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[#] Sun Jun 22 2014 11:27:38 UTC from zooer

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I had to go through the exchanges to get health insurance after my insurance company left NY. With my new plan
my monthly preiemum and my deductable went up! I just received a letter the other day saying they are applying
for a 17% rate increase! I am so excited! The government will probably approve something less than that and
then government will brag how they saved the consumer from the big bad insurance companies.

[#] Sun Jun 22 2014 13:17:15 UTC from vince-q <vince-q@ns1.netk2ne.net>

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Jun 22 2014 4:27am from zooer @uncnsrd (Uncensored) in Politics & Propaganda>

I had to go through the exchanges to get health insurance after my insurance
company left NY. With my new plan

So you didn't get to "keep your plan." [Big Lie #1]

Now, before answering, make sure you call the provider's office - the online site(s) lie...

Do you get to keep your Doctor? [Big Lie #2]

[#] Sun Jun 22 2014 13:18:35 UTC from vince-q <vince-q@ns1.netk2ne.net>

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Lest we forget....

New York is the state responsible for giving us "Senator Hillary Clinton."
New York is the state currently harboring Scumbag Bill Clinton.

[#] Sun Jun 22 2014 14:28:41 UTC from zooer

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I escaped from NY and was very happy, I came back for family reasons. My family hates NY but why give up all
that misery and complaining for something better?
So far I have been able to keep my doctor, but there isn't a wide choice in this area. With all the practices
that have merged there really isn't a choice.

I am willing to bet that soon your local pharmacy's health clinic will be your first stop in health care. They
will refer you to a doctor if need be.

What bothers me is the people that insist that the ACA is successful.

[#] Sun Jun 22 2014 22:28:04 UTC from IGnatius T Foobar

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It *is* successful. In fact, it's smashingly successful. You're assuming that its goal was better care at less cost. Its actual goal is to fail so miserably that there will be no choice but to replace it with a single-payer system: true socialist medicine. Looked upon with that goal in mind it's doing great.

Vince, you spelled "Hitlery" wrong. One of the reasons I'm moving out of New Castle is so I don't have to deal with living in the same town as her.
She lives here too -- in the village of Crappaqua.

[#] Sun Jun 22 2014 23:15:22 UTC from vince-q <vince-q@ns1.netk2ne.net>

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What bothers me is the people that insist that the ACA is successful.


"People" do not insist on that; "liberals" do.
And never they twain shall meet.

[#] Sun Jun 22 2014 23:40:51 UTC from triLcat

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I didn't really have definite views on socialized medicine until I moved to Israel, and saw how well it works when done right. 

A few caveats: 
1. Medical school is much cheaper here (US$3-4K/year for 7 years)
2. Doctors get paid much less, especially in the early years.
3. There are 4 competing "health funds" all of which are required to provide a certain level of service, and compete for customers by improving on that level of service. (plus each health fund offers supplemental insurance for fairly reasonable prices - $10-$20/month per person)
4. There is a thriving private medical sector, some of which is covered by supplemental insurance - meaning that when the wait for a "public" ophthalmologist was two months (and my son's condition's surgery success rate goes down drastically after the age of 3 months, so we didn't have the time to wait), I was able to get a private appointment within 10 days with the top guy, shell out US$200, and then get back US$150 of it later.  (the fact that the surgery determined that it was a hopeless case... well, that's another story).

I do, however, pay completely privately for my pain specialist, because he offers a treatment that nobody "in network" offers, and it's pretty much the only treatment that is safe long-term and actually works for me.

(Painkillers work, but you can't take 'em forever, and the other fibromyalgia 'on-label' treatments simply didn't work for me, though one of them made me gain 20 lbs very quickly... which would be great if I had started out underweight, I guess)

Not everything is better here, but in the past few weeks, I've been to a number of appointments where 3 or more top doctors consulted on my case at the same time, and I've paid NOTHING out of pocket. (last week, the head of ultrasound, the head of pediatric nephrology, and three other doctors were present for an ultrasound to confirm the diagnosis for my baby - since the kidney condition presents in an extremely unusual way.)

 



[#] Thu Jun 26 2014 21:44:19 UTC from the_mgt

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I am also for socialized health insurance, works well enough here. The only problem is: people visit doctors too often, since they do not have to pay for each visit. Without socialized health, I would be paying for my last treatment in a  hospital for the rest of my life and would probably spend that rest brain damaged. It is kind of a blessing not to worry about the financial risk of getting medical aid.

