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PeakOil is You

Movie: "Sicko" by Michael Moore

A forum to either submit your own review of a book, video or audio interview, or to post reviews by others.

Re: Sicko

Postby cynicalheretic » Wed 13 Jun 2007, 22:39:10

People are living longer and better than they ever did before.

You propose we do this under voodoo SPG?


I wish you would all stop worry about this kind of crap, because the end of days are coming and you had better go out and have your fun now.




*disclaimer -- I do not believe in God or God's end of days. But the world is dying and if you spend all your time now bitching and whining, then your going to mess out on all of the small pleasures in life.

Peace out
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Re: Sicko

Postby frankthetank » Wed 13 Jun 2007, 23:03:30

How did HEALTH INSURANCE ever get tied to a job? My employer doesn't offer me AUTO INSURANCE, they don't offer me HOUSE INSURANCE? Stupid if you ask me. I say be gone with the hole system and pay cash at the door/or check/or credit card. You'll see prices drop.
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Re: Sicko

Postby smallpoxgirl » Wed 13 Jun 2007, 23:15:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cynicalheretic', 'P')eople are living longer and better than they ever did before.

Well....longer anyway. No other time in history could the average Joe expect to spend 10 years in a nursing home with a nurse wiping his butt after the kids have long since stopped visiting. That's for sure.

I'm sure happy to give up half of my paycheck to the government for the security of knowing I can sit in a nursing home and drool on myself after my brain has melted from Alzheimers. Aren't you?

I tell you the truth. One trip to a nursing home and you start to understand why they use to call pneumonia "the old man's friend". No friends for us though. We've got antibiotics and vaccines to keep our friends far far away.
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Re: Sicko

Postby TheTurtle » Wed 13 Jun 2007, 23:49:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('smallpoxgirl', 'I') tell you the truth. One trip to a nursing home and you start to understand why they use to call pneumonia "the old man's friend". No friends for us though. We've got antibiotics and vaccines to keep our friends far far away.


I hear you, SPG. Sitting in the hospital with my dying mother over almost two months until she finally passed away last year helped me understand how truly insidious our medical system has become.
“Humankind has not woven the web of life. We are but one thread within it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves.” (Ted Perry)
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Re: Sicko

Postby Denny » Wed 13 Jun 2007, 23:59:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('lawnchair', ' ') Hiring companies aren't supposed to ask about your health situation, but they sure find out.


Are you sure it is illegal? Years ago I worked for one of the big three automakers, and the last stage of getting hired was to pass their insurance company exam. It was pretty extensive, chest X-rays, rectal exam and I think even blood samples. So, while it wasn't the employer checking on me, it was the same effect.

I see the logic for the tests, as if an employee is hired who is likely to get sick it would affect production quality and health care costs too. Just think of all these insurance costs being carried by companies, it must hurt overall U.S. manufacturing competitiveness. Maybe if Ford and GM and Chrysler didn't ahve them, they would be flourisihing today.

One other thing about the U.S. health care systme that confuses me is why elderly people still need to pay for care. We know of a on old couple in New York State who hade retired from a successful business and saved carefully, but found a lot of their savings eaten away when they both had heart surgery. I think in one person's case it ran to over $140,000! Just bizarre and a tragedy for two people who accomplished so much in life, but could not buy insurance reasonably. Isn't that sad?

Isn't there some plan, like Medicaid for the elderly? If you want to stimulate the economy, let the little guys set up businesses without having to fear for their health coverage. Its the little companies that are responsible for so much job creation, not the big guys.
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Re: Sicko

Postby TWilliam » Thu 14 Jun 2007, 00:21:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cynicalheretic', 'P')eople are living longer


And therein lies the crux of the biscuit. The demand for exotic procedures is increasing, just as the population base whose labor would finance the treatments is diminishing. Thus you may have noted the recent hollywood fascination with motherhood.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TheTurtle', 'S')itting in the hospital with my dying mother over almost two months until she finally passed away last year helped me understand how truly insidious our medical system has become.


Ditto my dad. God (and Republicans) forbid they offer a more expedient alternative to slow starvation.
"It means buckle your seatbelt, Dorothy, because Kansas? Is goin' bye-bye... "
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Re: Sicko

Postby Carlhole » Thu 14 Jun 2007, 00:32:32

I'm in favor of (1) a socialized portion of healthcare that rigidly focuses on prevention. Costs would have to be rigorously managed by disallowing many treatments, but the emphasis would, again, be on prevention, specifying which services are covered and which are not. No exceptions. Much of the preventive services would be provided by nurse practitioners and certified H/C workers whose re-iimbursements would not be as high as physicians. Very limited compensation for malpractice would also be a feature.

