On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote:
Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially.
Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially.
Still no different from the US
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Gorsameth
Netherlands20757 Posts
April 15 2015 00:52 GMT
#36981
On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US | ||
wei2coolman
United States60033 Posts
April 15 2015 00:54 GMT
#36982
On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. | ||
Velr
Switzerland10416 Posts
April 15 2015 00:56 GMT
#36983
On April 15 2015 09:51 Chewbacca. wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 09:41 Toadesstern wrote: On April 15 2015 09:36 Chewbacca. wrote: The statement made was about contribution to R&D, not on a per captia basis. I also suspect that if you expanded that top 10 to top 50 the US would have a lot more additional companies than those other nations and the per capita values would move in a more favorable direction for the US if you actually looked at the post you would have seen that the whole point of it was "yeah if you look at total numbers it looks like the US does a lot more but if you look at per capita or get a couple countries that together make up for 318,9 million people it's pretty average." Noone is denying that the US is spending more money on it than any other country, but the notion that european countries are just freeloading is retarded if you look at the per capita values... In which case, see my point 2. If you expand that list past 10 to show top 50 or top 100 it will shift the $/capita much more in favor of the US. Hell just looking at the "List of Pharmaceutical Companies" page on Wikipedia has the US at 14 of the top 41 companies and Switzerland only has those two in your list. That would still make the US look horrible when compared to Switzerland (10-11 Mio. inhabitants)... Let alone that this is an extremly globalised industry and the country tag of these firms means close to 0 in the "real" world. | ||
Toadesstern
Germany16350 Posts
April 15 2015 00:58 GMT
#36984
On April 15 2015 09:51 Chewbacca. wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 09:41 Toadesstern wrote: On April 15 2015 09:36 Chewbacca. wrote: The statement made was about contribution to R&D, not on a per captia basis. I also suspect that if you expanded that top 10 to top 50 the US would have a lot more additional companies than those other nations and the per capita values would move in a more favorable direction for the US if you actually looked at the post you would have seen that the whole point of it was "yeah if you look at total numbers it looks like the US does a lot more but if you look at per capita or get a couple countries that together make up for 318,9 million people it's pretty average." Noone is denying that the US is spending more money on it than any other country, but the notion that european countries are just freeloading is retarded if you look at the per capita values... In which case, see my point 2. If you expand that list past 10 to show top 50 or top 100 it will shift the $/capita much more in favor of the US. Hell just looking at the "List of Pharmaceutical Companies" page on Wikipedia has the US at 14 of the top 41 companies and Switzerland only has those two in your list. I didn't find a list that had them listed with the country besides them so I copy & pasted the top 10 into google and tried to figure it out myself. So yes I only did the top10 because I don't have unlimited time. Again, while that might be the case it just doesn't seem to be that way as http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/28/5/w969.full claims, and I'm sure I trust them more than my google skills on this. It is widely believed that the United States has eclipsed Europe in pharmaceutical research productivity. Some leading analysts claim that although fewer drugs have been discovered worldwide over the past decade, most are therapeutically important. Yet a comprehensive data set of all new chemical entities approved between 1982 and 2003 shows that the United States never overtook Europe in research productivity, and that Europe in fact is pulling ahead of U.S. productivity. [...] As shown in Exhibit 2⇓, pharmaceutical companies increased their R&D investments in the United States from about a third of the three-country total in 1990 to half in 2000. R&D investment in Europe dropped twelve percentage points during the decade, and investment in Japan declined around two percentage points. Absolute numbers increased everywhere because companies reported a rapid increase in total R&D investments, from 15.9 billion euro (US$22.4 billion) in 1990 to 48.3 billion euro (US$68.0 billion) in 2000. Overall research productivity can be measured by the proportion of new chemical entities to the proportion of R&D investment in the three countries. For example, if U.S. research teams received 33 percent of the budget, they should discover about 33 percent of all NCEs—a ratio of 1.0. By dividing the percentage of all NCEs in Exhibit 1⇑ by the percentage