Quote from: Rerun on March 22, 2010, 08:59:23 PMYou have to answer this:Is Health Care a "Right" or a "Privilege"?If it is a "right" than the government pays for it. If it is a Privilege than you pay for it if you can afford it.Health care is a Right.The Declaration lays out several unalienable rights, one of them being Life. Of which Republicans should have been behind reforming health care while they were in power because the Declarations Right to Life is one of the views that give when it comes to being against abortion.That is why Roe v Wade is so flawed. It violates that principal of the Declaration.
You have to answer this:Is Health Care a "Right" or a "Privilege"?If it is a "right" than the government pays for it. If it is a Privilege than you pay for it if you can afford it.
I have not been impressed on how CMS has served our dialysis population with our last place mortality among the developed nations, now the same road blocks to optimal dialysis will be present for optimal care for all conditions in my opinion. .
Quote from: Hemodoc on March 24, 2010, 03:07:27 PM I have not been impressed on how CMS has served our dialysis population with our last place mortality among the developed nations, now the same road blocks to optimal dialysis will be present for optimal care for all conditions in my opinion. .Who has placed the road blocks to optimal dialysis, and why? What is the exact nature of these roadblocks?Is there anything in the new bill with which you agree?I would be most interested in your picture of the ideal American healthcare system that you think most citizens would support.
Dear MooseMom, I would accept a health care plan that the members of congress, the senate and the President sign up for themselves.
Quote from: Hemodoc on March 24, 2010, 11:07:04 PMDear MooseMom, I would accept a health care plan that the members of congress, the senate and the President sign up for themselves.I wish I had a dollar for every time the President said that what he wanted was for the American people to have exactly that, the same FEHBP that he has. That was not only what he campaigned on, but that's what he was saying up until the final vote last week. Why do you think that is not what we ended up with? Looking at the FEHBP, I don't see anything there that most Americans would not gladly have. In fact, there have been moves in the past to extend the FEHBP to all Americans, but it hasn't happened yet, and I'm not sure why. Of course, since the Federal Government is the employer, that means the Federal Government is subsidizing up to 75% of the premiums, but I don't see why all employers couldn't offer the same sort of package and/or choices. But then what do you do about the self-employed or the small business owners who do not have the numbers of employees that the Federal Government has? If you extend this plan to all Americans, who exactly would be paying that 75% premium subsidy? Not the Federal Government, surely.
Dear MooseMom,I already answered what system I believe has done the best and that is the one in Switzerland.
Dear MooseMom,No one in America is denied treatment in any ER do to economic status or citizenship. It is regulated under legislation called EMTALA and it has very hefty fines that all docs take great care to comply with.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Medical_Treatment_and_Active_Labor_Act