As part of any prevention-oriented socialized medical services program, the message would have to also appear loud and clear that healthy habits and getting plenty of exercise are important to the nation's interests. A re-doubled effort to reduce cigarette smoking, for example, would be in order. A program to increase the use of bike paths and walkways that are human-friendly - not just an afterthought of the car culture - would be in order as well.

Americans have a reputation around the world for being fatter and lazier than Europeans or Asians. It's the car culture and energy-intensive society we've created. Any sensible national healthcare program would make it a primary goal to increase the level of fitness in its citizens. Perhaps some sort of reward system for good health/absence of bad habits could be engineered into it. It would be a big cultural change - but it would be one that is in accordance with many of the values that people here on these boards have expressed.

The next tier would be (2) a mandatory, employee-employer financed private insurance program that, again, rigorously specifies which treatment regimens are included. But the idea would be to provide a fair deal to health care consumers, not providing everything under the sun but providing coverage against many of the risks that ordinary people encounter. Again, limited malpractice compensation.

(3) The third tier would be totally optional private insurance which would allows consumers to access even the most expensive treatments.

In such a system, if someone had failed to provide third-tier level of care for themselves, then they either would have to find charitable help or suffer the tragic consequences. It should not be incumbent upon the healthcare system to completely eliminate all the risks of living.

I think a rigidly cost-controlled socialized portion of healthcare makes sense because we collectively have an interest in everyone's being reasonably healthy. For example, public sanitation systems are a socialized component of our present healthcare system that goes unmentioned for the most part. Without public sanitation, our individual healthcare responsibilities would be much, much more difficult. Also, we collectively want to discourage the various kinds of epidemic diseases that can threaten individuals, despite their best efforts.

However, there is also a personal responsibility for healthcare where each individual must step up to meet the risks that he/she can encounter. So my system would acknowledge both public and private delivery systems.

In any socialized portion of healthcare, costs would have to be rigidly managed because in healthcare, there is always limited supply but unlimited demand.
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Re: Sicko

Postby lawnchair » Thu 14 Jun 2007, 00:43:01

Close, but if part (2) is a standard, regimented plan, why should employers be involved in it? "We've always done it that way" is not enough reason. Small employers need to be free of the hassle of dealing with insurance company paperwork. Employers need to be freed from trying to figure out sneaky, cruel ways to fire employees who get sick (it happens every single day). People need to be freed from indentured servitude through fear and implied threats.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Carlhole', '
')The next tier would be (2) a mandatory, employee-employer financed private insurance program that, again, rigorously specifies which treatment regimens are included. But the idea would be to provide a fair deal to health care consumers, not providing everything under the sun but providing coverage against many of the risks that ordinary people encounter.
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Re: Sicko

Postby threadbear » Thu 14 Jun 2007, 00:43:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('smallpoxgirl', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cynicalheretic', 'P')eople are living longer and better than they ever did before.

Well....longer anyway. No other time in history could the average Joe expect to spend 10 years in a nursing home with a nurse wiping his butt after the kids have long since stopped visiting. That's for sure.

I'm sure happy to give up half of my paycheck to the government for the security of knowing I can sit in a nursing home and drool on myself after my brain has melted from Alzheimers. Aren't you?

I tell you the truth. One trip to a nursing home and you start to understand why they use to call pneumonia "the old man's friend". No friends for us though. We've got antibiotics and vaccines to keep our friends far far away.


On this issue, we whole heartedly agree. Whether it's socialized medicine or private insurance funded--this kind of thing HAS to stop.
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Re: Sicko

Postby smallpoxgirl » Thu 14 Jun 2007, 00:45:40

Oregon medicaid put together a medical system a lot like that. They did a survey of everybody on medicaid and asked them what services they wanted coverage for. Then they got together with doctors and came up with a list of priorities and prices. They drew a line on the list and said "Everything below this line is costs too much for too little benefit, and we're not going to cover it." Ended up with a really cool plan. Lots of primary care. Dental coverage and everything.