invested, one can see that the United States discovered far fewer NCEs than its proportional share of funding: 0.76 (25.3/33.3) in the first period and 0.75 in the second. Europe’s ratio of all NCEs to investment went from 0.99 in the first period to 1.17 (43.3/36.9) in the second. Japan’s proportionate ratio was the highest: 1.49 in the first period and 1.36 in the second. Okay fine, took the entire list with all the 41 entries in it. US has 14 in it. Added up all the nations in there without China... because let's be honest, china just bloats up everything because of it not being 1st world nation and being in there with such a huge population. That brings the US to 14 out of 40, so 35% while it has 41% of the population of the countries in that list (granted it's unfair because I'm leaving out countries that didn't even make the list) but other countries are "around that" as well. Germany at 7.50% vs 10.8%, UK at 5% vs 8.3%, JP at 25% (!) vs 16.94. It just doesn't look like the US is doing more per capita. All I was asking was how he got the idea that it's Europeans freeloading because neither papers written, money spend nor pharma companies per country seem to support that idea. | ||
Millitron
United States2611 Posts
April 15 2015 01:03 GMT
#36985
On April 15 2015 09:54 wei2coolman wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. Exactly. Like I've said a few times now though, I just don't like this half-and-half system that the ACA is. It's the worst of both worlds. You've got the rationing and taxation of a single payer system with none of the bargaining power. Single-payer or a strong free market a la SK would both be acceptable. | ||
wei2coolman
United States60033 Posts
April 15 2015 01:05 GMT
#36986
On April 15 2015 10:03 Millitron wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 09:54 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. Exactly. Like I've said a few times now though, I just don't like this half-and-half system that the ACA is. It's the worst of both worlds. You've got the rationing and taxation of a single payer system with none of the bargaining power. Single-payer or a strong free market a la SK would both be acceptable. the problem with strong free market regarding serious medical costs would be the leverage that healthcare place get. "oh, i get to leverage your life for payment", is an unfair and unrealistic place to start negotiations from regarding procedures. | ||
{CC}StealthBlue
United States41094 Posts
April 15 2015 01:34 GMT
#36987
BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Idaho officials face a looming deadline to maintain tens of millions of dollars in funding after a bill that would have brought the state into compliance with federal rules was killed when conservative legislators said it would have subjected the state to fundamentalist Islamic law. The state Health Department said Monday that without a revision in the next two months they stand to lose access to programs that process child support payments and track down scofflaws in addition to $46 million in federal payouts. The conflict started last week after a House committee narrowly rejected a bill that had sailed through the Senate after some lawmakers said it would have required Idaho to uphold Sharia law — a contention others said was baseless. State Sen. Sheryl Nuxoll, a Republican from the small northern community of Cottonwood, raised the objection during the House Judiciary and Rules Committee hearing. She testified that the federal law Idaho was adjusting to incorporated provisions of an international agreement regarding cross-border recovery of child-support payments, the Hague Convention on International Recovery of Child Support and Family Maintenance. None of the nearly 80 countries involved in the treaty — which the U.S. entered in 2007 — are under Sharia law. But Nuxoll and other skeptics said their concerns were valid because some nations in treaty informally recognize such courts. They added that the provisions of the deal wouldn't leave Idaho with the authority to challenge another nation's judgment, particularly if it were under hard-line Islamic law. The criticisms tapped into the conservative, and often isolationist, sentiment that can pop up in Idaho's Republican-controlled Statehouse, where lawmakers frequently balk at federal mandates. Source | ||
Millitron
United States2611 Posts
April 15 2015 01:34 GMT
#36988
On April 15 2015 10:05 wei2coolman wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 10:03 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 09:54 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. Exactly. Like I've said a few times now though, I just don't like this half-and-half system that the ACA is. It's the worst of both worlds. You've got the rationing and taxation of a single payer system with none of the bargaining power. Single-payer or a strong free market a la SK would both be acceptable. the problem with strong free market regarding serious medical costs would be the leverage that healthcare place get. "oh, i get to leverage your life for payment", is an unfair and unrealistic place to start negotiations from regarding procedures. Except in a true free market, there are other providers out there willing to do the treatment for less. I wouldn't consider a monopoly a free market. | ||
