Once again the rational behind this escapes me except to assign it
all to stupid people who have misplaced authority over others. The
health care service can become more efficient and it can become
better. What it cannot do is become cheaper except by kicking costs
back to consumers and that merely negates the whole premise. It it
wants to be come a profit making business, then it must cherry pick
and overcharge those who can pay. The ethics of this formula are not
worth discussing.
If the only service provided by the insurance industry is cash
management, then why are they there? Any coop can do better
without executive expectations as to salaries. Perhaps the churches
should do it. They at least are part of the community.
The whole purpose of universal medical insurance is to share
mandatory costs as they come up. The bigger the pool the better the
capacity to go a little further in solving rare problems. That is
all that size provides.
Banksters Rip Apart
Spanish Health Care
18 February 2013 13:54
By Thom Hartmann
According to the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's latest health
care rankings of the 34 most developed nations in the world, the
United States ranks dead last in male life expectancy.
We also rank near the
very bottom in preventing premature death, infant mortality, total
health care coverage, number of practicing doctors, and preventing
heart disease deaths.
But, here's some good
news (at least for those fans of Americanized health care): our world
rankings might soon improve.
Not because we're
radically changing our privatized system that puts profits ahead of
people's lives. But because banksters in Europe are forcing several
nations that rank ahead of us to ditch their national public health
care systems, and replace them with more privatized (and profitable)
American-style health care systems.
And, despite what
conservatives say about how the American health care system is the
envy of the rest of the world, those Europeans who are watching
banksters re-make their public health care systems are outraged.
On Sunday, protests
swept across Spain, with thousands of doctors, nurses, and health
professionals demonstrating against new conservative austerity
measures that will privatize more than 40 public hospitals and care
centers.
Spain, like Greece, is
indebted to the very foreign banksters who crashed their economy. And
rather than telling those foreign banksters to take a hike like
Iceland did, Spain's austerity-happy government is paying off the
banksters by taking money from working people through cutting socials
services like health care.
Spain's Prime Minister
Mariano Rajoy argues the health care reforms will save his nation
more than $9 billion this year, which can then be given to the
banksters.
But, as one protesting
nurse, Emilia Becares, told France 24 News, "There is no
study that shows that privatising the management of hospitals leads
to lower costs. This privatisation hurts patients' health care to
benefit other interests."
Those "other
interests" are, of course, the banksters and the for-profit
healthcare hustlers.
The United States
proves Emilia right. Privatization here has produced the highest
health care costs of anywhere else in the developed world; the United
States spends far more money on health care than any other OECD
nation. And, although the banksters and the health care hustlers are
making a fortune, average working people are dying at rates that
shock the rest of the world: we rank near the bottom in health care
outcomes.[ just when are
people going to come to their senses? arclein]
So while conservative
technocrats in charge of Spain are willing to use health care
privatization to solve their short-term deficit woes, doing so will
only make them worse over the long term.
Soon, Spanish
hospitals, run for a profit, will decide if prescribing certain
treatments and medical tests will boost or cut their quarterly profit
goals. Spanish citizens, who used to have a right to health care,
will now have to haggle with privatized corporate death panels that
are more focused crunching numbers than saving lives.
As prices go up,
preventative care will decline. There will be fewer visits to
doctors. And the overall health of the population will plummet with
the moneychangers in charge.
This means that over
the long term the cost of healthcare to Spain will go up.
This is what Greece is
now dealing with, since their public health care system was ripped
apart by the banksters in 2011. Prior to the crisis, Greeks enjoyed
complete universal health care. But when the banksters shook down the
entire nation, they targeted the health care system, and told
unemployed Greeks that they now have to pay for healthcare out of
pocket. And if they don't have the money, then...well...too bad.
Greek doctor, Kostas
Syrigos, told the New York Times about a woman with a tumor the
size of an orange that had broken through her skin because she
couldn't afford to see a doctor after the austerity cuts to health
care.
Dr. Syrigos said,
"Things like that are described in textbooks, but you never see
them because until now; anybody who got sick in this country could
always get help...In Greece right now, to be unemployed means death."
Sick and unemployed
Americans face the same fate. According to a 2009 Harvard study,
45,000 Americans die every year because they don't have health
insurance. And half of all bankruptcies in America are due to medical
bills.
Most of the public
health care systems across Europe were created after World War II, as
the people understood that they needed to rebuild together, and
should at the very least be providing free health care to each other,
too.
But, the United
States, triumphant after World War II, never learned this lesson.
Instead, we handed the care of our citizens off to corporations and
billionaires, and are today paying dearly for it with budget-busting
health care costs, sick populations, and far too many premature
deaths. But our healthcare banksters, like the CEOs of United
Healthcare, are literally billionaires.
And those models for
health care reform across the Atlantic are now disappearing
one-by-one – the latest victims of conservatives and their bankster
austerity programs. But at least in places like Greece and Spain, the
people are putting up a fight against these profiteers. And it's a
fight that's long overdue in America.
We should all ask
ourselves why is it that thousands are taking to the streets to
defend their public health care systems in Europe, but not once has
there been a legitimate rally in America to defend our privatized
health care system that kills tens of thousands of American every
single year. Deep down inside, we know we're getting ripped off. Just
like the Greeks and the Spaniards know they're getting ripped off.
Let's hope that the
decision banksters made to target universal health care rights in
Europe will inspire a new struggle in the United States that affirms
we are indeed our brothers' and our sisters' keepers.