by threadbear » Sun 06 Nov 2005, 16:17:37
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'I')'m a socialist for many reasons, but chief among them is both a desire and a need to witness the destruction of the U.S. medical "system" (so-called) (I say "need" because I am about to lose my health insurance.)
If American docs like cornholio (and pharmacists and RNs and other overpaid medicos) were really serious about their supposed mission, they'd be lobbying hard to overturn the current incestuous, profit-driven system of rationing and price fixing and forms layered on forms. I'd bet only 20% of the health care dollars spent in this stupid country ever reach the patient directly. Instead, the medicos and their octopus-like organizations, hand-in-crotch with the government, keep grubbing for ever more money.
It's time to get rid of the specialists, burst the bloated salaries, scrap the exotic technology and procedures (which increasingly have as their primary effect the extension of the lives of dying rich people by a few more weeks), and bring good basic health care to everyone.
Americans have a system with multiple redundancies, a true Kafkaesque bureaucratic nightmare, with the some of the inefficiencies of the socialist system wedded to the worst in croney capitalism.
In order to function fluidly, you have to first reduce military spending, then tax the rich, then institute a govt. one user pay system, a true regulated monopoly. One thing Russia actually did have and Cuba has today is a medical system that worked/works.
Most general practitioners make very little money, and nurses are being imported from the Phillipines to reduce wages in that sector. The only reason specialists are seeing rising pay is the gouging factor that is initiated by the forming of associations that provide approval and licensing. This limits supply.
The ones who are making out like bandits are the pharmas and the insurance companies, who can cherry pick their customer base. In order to serve everyone, economies of scale are needed. In order to manage that AND keep quality high, a transparent govt. monopoly is needed.
Because Americans have never seen a large govt institution function without corruption in a transparent manner they find it hard to believe it's possible.
I agree with you about the tech and life extension. Neither private insurance or public insurance will work if baby boomers insist on prolonging life into some hideous twilight of unsighly tubes, wires and defibbrilators,