What if the cost reduction projects made by independent studies were right..?
What if a repeal would actually be BAD for America..?
The nightmare continues
http://www.latimes.com/business/hiltzik ... story.html



This is what healthcare costs, checked out incomes for doctors, nurses, and administrators much.. and we are fat, out of shape, eat bullshit, smoke, and drink as if there ain't no tomorrow, well maybe we are right, but we flock to the E-room with our kiddie-pots and every snivvel, get our guts stapled, need our tickers repaired, livers pampered, kidneys replaced, and cancer tortured, and they just go..clenz wrote:Our deductible is now 10k
Monthly premium is now over 700, up over 200 a month in the last year and a half, and will go up massively again. The insurance plan that goes with it? Well they don't layout a single thing until we've hit 10k out of pocket. No co-pay on visits. We pay 100% of everything
Essentially we pay about 9 grand per year just to have insurance, to avoid whatever that goes with not having it, so that our insurance company will let us pay our own medical costs.
Basically we have to pay, minimum, 19k per year before our insurance will actually insure us. That 19k is barely, and I mean barely, a 5 digit number from my take home per year. Doesn't leave much room for other bills, does it
Thanks Obama.

Wedgebuster wrote:This is what healthcare costs, checked out incomes for doctors, nurses, and administrators much.. and we are fat, out of shape, eat bullshit, smoke, and drink as if there ain't no tomorrow, well maybe we are right, but we flock to the E-room with our kiddie-pots and every snivvel, get our guts stapled, need our tickers repaired, livers pampered, kidneys replaced, and cancer tortured, and they just go..clenz wrote:Our deductible is now 10k
Monthly premium is now over 700, up over 200 a month in the last year and a half, and will go up massively again. The insurance plan that goes with it? Well they don't layout a single thing until we've hit 10k out of pocket. No co-pay on visits. We pay 100% of everything
Essentially we pay about 9 grand per year just to have insurance, to avoid whatever that goes with not having it, so that our insurance company will let us pay our own medical costs.
Basically we have to pay, minimum, 19k per year before our insurance will actually insure us. That 19k is barely, and I mean barely, a 5 digit number from my take home per year. Doesn't leave much room for other bills, does it
Thanks Obama.
CHA-CHING!!

We don't have high health care costs because of the burden of obesity. We have high health care costs because everything is so focking expensive because of how the market of health care is structured. We've got a system with no competition and no real incentives to keep costs low. People get charged outrageous amounts of money for procedures and drugs that should be cheaper than they are. And we have a shortage of doctors. Any profession where you can turn away clients or customers as doctors do with patients with certain payers you know you need more providers to bring costs down.∞∞∞ wrote:I really think investing in a tough national push for better foods and a healthier lifestyle will pay dividends long-term, even possibly paying people (or giving tax cuts) to live better. Companies which have implemented such measures cut or significantly curbed their healthcare costs.
Wedgie is correct; we can only blame the ADA so much before looking at ourselves as a society.

And check out what ambulance chasing malpractice attorneys make from what you pay in premiums & co pays that end up in their pockets via medical malpractice oremiums to pay out lawsuits & settlements..Wedgebuster wrote:This is what healthcare costs, checked out incomes for doctors, nurses, and administrators much.. and we are fat, out of shape, eat bullshit, smoke, and drink as if there ain't no tomorrow, well maybe we are right, but we flock to the E-room with our kiddie-pots and every snivvel, get our guts stapled, need our tickers repaired, livers pampered, kidneys replaced, and cancer tortured, and they just go..clenz wrote:Our deductible is now 10k
Monthly premium is now over 700, up over 200 a month in the last year and a half, and will go up massively again. The insurance plan that goes with it? Well they don't layout a single thing until we've hit 10k out of pocket. No co-pay on visits. We pay 100% of everything
Essentially we pay about 9 grand per year just to have insurance, to avoid whatever that goes with not having it, so that our insurance company will let us pay our own medical costs.
Basically we have to pay, minimum, 19k per year before our insurance will actually insure us. That 19k is barely, and I mean barely, a 5 digit number from my take home per year. Doesn't leave much room for other bills, does it
Thanks Obama.
CHA-CHING!!

And medical malpractice attorneys..kalm wrote:Wedgebuster wrote:
This is what healthcare costs, checked out incomes for doctors, nurses, and administrators much.. and we are fat, out of shape, eat bullshit, smoke, and drink as if there ain't no tomorrow, well maybe we are right, but we flock to the E-room with our kiddie-pots and every snivvel, get our guts stapled, need our tickers repaired, livers pampered, kidneys replaced, and cancer tortured, and they just go..
CHA-CHING!!
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But you forgot incomes for insurance company executives.
...and their fancy pants brokers and agents....

BDKJMU wrote:And medical malpractice attorneys..kalm wrote:
![]()
But you forgot incomes for insurance company executives.
...and their fancy pants brokers and agents....

