about this blog
- Elizabeth MacDonald is the stocks editor for Fox Business Network. She is recognized as one of the top prize-winning business journalists in the country, and has received 14 awards, including the top prize in business journalism, the Gerald Loeb Award for Distinguished Business Journalism, and the Newswomen's Club of New York Front Page Award for Excellence in Investigative Journalism.
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A. Ray Thomas
Interesting facts. Based on all this information, the infant mortality rate should be dropped from further comparisons by both sides. Frankly, I think all comparisons to plans outside the USA should be dropped. There are so many factors that go into comparing quality of life and health care in each country that it is impossible to keep discussions rational on the subject. Besides, that is NOT the issue. The real issue is the cost of healthcare here in the USA and what alternatives can be put in place. We observed Medicare first hand over eight years of caring for my mother-in-law. The constant back-and-forth between Medicare and the providers is bureacracy at its worst. The lovely woman has been dead for 10 months and we are still getting paperwork as Medicare finally pays the hospital and doctors. The paperwork alone must cost a fortune. I was in employer paid systems for decades and for all their flaws, and there are many, I never saw problems like this. Now I'm one of the millions of boomers who is self employed and not eligible for Medicare. My wife and I are 61 and our BlueCross premiums are $1329/mo - that's $16,000 per year. Next month, it jumps to nearly $19,000 or we can pay an enormous deductible and it will only increase by $600. Real numbers. We have a problem in THIS country. Maybe if our legislators were on the same healthcare that the rest of us have to live with they would see the problem. They can't. They are spoiled rotten -- on OUR money!!!
Ed K
I watch with interest the debate on health care. I do however think the conversation needs to be turned on it's end. Every conversation is framed in "How do we pay for health care", "Costs continue to rise for some by 100%". The REAL question should be WHY is health care so expensive! If health care was left to the same market forces as every other business, costs would HAVE to come down. Until we understand why the costs are the way they are we can do NOTHING to control or save for those costs.
Frank Collatt
You cannot believe anything that comes out of the mouth of the President of the United States of AMERICA, Barack Hussein Obama, or anything that the Left-Wing Democrats say either, because of their 'ram it down your throat' socialistic and fascist agenda. They are using Health Care Reform, in one manner or another, to further enslave the American People into their control grid, which if passed, will ruin Health Care primarily for millions of aging Senior Americans. This ploy by the OBAMA Administration is a "ruse", and an attempt to utilize fear-mongering to rally support for a program that no-one is sure they can pay for, much less even if ever benefit from. Members of Congress should be ashamed of theirselves for running and legislating such a sham on the American People; do they think we are all stupid, like they are in inventing this SCAM? To prove my point, What has the Government of and for the American People done thus far with Medicare? Medicaid? and how about Social Security? It is easy to draw a conclusion, and see where their interests lie--in dominance, and control, much like the Car Companies and Banking Industry.
Carla, Ballwin,MO
It's probably going to happen, the Dems have the numbers in the Congress and Senate. I think a few Repubs will vote for it! Even if you are well insured, there are a lot of out of pocket expenses. Insurance - can't live with it - can't afford not to have it!!!
Sharden
All facts, I work in the industry and have been a student for the past 5 years ... i would scream during the campaign and today when I see a commercial depicting "47 million uninsured" - I even emailed the AMA when they aired a commercial with the same false facts! Costs are high and will continue to be - for a number of reasons, technology and MORE people using MORE services MORE of the time - it's a fact. Dont let Obama fool you with this "prevention" stuff, we have been trying that for years and the results are in - costs have still risen! Until we close the borders and get immigration under control, the costs will rise. We need tax reform, not government reform
F. Erwin
The cost or price of a product and how it is paid for are two separate issues. Insurance is how we pay for health care and it works by applying the concept of risk pooling. What is lacking most in our current system is a fair and equitable way for people to access a reasonable level of insurance that provides ongoing continuous protection from a potential financial catastrophe. While the problems with controlling costs/prices are quite complex, providing for access to insurance is not. There are really only two things that need to happen. First, there must be some form of community rating where insurance rates are established based on basic demographic information and not health condition. Not only should pre-existing conditions be covered, but rating with any information on health status at all should be forbidden. Second, there can be no exemptions from participation. None. If there is universal access there must be universal participation. What is most wrong with our current system is that the very people who have paid the most into the system – middle aged working Americans – are very ones who are most at risk for unavailable or unaffordable health insurance coverage. Just as we need to separate cost from payment, we need to separate the cost of providing healthcare services from the price that is charged for these services and the amount we choose to buy.
Bodo
I don't agree with the third paragraph of your article.
