Hawktawk wrote:Well RD I dont know what the answer is. Obamacare just turned 10 and despite Trump gutting it, defunding it, pulling support for it it picks up users every year, over 22 million people are insured because of it. I didnt suport it at the time but have talked to a lot of people who are able to insure their family only because of the law. It didn't destroy healthcare in america, my wifes a professional X ray tech and here clinic does better all the time. She makes twice as much money as I do.
Hawktawk wrote:It is the rampant costs which have skyrocketed under Trump that are a concern. This problem with antibiotics is growing under trump, the no health care strategy other than erase Obama president. I keep hearing the buzzword "socialism" painted on dems but there are plenty of aspects of socialism in our society and we are still doing just fine. I know I haven't gotten jack squat out of this *republican * administration to help my health care or bottom line or anything else. Not even the Dem party wants medicare for all which is why the moderate is leading the field. We need competence, rational decision making in a bipartisan fashion to address healthcare and it's just not possible right now.
RiverDog wrote:I was against Obama Care when it was first proposed but now that it's the law of the land, I don't want to get rid of it and leave those that are dependent on it high and dry. Ironically, the Dems want to do away with it as well. I wouldn't mind seeing something to help extend coverage or try to make it more affordable to those that need it but I don't want to throw the baby out with the bathwater and gut the entire health care system. Sure, we'd get our coverage for free, but the consequences would be enormous. We'll suffer in terms of quality, not to mention the amount of taxes we'd be paying and the devasting effect on our economy that a government take over of an industry that's over 10% of our GDP would have. If private industry isn't allowed to make a handsome profit off new drugs, equipment, et al, there will be no more new drugs to combat things like cancer, Alzheimer's, and so on as there won't be a motivation for investors to finance the cost of R&D. We'll end up with nothing but a bunch of basic, generic maintenance drugs. We will be jumping from the frying pan into the fire if we go down the road of socialized medicine.
You can't blame Trump for the antibiotics crisis, at least not directly. The problem has been festering for decades. Have you read the entire article?
Coming up with new compounds is no easy feat. Only two new classes of antibiotics have been introduced in the last 20 years — most new drugs are variations on existing ones — and the diminishing financial returns have driven most companies from the market. In the 1980s, there were 18 major pharmaceutical companies developing new antibiotics; today there are three.
The DISARM Act, a bill introduced in Congress this year, would direct Medicare to reimburse hospitals for new and critically important antibiotics. The bill has bipartisan support but has yet to advance.
One of its sponsors, Senator Bob Casey, Democrat of Pennsylvania, said some of the reluctance to push it forward stemmed from the political sensitivity over soaring prescription drug prices. “There is some institutional resistance to any legislation that provides financial incentives to drug companies,” he said.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Both private individuals and the public sector have a vested interest in improving healthcare. Rich people get diseases too. They would flood universities or research organizations with money to stay alive.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Healthcare is not like construction or other industries. It's life and death. A wealthy person has just as much need for quality healthcare including new drug and medical technology development as poor people. That would not change public or private. Universities and public research centers are almost always well funded to find new drugs for this reason.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Hawktawk would blame Trump for stubbing his toe. The skyrocketing cost articles have been there for ages. I saw those skyrocketing cost articles under Obama too. I heard Republicans blaming Obamacare for skyrocketing costs. I tried to explain to those same folks that the costs were rising for other reasons. Companies really don't want to absorb the cost of healthcare. They will do as little as they can to provide it. Companies in general would support a single-payer system if it didn't cost them more than they pay now. People just like to blame whoever they hate on opposing team whether it makes sense or has true factual support.
Hawktawk wrote:What I mean by "under trump" is hes the dude right now.
RiverDog wrote:[Lots of publicly held companies help fund R&D at our colleges and universities. They do so because they are profitable and have substantial funds available to make such donations and stand to benefit financially from the research they provide. If you hurt those companies by making it more difficult for them to make a profit, they will no longer make such contributions. When a company gets into trouble, the first and easiest item to get cut are charitable donations, whether they be for colleges or the local Little League team, as they don't put anyone that works for them out of work, which itself has costs.
Health care is similar to other industries in their funding mechanisms. Publicly held companies, which most are, sell stock in order to finance R&D, more efficient equipment/production methods, etc. Investors are speculating on the success of that company. As the value of that stock increases, so does the company's ability to borrow against it. Their stock price is their life blood.