Then one little girl got sick and was about to die for want of a kidney transplant. Next thing you know, every bleeding heart in the state was on the phone bitching to their senator and the whole thing fell apart. The little girl got her kidney and everybody else lost their dental coverage.
"We were standing on the edges
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Sifting through the ashes every day
What we thought would never end
Now is nothing more than a memory
The way things were before
I lost my way" - OCMS
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Re: Sicko

Postby smallpoxgirl » Thu 14 Jun 2007, 03:33:26

So healthcare currently consumes 12% of the GNP in the US. What do you think would be a reasonable number FG?
"We were standing on the edges
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Re: Sicko

Postby I_Like_Plants » Thu 14 Jun 2007, 03:50:12

Actually I think someone did the math (because I won't) and discovered about 50% of your tax dollars go to the war.

Very good reason to become a tax rebel, which does not involve anything illegal, it does involve however, living so that you pay very little taxes, making very little and instead growing, gleaning, etc., so you pay very little to the war machine. Needless to say this involves giving up the McMansion and the SUV, you have to give up being a Real American (tm)

I think one thing this thread has shown is that most 'Merkans like their chains. They've been raised since birth to hate Godless Socialism (tm) and it's easy to simply define any system that gives a shit about anyone other than the top ruling class and you get this visceral reaction: That must be Godless Socialism (tm) and the 'Murrikkkan's reasoning apparatus, what there is, just shuts down.

Myself, I only wish I'd known what I know now, why didn't I defect when I was in Cuba in the mid-90s? I just had no perspective.
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Re: Sicko

Postby smallpoxgirl » Thu 14 Jun 2007, 07:31:01

I hear you about the McMansions and SUVs. The thing is our medical system is built on the same model. We're all about spending $300,000 on pet scans and chemo and surgeries in order to live an extra 2 weeks with pancreatic cancer. Changing who pays for it is not going to fix this problem.

You never answered my question. What percentage of our GNP should we be spending on healthcare?
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Re: Sicko

Postby Graeme » Thu 14 Jun 2007, 07:52:17

SMG, I think NZ spends about 6% of GDP. You might be interested in this article:

World's 'best' health care fatally flawed

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')ne of the most contentious issues of the U.S. presidential campaign will be how to fix what many agree is a malfunctioning health-care system. Adding fuel to the fire is a recent study detailing the shortcomings of the U.S. health-care system compared with those of Australia, Canada, Germany, New Zealand and Britain.

The study, entitled "Mirror, Mirror on the Wall: An International Update on the Comparative Performance of American Health Care," released by the Commonwealth Fund in New York, finds that not only is the U.S. health-care system the most expensive in the world (double that of the next most costly, Canada) but that it comes in dead last in most measures of performance.

Presidential candidates will be asked to justify the costs (15 percent of GDP and estimated to reach 19.6 percent by 2016) of such a disadvantageous system that also fails to insure a sizable portion of the population. The most notable way in which the United States differs from other developed countries is in the absence of universal coverage. But it is also last in terms of access, patient safety, efficiency and equity.


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Re: Sicko

Postby TheTurtle » Thu 14 Jun 2007, 08:41:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('smallpoxgirl', 'I') hear you about the McMansions and SUVs. The thing is our medical system is built on the same model. We're all about spending $300,000 on pet scans and chemo and surgeries in order to live an extra 2 weeks with pancreatic cancer. Changing who pays for it is not going to fix this problem.

You never answered my question. What percentage of our GNP should we be spending on healthcare?


Twelve years ago, my young dog disappeared. We finally tracked her down to the Humane Society, where a good samaritan type had taken her after finding her injured on the side of a road three miles away from us. We transferred her to our vet where she was knocked out with anesthesiology ,underwent surgery for a broken pelvis, got hundreds of stitches, and then spent almost a week at the vets for observation, getting antibiotics and pain pills the whole time.

Total cost of the whole procedure was just over $300. Plus I donated $20 to the Humane Society.

Why does it cost so much more to treat a human who has similar injuries? :x

That dog is now almost 14 years old. She is going deaf, she is going blind and she is arthritic due to her early injury. The time will probably come when we do the humane thing and have her put to sleep so that she doesn't suffer.

Why don't we treat old decrepit people humanely? :x
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Re: Sicko

Postby basil_hayden » Thu 14 Jun 2007, 09:00:22

Old decrepid people should know when to walk off into the woods and croak. That's my plan, and I think anyone who comes after the baby boomers ought to have one, because when the boomers are done, there will be nothing left.
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Re: Sicko

Postby lawnchair » Thu 14 Jun 2007, 09:05:13

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