PatriotMan
WoooW! So we do have the best healthcare in the world. Everyone is lying and only we know what is right. All the statistics by UN, our own department of CDC, World Health Organization, are all lies, lies. Yes, we live in a utopia. We have low infant mortality, we don't have uninsured people (they just don't want to buy insurance), they are just exercising their choice. Everything bad about our healthcare is a fabrication by enemies; enemies outside of US and enemies within...... We also have the best car in the world. We have no credit crisis - there was never a financial meltdown. The foreclosures, they are lies spread by Communists and Democrats and Liberal.....
Peter A
Typically Fox. 46 mn do not have health care insurance. That's a fact which even the article above does not dispute - it just mucks it up enough so that people come away thinking that it is not true. Infant mortality: instead of ranking 29th the US ranks only 16th. Wow. The crux of the matter is that the US system is far more expensive than any other health system in the world. Per capita healthcare spending: US $6714, Germany $3669, Japan $2690 (source: WHO). But in virtually all health indicators (longevity, infant mortality, etc.), the US ranks at the dismal bottom of developed countries.
J.Irwin
As a practicing physician for 32 years, I know these things to be true. I am no fan of traditional insurance but insurance is not the problem. The real problems are: 1. end of life, unrealistic care estimated to be 30% of one's lifetime health care expenditures. Stop it! Health care is much cheaper in countries where people die young! 2. Medical liability. The tort system that makes plaintiff attorneys like John Edwards multimillionaires. Cap pain and suffering awards at $250,000 and watch this disappear. This directly results in unnessary tests and procedures--and costs. "no-fault" malpractice insurance. Stop the med-mal lottery winners. Of course, this will never happen with a Dem. congress and President. 3. the "worried well". Neurotic illnesses cost millions and millions. High deductibles really stop much of this. 4. Although a tough sell, we need to ration care in a realistic way. Does an 85 y/o in the nursing home really need both knees replaced? 5. Transparency in costs. The consumer needs to know how much an episode of care is going to cost so that he/she can make a rational decision about whether to proceed or not. High deductibles and cost transparency will force the consumer to choose rationally when they can compare costs and the knowledge that much of the cost will be out of pocket. Market forces will drive down costs. Finally, the idea that computerizing medical records will save money is so absurd it is laughable.
Lee
The only ones who want womb to tomb government healthcare are socialists who are too lazy to get private health insurance. They will buy insurance for the car they don't need or house insurance for a house too big for them. Then they cry they cannot afford simple health insurance. As a Canadian with horrible healthcare service, I see and hear it all the time.
John L
How about this myth: providing healthcare is an obligation. If I were sick and didn't have the money to pay for care it would be wrong for me to go to my neighbor and at gun point require him to pay for my care. It is equally wrong to to ask my government to do so for me. Healthcare is my right, but no one other than me (or my insurance company through contractual agreement) is obligated to pay for it.
Ira
"Waiting time for elective surgery is lower in the US than in countries with nationalized health care." Did the study factor in uninsured or underinsured people? I need to see a specialist, but my insurance won't cover it and I can't afford to pay it out of my pocket, so my waiting time is until I can afford it - probably four or five months at least. If I was still living in Canada, I'm sure I could get treatment within a week.
Nancy Welch
I agreed completely with Sharden, until we stop dishing out FREE health care to those who do not pay taxes and get free health care and free housing and free food and stop sending all of our jobs out of this country we are going to continue to go down the recession track in this country. The only thing that is really free is salvation and that's because the price has already been paid. WE give all this free living to people who are able to work and our elderly who worked blood sweat and tears for this country are the ones that live without their medicine and cool air and food to eat. It really burns me up to see them struggle to have a little something and then when they get sick and have to be cared for they have to give everything to the state but, we will give free housing, free food, $1 prescriptions to people who can get off their lazy tails and work but, we don't do it. I am not just talking about illegals I am talking about Americans. We let people come in to this country and pay no taxes, whose bright idea was that. Like I don't know. I believe in the land of the free but, I get up everyday and go to work and give 150% to my employer and i don't expect not to pay taxes or not to have to pay for food or my medicine. Our elderly should be some of the wealthest around but we have forgotten them instead we give it to the undeserving. SOMEBODY WAKE UP IN WASHINGTON PLEASE. Someone commented that Washington does not lieve like we do I say Amen to that.
Carla, Ballwin, MO
Health care always stirs a lot of emotion, the number of smart and impassioned responses is testament to that. Who wouldn't spend their last cent on saving their premature baby, or spouse or child with a terminal illness. Your mother, sister, grandmother, or beautiful best friend with breast cancer...we've all been there. A devastating car accident which cripples the victim, requiring months of rehabilitation. An elderly person with Alzheimer's, the care can deplete a wealthy family's fortune in no time. We've all been touched by life's unexpected heartbreaks. I hope the government and private sector can come up with a well thought out plan, which is agreeable to all sides of the debate.
TBarton
Elizabeth, Thanks for another fine piece of research. I always feel so much better informed after reading your articles.