Hasta pronto, porque la vida no termina aqui...
America, stop pushing. I know what I'm doing.
This would be a great point except the graph explicitly states "healthcare costs per capita".854 cigarettes per French adult / .3 French smokers per French adult = 2847 cigarettes per French smokerLess % wise of our people smoke, but they are smoking significantly more cigarettes.
While you are correct that the American figure is higher (5411), smoking 8 cigarettes a day is very clearly a major health risk. 30% of the population or 20% of the population with lung cancer, which is more expensive per capita?Somehow I doubt that your premium was $2 for life.Originally Posted by Jeril
Hasta pronto, porque la vida no termina aqui...
America, stop pushing. I know what I'm doing.
Hasta pronto, porque la vida no termina aqui...
America, stop pushing. I know what I'm doing.
No idea why but I needed to see that for some things to make sense. Maybe too long mentally staring at the same numbers without a new perspective. So, we as a country spend somewhere north of 5 trillion dollars a year on health care. There are obviously several things we could do to reduce that, but at the moment our government doesn't seem interested in them.
Hey, when you give me a horribly designed computer system and I say, "No, that is bad, it needs to be better", doesn't mean I think the idea is bad. Government healthcare does have the potential to save us money.
Single-payer health care is a system in which the government, rather than private insurers, pays for all health care costs.[1] Single-payer systems may contract for healthcare services from private organizations (as is the case in Canada) or may own and employ healthcare resources and personnel (as is the case in the United Kingdom). The term "single-payer" thus only describes the funding mechanism—referring to health care financed by a single public body from a single fund—and does not specify the type of delivery, or for whom doctors work. Although the fund holder is usually the state, some forms of single-payer use a mixed public-private system.
And I'd say that is what I was advocating, Obamacare isn't this. And who knows how much over hauling it would take to become such a system. You might be able to claim that it is the aim of Obamacare to become that, but would it really be so hard for our government to get something right the first time instead of spending countless hours and dollars fixing something screwed up that they created?
I think most Democrats would rather have had that. Obama went with what to me, still, is a Republican concept, because, truth is, one half of Congress doesn't actually want to do anything for citizens to the point that a Republican plan is now considered "Radical Socialism!" He naively thought they'd work with him. They didn't so he worked with insurance industry until they liked it.