coverpunch
United States2093 Posts
April 15 2015 01:36 GMT
#36989
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wei2coolman
United States60033 Posts
April 15 2015 01:36 GMT
#36990
On April 15 2015 10:34 Millitron wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 10:05 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 10:03 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 09:54 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. Exactly. Like I've said a few times now though, I just don't like this half-and-half system that the ACA is. It's the worst of both worlds. You've got the rationing and taxation of a single payer system with none of the bargaining power. Single-payer or a strong free market a la SK would both be acceptable. the problem with strong free market regarding serious medical costs would be the leverage that healthcare place get. "oh, i get to leverage your life for payment", is an unfair and unrealistic place to start negotiations from regarding procedures. Except in a true free market, there are other providers out there willing to do the treatment for less. I wouldn't consider a monopoly a free market. Just because the option of "sucks less" vs "sucks more", is not exactly moral high ground when it comes to dealing with the finances of medical care. also considering the # of hospitals per locale, it's like the stupid as fuck argument regarding internet price gouging from ISP's "oh you have the right to choose!", when in reality you're lucky to have 2 different companies providing internet at your location. | ||
Jormundr
United States1678 Posts
April 15 2015 01:42 GMT
#36991
On April 15 2015 10:34 Millitron wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 10:05 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 10:03 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 09:54 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. Exactly. Like I've said a few times now though, I just don't like this half-and-half system that the ACA is. It's the worst of both worlds. You've got the rationing and taxation of a single payer system with none of the bargaining power. Single-payer or a strong free market a la SK would both be acceptable. the problem with strong free market regarding serious medical costs would be the leverage that healthcare place get. "oh, i get to leverage your life for payment", is an unfair and unrealistic place to start negotiations from regarding procedures. Except in a true free market, there are other providers out there willing to do the treatment for less. I wouldn't consider a monopoly a free market. Healthcare is intrinsically not a true free market. How the hell is someone with a serious problem going to have a reasonable degree of choice, which is the basis for a true free market? | ||
Millitron
United States2611 Posts
April 15 2015 01:51 GMT
#36992
On April 15 2015 10:42 Jormundr wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 10:34 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 10:05 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 10:03 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 09:54 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. Exactly. Like I've said a few times now though, I just don't like this half-and-half system that the ACA is. It's the worst of both worlds. You've got the rationing and taxation of a single payer system with none of the bargaining power. Single-payer or a strong free market a la SK would both be acceptable. the problem with strong free market regarding serious medical costs would be the leverage that healthcare place get. "oh, i get to leverage your life for payment", is an unfair and unrealistic place to start negotiations from regarding procedures. Except in a true free market, there are other providers out there willing to do the treatment for less. I wouldn't consider a monopoly a free market. Healthcare is intrinsically not a true free market. How the hell is someone with a serious problem going to have a reasonable degree of choice, which is the basis for a true free market? There can be more than one provider. Sure, you don't exactly have much of a choice of whether to pay for services at all or not, but you can decide which provider gets your patronage. As long as there is true competition between providers, no collusion or price-fixing bullshit, it can still be a free market. On April 15 2015 10:36 wei2coolman wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 10:34 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 10:05 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 10:03 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 09:54 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. Exactly. Like I've said a few times now though, I just don't like this half-and-half system that the ACA is. It's the worst of both worlds. You've got the rationing and taxation of a single