SylviaB
Just Bee Yourself 🐝
perhaps not life threatening, no, but elective surgery includes things like hip replacements etcThat's for plastic surgery dude... Doesn't exactly entail life threatening situations.
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perhaps not life threatening, no, but elective surgery includes things like hip replacements etcThat's for plastic surgery dude... Doesn't exactly entail life threatening situations.
Health.gov.auThe length of time a patient waits for elective surgery is determined by the treating physician
based on clinical urgency.
John Stossel isn't an academic and he appears on FOX NEWS.everyone watch
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Health.gov.au
Tell me then, how is removing the government out of the equation going to help shorten 'waiting lists'.
not that it really matters...the figure stands at 3.0%.
in other words, more people are able to access healthcare. if we get rid of that ability, subsidisation, safety net etc, less people will be able to access healthcare and thus supply will increaseSylvesterBr said:when government regulates + subsidises something, supply falls and prices rise
no, you're the idiot.Does your proposed 'free market' deregulate bodies such as "Royal Australasian College of Surgeons" with out a proper substitute for its role? If so, you really are an idiot.
what you just said makes zero sensein other words, more people are able to access healthcare. if we get rid of that ability, subsidisation, safety net etc, less people will be able to access healthcare and thus supply will increase
you're a nutjob.
RACS doesn't limit the supply of surgeons. It would actually be in their best of interests to have more surgeons because they collect a yearly fee from surgeons (~ 3-6K). More members = more money. It merely oversees the training of fresh graduates and evaluates their competency in the profession and ability to perform surgeries unsupervised.
the RACS just limits the supply of surgeons so that they can create a shortage and make more money
besides, in a stateless society, RACS would still exist, except certification (or whatever) wouldn't be mandatory.
but since there would be far more surgeons, they couldn't afford to be shit because it would be too damaging for their reputation.
they would still make more money by ther being a shortageRACS doesn't limit the supply of surgeons. It would actually be in their best of interests to have more surgeons because they collect a yearly fee from surgeons (~ 3-6K). More members = more money.
No fresh graduate would actually want to perform surgery (by themselves) anywayIf 'certification' was optional then fresh graduates with absolutely zero experience can perform surgeries. Realistically, no one will risk their lives by having fresh graduates performing open heart surgery on them per se.
Consequently, fresh graduates will pursue further training under the provision of RACS in order for them to be recognised nationally. So no point in having 'certification' optional. Which is exactly what the current system is, thus rendering your proposal redundant.
Statistics you've provided about patients waiting more than a year for surgery fall under the umbrella of elective surgery. You never wait more than an hour in case of life or death situations for a fully qualified experienced surgeon to see you. Provided you went to the emergency department not your local GP. ~Sigh~And I would rather have a inexperienced surgeon operate me than no surgeon, if it was life or death.
im not talking about elective surgeryStatistics you've provided about patients waiting more than a year for surgery fall under the umbrella of elective surgery. You never wait more than an hour in case of life or death situations for a fully qualified experienced surgeon to see you. Provided you went to the emergency department not your local GP. ~Sigh~
Uh...one point to offer:What I AM saying is that choosing between either an american system or the Australian/canadian/british system is a false dichotomy.
If there was a legitimate free market in healthcare, it would be far superior to both systems.
The only reason why insurance doesn't work in america is because of state regulations.
Government intervention may cause inefficiencies inefficient, but relative to what? Show me how a perfectly competitive free-market ideal is feasible in this world, given the criteria for perfect information, no transaction costs, no barriers to entry, etc, etc.No, because the fool doesn't realise that for all his talk of a benign, absolutist free market, it has little or no practical application.
Dude, everyone dies eventually. Probably a lot that died could have been saved by some form of surgery. Doesn't mean they count as having died waiting for it.im not talking about elective surgery
seriously though, no one dies from waiting for surgery?
Compared to the free market!Government intervention may cause inefficiencies inefficient, but relative to what?
Given your economic illiteracy, I'm going to assume that you don't mean 'perfect competition' in a theoretical economics sense, but anyway, that notion is complete bullshit.Show me how a perfectly competitive free-market ideal is feasible in this world
ugh. Let's just assume that what any of what you're saying makes sense...given the criteria for perfect information, no transaction costs,
ugh. No other entity exists that erects more barriers to entry than the state.no barriers to entry, etc, etc.
do you think lives in Australia could be saved with a greater supply of medical treatment/professionals?Dude, everyone dies eventually. Probably a lot that died could have been saved by some form of surgery. Doesn't mean they count as having died waiting for it.
To a point. Law of Diminishing Returns states that eventually the extra cost of increasing supply will outweigh any benefit it will have in lives saved. When you're dealing with something as quantitative and difficult to measure as medicine and human biology, this point is just as likely to have already been past as to not.do you think lives in Australia could be saved with a greater supply of medical treatment/professionals?
Which is the exact problem. Free market healthcare will provide incentive for superlative quality as you put it, but this is made redundant by the fact that it would become too expensive to be affordable. A reasonable healthcare system that caters for everyone, such as one that Obama is proposing, is hands down superior to one that may have better quality but ultimately fails to provide for the majority of Americans e.g. a free market healthcare system.nope. America is closest, and the value of it (the free market) is reflected in their superlative quality of healthcare. however, government regulations restrict supply and hence, prices rise and people can't afford it.
No, on a free market health care would be far, far cheaper and of better qualityWhich is the exact problem. Free market healthcare will provide incentive for superlative quality as you put it, but this is made redundant by the fact that it would become too expensive to be affordable.
America does not have a free market health care systembut ultimately fails to provide for the majority of Americans e.g. a free market healthcare system.