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  1. #1
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
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    Ok, we’re a buncha geniuses here at SpursTalk.com. Lets figure this out.

    Let's run with the premise that our contemporary healthcare model is morbidly damaged and needs repair/reform/destruction. Pick your poison.

    My take. The current healthcare model has failed because Health Insurance morphed into something it was never intended to be. As a tool of risk apportionment, profit, above what was necessary to sustain it's organization, was not a primary motive. But over the centuries, it has become commoditized....just like pork bellies and FCOJ. Now, it is seemingly impossible to remove or strip away the multigenerational layers of this commoditization (Did I just make up that word?) by legislative fiat. We, and by we, I mean the consumer across a couple of centuries, have melded insurance to a commodity. We accomplished this by creating the market for HMO models where the insurance company now covers the routine visits and medications. It wasn't always that way, but it is now and we're largely responsible for it.

    The fix. Is reform a zero-sum game? I think it should not be. A public option, as it's been structured thus far, would kill off the private insurers over time.....and while many believe this to be a good thing, eliminating an entire industry generally never is. That belief is also held by those that are currently quite content with their healtcare plan.

    It seems to me that it's fatally counterproductive to consider that approach...the either/or. However, what's to keep us from structuring them in a progession of care? Let the public option take the role of an HMO...let it handle the routine appointments...the prescriptions and outpatient services such as physical therapy. Let the private sector handle the large ticket items...specialists...the surgeries...the ongoing therapies...etc. Free the private sector from the costs and expense of serving as an HMO and let them go back to being what they once were...tools to apportion risk..with the caveat that they cannot deny pre-existing conditions and that they will tier their pricing. With the cost reductions, we should demand an equal reduction in premiums. This in turn reduces the cost of both private and public options by sharing the populations.

    Ok. There's what I consider a starting point. What's wrong with it?

    Figure it out, braniacs.

  2. #2
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    "would kill off the private insurers over time.."

    a great idea. The current for-profit health insurance industry is a subsidized racket.

    Expanding Medicare to everybody will cause the for-profit insurance industry to shrink, one estimate is by 70%. For-profit insurance companies exist in countries with national plans.

    Instead of employer's contributing to for-profit insurance greed, employers contribute all the same money to Medicare.

    "That belief is also held by those that are currently quite content with their healtcare plan."

    You mean employed people on their employer's plan?

    80% never use it for serious expenses, and most them pay 25% for for down to nothing for it, and none of them pay income taxes on the benefit (thank you, Hated Big Govt). What's not to love?

  3. #3
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
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    Simple.

    1) Add a medicaid tax to what is called payroll taxes. Set it at maybe 2% to start with. Everyone pays, so everyone can access it.

    2) Extend current medicate coverage to every legal resident in the USA, up to a point where they can pay for insurance themselves. Then it goes to a sliding scale for payments.

    3) Coverage will include a free annual check up and other service as needed with a small copay.

    4) the initial 2% will be adjusted as needed to cover all medicaid costs.

  4. #4
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
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    boutons, I don't know whether you're an old, forgotten Turing program left running on a 386 machine in the basement of UT's computer science building, or just a wheels-off anarchist that would run Gary Busey for President.

  5. #5
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    Teysha darling, just for you, GFY

  6. #6
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
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    Teysha darling, just for you, GFY
    ROFL...Gary Busey in 2012 it is!

  7. #7
    Cogito Ergo Sum LnGrrrR's Avatar
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    What about a plan to reduce claims of malpractice? That seems to be a big puzzle piece in our current problem.

  8. #8
    Displaced 101A's Avatar
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    a great idea. The current for-profit health insurance industry is a subsidized racket.
    What makes insurance company's profit a "racket"?

    Is a doctor's profit a "racket".

    How about a Hospitals?

    A drug company's or a pharmacy's?

    How about a nursing home, or a ho e center?

    A farmer? (how dare he make a profit providing food)

    Or a builder? (same thing, except for shelter)

    All of the Healthcare industries profits, plus the salaries of their CEO's couldn't run Medicaid for two days!

    Profit isn't the problem.

    Sick people and expensive cures (or expensive non-cures) ARE.

