Good Luck
New member
Did it possibly occur to you that just MAYBE the reason those other countries plans are always in crisis is that the 1/2 per capita expenditures factor you keep touting is INSUFFICIENT to their needs, but are KEPT artificially low by cutting costs through limiting access? While undoubtedly exaggerated, the stories of waiting lists and long lines, which include verified anecdotal evidence, came from somewhere, and are most likely at least partially true as opposed to being completely false.Countries with universal plans have been talking about a crisis since implementing them. When does the government ever say they have plenty of money for a project? .....Opps, I forgot about Cheney. In one interview he said the US had money for war so war was an option with Iraq.
The countries which are talking about a crisis are spending 1/2 of what the US spends. If they budget $3,000/person and the US spends $6,000/person then, sure, they will face a crisis as they haven't allocated sufficient money.
The same thing in Canada. There was a "crisis" in the early 90's. There is a crisis today. Meanwhile, the universal plan in Canada has been in existence since 1968. For over 40 years people have been receiving medical coverage even though a "crisis" is constantly looming.
Furthermore, Canada spends 1/2 of what the US spends. Imagine if Canada's budget was increased 100%.
It's no different than a household budget. If a family budgets $100/wk for groceries and the bill is constantly $120/wk then it's time to cut out the booze and cigarettes and raise the budget to $120/wk.
As long as there is one guy cleaning up a National Park it means there is one more custodian available for a hospital. As long as the government has money to erect a monument it has money for hospital beds. As long as the government has money for the multiple things it's involved in it has money for the ill.
What is more important than looking after our ill and disabled? Well, besides allocating sufficient funds to ensure a high speed internet connection so one can chat with their cyber lover, that is?![]()
And just maybe (to continue your grocery budget analogy) the $120 grocery bill is simply due to the current cost of groceries. What if there are no cigarettes and booze to cut? Do you then replace your economy grind hamburger with peanut butter? And returning back to medicine instead of diet, what is the effect of replacing "hamburger" with "peanut butter"? Can you then continue to claim an equivalent standard of health care?
And one more item while we're on the analysis of budget. Did it occur to you at any time that a large part of the 2X health care expenditures are due to high end "non-necessities" as you describe them, such as private rooms, which you have stated should not be paid for by a public plan? Thus, eliminating the "non-necessities" level expenditures (ie: use minimum level medical coverage and extrapolate) how do U.S. health care expenditures then compare to other nations? You yourself insist that we can keep cost under control by eliminating such luxuries. So why not do so? Provide minimum level coverage, either direct pay via medicaid or government subsidized policies, for those without coverage, and let the rest of the system alone - a system that works quite well when talking about the 85% of the people who have health coverage?