payer system with none of the bargaining power. Single-payer or a strong free market a la SK would both be acceptable. the problem with strong free market regarding serious medical costs would be the leverage that healthcare place get. "oh, i get to leverage your life for payment", is an unfair and unrealistic place to start negotiations from regarding procedures. Except in a true free market, there are other providers out there willing to do the treatment for less. I wouldn't consider a monopoly a free market. Just because the option of "sucks less" vs "sucks more", is not exactly moral high ground when it comes to dealing with the finances of medical care. also considering the # of hospitals per locale, it's like the stupid as fuck argument regarding internet price gouging from ISP's "oh you have the right to choose!", when in reality you're lucky to have 2 different companies providing internet at your location. I live in a pretty small town. Around 2000 people. There's only around 30,000 people within a half-hour drive in any direction. Even I have access to dozens of primary care physicians, 3 hospitals, and several smaller clinics. You'd need a significantly smaller community to run into monopolies a la ISP's. And in that case, it'd be such a small community that any price-gouging doctor would be the most hated guy in town. The community would solve the issue with probably not totally legal means. He'd be bullied and publicly shamed into being less of a dick. | ||
wei2coolman
United States60033 Posts
April 15 2015 01:53 GMT
#36993
On April 15 2015 10:51 Millitron wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 10:42 Jormundr wrote: On April 15 2015 10:34 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 10:05 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 10:03 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 09:54 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. Exactly. Like I've said a few times now though, I just don't like this half-and-half system that the ACA is. It's the worst of both worlds. You've got the rationing and taxation of a single payer system with none of the bargaining power. Single-payer or a strong free market a la SK would both be acceptable. the problem with strong free market regarding serious medical costs would be the leverage that healthcare place get. "oh, i get to leverage your life for payment", is an unfair and unrealistic place to start negotiations from regarding procedures. Except in a true free market, there are other providers out there willing to do the treatment for less. I wouldn't consider a monopoly a free market. Healthcare is intrinsically not a true free market. How the hell is someone with a serious problem going to have a reasonable degree of choice, which is the basis for a true free market? There can be more than one provider. Sure, you don't exactly have much of a choice of whether to pay for services at all or not, but you can decide which provider gets your patronage. As long as there is true competition between providers, no collusion or price-fixing bullshit, it can still be a free market. except, in emergencies there is no choice. | ||
JonnyBNoHo
United States6277 Posts
April 15 2015 02:22 GMT
#36994
On April 15 2015 10:42 Jormundr wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 10:34 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 10:05 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 10:03 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 09:54 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. Exactly. Like I've said a few times now though, I just don't like this half-and-half system that the ACA is. It's the worst of both worlds. You've got the rationing and taxation of a single payer system with none of the bargaining power. Single-payer or a strong free market a la SK would both be acceptable. the problem with strong free market regarding serious medical costs would be the leverage that healthcare place get. "oh, i get to leverage your life for payment", is an unfair and unrealistic place to start negotiations from regarding procedures. Except in a true free market, there are other providers out there willing to do the treatment for less. I wouldn't consider a monopoly a free market. Healthcare is intrinsically not a true free market. How the hell is someone with a serious problem going to have a reasonable degree of choice, which is the basis for a true free market? Usually laws and norms are set up to get you around those issues. Once you're on an airplane you're a hostage, but they don't shake you down for a safe landing. | ||
wei2coolman
United States60033 Posts
April 15 2015 02:25 GMT
#36995
