From Paul Waldman at The American Prospect:
The single-payer and hybrid systems in place in every other country in the developed world have many admirable features: lower costs, universal coverage, and better health outcomes. But what ought to make us most envious is their security -- it's what they have and we desperately need. If you live in Canada or Germany or France or Japan, there are some things you need never fear. You need never fear that your insurance company will tell you it won't cover treatment for your asthma because you had asthma before they signed you up. You need never fear that you will bankrupt your family because of expensive treatments for a serious illness. You need never fear that you will find yourself without coverage after your insurer dropped you or you lost your job. You might fear getting sick, but you won't fear that your life will be destroyed by not being able to pay for getting sick.
In the United States, unless you're over 65, extremely poor, or a veteran -- thus, already covered by a government health insurance plan -- you do have to fear all that. That's because the central pathology of our deeply pathological health-care system is that most of us have no choice but to get health coverage from an entity whose sole reason for being is to take our money and then try to avoid paying for our care when we get sick.
Yes.
Can't se how you can do without it.
ReplyDeleteOur US system, Göran, especially our health care system, is capitalism run amok. 35 years ago, before the era of Reactionary Reagan Radicalism, most folks could get coverage for a reasonable cost.
ReplyDeleteReagan's tried to destroy government by making it subservient to the voracious interests of private capital-- the very definition of fascism. This Reagan legacy has succeeded best in the field of health care. It has become as a voracious malignancy, devouring our economy and our moral spirit.
Yes, the public option is a necessity.
ReplyDeleteFolks around me cannot believe that the US has so, so many without health insurance.