| I have never met a person who suggests comparison shopping for health care who has actually been seriously ill. I had required emergency care 3 times before the age of 21. If you have had a major illness requiring serious care (e.g., heart disease, cancer, organ failure, stroke), please talk about exactly how you would have comparison shopped for the best bargain in hospitals. If somebody isn't immediately dying and mentally unable, the relatives or caretaker can take care of comparison shopping or they can just buy the service from the nearest hospital. Whatever they choose, will determine the price of the service that they pay for. If everyone is provided insurance, we will all pay an arm and a leg and the hospital get to make extravagant profit due to price insensitivity. The healthcare system anywhere in the world can't save everybody or care for everybody. There will be some rationing of some kind. It could be long waiting line, denial of care for certain individuals, or based on ability to pay. This is the reality of all systems in the world. The only alternative is to be ruthless in improving efficiency, reliability and cost of a healthcare system so that those dilemma can't happen. |
Have you had a major illness requiring serious care? Apparently not. But you still answered the question. You know why that's relevant? Because you quite literally have no idea what you're talking about. Because you didn't and can't talk about how you would have fit comparison shopping in the busy schedule that goes with not dying.
The notion that somebody is going to say, "Hey, I'm going to see if I can get a discount on dealing with my impending kidney failure" is so far from the reality of what's reasonable in a hospital setting that I don't know where to begin. Other than saying that I should have learned by now not to try to have rational conversations with fundamentalists, be they biblical, Freudian, Marxist, or free-market fundamentalists.