On April 15 2015 11:22 JonnyBNoHo wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 10:42 Jormundr wrote: On April 15 2015 10:34 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 10:05 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 10:03 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 09:54 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. Exactly. Like I've said a few times now though, I just don't like this half-and-half system that the ACA is. It's the worst of both worlds. You've got the rationing and taxation of a single payer system with none of the bargaining power. Single-payer or a strong free market a la SK would both be acceptable. the problem with strong free market regarding serious medical costs would be the leverage that healthcare place get. "oh, i get to leverage your life for payment", is an unfair and unrealistic place to start negotiations from regarding procedures. Except in a true free market, there are other providers out there willing to do the treatment for less. I wouldn't consider a monopoly a free market. Healthcare is intrinsically not a true free market. How the hell is someone with a serious problem going to have a reasonable degree of choice, which is the basis for a true free market? Usually laws and norms are set up to get you around those issues. Once you're on an airplane you're a hostage, but they don't shake you down for a safe landing. I dunno... they've been progressively nickel' and dining passengers pretty hard... | ||
cLutZ
United States19551 Posts
April 15 2015 02:26 GMT
#36996
On April 15 2015 09:26 Toadesstern wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 08:22 cLutZ wrote: On April 15 2015 08:15 Stratos_speAr wrote: On April 15 2015 04:43 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 04:40 JonnyBNoHo wrote: Pharmaceutical spending is ~10% of healthcare spending. Even if we were subsidizing the rest of the world, you're talking small potatoes in the grand scheme of things. General medical equipment suffers from the same problems. Why does an X-ray cost hundreds? It takes seconds, and doesn't use anything up. The answer is the company that builds X-ray machines price gouges, and hospitals are forced to pass that cost on to the customer. As someone said before, this price gouging has no relevance to European health care. It's not like Big Pharma/medical device companies keep prices in Europe low just because they get a profit in the U.S. They don't just say, "Oh, we're making enough money, let's be nice to Europe". They don't make nearly as much in Europe because the system doesn't allow them to. The U.S. just needs to get with the program instead of allowing itself to be owned by corporations to such a degree. Thats one option. IMO the US should try to pressure European countries to pay more. So, you know, in 50 years we don't have the same healthcare as we have in 2020. they wouldn't sell in Europe if they didn't make some kind of profit in Europe, they just make a lot more in the US, I give you that. And as already stated, your idea that the US does a lot more than European countries in R&D seems to be wrong from what google tells me: http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/general/383301-us-politics-megathread?page=1846#36905 If anything, the US amount of papers published is pretty average in comparison to the other 8-9 countries in that list if we take the non-1st-word-nations out while articles like http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/28/5/w969.full seem to say that the money invested into R&D isn't what you're implying it's like either. Top 10 pharma companies seem to be: Show nested quote + # / Company / 2014 ($m) / country 1 / Novartis / 47101 / Swiss 2 / Pfizer / 45708 / US 3 / Roche / 39120 / Swiss 4 / Sanofi / 36437 / French 5 / Merck & Co. / 36042 / US 6 / Johnson & Johnson / 32313 / US 7 / GlaxoSmithKline / 29580 / UK 8 / AstraZeneca / 26095 / UK 9 / Gilead Sciences / 24474 / US 10 / Takeda / 20446 / JP which doesn't seem to support that standpoint either if my google skills are to be trusted (google always linked be to the german pages of those... but I think I got it correctly?) I mean you can always argue that giving them as much money as possible would be best because that means more profit and thus more R&D but I don't think that's how it goes. So the approach to cut spending in half (if forbes is correct) while keeping the quality you have right now and move on from there seems to be reasonable. If they don't get enough money anymore they'll raise prices all over the world, including Europe The country where the ownership of a company resides has, literally, nothing to do with my argument. Nor does it matter where the Research and Development happens. The only thing I am talking about is the potential profits that incentivize the companies to take on that risk. IMO the US bears a disproportionate amount of that cost because countries like Germany (they are the worst offender I know of) basically say "this is the price, take it or leave it" and since they already invested the money years ahead of time, and that price is greater than the marginal cost of manufacturing and distributing the drug, they would be fools not to take it. Plus, if all the drug companies banded together to prevent the country from doing this (which is actually rational, and necessary to counteract the monopoly of the state) they would obviously lose in court because its an illegal cartel. They'd probably lose patent rights in the case, so it would all be for naught regardless. | ||