That's where the article relates to socialized health care. Companies are not investing R&D money in antibiotic medicine because there's no profit in it. Most antibiotics are prescribed for short term illnesses, infections, etc, so revenue off those drugs are hit-and-miss vs. something like high blood pressure, high cholesterol, maintenance type drugs, that are taken for the rest of the patient's life and provide the drug company with a steady, dependable stream of income.
If the government restricts the price companies can charge for drugs, which is what will happen in a socialized, controlled system, the same thing that's happening with antibiotics will happen with all drugs that are not commonly used. We'll end up paying less for Tylenol and Ibuprofen, drugs that they can produce much more efficiently, but no new, experimental drugs to combat diseases like Alzheimer's as it would be too expensive to produce because they won't be sold in large enough quantities to justify mass production that would lower the cost per unit to the point where they could turn a profit or be sold with a high enough price to cover what they've invested in R&D and low volume production.
As far as your take on the source of health issues being due to controllable causes like fitness and avoidance of unhealthy habits, that's certainly part of the equation but not by any means all of it. My wife hasn't been more than 10 pounds overweight in her entire life, doesn't smoke or use recreational drugs, worked as a nurse on her feet constantly for 40 years, yet she acquired both MS and rheumatoid arthritis. She is on 11 prescription drugs, including drugs for high blood pressure and cholesterol that many associate with an unhealthy lifestyle.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Lots of public funds go into medical research as well. What of it? Medicine has been created with and without socialized healthcare. Profit alone does not drive drug or medical creation.
As far as your take on the source of health issues being due to controllable causes like fitness and avoidance of unhealthy habits, that's certainly part of the equation but not by any means all of it. My wife hasn't been more than 10 pounds overweight in her entire life, doesn't smoke or use recreational drugs, worked as a nurse on her feet constantly for 40 years, yet she acquired both MS and rheumatoid arthritis. She is on 11 prescription drugs, including drugs for high blood pressure and cholesterol that many associate with an unhealthy lifestyle.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Those are genetic disorders.
Aseahawkfan wrote:My main concern is what I've already stated: that our government will not do what is necessary to force people to better nutrition and fitness or at least make those unwilling to take the steps to improved health and fitness pay the price. If I were in charge, I would take those steps including weighing people for their tax rate like a yearly tab, taxing the hell out of fast food and junk food companies, and implementing nutrition education in school as well as having a PE system that requires children to exercise daily, not play a handful of games in class. The fact we don't teach humans how to properly care for their bodies as part of our education system shows how far we have to go to have a truly useful and effective education system in America.
RiverDog wrote:That's true. My point was that you're inevitably going to change the research funding equation by going on an attack on companies.
Some are, some aren't. For example, they don't know what causes MS or how to prevent it. It seems to afflict those living in northern latitudes, like Norway and Sweden, more often that people living in the tropics, leading researchers to speculate that it could be environmental, yet there are potential genetic markers that could identify a person that's at a higher risk of acquiring the disease. Same goes with high cholesterol and high blood pressure. It can be caused both by eating an unhealthy diet and/or a trait passed down through ancestry.
I am getting the sense that you are assigning too much importance to controllable attributes like smoking and over eating, which is why I gave you my personal example. My wife doesn't smoke, doesn't drink, and doesn't over eat, yet she's on 11 prescription drugs including many to treat conditions of unknown origin. Even things we assume are controllable, like obesity, you can't draw a line and decide that one case is environmental while another is genetic and others might be some unknown combination of the two. It's not an exact science.
So you're going to "force" people to live a healthy lifestyle? In other words, if I want to order a steak and baked potato, you're going to make me produce a card showing what my body mass index and that the government will allow me to eat a high fat, high calorie meal? And even if a person's health problems are due 100% to an unhealthy lifestyle, are you going to deny them one of life's basic pleasures by being able to eat whatever and whenever they feel like? And do you seriously advocate making people that don't fit your perception of good health pay more taxes? So in other words, you're telling me that only the rich that can afford the higher taxes can eat or drink what they please?
Same goes with your proposed taxation policy on fast food and junk food. If it's that bad for us, then make it illegal, but don't use the power of taxation to influence what the government thinks is bad behavior. Those types of taxes tend to shake out by class. For example, 21% of adults with incomes below $35,000 are smokers while just 7% of those with income of $100,000+ smoke, so in reality, sin taxes like those you are proposing are likely to hit the poor much harder than they would the rich.
I'm not sure if I want to live in this "government knows best" world of yours. It sounds too much like communism.
