thrustbucket
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[quote name='dmaul1114']It's a tough issue for me on some levels.
But really, in the end it comes down to the fact that health insurance shouldn't be a big profit industry. It should be essentially a non-profit giving people medical care that every human being should have access to. And premiums should be at the point to just cover expenses and save up some money to have a nest egg for rainy days and unexpected increases in costs etc.
And the bigger part is cutting down health care, which has also become all about money and getting rich vs. doing the job to help people, and thus you have a lot of unecessary surgerys and other procedures done just to put more insurance money in the doctors pocket, vs. saving expensive procedures for last resorts when all other cheaper options have been exhausted.
So honestly, I don't have much problem with a public option that drives costs down. Insurance shouldn't be about multi million or billion dollar profits making the executives super rich. It should be about running a system that gives every working person affordable access to health care with premiums set at a level to operate at a small profit.
Though I do understand the skepticism people have about the ability of the government to do that.
My only concern is to do it right and get a system that works like Frances, and not get a system that is bogged down like Canada's and some other countries. Though honestly, I'm willing to put up with longer waits on non-emergency care if it means more people have access to health care.[/QUOTE]
So do you believe that once people in the medical industry are not making nearly as much as they are (which would have to happen if what you said came to pass), we'd still have enough people wanting to go to 12 years of school to be in that field to provide good care?
It's a serious question. I honestly don't know the answer.
It's a careful juggle; of course there are always going to be people that are truly altruistic, will sacrifice, and want to help people for whatever pay. But how many people will leave or not enter the medical fields once it's really not nearly as lucrative?
But really, in the end it comes down to the fact that health insurance shouldn't be a big profit industry. It should be essentially a non-profit giving people medical care that every human being should have access to. And premiums should be at the point to just cover expenses and save up some money to have a nest egg for rainy days and unexpected increases in costs etc.
And the bigger part is cutting down health care, which has also become all about money and getting rich vs. doing the job to help people, and thus you have a lot of unecessary surgerys and other procedures done just to put more insurance money in the doctors pocket, vs. saving expensive procedures for last resorts when all other cheaper options have been exhausted.
So honestly, I don't have much problem with a public option that drives costs down. Insurance shouldn't be about multi million or billion dollar profits making the executives super rich. It should be about running a system that gives every working person affordable access to health care with premiums set at a level to operate at a small profit.
Though I do understand the skepticism people have about the ability of the government to do that.
My only concern is to do it right and get a system that works like Frances, and not get a system that is bogged down like Canada's and some other countries. Though honestly, I'm willing to put up with longer waits on non-emergency care if it means more people have access to health care.[/QUOTE]
So do you believe that once people in the medical industry are not making nearly as much as they are (which would have to happen if what you said came to pass), we'd still have enough people wanting to go to 12 years of school to be in that field to provide good care?
It's a serious question. I honestly don't know the answer.
It's a careful juggle; of course there are always going to be people that are truly altruistic, will sacrifice, and want to help people for whatever pay. But how many people will leave or not enter the medical fields once it's really not nearly as lucrative?