  9. #9
    Scrumtrulescent
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    1. Start taxing junk food and alcohol like we tax cigarettes.
    2. Take those tax proceeds and divvy them up amongst everyone with a social security number. Proceeds to be paid into individual health savings accounts which individuals can use to help pay for their health care expenses.
    3. Remove legislation that's keeping out foreign prescription drug compe ion.
    4. Tort reform.
    5. Tell hospitals and emergency rooms to turn away anyone who doesn't have insurance, or can't pay cash for the services to be provided, with the obvious exception of someone who's life is in imminent danger.
    6. No public option, but the government would be allowed to set up their own insurer, provided that the govt's program would be funded solely through member premiums. No support from income or payroll taxes.

  10. #10
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    "What about a plan to reduce claims of malpractice"

    a complete red herring. Tort reform is bull . Frivolous claims are a tiny percentage of total claims, like cadillac-drving welfare queens/welfare fraud is a tiny percentage of total welfare payments.

    About 100K deaths due to avoidable medical errors, and probably several 100K injured for same reason.

    How about reducing medical malpractice, then the suits for medical malpractice will automatically come down. aka, solve the problem, not the symptom.

  11. #11
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
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    What about a plan to reduce claims of malpractice? That seems to be a big puzzle piece in our current problem.
    I agree. The hard part is separating what is a legitimate claim from frivolous. We have to start by acknowledging that any procedure or drug my have unintended cir stances. We can only sue if fault can be clearly demonstrated, and not on su ion. Maybe have a third party interview all medical persons involved with a polygraph to establish if there is fault to assign. Many jobs have you acknowledge you may be subjected to a polygraph for employment. Let's add that to medical prac ioners. Let's stop the practice of people suing unless cause is established.

  12. #12
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    Amazing, Wild Goober proposing to raise payroll taxes.

    In the right direction, so everybody pays, but wimpily timid.

  13. #13
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
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    So how much has tort reformed lowered health care costs in Texas?

  14. #14
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
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    So how much has tort reformed lowered health care costs in Texas?
    Not much if any. Studies that I've read (I'm looking for them now) show that tort related costs are between 3-10% of healtchare expenditures. Now that aint chicken scratch, but it's not the big ticket issue many believe it to be.

  15. #15
    Scrumtrulescent
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    Not much if any. Studies that I've read (I'm looking for them now) show that tort related costs are between 3-10% of healtchare expenditures. Now that aint chicken scratch, but it's not the big ticket issue many believe it to be.
    True, but that doesn't mean tort reform shouldn't be part of the solution though. I haven't seen anyone provide any evidence as to how we'd all be better off by not doing it.

  16. #16
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
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    Amazing, Wild Goober proposing to raise payroll taxes.

    In the right direction, so everybody pays, but wimpily timid.
    I am not opposed to all taxation. I am fine with flat taxation. When everyone who votes is paying if they work, then I trust people will make better and more responsible voters. I am against taxes that have nearly half the voters having a say in who we elect, but pay no taxes, then vote for the people who promise them benefits.

    How is it timid?

    I have in the past, acknowledging Social Security will fail us, proposed we mandate a pay raise to give all workers the employers share of SS/medicare, then taking everyone the approximate 15.3%. Call it a social tax, and everyone pays. No exception. When government wants/needs to raise or lower taxes, this tax gets raised or lowered, and the income tax structure remains unchanged.

    Everyone has a stake in the system that way. Equal suffrage.

  17. #17
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
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    1. Start taxing junk food and alcohol like we tax cigarettes.
    2. Take those tax proceeds and divvy them up amongst everyone with a social security number. Proceeds to be paid into individual health savings accounts which individuals can use to help pay for their health care expenses.
    3. Remove legislation that's keeping out foreign prescription drug compe ion.
    4. Tort reform.
    5. Tell hospitals and emergency rooms to turn away anyone who doesn't have insurance, or can't pay cash for the services to be provided, with the obvious exception of someone who's life is in imminent danger.
    6. No public option, but the government would be allowed to set up their own insurer, provided that the govt's program would be funded solely through member premiums. No support from income or payroll taxes.
    I like #3, #4. I don't want to tax junk food....most of the time it's cheap food and that hits the wrong segment of the population too hard. Kinda like the flat tax.
    Subs ute WC's idea of a 2% (+- .5%) payroll tax. Then proceed with your point #2. I'd be curious to see what this would total.

  18. #18
    Scrumtrulescent
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    I like #3, #4. I don't want to tax junk food....most of the time it's cheap food and that hits the wrong segment of the population too hard. Kinda like the flat tax.
    Subs ute WC's idea of a 2% (+- .5%) payroll tax. Then proceed with your point #2. I'd be curious to see what this would total.
    There's no arguing the point that obesity is a major factor in driving up our health costs, so why not hit up that segment of the population for the increased costs their behavior is going to put on the health care system?

