Brad L
Well-known member
I was thinking just the opposite but didn't want to respond to his posts. We did not need to jump into socialist medicine to solve the problems that existed with medical insurance. Prices were artificially high because of needed regulation and the fact that Congress would not allow for competition between states. If prices truly go up and quality goes down like history and statistics predict, will you still approve?Holy crap, BGL.... you pretty much called it on the issues. Bravo.
To me, the biggest point you have made, which has gone largely unaddressed in much of the discussion is the disgusting fact that the insurance companies have a "de facto" monopoly on health care. They get to set prices through bargaining power, deny coverage with impunity, and get away with being a "death panel" of the worst sort.
In the US, try for laughs getting an estimate of health care costs before you "purchase" health care. In my experience, you can't, at least not that the health care providers will honor. Ask for the cost of a procedure/drug/treatment beforehand and you will get demurrals, denials and a really difficult time in getting a quote. I did this with my wife's pregnancy. Finally, got quoted a bottom line figure, paid it, and then got additional bills after the fact (about 300% above what I negotiated). After the fact negotiation? A joke. I got a ton of different answers, different prices quoted based on where we were in the process (a percentage discount offered if paid in one lump sum, advisement to ignore the bills until referred out to collection- which supposedly will give better terms than the hospital will provide, even thought the collections is within the hospital, repeated referral to social services, which we don't qualify for, and no one can tell us what the basis for the bill is...oh, and multiple people within the same hospital give different "bills" due. Offers to pay an amount got different responses from different departments. Remember, this was after having negotiated a flat fee of $16,000 which I paid upfront. "Magically" the earlier agreement was not honored (little explanation as to why, but was told the price of services was higher than the original quoted fee; sure, if push comes to shove, I will be able to raise the original agreement as a defense...but outside of court, I am at the whim of the medical bill collectors). However, the same folks are happy to explain that if I am destitute, they will forgive and write off the entire bill. But, if I can pay, they are intent on chasing me for multiples above what they originally agreed to as a flat fee.
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You seem to be complaining that your care provider could not offer you prices on certain services before the fact. The great thing about our previous system is that we had choice, we could choose which doctor we wanted to go to and the prices would obviously vary. You could simply go to another doctor. When you can't go to another provider what will you do then?