hog88
Your ray of sunshine
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2008
- Messages
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Eastern State.The government used to take care of homeless people by the way of mental health institutions. I remember a huge institution in Knoxville called East Tennessee State. At some point in time we deemed places like this unnecessary and closed them only to release the people that were inside to a world they weren't prepared for.
I stole a line from the movie Pulp Fiction by Marsellus Wallace with a minor change. I didn't mean to insinuate that you aren't wealthy. I have no idea. FWIW, I don't think I'm wealthy, just fortunate enough to be better off than some, not as well off as others.
I've listed a few things that could be done to lower costs but for some reason nobody wants to have a discussion about that. Or hell give any real solutions other than let the government run it. What has the government ever done efficiently?
I haven’t seen what your possible solutions are.
As I said before, a single payer system gives larger purchasing power to drive down overpriced medicine and ridiculous medical bills.
The current system is nowhere efficient or economical as it should be. An insurance company will do its best to cover as little possible because profits are the bottom line.
So I’m going thru shoulder surgery recovery now and I laugh continually at the provider billing and what is paid.
Each rehab session: Billed $350 paid $50
Surgeon fees for surgery: Billed $9k paid $900
Surgery Center: Billed $53k paid $9k
Pre/post op visit: Billed $150 paid $50
So if those paid costs were good for them and they had already agreed to them why do the damn shell game FFS. Insurance is broken and it broke health care costs.
It's on page one.
Do you think for 1 minute our government won't try to cover as little as possible?
None of your answers fit what I would I would do if King for the day.
1. Do away with employer provided health insurance. People have to purchase policies on their own.
2. Make health insurance premiums 100% deductible from an individuals taxes.
3. Make contributions to an HSA 100% tax deductible up to 10k per year. Money can be passed down in inheritance.
4. Allow healthcare providers to deny service to people that can't pay.
Those would be the 1st changes I would make. And to clarify on the tax deductibility of insurance premiums I mean regardless if you itemize or not it is deductible.
Depends on what’s put in there. That’s what republicans would want anyways.
Medicare for all would save us tons of money just through admin costs alone.
As far as your solutions:
Employer insurance is done away with why exactly? Because you don’t want to provide your employees benefits?
Insurance premiums are already deductible if expenses are high enough. That doesn’t help with the overpriced costs. Same with HSA.
Denying people healthcare that can’t pay is absolutely idiotic.
Depends on what’s put in there. That’s what republicans would want anyways.
Medicare for all would save us tons of money just through admin costs alone.
As far as your solutions:
Employer insurance is done away with why exactly? Because you don’t want to provide your employees benefits?
Insurance premiums are already deductible if expenses are high enough. That doesn’t help with the overpriced costs. Same with HSA.
Denying people healthcare that can’t pay is absolutely idiotic.
This is what many people who are pro government healthcare don’t understand.
In many ways the ACA has hurt more than it has helped - especially small businesses and their employees/families.
HSA should be a key part of the long term fix, but not sure how we get out of the current mess we’re in.
I like your ideas but remember, half of Americans don't pay income taxes anyway so deductibility does them no good and they're the ones who can't afford it, generally speaking.
