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by jatone
1602 days ago
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> This account, or at least should account, for a very small minority of interactions with healthcare facilities. sadly its not. you're in pain? you need to visit a medical facility to figure out whats wrong. without knowing how serious it is it can lead to a life long issue. again you don't really have choices here. pay the healthcare tax or risk long term issues. there is a reason preventative medicine is cheaper (overall) than delaying care until a condition has progressed. the capitalists idea of a market simply doesn't apply to healthcare. > If a hospital exists because people routinely visit the doctor. this isn't true. we fund hospitals in rural areas because there literally isnt enough people to keep one operating via patient care. you're also asserting that if the populace can't sustain the healthcare system then it shouldn't be available to people. which is fairly cruel and immoral. |
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I don't see how that is a congruent thought. The 'sadly it's not' doesn't follow from your statement after. If you are in pain without knowing how serious it is, you would likely get opinions from several doctors. You're not going to walk into the first hospital you find and say "I'll pay anything you ask just fix me."
> the capitalists idea of a market simply doesn't apply to healthcare.
You still haven't made a logically coherent argument as to why it doesn't. The vast majority of healthcare transactions are made between two lucid and consenting parties.
> this isn't true. we fund hospitals in rural areas because there literally isnt enough people to keep one operating via patient care.
That backs my point, right? Those hospitals aren't funded by emergency care either, which means the point about costs being a one sided negotiation while the other party is dying is still inaccurate.
> you're also asserting that if the populace can't sustain the healthcare system then it shouldn't be available to people. which is fairly cruel and immoral.
I don't think recognizing the limits of a given resource is cruel or immoral, it's reality. Us not having perfectly clean energy is killing us all, but it isn't cruel and immoral, it's a problem that needs solving. If a town can't afford a hospital, and you want to live in a town with a hospital, move, right? I don't see any reason why taxpayers should pay so a small mountain town in the middle of nowhere can have a staff of doctors and nurses to support a population of 100 people. If someone wants to live in the mountains of Oregon, I don't see how we have a responsibility to pay for a medical care facility to follow them up.