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And ours does cost more. I can agree that the charts presented go along with what I've already seen. I do not know how accurate the presentation that keeps saying: "FOR ILLUSTRATIVE PURPOSES ONLY" would be, but, it seems at least close to correct. Just that it says THAT we spend more, lots more.
PBS, Now with Moyers placed the price per capita here and abroad on his website. (I don't have an easy link.) I notice that price is missing from these pictures. It's the most interesting one for me.
$3,000 per capita is what everyone else pays, paying everything for everybody. UK just under 3K, Canada 3500 USD. We pay two to three times these numbers in the USA.
Admittedly, I cannot find a good number for the USA per capita HC spending. I like to find one, been looking for one for years that would include some underlying reasoning. (Does it include Federal spending on pharmaceuticals?) Early this year $8160 per capita appeared. Last month I heard $6000, the other day $7-something thousand.
Regardless, we pay double. We pay at least double to service fewer than our 307-million people. THAT we know, also. WHY, is the question.
We, as in we the people, gave BCBS special provisions if they would insure everyone. They decided not to and went about making more money. They collect... eight percent on whatever is charged for HC. Good deal--for them. They love higher prices. They raise eight percent each year. They love your graphs. They'd love $50 aspirins. They'd love $100 aspirins TWICE as much.
So, what's the difference between my $75 doctor and a Canadian $30 doctor? Well, lets see.
My doc has a staff of people in the basement filling out insurance forms. He charges $100, the insurance kicks him down to $75, he then charges me $25, if I balk he drops it and accepts the $75. He's a nice guy.
Then he has to call in prescriptions, he has a staff for that too. Then the pharma company denies it and he has to call them to okay it again, and again, and again.
When he doesn't have a patient, he's in his office with mounting papers on running his building, paying his staff, keeping up with insurance changes, and maybe keeping up with medicine. Not much time to talk with the other doctors around his office.
Sometimes the insurance companies deny over and over until he needs a lawyer. Then there are people who don't have insurance and who don't pay. To be sure there is a lawyer involved.
The Canadian?
Gets a salary. Might get an incentive payment, might just get an atta-person. Has no insurance payment staff, just someone making sure his electronic notes get transferred instead of transferring them to an insurance company form that then gets transferred to an insurance company.
He knows he'll get paid. Not so for the American.
The single-payer government doesn't need an army of people to read different forms that each insurance company needs. There's no insurance company taking 8% just for being there to deny HC and gleefully raise prices. Instead, like Medicare, there is only 2% needed, and that helps look for fraud as well. And with everyone in the single-payer system, Medicare no longer just gets the ones the insurance companies managed to drop, so it then works, works at the $3K per capita, not ever increasing rates covering fewer and fewer: who end up on Medicare without Medicare ever receiving commensurate payments.
So, how much does the American doctor make? $100 minus $25 for the savvy recipient, minus $10 for insurance staff, $20 for nursing staff, $10 for the building, and so he makes $40 not $30. Oh, but his own HC is priced so high like his staffs, because he has to pay his part of the per capita and more for the 50-million included in that figure but unable pay anything toward their own or any body's HC, not to mention the ballooning price of it going up 30% this year. Then there are the people who stiff him, and the lawyers for that.
So, can he make more in America? Sure. Especially if he gets rid of poor savvy patients and keeps the gold-star ones happy, the ones that pay full fare. However, on a bad day, he can lose. Now those gold-star patients are losing their stash of money to the bankers, and the doctor's lawyers will end up getting more than the doctor.
In Canada, the doctor also does not have to worry about his useless son, down and out nephews, and the guy that falls off his front porch needing HC. Here, we do.
Lucky US.
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