That "outcome" is in the ballpark of 5 years difference. Most analysts give a +/- margin of that much.
That's not a sample analysis. This is a population analysis that does not have a margin of error.
That "outcome" is in the ballpark of 5 years difference. Most analysts give a +/- margin of that much.
A lot more would come if they could afford it, but not many middle class people can afford to come to the US and pay for surgeries or cancer treatments in cash (which can run into the six figures or more).
And haven't we learned by now that Washington bureaucrats would spend a lot more than that to run socialized medicine. Look how much Obama care costs to operate. Government NEVER runs anything cheaper than private industry.
It's longer in countries with socialized medicine
That's not a sample analysis. This is a population analysis that does not have a margin of error.
Even in that case, the so called better survival rates do not translate into meaningfully longer life expectancy. How odd is that?http://www.forbes.com/sites/theapothecary/2011/11/23/the-myth-of-americans-poor-life-expectancy/
It has nothing to do with Socialized Medicine! Cut out death by crime or car crash and US if first in the world with life expectancy.
A lot more would come if they could afford it, but not many middle class people can afford to come to the US and pay for surgeries or cancer treatments in cash (which can run into the six figures or more).
And haven't we learned by now that Washington bureaucrats would spend a lot more than that to run socialized medicine. Look how much Obama care costs to operate. Government NEVER runs anything cheaper than private industry.
My dad's cancer cost his insurance company over $500,000 and he only had to pay a few hundred in co-pays. You won't get that top of the line, long-term care with socialized medicine. I have always thought our health care was the best in the world, it wasn't until this year that our deductible and co-pays doubled so how is that better with Obamacare?
I understand that health care is bound to rise with many people having chronic illnesses and needing long term care. We have heard stories on this board of people's cancer care costing over a million dollars. So I always thought health care was a great bargain - I know people who spend more on their car payments, cellphone or cable bills so I never understand what all the whining was about. You people voted for this so you now got it and you are still complaining. I was always appreciative of the insurance I had yet now my family is paying double what we did before your "hope and change" FIXED this problem.
And their unions pay plenty to certain candidates to get them elected and be assured that they don't have to switch to crappy coverage like the rest of us.
I've never understood how that works when the insurance company is supposed to be a 'non-profit'.Yes, a HUGE part of what we pay in insurance premiums is for profits for the Insurance companies. Eliminate the profit and you be paying only for the health care and admin and the cost goes down.
very true
and my concern is that everyone is focusing on "premiums". which I totally understand but until we figure out why a test that was 75 bucks now has inflated over 300%, we'll never get any relief.
I went to school at the Pitt and remember back in the early 80's I went to a forum hosted by newt gingrich of all people. He was the first one that I remember saying that insurance cost were getting out of control. We did absolutely nothing. Then Ms. Clinton also tried to raise the issue and was shot down.
So now we are at mass critical implode and we get "bandaides".
Now of course it's simply become a game of politics so nothing really will change at all. Even if they some how manage to get rid of ACA, does anyone really believe that health care premiums will drop? LOL. nope they won't. we'll simply revert back to "well I've got mine so no worries" to bad for you.
My dad's cancer cost his insurance company over $500,000 and he only had to pay a few hundred in co-pays. You won't get that top of the line, long-term care with socialized medicine. I have always thought our health care was the best in the world, it wasn't until this year that our deductible and co-pays doubled so how is that better with Obamacare?
That's just not true. For example: among people with chronic renal fail-
ure, only half as many Canadians as Amer-
icans get dialysis, and only a third as many
Britons on a per capita basis. According to
the Fraser Institute, almost 900,000 Cana-
dian patients are on the waiting list at any
point in time. And, according to the New
Zealand government, 90,000 people are on
the waiting lists there.
Women who are diagnosed with breast cancer,
only one fifth die in the
United States, compared to one third in
France and Germany, and almost half in
the United Kingdom and New Zealand.
Among men who are diagnosed with
prostate cancer, fewer than one fifth die in
the United States, compared to one fourth
in Canada, almost half in France, and
more than half in the United Kingdom.
Oh, gee, their care is so awful, they must me dying by the time they are 60! Oh, wait, they are not! They live longer than Americans!
SOWELL: Two different worlds of medicine
"In those things that are crucially affected by medical care, such as cancer survival rates, the United States leads the way. In things that doctors can do little about - such as obesity, homicide or drug addiction - Americans shorten their own lives, more so than people in other comparable societies.
This enables advocates of government-run medical care to cite longevity statistics, in order to claim that our more expensive medical system is less effective, since Americans' longevity does not compare favorably with that in other comparable societies.
For those who think in terms of scoring talking points - as distinguished from trying to get at the truth - this kind of argument may sound good. But should something as serious as life and death medical issues be discussed in terms of misleading talking points?"
http://rapidcityjournal.com/news/op...cle_f6b97bee-de51-11e0-9a5e-001cc4c03286.html
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Here's the thing. You and others are still selling socialized medicine. The majority didn't and don't want it! After pushing the ACA through (how many times?) and robbing Peter to pay Paul, the majority still don't want it!
I don't think anyone would argue we needed reform. But the ACA wasn't it.
It hurt more people than it helped. Everyone knows it's going to get worse.
All the goings on about how great socialized medicine is isn't going to change anyone's minds after the damage that was done. The ACA stinks. It's not affordable.
I mean, come on.
So, some crook lied with numbers to you, and you are saying c'mon, let's all believe him?
Here is the lowdown on how to lie with numbers.
1. You don't like the total bottom line numbers.
2. Find a way to adjust them that benefits you. Make it look reasonable.
3. Claim success.
Here is the real deal: every country on that list has some sort of social ill that makes their numbers worse.
The Greeks smoke 3 times the Americans. The Japanese and the Koreans smoke x2. The French drink 50% as much. The Japanese and the Koreans off themselves (suicide) twice as much. The Central Europeans (Hungarians, Slovenians) get twice the rate of stomach cancer because they eat a lot of smoked foods. The US has more guns/homicides, and while it's obesity level is high, it is comparable to that of Czech Republic. Drug addictions to opiates - UK, Spain, and Switzerland are rated higher than the US. Some countries have higher radon levels. Every country has something going on.
When you adjust only for the ills that benefit (in a negative way) your country, you are cherrypicking. You are distorting numbers to make yourself look better. You are lying with numbers. Either adjust for all, or not adjust at all. Because 2-3 times the smoking is bound to have a much larger effect on mortality than a few obesity points.