Check Out Our Shop
Page 6 of 8 FirstFirst 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 LastLast
Results 126 to 150 of 177

Thread: Medicare for all — net costs

  1. #126
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    SF & the Ho
    Posts
    11,035

    Medicare for all — net costs

    What a load of shit. A doc buddy of mine says he gets reimbursed at least as much and often more by medicare.

  2. #127
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    The Queen City North Carolina
    Posts
    1,440
    Quote Originally Posted by dunfree View Post
    Ah yes Obamacare, the name people love to hate, but they actually like what's in the law for the most part. So much so that the Republicans who'd campaigned against it for years couldn't actually repeal it because they lacked the votes.

    In the current environment rural, or more rural, hospitals and healthcare providers are going to continue to close. Eventually that might produce pressure upon rural congresspeople to change things. Or not.
    Not wanting to get into a pissing match but Obamacare is a disaster for americans and a profit generator for insurance companies. I could care less what it was called.
    The problem is you have to think about whether you look at healthcare as a basic right like or a privilege. Obamacare mandated the purchase of profit generating product where the provider, in this case insurance companies still have a profit motive. Look at the M&A deals, stock returns and paychecks at Aetna, Cigna etc. Then you add on mandates like EHR systems which has hospitals spend upwards of a billion dollars for software(Epic and Cerner) etc. and you have rampant cost and motives to keep spending more. Partners hospital spent 1.2 billion on Epic. https://www.bostonglobe.com/business...dkK/story.html
    Think of it this way, would you prefer the Federal government mandate everyone must purchase a car from Ford or GM or build a mass transit system that is essentially subsidized and you could ride anywhere for "free". We got the mandate to buy the car.
    http://time.com/money/4839017/judy-f...lionaire-epic/
    Americans do need to tear it down at some point but even your doctor is not going to be happy when he/she thinks of his/her paycheck looking like their canadian counterpart.
    Every time I go to a conference at a giant urban hospital tower or meet with C suite execs at "not=fr Profit" hospitals, I always think along the lines of Walt Disney, "To think, this was all built upon sick people"

  3. #128
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    The Queen City North Carolina
    Posts
    1,440
    Quote Originally Posted by mcski View Post
    What a load of shit. A doc buddy of mine says he gets reimbursed at least as much and often more by medicare.
    I'm sorry to say that I have millions of lines of actual patient data sitting on servers in my office for claims and I can tell you Medicare pays almost nothing compared to private insurance. Perhaps on something as mundane as a simple office visit, but for spine heart oncology and ortho, the reimbursement rates for private insurance are 5-10 times more than medicare. many if not all doctors try to limit the influx of medicare patients as a percent of their visit for this very reason. I am sure I will be told I'm wrong despite have the actual claims and working with hundred of hospitals in the US and an entire IT department focused on comparisons, but sadly its true.

  4. #129
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    northern BC
    Posts
    34,020
    Quote Originally Posted by ncskier View Post
    The problem is you have to think about whether you look at healthcare as a basic right or a privilege."
    sez it all^^ we have rights to HC but it ain't free googling around

    "In 2016, the average unattached (single) individual, earning an average income of $42,914, will pay approximately $4,257 for pub- lic health care insurance. An average Canadian family consisting of two adults and two chil- dren (earning approximately $122,101) will pay about $11,494 for public health care insurance."

    https://www.fraserinstitute.org/site...rance-2016.pdf

    taxpayers pay a % of their income so the more you make the more you pay, if you only make 14K a year you pay 410$ , if you make 280K you pay 37,000
    Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know

  5. #130
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    slc
    Posts
    19,265
    Quote Originally Posted by reckless toboggan View Post
    Awesome.

  6. #131
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    SF & the Ho
    Posts
    11,035
    Sure pal, whatever you say. I've yet to encounter the practice or specialist that didn't accept medicare. Not even a blink.

  7. #132
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Location
    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
    Posts
    12,122
    Quote Originally Posted by ncskier View Post
    I'm sorry to say that I have millions of lines of actual patient data sitting on servers in my office for claims and I can tell you Medicare pays almost nothing compared to private insurance. Perhaps on something as mundane as a simple office visit, but for spine heart oncology and ortho, the reimbursement rates for private insurance are 5-10 times more than medicare. many if not all doctors try to limit the influx of medicare patients as a percent of their visit for this very reason. I am sure I will be told I'm wrong despite have the actual claims and working with hundred of hospitals in the US and an entire IT department focused on comparisons, but sadly its true.
    I think there is a bit of a logical leap to say that just because the reimbursement rates are lower, it would mean that nobody could stay in business if everyone was on it. I think worst case it's fair to assume that doctors overall would take ~10% cut from now. I'm sure that different specialities would feel it more and places like emergency rooms would feel it less.

