dckingsfan wrote:tontoz wrote:sfam wrote:It would also involve significant reductions and risk and insurance costs on the part of the doctors. So its not all bad for them. Many health care systems are doing horrific in the US market. The fact that insurance companies are making BANK is not improving personal health or our systems' health. Ideally, a single payer system would cover basic health care and allow for a premium insurance model.
Tell that to the people in Canada who routinely come here for treatment, or have to wait indefinitely to get treatment in Canada.
My mom has already gone through two successful treatments of proton therapy, each lasting several weeks, for cancer. Proton therapy is an alternative to radiation therapy with far fewer side effects. She got treatment only 90 minutes from her home.
Good luck getting proton therapy in Canada. I doubt they have a proton machine in the entire country.
You might want to show that healthcare companies are one of the lowest margin groups out there. So much for making huge bank.
Yeah but more competition would force them to put more pricing pressure on providers.
I have worked on the same contract for 10 years but ownership of it has changed hands three times. I can't say who I work for now but I was shocked to see some of the "preferred provider rates". The first thing that came to mind was that these people are weak negotiators, maybe even worse than EG lol.
That was before I ran across claims where we actually paid more than the charge amount



















