Re: Personal Experience with Some of the Problems in Heath Care.
Thanks. I read the article and always enjoy Gladwell's stuff.
1. I believe that demand for healthcare *is* virtually unlimited. And demand is elastic -- it responds to price incentives.
2. It is my impression that poor people have a disproportionate amount of diabetes, obesity, high blood pressure and asthma. I believe it is a matter of lifestyle choices and not an access to health care issue. I think people with these problems are clogging up our healthcare system and if they changed their lifestyle they would become healthier and wouldn't need medical care to the degree they do.
3. I think medical care is mostly destructive. Some of it is good but most of it is bad. Pills and procedures are demanded by US patients and provided by ignorant US doctors. Avoiding doctors and hospitals, while exercising and doing the things that contribute to good health, is the best course for longevity and good health. So I don't think more doctor visits is the answer to better health. Quite the opposite.
4. Where health care is socialized, the limits to consumption are put in place through either financial disincentives, or rationing in the form of long waits, long queues, etc. People who can afford it will look outside the system because their time is more valuable than the waiting and hoops they have to jump through so these countries have a two tier system in any event.
5. As I have gotten older the front office has expanded and I think a large percentage of health care dollars are spent in billing, claims and administration. I am sure this can be cut back in a big way without socializing the whole thing. I am very much against further collectivizing of American life so I am against socialized medicine. The government has never proven to be the solution, so why would they be one here? It makes no sense...
Thanks. I read the article and always enjoy Gladwell's stuff.
1. I believe that demand for healthcare *is* virtually unlimited. And demand is elastic -- it responds to price incentives.
2. It is my impression that poor people have a disproportionate amount of diabetes, obesity, high blood pressure and asthma. I believe it is a matter of lifestyle choices and not an access to health care issue. I think people with these problems are clogging up our healthcare system and if they changed their lifestyle they would become healthier and wouldn't need medical care to the degree they do.
3. I think medical care is mostly destructive. Some of it is good but most of it is bad. Pills and procedures are demanded by US patients and provided by ignorant US doctors. Avoiding doctors and hospitals, while exercising and doing the things that contribute to good health, is the best course for longevity and good health. So I don't think more doctor visits is the answer to better health. Quite the opposite.
4. Where health care is socialized, the limits to consumption are put in place through either financial disincentives, or rationing in the form of long waits, long queues, etc. People who can afford it will look outside the system because their time is more valuable than the waiting and hoops they have to jump through so these countries have a two tier system in any event.
5. As I have gotten older the front office has expanded and I think a large percentage of health care dollars are spent in billing, claims and administration. I am sure this can be cut back in a big way without socializing the whole thing. I am very much against further collectivizing of American life so I am against socialized medicine. The government has never proven to be the solution, so why would they be one here? It makes no sense...
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