Wow, this is expanding fast. Anyone who recognizes my name will know I'm a strong proponent for a single payer system. I'm probably one of the few here (BoxheadTim maybe another) who has lived under both a single payer and the US system. I'm 50, I was born and raised in the UK and spent my first 25 years living there with the NHS. I've spent the last 25 years living here with the American system. Since moving here I obviously have an additional 25 years of friends and family who have continued to live with the NHS.
In a nutshell, nothing I've seen or experienced makes me think this system is better in any way. No, a single payer system isn't perfect. It has issues, but in my honest experience and opinion, it's far far better than here. I'd also like to point out that there is nothing in a single payer system that prevents or outlaws a pay to play system as we have here. That included private health insurance. It exists in other countries that have single payer systems. Through my parents we had BUPA, a private health insurance system. Do you know how often we used it in the 10 plus years we had it? Zero, not once. Not one incident or illness needed us to fall back on it due to wait times, rules etc. of the NHS. The NHS came through on time every time for zero out ofpocket expenses.
If we listen to certain news outlets we are told that single payer systems are nothing but long wait times, poor service, and 'death lists' letting people die. Nothing could be further from the truth. Yes, for non critical or elective surgery etc. you can wait, at times too long, but they will get to you. And the most important thing is no one daren't get treatment due to fear of costs, no one is ever bankrupted by costs etc. Since I've lived here I've met people who lost their life savings with medical costs. I've met people in their 20's who were bankrupted by medical costs. It just doesn't happen over there. I have a close friend who works for a nonprofit credit counseling company. Much of what she did (moved onwards and upwards these days) day to day was counseling people facing and entering bankruptcy. By far the biggest cause, even back in 08-09 when we were told all the bankruptcies were for too much debt and too much house, was, and still is medical bills. Google it. There are lot's of articles and studies, it's by far the leading cause of bankruptcy in this country. I've had a friend who was killed due to an allergy to an anesthetic and had to be revived. They then charged her for the privilege of resuscitating her. They did it again at the next surgery even though they were told about the allergy by both the patient and her sister who was there with her. But they used it again and she had to be revived again, and guess who had to pay again? Easy to say that's obvious malpractice, but when you're a single mother with not much income you can't afford to sue, let alone the emotianl effort it takes while fighting cancer even if you could find someone to take on the case. She ended up passing away due to the illness with insurmountable debt meaning there was nothing to pass to her kids. I've met someone who lost most of their retirement after an emergency tracheotomy was deemed not necessary retroactively by the insurance company and he tried to sue. Bigger pockets means the truth doesn't matter.
A few years ago my mother was here in the winter and just before going back she slipped and fell on ice and broke both wrists. IT was close to her returnt so we splinted them up and she flew home. The next day (a saturday) she went to the hospital inthe UK and was told yes,they're broken, but as they weren't set immidiatly the've started to set so we'll have to re-break them. There will be a wait as it's no longer an emergency. The wiat? 48 hours. She was in surgery Monday. Total cost ZERO. One more personal anecdote. When we were first married my wife got nasty grams and a summons for a supposedly unpaid bill from having a baby with her first husband several years before. He didn't want to help, but after much digging through boxes in the basement and hours of calls we found that not only had the bill been paid by her prior insurance, it had been paid twice. Again, imagine a young single mother on her own trying to sort out that, what extra stress would that have put on her?
While I feel for Tuna and his wife, they are lucky the treatment is available here. Would it not be available here under a single payer system? Even if not could they not get it with insurance or out of pocket under a single payer system? What about a single payer system would make her situation worse? I don't see it. Also, there are many treatments, available on the NHS that US insurance wont cover, so Tuna's argument goes both ways for both systems.
I'm one of the lucky ones. I've got great health coveage and I earn enough that even an aveage of $5k out of pocket annualy over and above insurance isnt' a problem for me. But there are so many people who end up in emergency rooms in this country because they can't afford basic preventative treatment.
As for paying for it. We spend more for less over here.
I've heard all the arguments for 25 years and still nothing makes me believe this system is better unless you're wealthy. But what about the other 70-90% of the population. For them, this is a horrible situation.
LEt's not even start on prescriptions!!!!