    Overall, I believe that MFA is a more moral choice in that we as citizens shouldn't have to stake our financial future on never getting sick or hurt. If millionaire surgeons need to take a 15% pay decrease, then I think that's fair price to pay.

    {/polyassrant]

  8. #133
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    The Queen City North Carolina
    Posts
    1,440
    Quote Originally Posted by mcski View Post
    Sure pal, whatever you say. I've yet to encounter the practice or specialist that didn't accept medicare. Not even a blink.
    Are you a troll.
    Sure doctors take it, the same way a certain percentage of housing in an apartment is section 8 or subsidized. However, without private insurance to pay the lions share of the bills, most if not all docs and hospitals would close given their current cost structures. I am not saying it right, I'm saying thats the way it is currently. Obamacare just kept it going longer.

  9. #134
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    The Queen City North Carolina
    Posts
    1,440
    Quote Originally Posted by Supermoon View Post
    I think there is a bit of a logical leap to say that just because the reimbursement rates are lower, it would mean that nobody could stay in business if everyone was on it. I think worst case it's fair to assume that doctors overall would take ~10% cut from now. I'm sure that different specialities would feel it more and places like emergency rooms would feel it less.

    Overall, I believe that MFA is a more moral choice in that we as citizens shouldn't have to stake our financial future on never getting sick or hurt. If millionaire surgeons need to take a 15% pay decrease, then I think that's fair price to pay.

    {/polyassrant]
    I don't disagree with anything you said. but its much more complex. You are correct not everyone would go out of business, but just about every urban hospital would. It's private insurance that paid for those shiny giant towers and parking decks with LEED certified modern marvel buildings and free wifi. You'd probably have more mom and pop type docs like years ago. Duo nurse doctor combos working out of store fronts.
    I'm not saying its wrong or right, it just is.
    Cost in american healthcare is universally the problem not how the payment mechanism is administered. Wringing profit out of the system was not done with Obamacare.
    It's not just doctor take a haircut and its fixed. Executives and Aetna, Cigna, Philips GE health etc make tens of millions. Not for profit hospitals sponsor entire football stadiums and have suites. I have skied with execs from hospitals with homes in Deer Valley that would blow your mind.
    It does not exist from what I can tell in Europe. doctors and their facilities while nice are somewhat more modest. Efficient would be the proper word.
    I'd be all for basic coverage for all. In Germany their is basic coverage sort of like the free clinic and rich germans pay for private insurace. That would be possible here. It would also mean "poor" people would be in group rooms to deliver a baby, while a rich woman has a private suite.
    Our current system is too expensive and too inefficient and no-one should die from a simple infection. But we also want 80 years to get heart transplants.

  10. #135
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Location
    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
    Posts
    12,122
    Yeah, I'm not sure very many people would shed a tear if the health insurance companies all had to close up shop. Those guys are fucking evil.

  11. #136
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    The Queen City North Carolina
    Posts
    1,440
    Quote Originally Posted by Supermoon View Post
    Yeah, I'm not sure very many people would shed a tear if the health insurance companies all had to close up shop. Those guys are fucking evil.
    Evil is an apt description

  12. #137
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    SF & the Ho
    Posts
    11,035

    Medicare for all — net costs

    You said lots of docs and specialists won't take medicare. Seems like I would have met one by now if it were that pervasive. Like I said, I bought that party line mostly too until my specialist buddy said it was pretty much bs smoke and mirrors. Anyway, this is getting a bit too polyass. The point is medicare should be open to all. How to fund and control costs are just details that need to be sorted without lobbyists mucking it uplike ACÁ

  13. #138
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Park City
    Posts
    5,126
    As a doc, I’ve met a single provider who didn’t accept Medicare. It’s not “lots”.


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums
    I rip the groomed on tele gear

  14. #139
    Join Date
    Aug 2016
    Location
    关你屁事
    Posts
    9,945
    Quote Originally Posted by ncskier View Post
    The problem is you have to think about whether you look at healthcare as a basic right like or a privilege.
    The problem with US healthcare is we have to make a choice between those finally. For years we've chosen both and so like most things in the US we privatized the gains (health co. towers) and socialized the losses (out of control spending). I'm for MFA, but if we don't choose to treat it as a right, we have to reform the system so it'll function as a privilege.

    As I know people who were able to get non-employer health insurance because of O-Care I can't call it a disaster for all americans, though it is deeply flawed.

