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How many of you take your extra money in your check each week and give that to people who don't have health insurance?
How many of you take your extra money in your check each week and give that to people who don't have health insurance?
When will he move all the way up to "Oh, yeah, my daddy can beat up your daddy"?
When will he move all the way up to "Oh, yeah, my daddy can beat up your daddy"?
I bet my daddy can beat up your daddy!
How many of you take your extra money in your check each week and give that to people who don't have health insurance?
Oh, ...and how much is this gonna' cost me?
How many of you take your extra money in your check each week and give that to people who don't have health insurance?
If you knew there was a car out there that worked better than your car and cost $6K less, would you buy it?
They are ripping us off and you know it.
This lame health care bill is never going to pass. Funny thing about the bill is that the President himself doesn't even know what's in the bill. None of the members of Congress have read it either. It's a stupid, over price piece of a bill that's only intention is one of those "feel good" liberal things. More and more everyday it is even loosing support within the Democratic party. I wouldn't get so worked up over this mess. It's dying a slow but sure death. Obama talked about it for an hour on TV last night and he didn't say anything meaningful about the bill. He tap danced around every question and didn't give a decent answer to anything. He explained nothing about how the bill would work, how much it would cost people who enrolled into it, and he all but outright said medical services would be rationed. Wish they would stop talking about it and get on to the next hokey pokey bill that Obama wants the country to spend trillions on.
How many of you take your extra money in your check each week and give that to people who don't have health insurance?
Why don't you ask how much I put toward my own healthcare? That happens to be ZERO, because in reality there is money stolen from me each week from my government to take care of others who do not work, many times they do not work because they just don't feel like it, poor things.
Meanwhile I have no healthcare. But I really do not want to be part of a healthcare system that will soon be totally run by the same entity that controls my paycheck
How many of you take your extra money in your check each week and give that to people who don't have health insurance?
Why don't you ask how much I put toward my own healthcare? That happens to be ZERO, because in reality there is money stolen from me each week from my government to take care of others who do not work, many times they do not work because they just don't feel like it, poor things.
Meanwhile I have no healthcare. But I really do not want to be part of a healthcare system that will soon be totally run by the same entity that controls my paycheck
I hear you... Just imagine if the government cut spending and gave us some of our own money back to pay for our own healthcare...
When will he move all the way up to "Oh, yeah, my daddy can beat up your daddy"?
I bet my daddy can beat up your daddy!
Oh, ...and how much is this gonna' cost me?
I'm happy with my healthcare but I'm fortunate enough to have a decent job with benefits. I'm more concerned with helping those in need and eliminating waste.
You are in the vast majority. Over 85% are happy with their health care, and the number goes even higher when we poll those who have recently had serious procedures.
while the numbers clearly show that people are happier with their own health care than with the system as a whole, there is no dimension with which their happier than the quality of care they personally receive a mere 15 percent complain about the quality of care they receive..(New England Journal of Medicine)
Health Beat: The Quality Question
And, of course, the 47 million figure of those uninsured is bogus, and is, in actuallity, closer to 15 million, 4.8 % of the population.
Which leads to the question as to why the Democrats are so hot to throw out a working system.
It's a good thing you didn't read any further PC; you weren't looking for TRUTH, you were looking for something that would support your dogma...
You picked the wrong article, organization and study...LOL!
The Quality Question
No doubt one of the reasons that quality doesnt make it into the health care discussions as readily as coverage or cost is because of this very satisfaction: if people are happy, then theres no problemso why pick a fight where there need not be conflict? Health care reform is already hard enough.
But quality is a problem. Just because Americans are happy with their care, doesnt mean that they are getting the best careor even recommended levels of care, as determined through medical consensus.
In 2003, Elizabeth McGlynn, the associate director of RANDs health care program, led the first national, comprehensive study on the quality of care for adults. (Read that sentence again: we didnt have a major nation-wide study on quality until just five years ago. The Institute of Medicine did focus on medical errors in its 1999 report, To Err is Human"; but the RAND study looked at whether doctors were following best practice.) Quality has clearly been an overlooked issue in health care assessments.
Maggie has touched on McGlynn's study in a previous post, but its worth discussing again here. Using telephone interviews and two-year medical records, McGlynns team assessed whether or not 13,275 participants in 12 metropolitan regions received the level of care that doctors recommend for their specific ailments (25 conditions in all, including congestive heart failure, hypertension, breast cancer, diabetes, asthma, coronary artery disease, STDs, headaches, and alcohol dependence). What they found was that, on average, patients receive just 55 percent of recommended care for their conditions. (Recommended care was determined by (1) poring over national guidelines and medical literature to come up with key indicators and (2) subjecting these indicators to four nine-person, multi-specialty panels, who nixed or okayed the metrics).
