Berniewood Hogan
IT'S BERNIE SANDERS WITH A STEEL CHAIR!
AIDS is a hoax made up by Chinamen.like an aids test, whats the results. not positive :hovtrump:
AIDS is a hoax made up by Chinamen.like an aids test, whats the results. not positive :hovtrump:
55-year-old first-time voter who chose Trump protests large increase in health costs
After voting for the first time at the age of 55, for Donald Trump, Martha Brawley is worried that the main issue that brought her to the polls, health insurance coverage, is going to become worse.
Brawley, a resident of Monroe, North Carolina, said she fears the new Republican health insurance bill will significantly raise her premiums.
"I'm 55. This is the first time in my life I voted, and I voted for Trump hoping that he would change the insurance so I could get good health care," she told ABC News. "I might as well have not voted."
She first spoke to The New York Times about her concern that she would receive thousands of dollars less in assistance, as tax credits, to help her buy health care coverage under the proposed American Health Care Act (AHCA), dubbed "Trumpcare."
Brawley reportedly receives approximately $8,688 in health care subsidies per year to pay for insurance, but under the proposed bill, she would receive $3,500 a year in tax credits, according to the Times.
First-time voter who chose Trump protests health cost increase
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I think the hospital should have the right to refuse service.If a person doesn't have insurance or money to pay for emergency care, should the hospital have the right to turn them away from an ER for a medical emergency?
my thing has always been that the individual mandate and expanded medicaid should stay as long as the 80's era law requiring emergency rooms to treat anyone that showed up is still in effect.If you get rid of the individual mandates, what happens if someone with no coverage ends up at the ER?
I believe the individual mandate should stay. If you gave people that options, some will not get coverage.
However this exacerbates the problem that the ACA was enacted to solve. In fact, emergency care without coverage and overrealiance on emergency care is what was driving up prices before ACA and putting strains on hospitals who couldn't refuse emergency care. Then they would get help from the government to remain open. Because the hospital and government took the hit in response to people not having coverage and not utilizing preventive care which led to more emergency visits. The fact that preventive care is being under utilized due to lack of coverage, these same people probably ended up costing taxpayers more in the long run when they actually had an emergency care issue and life term illnesses and preventive illnesses reached their peak forcing them into the hospital eventually.I think the hospital should have the right to refuse service.
That said I think professional certification has the right, depending on certification body, to say if you carry our license you can't refuse to threat anyone and stay accredited under our body.
ACA was created by the GOP to subsidize health insurance companies. Period.However this exacerbates the problem that the ACA was enacted to solve. In fact, emergency care without coverage and overrealiance on emergency care is what was driving up prices before ACA and putting strains on hospitals who couldn't refuse emergency care. Then they would get help from the government to remain open. Because the hospital and government took the hit in response to people not having coverage and not utilizing preventive care which led to more emergency visits. The fact that preventive care is being under utilized due to lack of coverage, these same people probably ended up costing taxpayers more in the long run when they actually had an emergency care issue and life term illnesses and preventive illnesses reached their peak forcing them into the hospital eventually.
How does losing accreditation fix this problem and given your limited government view how do you keep governments out of the picture without making a ton of hospitals go broke?
This was what I was driving at with my question. Zealot adherence to anarcro capitalism seems to run into very sticky roadblocks such as this. I'm sure you can give me a rational so id like to hear it.
However this exacerbates the problem that the ACA was enacted to solve. In fact, emergency care without coverage and overrealiance on emergency care is what was driving up prices before ACA and putting strains on hospitals who couldn't refuse emergency care. Then they would get help from the government to remain open. Because the hospital and government took the hit in response to people not having coverage and not utilizing preventive care which led to more emergency visits. The fact that preventive care is being under utilized due to lack of coverage, these same people probably ended up costing taxpayers more in the long run when they actually had an emergency care issue and life term illnesses and preventive illnesses reached their peak forcing them into the hospital eventually.
How does losing accreditation fix this problem and given your limited government view how do you keep governments out of the picture without making a ton of hospitals go broke?
This was what I was driving at with my question. Zealot adherence to anarcro capitalism seems to run into very sticky roadblocks such as this. I'm sure you can give me a rational so id like to hear it.
I looked up the Singapore healthcare system just out of curiosity because I was unfamiliar with it, and I'm surprised you're advocating for it.ACA was created by the GOP to subsidize health insurance companies. Period.
You want to take care of healthcare COSTS, delink it from insurance and let standardized costs for service to emerge like in the free market or even like the freer market singapore option. Let insurance be actual insurance for catastophric and unexpected costs.
That said there is a difference between compulsory acceptance of all by law and organizations volunterring to see all who come at their door.
Government shouldn't be in the healthcare or healthcare subsidizing business in myopinoin. Its their relationship that has done nothing but lower quality of service while raising prices.
If we can removed the FDA, remove government IP laws on drugs, remove government backing of medical cartel groups AMA, surgeons, medical schools, remove government authority on state level that lets health mega corporations block building on new hospitals for their own sake, and etc, cost of care would go down, quality would go up because of market competition, drug prices would crash down, medical professional growth rate would skyrocket bringing cost of services down, and you would have lower healthcare costs all around, which would allow donations from people to go further to aid those who truly fall into times where they need charity.
All that said, it seems you are a statist medicine zealot, as if you think arguing for market solutions and removing of government restrictions that stop the medical/healthcare sector from responding directly to consumers is a negative or that the government is neccessary to providing these services when it can't even adequately provide the service of transporting mail at a profit.
You want to reply back to my previous posts with rational critiques and questions though, I'll be ready to answer you and engage in a conversation.
Citizens are taxed to pay for their own healthcare which is then stored in a healthsavings account. This is more government than Ryan's voluntary HSA plan is proposing. Also the government controlling prices is something I'm surprised you support. This seems very statist and in fact falls in line with Singapore's reputation of being much a statist society as a whole.Singapore has a non-modified universal healthcare system where the government ensures affordability of healthcare within the public health system, largely through a system of compulsory savings, subsidies, and price controls.