coverpunch
United States2093 Posts
April 15 2015 02:27 GMT
#36997
In 2013, President Obama promised that before any U.S. drone strike, “there must be near-certainty that no civilians will be killed or injured.” Death by Drone questions whether he has kept that promise. The report casts serious doubt on whether the United States’ “near-certainty” standard is being met on the ground, and whether the U.S. is complying with international law. The nine case studies documented in this report provide credible evidence that U.S. airstrikes have killed and injured Yemeni civilians. Which contrasts with this case in Dallas, in which the administration decided not to kill a target over the objections of the CIA, Pentagon, and Congress, even though drones had several opportunities. It's not clear in that case why the administration and DOJ opposed killing him and why the other groups were so angry that they did not. | ||
Stratos_speAr
United States6959 Posts
April 15 2015 03:28 GMT
#36998
On April 15 2015 10:34 Millitron wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 10:05 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 10:03 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 09:54 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. Exactly. Like I've said a few times now though, I just don't like this half-and-half system that the ACA is. It's the worst of both worlds. You've got the rationing and taxation of a single payer system with none of the bargaining power. Single-payer or a strong free market a la SK would both be acceptable. the problem with strong free market regarding serious medical costs would be the leverage that healthcare place get. "oh, i get to leverage your life for payment", is an unfair and unrealistic place to start negotiations from regarding procedures. Except in a true free market, there are other providers out there willing to do the treatment for less. I wouldn't consider a monopoly a free market. Monopolies are often the direct result of a free market. | ||
Toadesstern
Germany16350 Posts
April 15 2015 03:37 GMT
#36999
On April 15 2015 11:26 cLutZ wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 09:26 Toadesstern wrote: On April 15 2015 08:22 cLutZ wrote: On April 15 2015 08:15 Stratos_speAr wrote: On April 15 2015 04:43 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 04:40 JonnyBNoHo wrote: Pharmaceutical spending is ~10% of healthcare spending. Even if we were subsidizing the rest of the world, you're talking small potatoes in the grand scheme of things. General medical equipment suffers from the same problems. Why does an X-ray cost hundreds? It takes seconds, and doesn't use anything up. The answer is the company that builds X-ray machines price gouges, and hospitals are forced to pass that cost on to the customer. As someone said before, this price gouging has no relevance to European health care. It's not like Big Pharma/medical device companies keep prices in Europe low just because they get a profit in the U.S. They don't just say, "Oh, we're making enough money, let's be nice to Europe". They don't make nearly as much in Europe because the system doesn't allow them to. The U.S. just needs to get with the program instead of allowing itself to be owned by corporations to such a degree. Thats one option. IMO the US should try to pressure European countries to pay more. So, you know, in 50 years we don't have the same healthcare as we have in 2020. they wouldn't sell in Europe if they didn't make some kind of profit in Europe, they just make a lot more in the US, I give you that. And as already stated, your idea that the US does a lot more than European countries in R&D seems to be wrong from what google tells me: http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/general/383301-us-politics-megathread?page=1846#36905 If anything, the US amount of papers published is pretty average in comparison to the other 8-9 countries in that list if we take the non-1st-word-nations out while articles like http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/28/5/w969.full seem to say that the money invested into R&D isn't what you're implying it's like either. Top 10 pharma companies seem to be: # / Company / 2014 ($m) / country 1 / Novartis / 47101 / Swiss 2 / Pfizer / 45708 / US 3 / Roche / 39120 / Swiss 4 / Sanofi / 36437 / French 5 / Merck & Co. / 36042 / US 6 / Johnson & Johnson / 32313 / US 7 / GlaxoSmithKline / 29580 / UK 8 / AstraZeneca / 26095 / UK 9 / Gilead Sciences / 24474 / US 10 / Takeda / 20446 / JP which doesn't seem to support that standpoint either if my google skills are to be trusted (google always linked be to the german pages of those... but I think I got it correctly?) I mean you can always argue that giving them as much money as possible would be best because that means more profit and thus more R&D but I don't think that's how it goes. So the approach to cut spending in half (if forbes is correct) while keeping the quality you have right now and move on from there seems to be reasonable. If they don't get enough money anymore they'll raise