• @[email protected]
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    1026 months ago

    Adam Smith, who is considered to be quite the capitalist, said that it is impossible to have a free market if the participants cannot choose not to participate.

    Letting Doctors use the “free market” set medical prices is not only sinful, it is not justifiable by the most originalist economic theory.

    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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      446 months ago

      The ACA was supposed to have a public option that would put a control on the insurance prices. Ideally the public option would be so good that the insurance industry would just wither and die.

      But the health insurance industry, mainly via Joe Lieberman, made sure that was never going to happen.

    • @[email protected]
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      276 months ago

      Letting Doctors use the “free market” set medical prices is not only sinful, it is not justifiable by the most originalist economic theory.

      That’s not even what’s happening. It’s vampire middlemen setting the prices, which is even worse.

    • Zorque
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      96 months ago

      Unfortunately Capitalism by its very nature abhors a free market. Free markets mean more competition, which means less profits. Which is counter to the ideology of capitalism, that being higher profits mean success.

      • @[email protected]
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        76 months ago

        Capitalism is fundamentally unstable and will devolve into monopoly and autocracy if not regulated to prevent it.

  • @[email protected]
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    456 months ago

    You do everything right and still lose it all - our capitalistic system is working exactly the way it is intended.

  • @[email protected]
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    276 months ago

    I hate the US healthcare system so much. So much stress for so many people for so little reason.

    There’s a reason why literally no developed country in the world is imitating that system. It’s broken and it doesn’t work for most people.

  • @[email protected]
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    266 months ago

    If only either political party in America agreed…

    We’re stuck with only a small slice of Dems that even acknowledge our system is fucked.

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      We’re stuck with only a small slice of Dems that even acknowledge our system is fucked.

      Which explains why Bernie Sanders got sacked in their presidential primaries, twice.

      • @[email protected]
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        6 months ago

        That was vague, my bad.

        I might meant a small slice of dem politicians.

        Voters of the Dem party and independents largely support healthcare reform, and even a good amount of Republicans.

        But the party keeps supporting incumbents who don’t represent their voters.

        Just a bunch of old politicians deciding it’s best for all of them to stay in power because they know better than voters.

        • @[email protected]
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          6 months ago

          That was vague, my bad.

          I [meant] a small slice of dem politicians.

          Oh, that was understood.

          And what I meant was that the party itself orchestrated his sacking.

        • TigrisMorte
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          -36 months ago

          The winner of the Primary being supported by the Party is how it is supposed to work. And regardless of your purity and infallibility, there shall remain only two candidates with a viable chance. If fools whining doesn’t damage Biden too much, the winner shall be he. But whine enough and you may suppress turn out enough to elect Fat Joffrey again.

          • @[email protected]
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            6 months ago

            But whine enough and you may suppress turn out enough to elect Fat Joffrey again.

            I could say the same about whiny Democratic partisans trying to pin the blame on leftists yet again despite continuing to offer fuck-all as incentives. “Fuck you, vote for us because you have no real choice” is hardly motivating, assholes!

            • TigrisMorte
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              -26 months ago

              Not a Dem. Just actually paid attention and don’t want fools throwing us to the greater evil simply because they didn’t get their way.

              • Sybil
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                16 months ago

                Anther fantasy about what was stated in an attempt to ignore it as you’ve no leg to stand upon.

          • @[email protected]
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            36 months ago

            The winner of the Primary being supported by the Party is how it is supposed to work

            Agreed.

            Unfortunately the party has that backwards, and a judge agreed with them.

            The winner of the primary is whoever they want it to be. They can influence as much as they want, because at the end of a day it doesn’t even matter who wins the primary. Legally a bunch of unelected donor connected people can name whoever they want.

            But I don’t think I want to get roped in a conversation with you based on your post history

            • TigrisMorte
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              -26 months ago

              False. While they may wield undue influence, there is nothing remotely “rigged” about it.

              My post history is one of treating folks as they treat me. I understand why you don’t wish to have a conversation as you’ve not a leg to stand on, but the only person that could possibly rope you into one is you.

          • Zorque
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            16 months ago

            Ignore “whining” and just assume that Biden is a perfect being with no flaws, and you drive people away.