    Also, I wholeheartedly disagree with the premise that lower income Americans can't afford to make healthy choices when it comes to food. If you can afford a combo meal every day you can afford to go to a grocery store and buy something healthier.

  19. #19
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
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    There's no arguing the point that obesity is a major factor in driving up our health costs, so why not hit up that segment of the population for the increased costs their behavior is going to put on the health care system?

    Also, I wholeheartedly disagree with the premise that lower income Americans can't afford to make healthy choices when it comes to food. If you can afford a combo meal every day you can afford to go to a grocery store and buy something healthier.
    You're only hitting one side of the junk food problem, tho. The consumers. Why not the suppliers as well? Yeah, it'll likely get passed on to the consumers, but if they offered a healthier item, it would automatically have a better margin.

  20. #20
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
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    You're only hitting one side of the junk food problem, tho. The consumers. Why not the suppliers as well? Yeah, it'll likely get passed on to the consumers, but if they offered a healthier item, it would automatically have a better margin.
    How about instead of food stamps, we do like WIC does. They send you a check like paper that lists what you buy. Cereal, cheese, milk, etc. The items are rung up then the amount placed on the check, and the supermarket gets reimbursed. Make people getting government assistance only able to use them for government approved foods. No junk food. Now if people have the money to buy McDonald's, etc. Let them. If you restrict them to only healthy food paid for with other people's money, then more I'm sure will use their spare money for other choices besides fast food.

  21. #21
    Cogito Ergo Sum LnGrrrR's Avatar
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    How about instead of food stamps, we do like WIC does. They send you a check like paper that lists what you buy. Cereal, cheese, milk, etc. The items are rung up then the amount placed on the check, and the supermarket gets reimbursed. Make people getting government assistance only able to use them for government approved foods. No junk food. Now if people have the money to buy McDonald's, etc. Let them. If you restrict them to only healthy food paid for with other people's money, then more I'm sure will use their spare money for other choices besides fast food.
    Hm.. I think that'd be a good idea. If you go on the government dole, then you shouldn't (theoretically) balk at eating the foods the government says you have to eat.

    It would also give motivation to those who want to eat some junk food once in a while.

  22. #22
    Scrumtrulescent
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    You're only hitting one side of the junk food problem, tho. The consumers. Why not the suppliers as well? Yeah, it'll likely get passed on to the consumers, but if they offered a healthier item, it would automatically have a better margin.
    The suppliers only supply what the consumers want. I think it would be much more effective to hit the consumers directly and force them to acknowledge exactly why they're paying more for their junk food, as opposed to just hiding that cost behind all the other factors that get buried into a supplier's cost. When consumers start demanding healthier food the suppliers will be more than eager to provide it to them.

  23. #23
    NBAChamp..to be Continued SpurNation's Avatar
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    There's another aspect of health care costs that doesn't get discussed much throughout the nation but is one of the largest contributors to it's esculated cost.

    That is the free health care already in place paid by tax dollars, private insurance premiums and losses in the industry due to illegal allien care.

    Also, I already pay to support free loading welfare recipients who by the most part have no intention on giving up their monthly government checks and food stamp cards just to have to actually sustain a job.

    Unless these areas of government waste are addressed and corrected...I see no way that "government" health assistance is going to function any more proficient.

    It should remain as a free enterprise system but...I would condone government regulations throughout the entire health care industry including rate regulations and subsidation amongst Physicians, Hospitals, Pharmeceutical Companies, Insurance Companies and by all means Tort Reform.

  24. #24
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
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    Hm.. I think that'd be a good idea. If you go on the government dole, then you shouldn't (theoretically) balk at eating the foods the government says you have to eat.

    It would also give motivation to those who want to eat some junk food once in a while.
    Yep. It's pretty bad when you can have a vending machine business under the table. Buy your products with food stamps, and keep your vending machines full, pocketing the cash, tax free.

  25. #25
    Veteran jack sommerset's Avatar
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    We need to start gathering all the illegals up and sending them home. If a business hired illegals they need to be fined to the point they never hire another one. Put a cap on lawsuits. If the person who took a doctor to civil court loses that person needs to be fined and his/her lawyer as well. It's a start.

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