Aseahawkfan wrote:It is quite well known that smoking is extraordinarily bad for your health. That is not even in question at all. It is terrible for you.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I am not assigning too much importance to controllable factors. You are taking a single individual and extrapolating that to large populations when the data already proves quite succinctly that obesity and related illnesses and smoking are terrible for your health and cause huge numbers of health problems.
Aseahawkfan wrote:MS is a disorder they check for when you are a child. And rheumatoid arthritis is a genetic disorder with the immune system causing inflammation of the joints. Neither one associated with obesity or smoking. Does she have any disorders associated with smoking or obesity like so many Americans?
Aseahawkfan wrote:Sure, some components are genetic. The vast majority of health problems are due to lifestyle choices. The vast majority. As far as personal anecdote goes, my grandmother died at 95 of old age. She never smoke, wasn't overweight, and didn't have any serious medical conditions and took no medications until her 90s. Then she died of old age and the body shutting down. That anecdotal evidence of a single individual has very little to do with the mass evidence of obesity and terrible life-style choices of smoking, drug abuse, alcohol abuse, or the like ruining health.
Aseahawkfan wrote:My main point for this is people should pay for the lifestyle choices they make in a socialized system.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Controllable factors are largely the highest medical costs we deal with. I'm not sure why you are downplaying it given the sheer volume of evidence to the contrary. People are terrible at taking care of their health. And it costs a lot of money to insurers because of it.
I-5 wrote:Not one person claims that any healthcare in the world is perfect, so my post was simply to share something firsthand from a good friend that goes against the 'can't trust the gov't to provide healthcare' narrative. Secondly, the story you referred to is specifically about Ontario's policy with 'out of the country' healthcare provided by an unaccredited foreign practitioner using a drug that wasn't recognized or sanctioned yet in Canada. And yet, the Ontario Ombudsman (technically part of the government) ruled in favor of the citizen. That story, although it does show frustration with the Ontario Healthcare System's out of country policy, also shows the government caring about its citizens to fix a problem. What are the chances that would happen in the US?
I-5 wrote:Once more, not one person is claiming that the Canadian system is perfect. Yes, Canadians who can’t wait or don’t want to wait can and do go to the US treatment, but the costs are ridiculous (hence the story above). Also, not all cancer treatments are approved or readily available in Canada. For the huge majority of healthcare needs, however, the single payer system works EXTREMELY well, and administered by competent and caring professionals in my experience and every other Canadian I’ve spoken with about (even the ones who have some frustration with it). All it takes is to bring up the US system, and no one would want to trade.
I-5 wrote:Riv, you're right the Canadians have it good having the US as neighbors. Actually, I hear Asian countries like Thailand and India are a great resource for high quality healthcare options. I was simply making the point that the gov't can and does provide a quality healthcare provider experience everyday, even in spite of the story you shared.
Hawktalk, 50% does sound a bit high, so I'm not sure why. Here are the Canada tax brackets (they are not wildly different than the US):
2018 Canadian Federal income tax rates
$46,605 or less |15%
$46,605 to $93,208 | 20.5%
$93,208 to $144,489 | 26%
$144,489 to $205,842 |29%
https://www.canada.ca/en/financial-consumer-agency/services/financial-toolkit/taxes/taxes-2/5.html
I-5 wrote:Riv, you're right the Canadians have it good having the US as neighbors. Actually, I hear Asian countries like Thailand and India are a great resource for high quality healthcare options. I was simply making the point that the gov't can and does provide a quality healthcare provider experience everyday, even in spite of the story you shared.
The United States is a very unique country, and it always gets my dander up when people start suggesting that we could easily adapt to Country X's system and expect the same results
The United States is a very unique country, and it always gets my dander up when people start suggesting that we could easily adapt to Country X's system and expect the same results
c_hawkbob wrote:In deference to your dander, I think we could easily adopt the Canadian health care model and be better off for it. Unless you have stock in pharma.
RiverDog wrote:Experts say the grim financial outlook for the few companies still committed to antibiotic research is driving away investors and threatening to strangle the development of new lifesaving drugs at a time when they are urgently needed.
RiverDog wrote:Good luck paying for it. I doubt that all it would take to finance a Canadian-style health care system here in the US would be to adapt the tax structure noted by I-5.
And BTW, if you have a 401K, an IRA, or a mutual fund, you most likely have stock in pharma.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Then you have the 44 million Americans on medicare, the public system. So far I've heard even government medicare is pretty good. Aren't you on medicare right now? How is it compared to your employee health coverage?
Aseahawkfan wrote:I still want to hear how competition drives biotech.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Aren't you on medicare right now? How is it compared to your employee health coverage?
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