This proportion was remarkably consistent across different kinds of care. The authors found little difference among the proportion of recommended preventive care provided (54.9 percent), the proportion of recommended acute care provided (53.5 percent), and the proportion of recommended care provided for chronic conditions (56.1 percent).
In testimony before the Senate Finance Committee last month, McGlynn nicely summed up the implications of these numbers: we spend nearly $2 trillion annually on health care and we get it right about half the time.
How about HALF your income, if the status quo is kept in place...
The cost of the average employer-sponsored health insurance plan (ESI) for a family will reach $24,000 in 2016. This represents an 84 percent increase over 2008 premium levels. Under this scenario, we estimate that at least half of American households will need to spend more than 45 percent of their income to buy health insurance.
The Cost of Doing Nothing
Why the Cost of Failing to Fix Our Health System Is Greater than the Cost of Reform
BTW, you had your head handed to you HERE and you never responded PC...
You are in the vast majority. Over 85% are happy with their health care, and the number goes even higher when we poll those who have recently had serious procedures.
while the numbers clearly show that people are happier with their own health care than with the system as a whole, there is no dimension with which their happier than the quality of care they personally receive a mere 15 percent complain about the quality of care they receive..(New England Journal of Medicine)
Health Beat: The Quality Question
And, of course, the 47 million figure of those uninsured is bogus, and is, in actuallity, closer to 15 million, 4.8 % of the population.
Which leads to the question as to why the Democrats are so hot to throw out a working system.
It's a good thing you didn't read any further PC; you weren't looking for TRUTH, you were looking for something that would support your dogma...
You picked the wrong article, organization and study...LOL!
The Quality Question
No doubt one of the reasons that quality doesnt make it into the health care discussions as readily as coverage or cost is because of this very satisfaction: if people are happy, then theres no problemso why pick a fight where there need not be conflict? Health care reform is already hard enough.
But quality is a problem. Just because Americans are happy with their care, doesnt mean that they are getting the best careor even recommended levels of care, as determined through medical consensus.
In 2003, Elizabeth McGlynn, the associate director of RANDs health care program, led the first national, comprehensive study on the quality of care for adults. (Read that sentence again: we didnt have a major nation-wide study on quality until just five years ago. The Institute of Medicine did focus on medical errors in its 1999 report, To Err is Human"; but the RAND study looked at whether doctors were following best practice.) Quality has clearly been an overlooked issue in health care assessments.
Maggie has touched on McGlynn's study in a previous post, but its worth discussing again here. Using telephone interviews and two-year medical records, McGlynns team assessed whether or not 13,275 participants in 12 metropolitan regions received the level of care that doctors recommend for their specific ailments (25 conditions in all, including congestive heart failure, hypertension, breast cancer, diabetes, asthma, coronary artery disease, STDs, headaches, and alcohol dependence). What they found was that, on average, patients receive just 55 percent of recommended care for their conditions. (Recommended care was determined by (1) poring over national guidelines and medical literature to come up with key indicators and (2) subjecting these indicators to four nine-person, multi-specialty panels, who nixed or okayed the metrics).
This proportion was remarkably consistent across different kinds of care. The authors found little difference among the proportion of recommended preventive care provided (54.9 percent), the proportion of recommended acute care provided (53.5 percent), and the proportion of recommended care provided for chronic conditions (56.1 percent).
In testimony before the Senate Finance Committee last month, McGlynn nicely summed up the implications of these numbers: we spend nearly $2 trillion annually on health care and we get it right about half the time.
Why don't you ask how much I put toward my own healthcare? That happens to be ZERO, because in reality there is money stolen from me each week from my government to take care of others who do not work, many times they do not work because they just don't feel like it, poor things.
Meanwhile I have no healthcare. But I really do not want to be part of a healthcare system that will soon be totally run by the same entity that controls my paycheck
I hear you... Just imagine if the government cut spending and gave us some of our own money back to pay for our own healthcare...
Then I could make my own choice, instead of being forced to do something against my will.
I am amazed that people have allowed this to get so far.
The right to make Personal choices are challenged daily with this obamunism.
Choices are being stolen from all of us. Therefore the character to do the right thing is being challenged by this regime
I hear you... Just imagine if the government cut spending and gave us some of our own money back to pay for our own healthcare...
Then I could make my own choice, instead of being forced to do something against my will.
I am amazed that people have allowed this to get so far.
The right to make Personal choices are challenged daily with this obamunism.
Choices are being stolen from all of us. Therefore the character to do the right thing is being challenged by this regime
And if healcare plans of all stripes were allowed to use free market ideas, such as Progressive Insurance does, letting the user select what is necessary for the individual. You could choose something available in every other field, such as telephone or e-mail consultation programs, which are not paid for currently, and costs commensurate with your particular health situation.
The government could allow tax deductions, as they do now, based on what percentage is spent out-of-pocket depending on the health problem.
And never, ever put forth a plan that prevents private individuals from spending their own money as they see fit.