We pay about 15% of our income for the insurance, people earning less than 840€ all spend about 150€ and if you earn more than 3400€ or so, you still pay as if you earn "only" 3400€. There is also coverage for the case when you need caring due to old age, etc. 15% sounds a lot, but when you know that they simply wont stop to treat you just because you run out of money, it gives you a perspective when you need one badly.



[#] Thu Jun 26 2014 22:10:04 UTC from LoanShark

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1. Medical school is much cheaper here (US$3-4K/year for 7 years)

I don't get it. A chimp could pay his way through med school, but would he learn anything because that money doesn't support the school's budget. Without subsidies.

[#] Thu Jun 26 2014 22:17:59 UTC from triLcat

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The American system unfortunately makes it so that people who can't pay frequently need to use emergency rooms instead of regular doctors, which ends up costing those who can pay lots more.

Here, for example, you pay relatively little to see a regular doctor in his office ($3-4 quarterly), $25 for an urgent-care visit (unless you've broken a bone or similar), and around $200 for an ER visit  (unless you have one of a list of recognized conditions, a referral from your doctor, or something serious enough to get you admitted.)

Basically, the fees involved make people use the minimal care first. 

 



[#] Mon Jun 30 2014 19:48:17 UTC from IGnatius T Foobar

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The American system unfortunately makes it so that people who can't
pay frequently need to use emergency rooms instead of regular
doctors, which ends up costing those who can pay lots more.

The American system makes it so that people who can't pay are encouraged to STIFF THE HOSPITAL FOR THE BILL.

I can fix the problem in one step.

The vast majority of people using the emergency room as a free primary care clinic are illegal immigrants. All we have to do is fix their little ailment and then immediately drop them back into whatever country they illegally came here from, immediately, every single time, no questions asked.

The influx of freeloaders into emergency rooms would immediately stop.

[#] Mon Jun 30 2014 20:18:18 UTC from triLcat

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And those legit American citizens should continue using the ER instead of proper primary care?



[#] Mon Jun 30 2014 20:20:03 UTC from fleeb

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Some of those legit American citizens could find themselves booted out of the country if they can't prove they belong. This could potentially help reduce the overuse of hospitals in general.

[#] Mon Jun 30 2014 23:51:04 UTC from the_mgt

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Why not put them to death as long as they are in the ER? Should be far cheaper, dead bodies could be sent home via simple cargo flights, can stack way more of them into one plane.



[#] Tue Jul 01 2014 14:33:20 UTC from fleeb

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Ah, need refrigerated planes to keep the stench down.

[#] Tue Jul 01 2014 22:44:40 UTC from triLcat

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Thu Jun 26 2014 18:10:04 EDT from LoanShark @ Uncensored
1. Medical school is much cheaper here (US$3-4K/year for 7 years)

I don't get it. A chimp could pay his way through med school, but would he learn anything because that money doesn't support the school's budget. Without subsidies.

Yes - highly subsidized by government. And yes, Israel has excellent doctors graduating from their medical schools.

The thing is that it's cheaper to make medical school subsidized than it is to have to pay doctors enough to pay off absurd debts.

I was talking to a friend who literally couldn't accept a starting position at less than $60K because she has $250K of student loans, and even living as frugally as possible, couldn't even dent the interest with less. 

In Israel, the doctors graduate with no debt at all, and work for peanuts until they prove themselves.

 



[#] Wed Jul 02 2014 17:11:14 UTC from fleeb

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I think the people are getting fed up with illegal immigrants:

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/san-diego-suburb-protests-influx-ille gal-immigrants-article-1.1852056

[#] Wed Jul 02 2014 17:57:04 UTC from LoanShark

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that may be objectively untrue,

https://twitter.com/washingtonpost/status/483067065168060416?utm_source=fb&utm_medium=fb&utm_campaign=JonMLevine&utm_content=483075085817769986

[#] Wed Jul 02 2014 17:57:58 UTC from LoanShark

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(though the question was worded "immigrants" rather than "illegal immigrants", the change in public opinion is striking)

[#] Wed Jul 02 2014 18:59:25 UTC from fleeb

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That's a huge distinction. Illegal immigrants are viewed as a drain on society (rightly or wrongly). Immigrants are not, as they contribute back to society in many ways, and most people have relatively near relatives who themselves are immigrants (grandfather, great grandmother, or the like).

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