            I will vote for Biden if I have to. That doesn’t mean I have to accept him as a paragon of progressivism and support for the people. He is, at best a flawed man with flawed ideals. At median he’s a symptom of stagnating politicians scared to lose power.

            Refusing to acknowledge that and force him to better both himself and his party for the sake of the people just leads to more disillusionment and failure.

            I will vote for him, but only because he’s the only option I’m given. I will still push for him to support people and not a political narrative.

            • TigrisMorte
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              -16 months ago

              Anther fantasy about what was stated in an attempt to ignore it as you’ve no leg to stand upon.

  • @[email protected]
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    156 months ago

    I am tired of this. Is anyone actually working on solutions or are we just going to complain?

    What would it take to setup a low cost health care clinic and hospital that is covering it’s marginal costs?

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      There is a current movement called Direct Primary Care, where you sign up to a binding agreement to pay a continuing monthly subscription fee that covers your office visits, and your labs and prescriptions are also discounted. So it’s possible. And it sounds absolutely fantastic upfront.

      But the problem there is that places that do not accept insurance and/or Medicaid and Medicare are also not governed by HIPAA and other state and federal healthcare laws, something most people don’t even know until they find out the hard way. I have a relative who thought DPC was the best thing since sliced bread until she found out that all the strange tests she kept being told she needed were not actually for her, and she was actually being submitted to various clinical trials without her knowledge and against her directly expressed wishes, for symptoms and diseases she’s never even had.

      So now she’s paying for a monthly DPC subscription she can’t use because she’s afraid of them and refuses to go back. They won’t even give her her medical records (not surprising, because that practice is all a clinical trial fraud scam so they’d be a work of fiction anyway). And she doesn’t have a lot of money to start with; she can go to an urgent care place if she needs something immediate, I suppose.

      But if you break a DPC agreement, you have to pay full value for every office visit you ever had, every non-billable service under the agreement, and it gets added up against the monthly subscription fees you’ve been paying. These agreements are written so as to be difficult to break (pick one and look for the following “Termination” language):

      If this agreement is terminated or held to be invalid or unenforceable for any reason, you agree to pay practice an amount equal to the fair market value of the services actually rendered to you during the period of time for which the fees were paid commensurate with prevailing rates in the practice area . . .

      So yeah, DPC is great in theory, as long as in practice it’s not just a front end for some other medical scam, because they lack oversight and are exempt from all the consumer protections built into insurance-oriented laws like HIPAA. There is no recourse with these non-insurance places, because insurance laws are also pretty much the only consumer protection laws with teeth that exist in the doctor-patient relationship, and very few states have any legislative experience with, much less written law, in regard to Direct Primary Care. We’re trying to find an attorney that knows enough about it to be able to assist, but even that’s a challenge.

      I don’t know if fraud was the primary intention of Direct Primary Care, but because of the way it is structured it absolutely attracts the bottom feeders of medical practice who want to pull in otherwise underserved (uninsured, poor, undocumented) patients for some kind of economic exploitation.

        • @[email protected]
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          6 months ago

          Yeah, and it’s still ongoing. She can leave and get hit with an as-yet-unknown fee/bill, or she can stay and not have her own needs addressed but be pressured into carrying on underwriting her own clinical trial eligibility tests.

          She’s terrified of setting foot in there now because when she started to argue she’d never had [whatever] and didn’t need these tests they got really aggressive. Not physical, just verbally hard hitting, like abruptly changing the subject and then coming back around to it two minutes later to insist she needs this, and doing that over and over again, ignoring or twisting anything she tried to say in reply, and this was at the end of a day long fast for blood tests. There’s more, just petty shit like you’d expect from a high-pressure con, but that’s the kind of thing.

          Fortunately the tests she was objecting to were not common, and she has an in-law who is retired from medicine, so when she asked him what was going on and named the tests they wanted he was able to cotton on pretty quickly and at least tell her it had nothing to do with her or her own needs.

          But the only red flag up front was that they have ZERO local reviews. None. They have pay-to-play awards like “best in town” in a local newspaper, and NOTHING else anywhere. That was odd. Now we know why.