prices all over the world, including Europe The country where the ownership of a company resides has, literally, nothing to do with my argument. Nor does it matter where the Research and Development happens. The only thing I am talking about is the potential profits that incentivize the companies to take on that risk. IMO the US bears a disproportionate amount of that cost because countries like Germany (they are the worst offender I know of) basically say "this is the price, take it or leave it" and since they already invested the money years ahead of time, and that price is greater than the marginal cost of manufacturing and distributing the drug, they would be fools not to take it. Plus, if all the drug companies banded together to prevent the country from doing this (which is actually rational, and necessary to counteract the monopoly of the state) they would obviously lose in court because its an illegal cartel. They'd probably lose patent rights in the case, so it would all be for naught regardless. you could make that argument for any market. Why don't we tripple the prices of cars to make sure we get better cars in the future with the added money the car companies will put into R&D that way? I'm not sure it works that way On April 15 2015 10:34 Millitron wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 10:05 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 10:03 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 09:54 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. Exactly. Like I've said a few times now though, I just don't like this half-and-half system that the ACA is. It's the worst of both worlds. You've got the rationing and taxation of a single payer system with none of the bargaining power. Single-payer or a strong free market a la SK would both be acceptable. the problem with strong free market regarding serious medical costs would be the leverage that healthcare place get. "oh, i get to leverage your life for payment", is an unfair and unrealistic place to start negotiations from regarding procedures. Except in a true free market, there are other providers out there willing to do the treatment for less. I wouldn't consider a monopoly a free market. except that there isn't really a choice if you're in the ER and it's a matter of minutes. You can't pick another provider because you'd be dead before you get there... | ||
Millitron
United States2611 Posts
April 15 2015 04:27 GMT
#37000
On April 15 2015 12:37 Toadesstern wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 11:26 cLutZ wrote: On April 15 2015 09:26 Toadesstern wrote: On April 15 2015 08:22 cLutZ wrote: On April 15 2015 08:15 Stratos_speAr wrote: On April 15 2015 04:43 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 04:40 JonnyBNoHo wrote: Pharmaceutical spending is ~10% of healthcare spending. Even if we were subsidizing the rest of the world, you're talking small potatoes in the grand scheme of things. General medical equipment suffers from the same problems. Why does an X-ray cost hundreds? It takes seconds, and doesn't use anything up. The answer is the company that builds X-ray machines price gouges, and hospitals are forced to pass that cost on to the customer. As someone said before, this price gouging has no relevance to European health care. It's not like Big Pharma/medical device companies keep prices in Europe low just because they get a profit in the U.S. They don't just say, "Oh, we're making enough money, let's be nice to Europe". They don't make nearly as much in Europe because the system doesn't allow them to. The U.S. just needs to get with the program instead of allowing itself to be owned by corporations to such a degree. Thats one option. IMO the US should try to pressure European countries to pay more. So, you know, in 50 years we don't have the same healthcare as we have in 2020. they wouldn't sell in Europe if they didn't make some kind of profit in Europe, they just make a lot more in the US, I give you that. And as already stated, your idea that the US does a lot more than European countries in R&D seems to be wrong from what google tells me: http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/general/383301-us-politics-megathread?page=1846#36905 If anything, the US amount of papers published is pretty average in comparison to the other 8-9 countries in that list if we take the non-1st-word-nations out while articles like http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/28/5/w969.full seem to say that the money invested into R&D isn't what you're implying it's like either. Top 10 pharma companies seem to be: # / Company / 2014 ($m) / country 1 / Novartis / 47101 / Swiss 2 / Pfizer / 45708 / US 3 / Roche / 39120 / Swiss 4 / Sanofi / 36437 / French 5 / Merck & Co. / 36042 / US 6 / Johnson & Johnson / 32313 / US 7 / GlaxoSmithKline / 29580 / UK 8 / AstraZeneca / 26095 / UK 9 / Gilead Sciences / 24474 / US 10 / Takeda / 20446 / JP which doesn't seem to support that standpoint either if my google skills are to be trusted (google always linked be to the german pages of those... but I think I got it