mike777, on 2012-July-12, 20:23, said:
Advocates keep making the same mistake over and over again, you either dont quote studies or you quote studies that simply are thought to be faulty for many reasons.
I am happy to provide some studies, there are approximately a billion. However, to facilitate this process, we first need to define the principles that you want to see in understanding what makes a healthcare system 'effective' - as a starting point I would suggest
A) Cost per capita
B) Patient Satisfaction (for people admitted to hospital or present at an ER, measuring the satisfaction of people who don't use the healthcare system's satisfaction with it is a pointless exercise in futility).
C) Some measure of quality. This is the most difficult to measure so I would like your thoughts. If it's population health measures I need you to understand that the drivers of this are diet and smoking rates which mask the small differences in outcomes between the healthcare systems. If it's delivery of WHO recommended care, I will note that no study has been performed other than a single one which says there is no difference between the NHS and the USA.
Please note: No country in the OECD has as large a population as the USA. If smaller countries are not legitimate examples, there is no evidence that can pursade you.
If you have some other set of preferred principles please suggest them. It is impossible to proceed until it is clear what factors would satisfy you prior to gathering information.
blackshoe, on 2012-July-12, 20:43, said:
Which step?
A. Not wearing helmets increases medical costs
B. Not wearing helmets is unauthorized in my country
C. At-least 40% of medical costs of motorcycle accidents are covered by the public or written off as loses by care providers regardless of jurisdiction
D. The remaining 40% or more is covered directly or indirectly by taxpayers and healthcare users (US numbers, higher in oz).
E. If costs are covered by taxpayers that results in increased tax burden
F. If costs are covered by care providers they amortise the loss over other patients, resulting in increased costs for healthcare users
G. I am a taxpayer and healthcare user
H. Therefore I pay for the medical care of people who have motorcycle accidents without a helmet
I. Non consensual re-purposing of funds is 'embezzlement'
J. Embezzlement is colloquially known as theft.
K. As this re-purposing of my funds is unauthorized (by the accident haver), they are committing theft.
blackshoe, on 2012-July-12, 20:44, said:
If "America should be like Europe" were a true statement, our ancestors would not have revolted against George III.
This is insane. I presume you are going to stop pasteurising milk? Just because colonial imperialism is bad, all products of Europe ever are bad? Amazing.
Of course, people are really defending this system, so I guess things are beyond help?
Quote
CBS news
Some have been forced in this economy to drop their pricey medical insurance. A Loomis man without coverage says first responders forced him to the hospital after his motorcycle crash. Now he faces more than $40,000 in bills he doesn’t feel he should have to pay.
It was a cool summer’s day in August when Terry Barth was out riding his Harley in Plumas County. The winding country road in front of him took an unexpected turn. Thrown off his bike, Terry was roughed up and hit his head. When the paramedics arrived, he says he declined treatment.
“I said i told you i can’t go, I don’t have insurance,” he recalls.
Against his wishes, he says they loaded him up anyway.
“And I was still yelling the words in the ambulance, I can’t go. I told you I can’t go.”
Rushed to a hospital in Quincy against his will, doctors then loaded Terry into an air ambulance to Enloe Medical Center in Chico which was the closest trauma center. Terry learned he suffered a concussion and a broken bone around his eye. Against doctor’s orders, he walked out of the hospital and went home only to get slapped with bills totalling more than $40,000 for the care he says he never wanted.
“I was kidnapped, i felt,” he said.
So if you say no, you don’t want to go to the hospital, do they have to listen?
“Yes and no is the answer to that question,” said Sacramento Fire Paramedic Jonathan Burgess.
He says normally it is the patient’s decision, but if you have a head injury like Terry had, or if you’re intoxicated or having a diabetic emergency, first responders are required to make that decision for you. Otherwise they can be held liable if something happens to you later.
“Your license is at jeopardy for patient abandonment, if you show up to a person in need of care and you don’t take them to the hospital,” Burgess said.
Terry doesn’t think he owes a penny and feels someone else should pay the blistering bill.
“Who forced me to go when i said no. I just know if they had listened to me, I wouldn’t have a bill.”