You pinpointed it!doodle wrote: ↑Sat May 02, 2020 1:06 amAmerica's healthcare system is a national disgrace. I can't exactly pinpoint why it is so broken but I think I would simply refuse to pay any hospital bill I was sent. They could spend the next ten years harassing me and ruining my credit and I still wouldn't give them a penny. I feel bad for the doctors and nurses caught up in the middle of this. The thing that strikes me Everytime I've been to doctor is how complicated the billing process is...seems like an enormous waste of effort and manpower. Imagine if other services and products were sold in the same incredibly complicated way that medical services are.....its absurdly inefficient. I'm also surprised that in today's age we don't have the ability to consent to being included in a national healthcare database so that medical records don't have to be shuffled around between doctorsyankees60 wrote: ↑Fri May 01, 2020 8:29 pm I searched for the post where WiseOne recently had stated how business has overtaken the actual delivery of medicine. I thought it was in this Topic but was unable to find it.
I wanted to ask her if she was familiar with this book:
The Price We Pay: What Broke American Health Care--and How to Fix It
https://smile.amazon.com/Price-We-Pay-A ... 147&sr=8-1
Just started reading it and read these highly illuminating five paragraphs in this preface, Looks like this is a book I'm going to quickly read!
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Vinny
Here was another example from the book.
Someone's father had a heart attack. His father had been visiting from France. The hospital told him he needed a procedure which they could do for $150,000. The father called his doctor in France and was told the same procedure there would cost $15,000. They told the hospital this $15,000 price and the hospital immediately reduced the price to $50,000. They said no. Then just as they were leaving the hospital they got another offer to do it for $25,000!
Another story is about C-sections. Makes life easy and predictable for the doctor but not as good for both the mother and the baby.
The book did all kinds of studies of procedures. In the case of C-sections they found that one particular doctor did 80% more than average C-sections on Fridays! Clearly putting his welfare / needs ahead of his patients.
All through the medical system there is predatory pricing, taking advantage of people at their weakest moments with NO price transparency.
All Congress does is just offer more money to pay for "health care" when it is just lining the pockets of those who profit from the system. It does nothing to provide better "health care".
Vinny