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Originally Posted by Inso0
No, it is very much about whether or not our infrastructure can support Universal Healthcare. Nordic countries (and Canada/Australia) have relatively tiny populations in comparatively confined geographic locations. USA#1 is not all New York and LA. We're more widely scattered and already have issues with medicare recipients having a difficult time finding doctors accepting more patients. We have overcrowded hospitals and a shortage of medical staff.
The only constraint I see you mentioning Inso is population and density. On the population side that works in the US's favor by giving the US better economies of scale. The density issue is a problem but not for M4A vs another system but in subsidizing rural hospitals regardless of the system. Rural hospitals are closing right now because they're dependent on Medicare programs to stay afloat, not on private insurance, and Medicare programs to rural hospitals were reduced.
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Now, let's open the floodgates and tell people that all their medical expenses are "free" and see if those problems get any better. Oh, and we're supposedly going to spend LESS money overall on it.
I'm not sure the floodgate would be as open as you think. I really need to find the study because it stops this Econ 101 thinking but it said the difference between the US and most other healthcare systems isn't utilization, in other words, Americans go to the doctor and get operations at about the same rates as everyone else in the world, but it's the per unit costs that account for most of the difference. If that's true, then forcing a reduction in costs even to being free won't open the floodgates because it being free or not isn't what makes people go or not go to the hospital or doctor. People are going to the doctor when they're sick, Americans just pay more to do it.
Which makes a kind of sense as well. Going to the doctor isn't an enjoyable experience. You miss work, you sit in the waiting room, you get poked and prodded, etc. If you make it cheap, it still sucks.
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Edit: I will again point out that I'm not a staunch opponent to the concept of Universal Healthcare. Merely pointing out the insanity of claiming it will somehow save us money without any downside or unintended consequences.
Sure. The real constraints are on the actual real resources. We need more doctors, nurses, facilities. Those will be strained by increased utilization and there needs to be ways to increase those. What isn't needed are insurance companies, billing departments, administrative bloat in hospitals etc.