The ACA doesn't fund health care! Are you serious Bill?Just because it doesn't fund 100% of health care does not in any sense diminish the expansion the public sector health care nor the new subsidies on the exchanges nor shunting more from the private sector into the government sponsored exchanges.In addition, you are overlooking the massive takeover and of the ENTIRE health care system which is NOW controlled by the government. If you cannot understand the socialistic nature of the entire ACA, there is little point in further discussion.In addition, it is getting tiresome to read your absurd and false insults against me in almost all of your responses. Bill, if you wish to discuss politics, you have stated on many occasion you enjoy that so let's talk politics if you wish. I have not ventured into trading insults against you in response to yours simply because I still respect your friendship and your contributions mentoring me in blogging and introducing me to those in dialysis advocacy.
Sorry Rocker, it appears you don't understand what socialism really is which is probably not surprising since most folks don't understand the concept of socialism.
Rocker, simply because the government does not yet own the bricks for all of the health care facilities does not in the least prevent you from understanding how the ACA is moving from a capitistic/individualistic system to a collectivist/government controlled system. The exchanges are paving the way for a single payer system in that all of the private insurers are dictated to on coverage details in large part eliminating competition between the different insurance companies. Competition as you must be aware is one of the hallmarks of capitalism.
In addition, you are ignoring the impact of ACO's on the current fee for practice, i.e., private practice that has put the final nail in the coffin eliminating this last vestige of capitalism in American medical practice. And yes, it is the ACA that brings this into place:The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) authorizes the use of Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) to improve the safety and quality of care and reduce health care costs in Medicare. The ACO program – a voluntary program – began on January 1, 2012. This is not a demonstration project or pilot, it creates a new entity, an ACO that can directly contract with Medicare.
I'm not commenting on your discussion, but doesn't every government have to have a certain degree of socialism? If the government doesn't control anything wouldn't that be anarchy? The government owns the police dept., fire dept., libraries, etc. So why is the government owning the healthcare system any different than them owning the fire dept.?I'm sincerely interested in peoples opinion. I'm not a political person and I don't understand where or why the line is drawn. From what I have read, there hasn't ever been a pure capitalist or socialist government.
No one yelling Rocker, just simply putting forth historical and political truths. You seem to be ignorant of the founding fathers separation of powers between the Feds and the States. Just because a community has fire and police does not make that socialistic. What is your definition of socialism my friend. I believe you are confused on what is socialism and what is simply a community service provided by that community and often done as a VOLUNTARY UNPAID service. That is before unions came into being.
Please explain how a community that comes together, democratically votes and provides for their own protection through police, fire, streets, water and sewer is a political synthesis of progressively going from a capitalistic society to a communist society?
The irony is that now you are arguing that all of these basic services are "socialistic" while Bill and Rocker are alleging the ACA is NOT socialistic. You folks are now opposing each others arguments. So how can fire, police and sewer services be socialistic and the ACA is not?
Please explain how a community that comes together, democratically votes and provides for their own protection through police, fire, streets, water and sewer
"you are arguing that all of these basic services are "socialistic"
You folks are now opposing each others arguments. So how can fire, police and sewer services be socialistic and the ACA is not?
I understand your point about the police being an extension of the rule of law. However, it seems like the fire dept. could just as easily be run by a business for profit which would make it capitalistic, but it is instead run by the government which would be socialist. The same for public library's and other services. I guess I just don't see what the big deal about putting labels on things is about. Shouldn't things really be about what works best not arguing over philosophy.
obsidianom, I love you! YES, YES and YES! The media makes it sound like most physicians hate medicare and for a while no docs would accept Medicare patients. Then I think they realized that "at least they got paid" from Medicare. I LOVE when I get my EOB on one month of dialysis and the submitted charges are $65K and they get $3k. What ARE they thinking? If they put what they WANT they will get it? It does not cost $65 thousand dollars a month for ME to be on dialysis. You know...all I want is TRUTH in BILLING! Don't lie!
Your question: "if they put what they want, will they get it?", highly depends on the insurer. I was always on private insurance when I was on dialysis, both home and in-center. My insurance company billed $3500 per treatment ($70,000 per month) and received around $950 per treatment. So what does it really cost to provide dialysis? What Medicare reimburses? What the provider bills? Somewhere in between? I agree that truth in billing is necessary. Especially for those who are on the hook for the 20% that their insurer does not cover. I want to cover my costs, I don't want to be gouged.Quote from: Rerun on September 02, 2013, 08:25:17 AMobsidianom, I love you! YES, YES and YES! The media makes it sound like most physicians hate medicare and for a while no docs would accept Medicare patients. Then I think they realized that "at least they got paid" from Medicare. I LOVE when I get my EOB on one month of dialysis and the submitted charges are $65K and they get $3k. What ARE they thinking? If they put what they WANT they will get it? It does not cost $65 thousand dollars a month for ME to be on dialysis. You know...all I want is TRUTH in BILLING! Don't lie!
Your question: "if they put what they want, will they get it?", highly depends on the insurer. I was always on private insurance when I was on dialysis, both home and in-center. My insurance company billed $3500 per treatment ($70,000 per month) and received around $950 per treatment. So what does it really cost to provide dialysis? What Medicare reimburses? What the provider bills? Somewhere in between? I agree that truth in billing is necessary. Especially for those who are on the hook for the 20% that their insurer does not cover. I want to cover my costs, I don't want to be gouged.
Docs in this nation have always taken care of the patient and worried about getting reimbursed later.
QuoteDocs in this nation have always taken care of the patient and worried about getting reimbursed later.For emergencies, yes. Broken bone, heart attack, stroke - immediate treatment followed by payment if possible.But, docs (via a system of gatekeepers that prevents the doc from personally turning down anyone directly, it's all done by minions) routinely refuse lifesaving treatment unless payment is secured in advance (notice how the insurance card is verified on the way in, not out ... and many docs offices insist on the copay before you are seen). Try getting a doc to worry about getting paid later it you need to get a melanoma checked out, or have lung cancer and want to schedule a resection. The big article on medical rates discussed someone showing up at the MD Anderson cancer center in TX for treatment and being made to wait while the staff verified his check would clear.