Some good points here. Show me the free market example of how costs are controlled for a life or death service. I'm genuinely curious.Pwns wrote:We don't have high health care costs because of the burden of obesity. We have high health care costs because everything is so focking expensive because of how the market of health care is structured. We've got a system with no competition and no real incentives to keep costs low. People get charged outrageous amounts of money for procedures and drugs that should be cheaper than they are. And we have a shortage of doctors. Any profession where you can turn away clients or customers as doctors do with patients with certain payers you know you need more providers to bring costs down.∞∞∞ wrote:I really think investing in a tough national push for better foods and a healthier lifestyle will pay dividends long-term, even possibly paying people (or giving tax cuts) to live better. Companies which have implemented such measures cut or significantly curbed their healthcare costs.
Wedgie is correct; we can only blame the ADA so much before looking at ourselves as a society.
Of course the POS "Affordable" Care Act does nothing to address any of that, it just brings in people with pre-existing conditions and brings up out-of-pocket costs for everyone else. It's a crap "reform" law based on a bunch of lies and the illiterate public ate it up, as John Gruber states in a more politically-correct way.

When you need emergency care, obviously you can't take the time to shop and compare. But most of the time it's not something where minutes count. When you need to have an appendix removed if you were to ask for an estimate from a hospital you would get laughed at. When I need to make a claim from car insurance I have to get multiple estimates, and if I didn't it would be very easy for people who do collision repair to charge outrageous amounts of money and the person making the claim won't care because they don't have any skin in the game. No reason why something comparable can't be done in health care, especially in larger cities where you have multiple providers.kalm wrote: Some good points here. Show me the free market example of how costs are controlled for a life or death service. I'm genuinely curious.

Good points.Pwns wrote:When you need emergency care, obviously you can't take the time to shop and compare. But most of the time it's not something where minutes count. When you need to have an appendix removed if you were to ask for an estimate from a hospital you would get laughed at. When I need to make a claim from car insurance I have to get multiple estimates, and if I didn't it would be very easy for people who do collision repair to charge outrageous amounts of money and the person making the claim won't care because they don't have any skin in the game. No reason why something comparable can't be done in health care, especially in larger cities where you have multiple providers.kalm wrote: Some good points here. Show me the free market example of how costs are controlled for a life or death service. I'm genuinely curious.
And regarding drugs, yeah, that whole situation with Martin Shkreli and his sham pharmaceutical company and the AIDS drug is also an example of how drug makers get protected from any competition and are allowed to gouge people for whatever price they please.





I thought you quit drinkingChizzang wrote:What if the Affordable Care Act actually ends up working...?
What if the cost reduction projects made by independent studies were right..?
What if a repeal would actually be BAD for America..?
The nightmare continues
http://www.latimes.com/business/hiltzik ... story.html

No, no.AZGrizFan wrote:Cost my company money on day one.
Cost employees hours, as we had to keep them under 30 hours to avoid having to provide healthcare benefits to part timers.

It shouldn't be your employer's responsibility to provide you with health insurance.Cluck U wrote:No, no.AZGrizFan wrote:Cost my company money on day one.
Cost employees hours, as we had to keep them under 30 hours to avoid having to provide healthcare benefits to part timers.
Cleets says it is all OK.
He'll soon put up some graph about how Costco is doing well and everyone is earning $15 per hour.
And skelly will put up some graph about how Walmart is using our gubmint to provide healthcare and other benefits to Walmart's employees.
Of course it's our fault! If you eat and live like shit then don't surprised when you have so many medical problems and require 15 medications. Ailments, like Diabetes, have been known to be reversed when a healthy diet and exercise become the lifestyle. The body will break down and there are things that we can't avoid. Our food supply is full of so much crap that girls are reaching puberty at age 7 or 8. Our food supply is genetically modified and pumped full of steroids and other hormones that it's not a wonder we aren't more fucked up.∞∞∞ wrote:I really think investing in a tough national push for better foods and a healthier lifestyle will pay dividends long-term, even possibly paying people (or giving tax cuts) to live better. Companies which have implemented such measures cut or significantly curbed their healthcare costs.
Wedgie is correct; we can only blame the ADA so much before looking at ourselves as a society.

Our company is an anomaly trip. You have no idea what the vast majority of people pay for insurance. We haven't had a real increase in well over 10-15 years.∞∞∞ wrote:I really think investing in a tough national push for better foods and a healthier lifestyle will pay dividends long-term, even possibly paying people (or giving tax cuts) to live better. Companies which have implemented such measures cut or significantly curbed their healthcare costs.
Wedgie is correct; we can only blame the ADA so much before looking at ourselves as a society.
andy7171 wrote:Our company is an anomaly trip. You have no idea what the vast majority of people pay for insurance. We haven't had a real increase in well over 10-15 years.∞∞∞ wrote:I really think investing in a tough national push for better foods and a healthier lifestyle will pay dividends long-term, even possibly paying people (or giving tax cuts) to live better. Companies which have implemented such measures cut or significantly curbed their healthcare costs.
Wedgie is correct; we can only blame the ADA so much before looking at ourselves as a society.
I totally understand our company is an anomaly, but I still think health care costs can be cut down if overall our society becomes...healthier. I personally like what our company has done. Costs have risen very little, I'm living healthier, and I get $$$ to boot (great incentive).andy7171 wrote:Our company is an anomaly trip. You have no idea what the vast majority of people pay for insurance. We haven't had a real increase in well over 10-15 years.∞∞∞ wrote:I really think investing in a tough national push for better foods and a healthier lifestyle will pay dividends long-term, even possibly paying people (or giving tax cuts) to live better. Companies which have implemented such measures cut or significantly curbed their healthcare costs.
Wedgie is correct; we can only blame the ADA so much before looking at ourselves as a society.
