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From: scott
Subject: Re: Seemingly they don't understand the concept of winter tires
Date: 4 Mar 2008 03:13:57
Message: <47cd04c5@news.povray.org>
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> Also, some places will not treat you unless you have a prescription from a
> doctor... ie, you might have a problem getting a baby ultrasound if a
> doctor does not call for it. That's the choice for the place, and
> possibly a restriction for accepting insurance covered people.
Yeh, if you are in the public system here in Germany (well in Bavaria at
least), you need to get referred from your normal doctor before you go to
see a specialist. Or you can just pay 10 euro ;-) It's the same in the UK
I think, you can't just make an appointment with a specialist, your normal
doctor must do it for you.
> It has its problems, yes. And some people leave the US to go to other
> countries to get different care. Just as some people come to the US to
> get different care.
I don't think it's the level of care that is the problem, just the cost of
the system.
> I know a specific example where a person with eye cancer came the the US
> to get treatment that would allow him to keep his eye. His only option in
> Canada was to lose the eye.
Yeh, well it's the same in the UK for the public system, they have a finite
amount of money from taxes so they can't go around fixing everything the
expensive way. If they cured everyone with eye cancer rather than removing
the eye, they probably wouldn't have enough money to save some other peoples
lives. But, you can always go to a private doctor yourself and pay for
whatever treatment you want, isn't that possible in Canada?
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From: Tom Austin
Subject: Re: Seemingly they don't understand the concept of winter tires
Date: 4 Mar 2008 09:28:35
Message: <47cd5c93@news.povray.org>
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scott wrote:
>
> Yeh, if you are in the public system here in Germany (well in Bavaria at
> least), you need to get referred from your normal doctor before you go
> to see a specialist. Or you can just pay 10 euro ;-) It's the same in
> the UK I think, you can't just make an appointment with a specialist,
> your normal doctor must do it for you.
>
Another health insurance option in the US is HMO (Health Maintenance
Organization) - which is similar to what you describe.
Typically you have a primary care physician that directs your care. You
have to get prior approval before you can go/do anything else.
HMO's here have a bad reputation because of some things that have gone
on in the system. Doctors are pressured and even rewarded for referring
less patients to expensive specialists (hmmm... is that in the best
interest of the patient.) I've heard horror stories about care that is
denied and denied and finally in the end when it is approved it is too late.
But the HMO scenario is different from what you described in that in the
US it is all capitalistic driven - profit is put ahead of people's lives
and wellness.
OTOH
The PPO and Traditional plans, you can make an appointment with a
specialist on your own without a referral. It's just certain procedures
that require a prescription from a doctor - kinda like a prescription
for narcotic medicine.
>> It has its problems, yes. And some people leave the US to go to other
>> countries to get different care. Just as some people come to the US
>> to get different care.
>
> I don't think it's the level of care that is the problem, just the cost
> of the system.
>
I agree, the level of care isn't the problem. I think it does vary from
location to location (even in the same country), but it isn't the issue
with this.
I think it is also the available of choices that drive people to
different countries. I know that people will go to Mexico from the US
to get certain treatments that are either hard to get or illegal in the US.
>
> Yeh, well it's the same in the UK for the public system, they have a
> finite amount of money from taxes so they can't go around fixing
> everything the expensive way. If they cured everyone with eye cancer
> rather than removing the eye, they probably wouldn't have enough money
> to save some other peoples lives. But, you can always go to a private
> doctor yourself and pay for whatever treatment you want, isn't that
> possible in Canada?
>
My understanding is that while you can do it, it can take a long time
and may be complex to do it. hence go to a country where it is readily
available and quicker.
To bring this back closer to topic....
From an financial point of view, if I were in an accident, I would
prefer to be in a different country than the US. In the US I would have
to deal with insurance companies for the property damage. I would have
to deal with insurance companies for the medial costs. Sometimes there
are hidden medical problems that surface years later that you now have
to pay for because the insurance stuff is all done.
From a very narrow point of view...
So, in the US system, it is better to ban studded tires and save the
road. The government saves the tax dime while the people pay the
private medical care as a result of the accident.
In Finland, or many other countries where there is medicine paid by
taxes, the government saves the tax dime by allowing studded tires
because it saves on the medical expenses that is also covered by tax.
Anyhow.... enjoy whatever snow is left in the season.
Tom
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From: Darren New
Subject: Re: Seemingly they don't understand the concept of winter tires
Date: 4 Mar 2008 22:45:15
Message: <47ce174b$1@news.povray.org>
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Tom Austin wrote:
> I think that a lot of them need to be called "stupidities".
Or "greedy selfishisms."
--
Darren New / San Diego, CA, USA (PST)
"That's pretty. Where's that?"
"It's the Age of Channelwood."
"We should go there on vacation some time."
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From: Tom Austin
Subject: Re: Seemingly they don't understand the concept of winter tires
Date: 5 Mar 2008 08:18:51
Message: <47ce9dbb$1@news.povray.org>
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Chambers wrote:
> Tom Austin wrote:
>> Here is the US the cost for tax money is much lower because so many
>> things are not government run - health care, rescue and ambulance, tow
>> truck service, etc...
>
> Tom, "the people" end up paying, whether its through taxes, or insurance
> hikes, or higher healthcare rates...
>
> No matter what happens, "someone" has to pay, and that "someone" is
> usually you and I.
>
Notice that I was specific to taxes - government taxes.
That does not mean that our total costs are lower.
Tom
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From: Tom Austin
Subject: Re: Seemingly they don't understand the concept of winter tires
Date: 5 Mar 2008 08:20:47
Message: <47ce9e2f$1@news.povray.org>
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scott wrote:
>>> Would you choose that 60 million people
>>> were all delayed by an extra 30 minutes every day to save one single
>>> life?
>>
>> Yes?
>
> Because you are looking at the problem selfishly and not the whole
> system. Of course, if you said to an individual that if they were forced
> to wait an extra 30 minutes every day to save a life, they might say
> yes. But goverments need to look at the whole system in order to make a
> decision, try the following:
>
> How much would someone have to pay you if it meant you lost 30 minutes
> each day to being stuck in traffic?
>
> Ask 60 million people that question and add up all their answers, what
> do you think the total would be? I'd guess around $10 per person on
> average, so say $600 million.
>
> A hospital near you wants to buy some new piece of equipment that will
> save more lives than the old bit. It's very expensive, let's say it
> will save an extra 10 lives, and costs 10 million dollars.
>
> So, what you are effectively saying is that you'd rather waste $600m of
> peoples time, to avoid having to spend $1m to save a single life. Good
> job you aren't an economic adviser for your government ;-)
>
> BTW you can substitute the hospital equipment for anything that puts a
> value on human life. Actually, whenever you buy or use anything that is
> not 100% safe, you are putting a value on your life.
>
>
here is something related
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/03/05/crashes.costs.ap/index.html
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