correctly?) I mean you can always argue that giving them as much money as possible would be best because that means more profit and thus more R&D but I don't think that's how it goes. So the approach to cut spending in half (if forbes is correct) while keeping the quality you have right now and move on from there seems to be reasonable. If they don't get enough money anymore they'll raise prices all over the world, including Europe The country where the ownership of a company resides has, literally, nothing to do with my argument. Nor does it matter where the Research and Development happens. The only thing I am talking about is the potential profits that incentivize the companies to take on that risk. IMO the US bears a disproportionate amount of that cost because countries like Germany (they are the worst offender I know of) basically say "this is the price, take it or leave it" and since they already invested the money years ahead of time, and that price is greater than the marginal cost of manufacturing and distributing the drug, they would be fools not to take it. Plus, if all the drug companies banded together to prevent the country from doing this (which is actually rational, and necessary to counteract the monopoly of the state) they would obviously lose in court because its an illegal cartel. They'd probably lose patent rights in the case, so it would all be for naught regardless. you could make that argument for any market. Why don't we tripple the prices of cars to make sure we get better cars in the future with the added money the car companies will put into R&D that way? I'm not sure it works that way Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 10:34 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 10:05 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 10:03 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 09:54 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. Exactly. Like I've said a few times now though, I just don't like this half-and-half system that the ACA is. It's the worst of both worlds. You've got the rationing and taxation of a single payer system with none of the bargaining power. Single-payer or a strong free market a la SK would both be acceptable. the problem with strong free market regarding serious medical costs would be the leverage that healthcare place get. "oh, i get to leverage your life for payment", is an unfair and unrealistic place to start negotiations from regarding procedures. Except in a true free market, there are other providers out there willing to do the treatment for less. I wouldn't consider a monopoly a free market. except that there isn't really a choice if you're in the ER and it's a matter of minutes. You can't pick another provider because you'd be dead before you get there... Emergency care can be like the police or fire department. But as soon as you're stable enough to make the trip you get shipped off to the provider of your choice. On April 15 2015 12:28 Stratos_speAr wrote: Show nested quote + On April 15 2015 10:34 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 10:05 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 10:03 Millitron wrote: On April 15 2015 09:54 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:52 Gorsameth wrote: On April 15 2015 09:50 wei2coolman wrote: On April 15 2015 09:48 IgnE wrote: You can still get the minor operation if your insurance denies the claim. You just have to pay yourself. Unless you're a 2% or 1%, that's pretty much out of the question, at least financially. Still no different from the US And this is why US's healthcare system is fucking dumb. lol. though I suspect it would be less dumb if average income in the US was a lot higher, along with changes in spending culture, but that's somewhat low on the list of reasons why US healthcare system isn't working. I mean, ideally millitron's ideal healthcare system would be mirror the free market plastic surgery, and surgical cosmetic industry of South Korea, where procedures are extremely cheap due to strong free market competition, the problem is, even with such competitive market, it's still limited to lower middle class and up to afford these procedures. Exactly. Like I've said a few times now though, I just don't like this half-and-half system that the ACA is. It's the worst of both worlds. You've got the rationing and taxation of a single payer system with none of the bargaining power. Single-payer or a strong free market a la SK would both be acceptable. the problem with strong free market regarding serious medical costs would be the leverage that healthcare place get. "oh, i get to leverage your life for payment", is an unfair and unrealistic place to start negotiations from regarding procedures. Except in a true free market, there are other providers out there willing to do the treatment for less. I wouldn't consider a monopoly a free market. Monopolies are often the direct result of a free market. But they themselves are not a free market. I think Teddy Roosevelt was pretty awesome for busting trusts. | ||
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