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suture | 3 years ago

Assuming by free you mean universal coverage that is (almost) free at the point of usage then this is a solved problem. What the United States lacks in order to realize a solution is political willpower and an electorate that is savvy enough to know that wanting such a system does not make one a communist. (And that being a communist does not make one an evil person.)

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thr0wawayf00|3 years ago

...also the fact that the electorate generally can't out-compete the big money interests that lobby heavily to keep healthcare a private venture.

It's so easy to blame voters but the reality is that politics is about messaging, and how is the electorate supposed be savvy enough when these companies can spend unlimited amounts of money to keep us fighting each other about this stuff? Make no mistake, Google benefits from this depravity too.

scarface74|3 years ago

It’s not the lobbyist. There is still a lot of people who don’t want universal healthcare because it might benefit “those lazy people who don’t want to work” and older people on Medicare who “want to keep the government out of healthcare”.

suture|3 years ago

I don’t disagree in general with what you wrote. On the bogeyman of “socialism” I do blame the electorate. The irrational fear of anything remotely related to “socialism” in America has been going on far too long.

refurb|3 years ago

Canada has "free" universal healthcare, but to call it a "solved problem" seems pretty naive.

suture|3 years ago

The naivety is in thinking that if it doesn’t work in Canada then it must not be a solved problem. The naivety is in thinking that if you can find anecdotal evidence that in a particular instance Canada’s system worked worse than the U.S. system then it must be the case that Canada’s system is worse.

The U.S. per capita spends far more on healthcare than any other OECD country. We don’t get correspondingly better outcomes or coverage. Universal healthcare is a solved problem within the context that every system necessarily involves some sort of rationing since there aren’t enough medical resources in any country to do otherwise.

If you don’t want to use the phrase “solved system” then don’t but don’t pretend the U.S. is any way better other than in anecdotal instances. Below is a source for information on per capita spending for OECD nations. You can easily find information on health our outcomes, life expectancy, teen pregnancies, infant mortality, etc.

https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/sites/876d99c3-en/index.html?i...

bruce511|3 years ago

It's a solved problem in the sense that it exists, and works[1] and it is available in a lot more places than Canada.

[1] "works" is an interesting point because it isn't clearly defined, and usually means different things to different people.

Ever experience of the system is "unique" - there is this mix of human patient with human provider with finite resources with medical knowledge with time. So there are plenty of examples of long waits, bad service, unfavorable outcomes, even death. It's not hard to cherry pick bad experiences here.

No health system will make everyone live forever. Death comes to us all sooner or late. But universal healthcare works in many places in raising the overall standard of public health, without bankrupting people in the process.

Given that its always spending limited money, and only scales at human rates, its far from perfect. But, at least for some, its better than a "health care level based on your wealth" system.

Am4TIfIsER0ppos|3 years ago

Being a communist absolutely makes you an evil person. About 5 times more evil than the group of people they fought against in a war.

As for socialized medicine it makes doctors another arm of the government. In the UK last week (or the week before) one arm of the government ordered another arm of the government to kill a 9 year old. We are also just outside a 2 year stretch of tyranny of governments all over the world giving that arm of government near unilateral power over our freedom at the point of a gun.

suture|3 years ago

I hope you can break from the the intellectual shackles that bind you. I hope you can visit other countries and read from sources of information outside your comfort zone. Subscribing to a belief about which system of economics you prefer does not make one evil.

Sohcahtoa82|3 years ago

> Being a communist absolutely makes you an evil person.

Tell me you don't know what communism is without telling me you don't know what communism is.

Yes, every known communist country has been rife with fascism, authoritarianism, and corruption. But those are orthogonal with communism as an economic model. It's like saying socialism is evil because the Nazis were socialist (they really weren't) just because "Socialist" is part of "Nationalist Socialist Party" .

> In the UK last week (or the week before) one arm of the government ordered another arm of the government to kill a 9 year old.

[citation needed], because this sounds like an extremely gross misinterpretation of a situation, likely done deliberately in bad faith.

1986|3 years ago

The Viet Cong were 5 times more evil than the USA?

systemvoltage|3 years ago

I'm not convinced, even with the best of intentions. In fact, I am convinced of the opposite: A) Universal Health program would result in terrible quality health care B) It would lead to longer wait times, and less choices C) It would be insanely costly to fund. We've been busy printing a lot of $. Increased the Federal deficit from $21T to $30 since COVID and there isn't a good way to fund a bloated system in USA, comparisons with smaller nations is ridiculous and misleading.

We already have free health for the poor: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicaid

> Medicaid is the largest source of funding for medical and health-related services for people with low income in the United States, providing free health insurance to 74 million low-income and disabled people (23% of Americans) as of 2017, as well as paying for half of all U.S. births in 2019.

What we should be doing is to fight the regulatory and bigpharma capture of US health system along with the horrible hospital + insurance racket. Google is now going to take advantage of the moat built by Big Gov and never ever allow anyone to compete.

jholman|3 years ago

Regarding (A) and (C), this is the obligatory reminder that:

* The US spends more public money on health care, per capita, than other wealthy nations, while also spending much much more private money than other wealthy nations

* By many measures, the US gets worse outcomes (e.g. life expectancy)

The conclusion that many draw from this is that perhaps a single-payer health care system in the US could dramatically lower private spending, also lower public spending, and perhaps improve outcomes. I don't personally know if that follows, but it's not implausible.

This is counter-intuitive to many, thus comments like your (A) through (C) are common, but might not be correct.

That said, I'm not aware of evidence that your (B) is wrong. That might be part of the trade-off.

As a non-American from America's hat, who has had a few (bigco-insurance-funded) run-ins with US Healthcare, my observations were that

* emergency health care at the no-expenses-spared level in the US was nicer than emergency healthcare up here, and I wouldn't want to pit my doctors vs those US doctors in a quality competition

* US doctors seemed really eager to waste money, like really eager, like it was creepy

heavyset_go|3 years ago

> We already have free health for the poor: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicaid

There are tens of millions of people who have no access to Medicaid because states chose not to expand it under the ACA, and there are plenty of poor people who make more than ~$16k a year, which is the cut-off for Medicaid.

Apocryphon|3 years ago

> C) It would be insanely costly to fund.

How could it be even more expensive than our current inefficient, half-baked, worst of both worlds system, which is more expensive than socialized systems in other nations? And more expensive per capita, not simply overall.

dragonwriter|3 years ago

> We already have free health for the poor:

No, we have free health insurance for some of the poor (states that have no accepted the ACA expansion have basically no coverage for adults without dependents.)

Medicaid is not (as a generality) free health care (it can be, in some states, for some recipients). It is free health insurance, which can have copayments, coinsurance, deductibles, etc.

moomoo11|3 years ago

I’m a bit confused on the choice part. Can you explain?

I think if someone can afford better, private care they should be able to. For example I would probably go to the universal healthcare family doctor but if I need a specific surgery I would like to be able to go to the best care I can get.