  15. #140
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    The Queen City North Carolina
    Posts
    1,440
    Quote Originally Posted by mcski View Post
    You said lots of docs and specialists won't take medicare. Seems like I would have met one by now if it were that pervasive. Like I said, I bought that party line mostly too until my specialist buddy said it was pretty much bs smoke and mirrors. Anyway, this is getting a bit too polyass. The point is medicare should be open to all. How to fund and control costs are just details that need to be sorted without lobbyists mucking it uplike ACÁ
    Please show me where I said docs won’t take it. I said docs and hospitals can’t have the majority of their patients on it with their current cost structure.

  16. #141
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    The Queen City North Carolina
    Posts
    1,440
    Quote Originally Posted by dunfree View Post
    The problem with US healthcare is we have to make a choice between those finally. For years we've chosen both and so like most things in the US we privatized the gains (health co. towers) and socialized the losses (out of control spending). I'm for MFA, but if we don't choose to treat it as a right, we have to reform the system so it'll function as a privilege.

    As I know people who were able to get non-employer health insurance because of O-Care I can't call it a disaster for all americans, though it is deeply flawed.
    Have you seen the horrible policies they were able to get. I’ve worked with and in hospitals forever. We had employees cry when the plan was switched to a high deductible family plan. Just because you have some coverage doesn’t mean it’s good coverage.
    I agree though the two tier system we have is deeply flawed

  17. #142
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    The Queen City North Carolina
    Posts
    1,440
    Quote Originally Posted by detrusor View Post
    As a doc, I’ve met a single provider who didn’t accept Medicare. It’s not “lots”.


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums
    Did we all fail reading comprehension. I didn’t say they don’t take it. I said if all rates paid the Medicare rate or Medicaid rate doctors would have some serious problems given their current cost structure.
    Would you have a practice with 100% governmental payers? Of course not, your private payers make up the difference currently
    Example
    Your run a T-Shirt shop. You need $500 per week to keep the lights on and pay your staff. You get $12 from tourist and $2 from the federal government for locals. You can sell 50 T-shirts per week keeping up your current staff and ability to service those people so each week so you sell 40 shirts to the tourist for $480 and you sell 10 shirts to the locals and you get $2 from the federal government. Your happy because you grossed $500.
    The next year they propose that in order to have everyone get a new T-shirt they would be paying $2 for all the shirts in america however, in order for the numbers to work they have to pay the federal rate, they can't pay the fat cat $12. You are now selling 50 shirts a week in our fictional tourist town, but only getting $100 for what you used to get $500 for. Thats how the math for Medicare for all is working out. They are proposing paying the federal rate to everyone. It's a bit too rosy of a prediction in that article.
    Listen I am not saying its right or wrong. Just don't be surprised when the AHA or doctors lobby or pharma companies don't lobby for this.
    In fact, all your local congressman cave and don't even let medicare or medicaid programs negotiate as a block with pharma companies now. Its a joke.
    We just signed a nearly trillion dollar defense bill and hospitals are getting payment reductions in many federal programs such as outpatient payment rates to hospital owned practices to save money for medicare. Our priorities are screwed up, but it would take a massive reorg is all I'm saying

  18. #143
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    9,300ft
    Posts
    23,145
    Quote Originally Posted by ncskier View Post
    I'm sorry to say that I have millions of lines of actual patient data sitting on servers in my office for claims and I can tell you Medicare pays almost nothing compared to private insurance. Perhaps on something as mundane as a simple office visit, but for spine heart oncology and ortho, the reimbursement rates for private insurance are 5-10 times more than medicare. many if not all doctors try to limit the influx of medicare patients as a percent of their visit for this very reason. I am sure I will be told I'm wrong despite have the actual claims and working with hundred of hospitals in the US and an entire IT department focused on comparisons, but sadly its true.
    I can back that up. I see the medicare and medicaid numbers... low + MANY extra hoops to jump through. Plenty won't take VA or TriCare either because of insane hoops to jump through and drastically delayed reimbursement. It is sad.
    Quote Originally Posted by blurred
    skiing is hiking all day so that you can ski on shitty gear for 5 minutes.

  19. #144
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    9,300ft
    Posts
    23,145
    Quote Originally Posted by ncskier View Post
    You'd probably have more mom and pop type docs like years ago. Duo nurse doctor combos working out of store fronts. .
    ACA killed the single practice doc (and really all small practices). And it was by design. ACA intentionally place compliance structures in place that make it so onerous for small practices that they had no choice but to sell out to the big boys. The idea in crafting that sort of system design is that bigger practices will be more efficient. But it turns out that isn't necessarily so, and larger organizations are certainly less agile and less personal.

