- Joined
- Nov 26, 2005
- Posts
- 269
- Reaction score
- 5
- Points
- 18
Perhaps but what does that have to do with healthcare?
![]()
My post was on topic...free healthcare.
To register, turn off your VPN; you can re-enable the VPN after registration. You must maintain an active email address on your account: disposable email addresses cannot be used to register.
Perhaps but what does that have to do with healthcare?
![]()
Exactly. Most countries have a combination of publicly financed and privately financed systems. It's not realistic to call any of these systems "free healthcare" just because there's not an out-of-pocket payment at the time of service.Nobody is talking about 'free healthcare'. We are talking 'universal healthcare'. There is a huge difference. Canada has universal healthcare, but it is not free. We pay for it.
The subsidies under Obamacare mean that many receive free health care at the expense of the taxpayers, and by expanding the subsides the system can be expanded to free for most at the expense of a few.Exactly. Most countries have a combination of publicly financed and privately financed systems. It's not realistic to call any of these systems "free healthcare" just because there's not an out-of-pocket payment at the time of service.
Incorrect. About 80% of ACA enrollees get subsidies but still have to pay their share of the premium, generally under $75 per month which, since they are paying a portion of their premium, doesn't meet the definition of "free healthcare".The subsidies under Obamacare mean that many receive free health care at the expense of the taxpayers, and by expanding the subsides the system can be expanded to free for most at the expense of a few.
I don't correct the disinformation for his benefit; I correct it so that the disinformation does not spread.^ He won't get that. He still insists that Canada's healthcare is free. It is not.
The subsidies under Obamacare mean that many receive free health care at the expense of the taxpayers, and by expanding the subsides the system can be expanded to free for most at the expense of a few.
We can be sure that more and more people will be found unable to pay. The subsidies will get higher and higher and the individual payment less and less. More ever more will be required of fewer and fewer taxpayers.I know this will make little difference since you seem to have no compassion for those less fortunate than yourself, but here goes:
1. They are called "subsidies" for a reason. The person pays all that they can afford based upon their income. I know you'd like it that we could possibly extract blood or other bodily fluids from the person but the fact is that many people working working full-time jobs (and sometimes multiples) do not make enough to survive much less pay for "luxuries" like being healthy and living. They pay all that they can based upon a formula that is established to reflect the poverty rates and necessities. The subsidies pay the rest of the premium but the person pays all that they can logically afford.
2. If the person does not have health care, they can still get treatment. Unfortunately, they show up at emergency rooms which cannot (although you and most Republicans would have no problem) throw them on the street and await death's arrival. Instead, hospitals like the one I was president of, provide the necessary treatment in the ER which is the most expensive place that we can deliver care. They also usually have to wait a long time, cause other patients to wait, stress staff, and the outcomes are not the best because they cannot often afford the long term care or treatment necessary to prevent further degradation of their lives. Since they live in poverty, they also cannot pay the bill which the hospital then has to spread across those who pay in cash (fewer and fewer) or who have insurance. The other option, which is being seen in the south (that refused to participate in ACA because of the governors desire to see failure instead of protecting their citizens) is that hospitals then close; particularly smaller, rural hospitals that cannot afford uncompensated care. Thus, we (including you) all pay. If treated in ER, we all pay more and the outcome is far less successful.
And to add to this, the ACA required employers to provide group health insurance if the employer had more than 50 employees. This was a big exemption for small businesses.1. They are called "subsidies" for a reason. The person pays all that they can afford based upon their income....
When the ACA mandates were passed, I always thought it was a mistake that the Democrats didn't weaken EMTALA. There are people who would prefer to pay the $695 penalty instead of buying health insurance. I'm just not sure why hospital EDs should continue to be required to treat patients who don't have insurance even though the law mandates that they have health insurance.2. If the person does not have health care, they can still get treatment. Unfortunately, they show up at emergency rooms which cannot (although you and most Republicans would have no problem) throw them on the street and await death's arrival. Instead, hospitals like the one I was president of, provide the necessary treatment in the ER which is the most expensive place that we can deliver care...
Yes. It is CONSERVATIVE!In the real world it is prudent and conservative.
Before EMTALA, patients would show up in the ED with minor complaints and after triage, they would be referred to their primary care physician or a public health clinic.The mandate is awful and for those who pay the penalty, their uncovered medical expenses are also awful. In ER and our clinic, "first do no harm" should include the client's financial future. We turn no one away. You and I collectively pay these costs...
And to add to this, the ACA required employers to provide group health insurance if the employer had more than 50 employees. This was a big exemption for small businesses.
I have heard several politicians bemoaning the ACA's cost to "small business". I've always questioned whether an employer who had more than 50 employees was still a "small business".
All this gnashing of teeth over the ACA really misses the point that most Americans still get their insurance from their employers and this insurance is still heavily subsidized by employers which gives employees a distorted understanding of the actual cost of their health insurance.
For employees of small businesses, the Marketplace and the government subsidies are a bridge that allows people who work for small businesses to buy affordable insurance that their employer may not be able to provide.
When the ACA mandates were passed, I always thought it was a mistake that the Democrats didn't weaken EMTALA. There are people who would prefer to pay the $695 penalty instead of buying health insurance. I'm just not sure why hospital EDs should continue to be required to treat patients who don't have insurance even though the law mandates that they have health insurance.
The ACA mandate and penalty is not popular but if private hospitals were not required to treat the uninsured, the public's attitude toward the mandate might be different.
The mandate is awful and for those who pay the penalty, their uncovered medical expenses are also awful. In ER and our clinic, "first do no harm" should include the client's financial future. We turn no one away. You and I collectively pay these costs. Universal health care is often called socialism. In the real world it is prudent and conservative.
Yes. It is CONSERVATIVE!
For a nation to be robust and effective, health is very important. An unhealthy nation cannot meet its best potential in the modern world.
Before EMTALA, patients would show up in the ED with minor complaints and after triage, they would be referred to their primary care physician or a public health clinic.
With EMTALA, because of the requirement that patients be assessed and "stabilized" before they could be referred, it pretty much transformed EDs into free clinics regardless of ability to pay. And you're right- the cost for the uninsured is picked up by the insured as part of the overhead costs billed by the hospital.
Under the ACA, all emergency care is considered "in network", so the reimbursement from insurance is guaranteed. If the mandate were effective and everyone had insurance, some of that overhead cost would be eliminated which would lower the cost for everyone.
EMTALA came about because of patient-dumping. Before EMTALA, hospitals didn't want to deal with the large number of uninsured people and the proliferation of preferred-provider networks. If an uninsured patient or out-of-network patient showed up in a hospital ED, the registration staff would look at a patient's insurance status and they would send them to other hospitals without evaluating their condition. Of course, it was no coincidence that for-profit hospitals would send uninsured patients over to not-for-profit hospitals to avoid seeing them.KaraBulut said:Under the ACA, all emergency care is considered "in network", so the reimbursement from insurance is guaranteed. If the mandate were effective and everyone had insurance, some of that overhead cost would be eliminated which would lower the cost for everyone.Interesting idea -- it would allow market forces to work more freely.
EDs have completely restructured the way they do business. Instead of sitting in a waiting room, you can expect that a triage nurse will see you within 15 minutes of arrival. The nurse will assess you and assign you an acuity score that determines who will see you and how fast you will be seen.I remember going to an ER with an injury once only a few years before the ACA. It was in an urban area, near downtown, and the place was a madhouse. I waited over two hours for more than a cursory assessment to establish my priority.
In the last several years I've been to an ER three times, and the longest wait was twelve minutes.
