by Heineken » Fri 20 Jun 2008, 07:51:22
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'H')eineken wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')uh, Mr. Bill? The idea behind universal health care is that everyone gets care---at least some basic care. So then it doesn't matter if you're Tiger Woods or not. You can get your broken leg set without second-mortgaging the house.
Yes, being from Canada and having worked in the UK I know what universal healthcare is AND what it is not. The NHS is a sick joke or is that a joke that makes you sick?
The issue is not getting care, but how long the queue is, and how long you have to wait? If you are relatively young and healthy there may be a lot of sick people ahead of you in line. Hence the idea of buying supplemental insurance to cover
elective surgery or private care.
I am talking about mandatory health insurance for everyone whether in a private or default public plan that guarantees basic medical care. Similiar to Germany.
This is quite different than blanket coverage regardless of the costs. Not an insurance scheme, but a wealth transfer. Let's call it by its true name. And it is different than allowing some to opt out at the risk of not being elligible for coverage at a later date.
The crime of the US system (yes, I lived and worked there, too) is that a worker can pay into a plan their entire working life, and then find themselves uninsured should they lose their job and have a pre-existing medical problem that prevents them from getting a new job or finding new coverage at an affordable rate. That is a very serious short-coming that needs to be fixed!
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ait until you lose your coverage and have nothing. Then comment.
That will never happen for the simple reason that I joined the plan when I was young and healthy, and now I continue to pay the same premiums as I did back then. Because unlike US plans tied to an employer my private coverage is portable so I take it with me. Plus if I do something risky like off-piste skiing I take additional rescue insurance just in case. It is called looking ahead and being aware of the risks. I can recommend it.
Look I am sorry if your health is failing and you cannot get the treatment you need. That is a failure of the US healthcare system. Surely between 300 million Americans they can design a better one? If they took their ideological blinders off they could pick and choose from a smorgosbord of public and private plans that exist elsewhere in the world and deliver higher levels of care for less money. But then again the USA seems unable to come to terms with many of its problems. So back to square one. Play the blame game.