    And before someone starts screaming that their doc still is a solo practitioner, well yes, there are some holdouts, but the massive trend is solo practice and small practices are selling out.

    It's sad... more money for the middle managers and corps, and healthcare practitioners are employees instead of entrepreneurs.

    One of the architects of this feature of ACA wrote a mea culpa in the WSJ: https://www.wsj.com/articles/i-was-w...are-1469997311
    Quote Originally Posted by blurred
    skiing is hiking all day so that you can ski on shitty gear for 5 minutes.

  20. #145
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Squaw valley
    Posts
    4,975
    Quote Originally Posted by ncskier View Post
    Did we all fail reading comprehension. I didn’t say they don’t take it. I said if all rates paid the Medicare rate or Medicaid rate doctors would have some serious problems given their current cost structure.
    Would you have a practice with 100% governmental payers? Of course not, your private payers make up the difference currently
    Example
    Your run a T-Shirt shop. You need $500 per week to keep the lights on and pay your staff. You get $12 from tourist and $2 from the federal government for locals. You can sell 50 T-shirts per week keeping up your current staff and ability to service those people so each week so you sell 40 shirts to the tourist for $480 and you sell 10 shirts to the locals and you get $2 from the federal government. Your happy because you grossed $500.
    The next year they propose that in order to have everyone get a new T-shirt they would be paying $2 for all the shirts in america however, in order for the numbers to work they have to pay the federal rate, they can't pay the fat cat $12. You are now selling 50 shirts a week in our fictional tourist town, but only getting $100 for what you used to get $500 for. Thats how the math for Medicare for all is working out. They are proposing paying the federal rate to everyone. It's a bit too rosy of a prediction in that article.
    Listen I am not saying its right or wrong. Just don't be surprised when the AHA or doctors lobby or pharma companies don't lobby for this.
    In fact, all your local congressman cave and don't even let medicare or medicaid programs negotiate as a block with pharma companies now. Its a joke.
    We just signed a nearly trillion dollar defense bill and hospitals are getting payment reductions in many federal programs such as outpatient payment rates to hospital owned practices to save money for medicare. Our priorities are screwed up, but it would take a massive reorg is all I'm saying
    Actually, all the hospitals and doctors would have to do is get more efficient. Not that hard.

    Sent from my Moto G (5) Plus using TGR Forums mobile app

  21. #146
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    The Queen City North Carolina
    Posts
    1,440
    Quote Originally Posted by rod9301 View Post
    Actually, all the hospitals and doctors would have to do is get more efficient. Not that hard.

    Sent from my Moto G (5) Plus using TGR Forums mobile app
    There is a lot of ignorance in this thread, but this takes the case. Many of not all md’s barely have time to spend with patients. Now my dentist work 3.5 days a week, but we all now that.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  22. #147
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Location
    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
    Posts
    12,122
    But isn’t that, like, their one job? To see patients?

  23. #148
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Squaw valley
    Posts
    4,975
    Quote Originally Posted by ncskier View Post
    There is a lot of ignorance in this thread, but this takes the case. Many of not all md’s barely have time to spend with patients. Now my dentist work 3.5 days a week, but we all now that.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    My doctor practice in Tahoe has a bunch of assistants, nurses, biking clerks, receptionists, at least 15 admin.

    When I was in France last year, the clinic I went to had about 8 doctors and one admin.

    There's a lot of room to cut costs, but there is no incentive to do it.

    Sent from my Moto G (5) Plus using TGR Forums mobile app

  24. #149
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Where everything's a dollar
    Posts
    2,694
    Quote Originally Posted by rod9301 View Post
    Actually, all the hospitals and doctors would have to do is get more efficient. Not that hard.

    Sent from my Moto G (5) Plus using TGR Forums mobile app
    Not saying you're right or wrong but would love to hear how. I work in healthcare on the $$$ end and have a few ideas myself.

    edit: Sorry...I'm late
    The Sheriff is near!

  25. #150
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Where everything's a dollar
    Posts
    2,694
    Quote Originally Posted by rod9301 View Post
    My doctor practice in Tahoe has a bunch of assistants, nurses, biking clerks, receptionists, at least 15 admin.

    When I was in France last year, the clinic I went to had about 8 doctors and one admin.

    There's a lot of room to cut costs, but there is no incentive to do it.

    Sent from my Moto G (5) Plus using TGR Forums mobile app
    That's anecdotal evidence, and if you think there's no incentive to cut costs in the US then you don't know what you're talking about.
    The Sheriff is near!

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •