National Health Care
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24valvenotak;283192 wrote:
on another note, my aunt recently breached the 1.1mil mark in claims to her insurance for three transplants/complications/diabetes over the years and they dropped her. guess you only get insurance until your actually sick and they stop making money. good thing we dont need any reform or anything.Uh, why shouldn't they drop her? She's cost them 1 million dollars, less whatever her premiums have been in her lifetime.
It'd be one thing if they weren't honoring a contract they had signed -- that's illegal and they should be reamed for doing so.
But if their previous agreement had a sunset date, and they're choosing not renew her, how can you blame them?
How is it that people understand that some drivers are uninsurable, but somehow don't think that should apply to health insurance?
I already stated at the beginning of this thread that people that can't pay their own way don't **deserve **to continue living at the expense of others. If they can convince people to help them out, that is awesome, and that would be one of the nice things about human compassion.
That doesn't change whether we're talking about your aunt or my kid or whomever.
I sure hope I never have to come crawling back to Fargostreet saying "my kid is about to die and I don't have any money left, please help", but I don't beleive that I have any right to *force *YOU to pay for his medical costs.
I have a medical condition that my insurer will only cover up to a certain amount on, and that coverage was completely used up years ago. I've spent at least one nice car's worth of money out of pocket on treatments, and am contemplating another nice car's worth of future treatments.
It's not my fault that I have this problem [as near as anyone in the medical community can tell], but it certainly isn't anyone elses fault. Why should they have to pay? [In some states, they do, but not here].
Luckliy for me it isn't life threatening; it's "only" a quality of life issue.
I know it can be hard to see through the hurt and anger of personal situations, but you have to ask yourself: when will it stop? In order to keep your aunt alive, how much are you willing to steal from others? And from which "others"? If somehow I am taxed so much that I cannot afford future out-of-pocket treatments for my condition, so that your aunt can pay for hers, is that a just system? By what standard or rational basis? Who should decide that your aunt gets treatment and that I do not?
The point you are trying to make about me already being in a shared risk pool where others affect my premiums is perhaps interesting, but here's where it breaks down: today, I can choose not to be a part of any risk pool. And today, I can choose which risk pool I'd like to be a part of. That's what private enterprise allows.
Put uncle sam in that picture and I have no choice left. Make it compulsory and suddenly its an issue of basic rights, the role of government, the appropriateness of taxation, stealing from Peter to pay Paul, and so on.
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Trafik Jamz;283197 wrote:
Insurance is based on odds.I cannot tell if you think you are disagreeing with me or not. In either case, I'll point out that Lloyd's [while not technically an insurer] underwrites policies for irreplacable, singular items as a matter of routine course, i.e. the pool size is 1.
You should also not assume that insurance regulators are brighter than the actuaries designing products.
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If we step back and look at the big picture, the problem with "healthcare" all started when employers started paying for peoples insurance. It's been a downhill slide since then, because it took all the responsibility from the individual. People no longer cared what a doc visit or treatment cost, because "they" were no longer paying for it. Most people don't know or care what it actually costs to go to the doc, because "the insurance company" is paying for it. Without costs being held in check by the individual, doc visits/treatments are expensive enough that people "feel" like they can't afford it. IMO any type of govt program is just adding to the problem. The accountability for paying for your own stuff has to be brought back.
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Isn't the whole point of insurance to cover your ass when you get really sick? Why would they drop someone after they've spent that much? That is why you have insurance, is it not? I understand it's a business, but that is the risk they take going into the insurance industry. You win some, you lose some. Otherwise, what is the point of having insurance? Granted, if she signed a contract that says we will pay x amount of money for you, then yeah that is her fault. If not, isn't that the companies fault? Don't insure someone if you can't take the heat once they do get sick, especially after they approved the policy.
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DaveH;283220 wrote:
If we step back and look at the big picture, the problem with "healthcare" all started when employers started paying for peoples insurance. It's been a downhill slide since then, because it took all the responsibility from the individual. **People no longer cared what a doc visit or treatment cost, because "they" were no longer paying for it. Most people don't know or care what it actually costs to go to the doc, because "the insurance company" is paying for it. **Without costs being held in check by the individual, doc visits/treatments are expensive enough that people "feel" like they can't afford it. IMO any type of govt program is just adding to the problem. The accountability for paying for your own stuff has to be brought back.Which is the reason insurance companies should not be paying for your little "i have a cold" visits to the doctor. I believe that insurance companies should be there to assist in the costs of the more expensive vists. Say.. anything over $500.
Now.. I don't know the cost of medical care as the last time I saw the doc for something was to get my yearly shots. Aside from that, it's been a few years.
Maybe insurance companies should be looking at medical records and setting guidlines on what the value is that the bill has to reach before insurance will step in.
This would eliminate all the pointless visits to the doc. If you still want to go for your "cough", you can foot the bill.
Summary: Insurance companies need to stop covering the pointless "I have had a cough for 2 days" visits. That would grealy help in the cost of insurance.
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PSiedTSi;283221 wrote:
Isn't the whole point of insurance to cover your ass when you get really sick? Why would they drop someone after they've spent that much? That is why you have insurance, is it not? I understand it's a business, but that is the risk they take going into the insurance industry. You win some, you lose some. Otherwise, what is the point of having insurance? Granted, if she signed a contract that says we will pay x amount of money for you, then yeah that is her fault. If not, isn't that the companies fault? Don't insure someone if you can't take the heat once they do get sick, especially after they approved the policy.Most policies have a maximum $ of benefits they will pay. It is stated clearly within the policy (by law). Once you have exceeded the lifetime maximum benefit there becomes no coverage for (all or part) of the policy going forward.
Thrash - Lloyds is a surplus line insurer, insuring things that don't meet the normal risk patterns. To do this, they have to charge more than if you had a larger group of people to spread this risk around, hence the larger premiums. (I'm sure you understand this, I'm just trying to get everyone up to speed on this)
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DaveH;283220 wrote:
If we step back and look at the big picture, the problem with "healthcare" all started when employers started paying for peoples insurance. It's been a downhill slide since then, because it took all the responsibility from the individual. People no longer cared what a doc visit or treatment cost, because "they" were no longer paying for it. Most people don't know or care what it actually costs to go to the doc, because "the insurance company" is paying for it. Without costs being held in check by the individual, doc visits/treatments are expensive enough that people "feel" like they can't afford it. IMO any type of govt program is just adding to the problem. The accountability for paying for your own stuff has to be brought back.Remember when/why employers started doing this?
It was because the government put salary caps in place in the WW2 timeframe. Companies had to find a way to attract talent in a competitive labor market place.
You're right: when the end user doesn't know what things cost and doesn't pay for it, they have no incentive to economize. When the end user has no incentive to economize, the provider has no incentive to compete on price. When both the end user and the provider don't care what something costs, the price continues to go up, until the people stuck footing the bills -- insurers -- start breaking.
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thrash;283228 wrote:
Remember when/why employers started doing this?It was because the government put salary caps in place in the WW2 timeframe. Companies had to find a way to attract talent in a competitive labor market place.
You're right: when the end user doesn't know what things cost and doesn't pay for it, they have no incentive to economize. When the end user has no incentive to economize, the provider has no incentive to compete on price. When both the end user and the provider don't care what something costs, the price continues to go up, until the people stuck footing the bills -- insurers -- start breaking.
24valvenotak;283107 wrote:
take a bottle of 170 dollar brand name pills and then a generic version for 40. i have insurance so guess which ones get prescribed to me... is that the market doing its job?apparently i need another 30 years under my belt before anything i say is actually comprehended
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Ok...I think we can all agree that IF something catastrophic happens (cancer, heart disease, etc....) you will be best off if you have insurance. I'm really surprised more people don't go the route of no major medical insurance but just bulk up on supplemental policies. 2/3 of the expense with cancer happens outside of the hospital (missed work, travel, drugs that aren't covered, etc...) and supplemental pays YOU if you get sick and miss work or need drugs/chemo. Aflac/Conseco and a host of others have really good cancer policies and they are extremely inexpensive vs major medical insurance. I'm not suggesting people drop major medical by any means, just throwing the thought out there.
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24valvenotak;283272 wrote:
apparently i need another 30 years under my belt before anything i say is actually comprehendedI hate to be so condecending, but by reading your posts you just sound like a piece of shit welfare case to me. If your aunt has had that many problems to rack up $1mil+, sorry but she should be dead by now, and big fucking deal if you have to take the cheap pills? Can you afford the difference to buy the good ones? If not, tough shit you should be thankful that someone else is paying the $40 that THEY cost. boo hoo i want everything on someone elses dime, fuck you and pay for your own shit
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Grr;283283 wrote:
I hate to be so condecending, but by reading your posts you just sound like a piece of shit welfare case to me. If your aunt has had that many problems to rack up $1mil+, sorry but she should be dead by now, and big fucking deal if you have to take the cheap pills? Can you afford the difference to buy the good ones? If not, tough shit you should be thankful that someone else is paying the $40 that THEY cost. boo hoo i want everything on someone elses dime, fuck you and pay for your own shitHis point was not that he feels slighted by having to get the generics...
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Grr;283283 wrote:
I hate to be so condecending, but by reading your posts you just sound like a piece of shit welfare case to me. If your aunt has had that many problems to rack up $1mil+, sorry but she should be dead by now, and big fucking deal if you have to take the cheap pills? Can you afford the difference to buy the good ones? If not, tough shit you should be thankful that someone else is paying the $40 that THEY cost. boo hoo i want everything on someone elses dime, fuck you and pay for your own shitAre you retarded?
For example.. A guy I used to work with (a good friend of my dad's), as a grand-daughter that need a life saving brain surgery at the age of 8. Yes, EIGHT. Just the surgery alone was over $200,000.
By time you figure in ALL of the medical bills for this 8 year old, the final tally was over $800,000.
So what your saying is she should be dead because it cost so much to save a life?
Go fuck yourself you ignorant bitch.
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yeah...a million isn't that hard to accumulate in bills anymore at a hospital.
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listen guy, that has nothing to do with any of it, and like i said i carry my own policy and dont use the VA except for the mandatory stuff. I think people get shit for a reason and die for a reason, its natures way. If you dont like it fuck you, i dont need your acceptance, sorry im not some soft cored little bitch
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I can't wait until you or one of you close friends/family has cancer or brain surgery and dies. I'm going to go to the funeral and LAUGH MY ASS OFF and say "They deserved to die, insurance should not cover any of it."
Your ignorance is absurd.
Go talk to the dude who just had his leg amputated. Ask him if he could have afforded the bill without insurance. Willing to bet he couldn't have.
Insurance saves lives. It's the babies who get checked for everything that causes the cost of insurance to go up.
If you don't believe in insurance, what the fuck do you have a policy for? So when you get sick and almost die, that other people's money can save your life? Or will you run like a bitch to the VA and get ur free medical care?
Fuck off and die you worthless pile of white trash. End your life now before you humiliate yourself any more.
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Are you kidding stupid fuck? Insurance is GREAT, but there is a limit dude, why you getting so bent out of shape for? Cause your a dumbfuck, if you dont like my opinions, block my posts! If you dont, then fuck you! whats with all the personal attacks because of my beleifs? Boo hoo i was a giant sandy pussy and didnt join the military so i have to run them down and bitch about the VA. Guess what, i signed a contract with them and the coverage is part of it. fucking baby
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is it just me or does this link guy only talk mad shit. yet who the fuck is he?
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