          I don’t see how this ends well. She’ll either pay some fat bill or end up in court, none of which has anything to do with the healthcare she signed up for. I wrote all this so that maybe someone thinking about DPC will think twice before they sign up.

          • @[email protected]
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            36 months ago

            Thank you for sharing this story. Things can only change is the abuses are shared with many people.

            I am sorry she is going through this.

        • @[email protected]
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          46 months ago

          That really sounds like some dystopian science fiction novel. But I guess that’s true for a lot of things going on in the US right now.

          • @[email protected]
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            36 months ago

            That really sounds like some dystopian science fiction novel.

            Funny you should say that. When she first told me what was going on, my mind immediately went back to that Robin Cook novel Coma from the 70s, lol.

    • @[email protected]
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      46 months ago

      Probably a justice system where you can’t be sued for 150 bajilion for every time someone slips on wet floor. And where health insurance does not expect you to give them 95% discount because every other hospital does. Among other things.

    • @[email protected]
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      16 months ago

      I don’t know. How would you get around malpractice insurance and deal with the competition that has economy of scale?

      • @[email protected]
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        16 months ago

        Malpractice insurance is not infinitely expensive.

        As for economies of scale, there are not a lot of them. One doctor and one patient.

        • @[email protected]
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          36 months ago

          Ok it isn’t bloody free either. What do you mean there is not a lot of them? Have you been to any clinic the past 30 years? Look at all the gear they got. What about medications? They aren’t going to be able to buy in bulk. It feels like every single doc I have met in my life tried at least once to go into private practice and struggled.

          But hey if these are easy to defeat problems I am all for someone doing it. Open up a clinic and run it at cost and donations. Take no insurance and somehow find a way.

          • @[email protected]
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            6 months ago

            Do you know what “marginal cost” means?

            Edit: that was more aggressive than is helpful.

            Marginal costs capture the costs for helping one more patient, so most of the issues presented are handled. Fix costs cover the cost of equipment that can be reused without additional costs. Fixed costs can be paid for with “one time” money like grants and donations.

          • @[email protected]
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            16 months ago

            Malpractice insurance accounts for about 2.4% of overall healthcare costs in the US. Meanwhile, healthcare costs are going up at around 4% a year. So, let’s assume malpractice never really happens (ha) and we can entirely eliminate that cost by outlawing malpractice suits completely. Great, we just solved half a year of healthcare inflation.

  • @[email protected]
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    106 months ago

    It’s finally working!!! We’re nearly fully incorporated in the profit-machine! I hope the billionaires notice me for a moment so that I can feel like I’m one of them

  • @[email protected]
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    56 months ago

    Here I am. Sitting in a private room with my son at one of the best children’s hospitals in the world. 5 therapy sessions a day. And all I have to worry about is food for me and the wife. I used to bug my dad about moving to Canada. Now I thank him.

  • Zuberi 👀
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    16 months ago

    Just don’t pay your debt, if they send it to collections they’ve broken HIPPA ;)

    • @[email protected]
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      46 months ago

      The Notice of Privacy Practices you sign allows them to share the barebones amount of information for debt

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          This is a pretty big misconcepion as well. When you ask for this per FDCPA (Fair Debt Collection Practices Act), it has to pause the collection process (stopping it from reporting to credit & stopping phone calls while they order it from the hospital), but that may be all it does. Once the IB is sent, collection can continue. It is not a guarenteed way to stop the debt.

          If you want to stop the debt say “I DISPUTE the validity of this debt.” The dispute word is very important here. On top of this also get the name of the agency and the person you’re speaking with, ideally before the dispute word, in case they breach this violation you can sue. You can also sue if they affect your credit after saying you dispute it. It’s very very very rare agencies will follow up with asking for money after using the dispute word because its often too resource intensive for them. After this tell them to not contact you by any means. They legally cannot contact you at this point.

              • Zuberi 👀
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                -16 months ago

                Just don’t pay it, not a thing they can do if they just tell me some arbitrary amount. Try it yourself and you’ll see, it’s not worth their time to collect.

                • @[email protected]
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                  16 months ago

                  They can take from your paycheck, harm your credit score, summon you to court, ban you from certain hospitals if its medical debt, and more.