated,” said Ammendolea, who encountered physicians at the hospital distraught they could not take on new patients because operating rooms are not available in a timely manner.
“To the point where they are not going to see patients that fast, because if they see the patient, they have to treat the patient, and to do that properly you need access to an OR. It’s crucial for ovarian cancer,” she said.
Officials at the Jewish were not available to comment Monday.
But according to advocates, women are shopping for available ORs in secondary hospitals not suited for complex cancer surgeries, Ammendolea said: “Once they are diagnosed, they are trying to get rid of it as quickly as possible.”
Dr. Robert Sabbah, president of the Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Quebec, said some patients will seek care elsewhere to reduce wait times. But most are getting surgery within three months, he said. In 2007, Quebec announced it would reduce surgical wait times to less than four weeks for all types of cancer, but it’s a rare doctor who has wait-lists of less four weeks, Sabbah said.
Quebec’s promise to cut delays translated into improvements in eye, knee and hip surgeries, Sabbah said, but oncology remains a bottleneck because of budget deficits and staff and equipment shortages.
“Cancer patients are very vulnerable — no patient should wait, but especially cancer,” Sabbah said.
Two years ago, because of potentially devastating delays, oncologists at the Notre Dame Hospital of the Centre hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal sent women with gynecological cancer to other hospitals in Quebec City and Trois-Rivières.
Doctors had to alter treatment in women where the cancer had advanced, CHUM and Notre Dame oncologist Philippe Sauthier told The Gazette in an earlier interview. At the time, the wait-list there had about 120 women and 50 of them were waiting longer than four weeks. Sauthier then wrote an open letter accusing the Quebec government and his hospital of ignoring best practices in favour of balancing the books.
As of March, things began to improve, Sauthier noted in an email, once the CHUM added a sixth operating room dedicated to fast tracking gynecological cancer. By September, 61 per cent of the CHUM’s cancer gynecology operations were done within four weeks of diagnosis, said CHUM spokesperson Sylvie Robitaille.
In August, the McGill centre had at least 100 women waiting for gynecological cancer surgery; 78 of them waited longer than 28 days. As of September the wait-list shrunk to 46 women, 33 of whom were on a wait-list more than 28 days, said MUHC spokesperson Ian Popple.
Ariane Lareau, a press attaché to Health Minister Réjean Hébert, said budgets have little to do with OR congestion and it’s up to each hospital to determine its priorities.
Nine members of the Wisconsin state legislature say they plan to back a bill to arrest federal officials who try to implement Obamacare.
The state’s Republican Gov. Scott Walker must decide by Friday whether the state will draft a health care exchange plan under Obamacare or surrender the task to the federal government.
“Just because Obama was re-elected does not mean he’s above the Constitution,” Republican state Rep. Chris Kapenga told the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel.
Of the nine Republicans who advocated arresting federal officials, eight have also said on record that they want to write a law that would permit prosecuting TSA agents who physically search passengers with sexual assault.
Additionally, all nine told a tea party-aligned group that they supported the passing of legislation that would allow people to carry guns without first acquiring a permit, allow people to buy raw or unpasteurized milk, allow people to carry guns without state permits and block state funding for federal Real ID laws that require states to develop more secure driver’s licenses.
Kapenga said that he doesn’t think “right-to-work” laws, which bar private-sector labor contracts from including provisions that require employees to join unions as conditions of employment, will be passed in the upcoming congressional session, even with Republican majorities in the state assembly and senate.
“I very much support right to work, but do I think it’s realistic? No. I don’t think we’ll have the political capital to do it,” Kapenga said.
Republicans were able to pass a bill in the last session allowing people to get permits from the state to carry concealed weapons, ending Wisconsin’s lengthy ban on the practice.
jj3044 wrote:Is having the first scenario better, only discovering 90,000 cases and having a lot of cases going undiagnosed? Or, is the second scenario better, even though some have to wait longer than 4 weeks?
Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.
Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.
Metsfanmax wrote:jj3044 wrote:Is having the first scenario better, only discovering 90,000 cases and having a lot of cases going undiagnosed? Or, is the second scenario better, even though some have to wait longer than 4 weeks?
That is pretty much the conservative playbook. Let people die because of undetected and preventable illnesses, and claim the free market is working.
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